Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 2, 1924)
PAOE TOVTl METWOftP MAYTj TRTBUNTC, fEDFOTCD, OREGON- TTTFRfcPAY, OfTOBEK, ?. S2f KI)FORD HAIL TRIBUNE AN INliKt'KNUtNT NKWHPAPEK ptJBLIbUUJ L t LH Y A r 1 K h N ouS LICE PI hlMMT, BY THE MKDKuKP PKINTIMJ CO. H llwjford Hundar Mornm Hun la fumitfiwl Olfic. Mall Tlrbunc Uulldloc, Norua rir atnU Vnona 76. A ponaolldatlon of tli Democratic TilBrt. the Bedford Mail, tlit Mwlfvnl iribui,, tb boutft- m prt-goblan, lit AwiUud IntAjne. RUBEKT W. Kl'IIL, Editor. I. bLUt'TKK HUH II. Uniter. Bf Mail In Adne: Dttir. with hutMiar Sun. ar. llib wHb Sumlay Hun, mutitti. Ptflj, without humlajr Nun, )t-ar Dally, without huily Kuii. muiiUi... Wi',jt Hall Tribune, one rr feuLO Hun, on )var . .$7.60 BV flAKfWEK In Medfard. Ashland. JackoH- rli. Ontal Point, HiaQii, Taleat and on yirliwara: PMy, with Btinday Sun. month lb DiIIt. without huiwlar Hun. month fi Laily, wirtiuut S-iiidjy Hun, on yar.. 7 to Pailr, with burnt t Hun. one year 8.60 All terms br carrttr. cash 's a'lvance. lutered aa swoiid data matter at Wed ford Qrtfon, under act of Hardi . 1079. Official paper of the City of UMford. Official paver of Jackaon County. 8wjrD dallr aveiara circulation for montha endiriff Arril Ut, 1lt!i4, ir,v, more than otiMe Uit circulation of any ottn-r paper pub- lialted or circulate in jaKKfn counry. Albati), Ore., and lraed wir Aaoclated Prtea Tb tnly Daner 11 CtA'M. California, a dutaur of over 4j0 niiiti, Having BerYlo. MP.WBKRS OP T1IR ASMOCMTVP I'KKMH Tbt AfttocUted Prea 1c n IuiHt entitle! to titt ua for republication of all ni dm fatcbec credited to it or not otherwie credited U Cilia paper, ana iao to u local newa purj tUhtd herein. AU rigid of repiibllratlon of apecfal difr patch herein are alao reaervH. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur PTry Oregon fans outfit to step a trifle higher the remainder of the week. Their senior seedsender Ik a special playmate In Congress of the wild man from Iowa, who ravlngly demands that Mr. Dawes resign as a vice-presidential candidate. As Oregon will demonstrate overwhelmingly in Nn vember, that it 1b for the President . And his policies, it might not he a J (tad Idea for the senator to cease hob nobbing with political freaks, nuts, and socialists from the Mid-West, whose principal object In life is the aggravation of the chief executive. RULE THE GIANTS OUT. HTOO NAD! TOO HAD! Just s everyone was petting primed A for the world series, including our Cool mid L'annv Cul, the un lovely monster of .seiiudid arises once more and casts its malignant shadow over the entire njiurl. The blow falls particularly hard on the Pacific Coast, for the con fessed intermediary in crookedness is none other than Jimmy O'Con- nell, the $1.1,(100 beauty of San Francisco, generally regarded as one c the best players and cleanest sportsmen who ever performed on the Pacific Coast. Of course only the surface of the mess has been touched thus fur. ''here the $500 bribe was to come from, is at this writing unknown, and until it is known, the clean-up can not be complete. But there is enough evidence to demonstrate that the cancer of corruption, first exposed in the Hlaek Sox scundal, was not as most sportsmen supposed, cut out by the criminal proceedings which re sulted in the elevation of Judge Landis to the post of the Big Leagues' moral director. . O 'Council says he is being made the goat, that the deal was known to other members of the Giant team who really instigated the plot. I ricnds of O 'Council will certainly credit this assertion, and if cor roborating evidence is produced, there is only one thing to do, with draw the Giants from the'Worfd .Series, and put the runncrup team in her place. Money, money, money, there is the basic cause of this scandal, and the canker at the rose of the great American sport. Too much money, too little real sportsmanship. It is a significant fact that "$7o,000 Jimmy" is the chief actor in the drama, and that the most thoroughly commeroilized team in the game, is the instigator of the plot. . f There has been much talk about McGraw's baseball genius, the bor.sebide Napoleon, etc., ete. HcGraw knows the game, of course. nit he has not been a Napoleon of baseball, he has been a Napoleon of high finance. Jle has broken the pennant winning record, by buying l. by fiaying more than any other team could afford to nav. Until the dollar sign is taken out of baseball, or at least as the su preme factor in it, such scandals will continue, and eventually the great sport will be killed. The best thing Judge Landis could do for the game would be to rule the New York Giants out of the championship and decree once and for all, that no team a member of which is guilty of graft, can compete in any world series. I rue ve're ro ttSt IPAIACS ALIKE J3m i 7 IxsUt Mopiw lm been out o wliool for nigh on two year an' he i-au't tvn play a saxophone No matter how much money u woiiuui'ri cot site ean't look up-to-daUs unless kIic'h got lh nerve. Timely Views on World Topics CIJCAK AS MI I (SI- Bulletin) Miss Cireenwood was the wife of Cyril JUng, brother of lilancho King. Albee was at one time the husband of tho widow of u son of the late Percy Williams, vaude ville manager. Brown has no matrimonial record. QUILL POINTS WANTED I have three small J houses to build and want them built by carpenters needing work. Phone 602. (Halein Statesman.) Here Is a man who does not know there is some thing about driving a null, or sawing a board that requires long deliberation. The new locomotives of the concern that Is going to ravish the hunter's paradise back of Butte Falls, look like they could hold their own with a Ford at a crossing. Ho tried to wear out a cold, nnd Would have been 47 next January. There Is one nice thing about the Portland ball team. Nobody offers them gold to lose a game. Another young lady, upstate, has demonstrated that it's easier to jump Into a strange automohilo than out of a strange automobile. ;, If tho Journal really Is looking for scandal It should Investigate some of the state departments as at present conducted. It doesn't need to dig-up records 14 years old to find out what Is going on In the Prohibition 10 n forccmcnt department and In other branches of administration. (Halum Capital-Journal.) O! keep mill! Interallied Loans Am Heal Obliga tions, Cannot Be Cancelled,' Says Iiartieh Now that the subject of German reparations has been disposed of for while, the nations of Kurope are confronted once more with the thought of paying war debts to the United States. When last heard of, Inter-a 1 1 1 e d debt were to be the next item on x&m ' tne international program of discus sion. In anticipat I o n Bernard M. Baruch was aked recent ly for an authori tative statement of the situation and 1 what the outlook I is; and Mr. Baruch &ABD BABUCH pointed to his ar- Tiio "masher," however, never gets very far without some' co-ope-hc,e " ingrained Debts in -These I Eventful dears'-which h:i hist been mtion. published by' the Encv.lonedia Bri- tanica company. Mr. Biiriifh -vena hnfntmn (if tli China s mohilintion dar seems to be running into extra innings. I war industries Board, memiier ot the supreme economic council. t'eace commission: American dt-lf L-.-it (in Another way to eradicate the hyphen is to quiet appealing to it I Economic , ami Reparation clauses. for Votes T author of "Making or the the Peace Treaty." In his article, he says in part: Hindered Reparations Settlement "The whole subject of the inter allied debts, other than those be tween Great Britain and t lie I'nited Jt might lie worse. 1 nippers are having their hair shingled, but (States, was in January, imm. held up The leading role is a bank roll. Personal Health Service By WILLIAM BRADY, M. NoUd Physician and Author Blantd l.tur. MrHlnlnf, to pe'wnal rwsHh tnd . hygian. nol to diwiM trMtm.nt. will b. ...red by Dr. Brad, Jf . SSSTit lllUilwd. only Utters should ba brlaf nd wrHUn In Ink. Owlr0 to tfti large number oi I. . n i fw son bo anowirod No rtply con bo modo to Quorloo not oon!ormln to iMtrucnona Addroaa Or. WiMlcm Brady, ! or of mi nowapaw. The atuiti Bob Not a word about the Hhlnjrle bob : It v? ht,r. Of course if the Con or any similar monstrosity. This is valencent happens to r ,IC a health department and we can take : ative" or "hair tonic while the ban- no notice of pathological cases. Jiui is coining to n ui"" - v ran nympathr.e rousing testimcoiiiii ni v...- - with the rural uncle The old fishwives used to be strong who paid a visit to 1 1 or clipping off u young woman's hair his rlty nephew, las soon as they learned she had ty The old gentleman : pboid fever. No great calamity it returned from his ( the patient happens to be one destined first stroll about ; to shed her hair anyhow, but a deplor town in a depressed able mutilation if she happens to be slate. "It's a fine i one of the many typhoid victims who plate and the pen-do not shed their hair to any serious pie seem to be kind extent. The superstition which en and courteous to- abled the fishwives to perpetrate the ward strangers." he atrocity was that cutting the hair con exolained. "but I serves strength or vigor. It does, like Food faddists remind us at times that there is too much "nut nutrition. , in they haven't all yet begun to use varnish. When he cleans his own asli tray, he thinks he is a great help about the house. pending the settlement of the repara tion problem. France, followed by Italy, practically said to the other na tions that unless Germany pays cer tain sums of money, it cannot, or will ;not pay its indebtedness to other na tions. "Because of Inability or unwilling The difference between boxing and prize fighting is that prize new- t"e ony understanding reached iiiii- Ion interallied debts has been an agree- tigmers uo ueuer uoxiug. If a husband hits the last word, it is something like this: right; buy the darned thing." 'All tub iA'itic or liAFoons It Is tho year of our Lord 1924. Tet we have with us, as had tho phantom-ship of old, n. company as singular as trod its decks men of every country and In costumes of all kinds a mistiness indescribable in the air, or a premature twilight In which all the figures look ghostly nnd unreal. Tho rigging has a musty odor and tho whole craft smells like a ship-chandler's shop grown mouldy. Aloft, the sails nre taut, yet the wind whistles but faintly with a sound as if It came from the creak of cordage In ships of Crusaders or of quaint old craft upon tho Spanish Main, as If echoing through remote years so far ftwuy It sounds. A lone figure crouches over the wheel, and the old, withered face of the pilot does not betray any curiosity or interest as to what break ers or reefs or pitiless shores may bo lying In ambush to destroy tho motley crew. Their faces wear tho it pa thy of despair. There Is no hope In their eyes: only a bitter, restless longing for the flash of distant spires, the sunny gleam of up-land pastures, tho undulation of purple hills. They seem to listen for the singing of birds and lowing of cattle and sight for a land where there is no work nor tempest nor pain, and they shall bo forever happy. Fantastic characters sailing toward Impossible bournes! Characters wheth. In every age. have ventured all the bright capital of life In vague specu lations and romantic dreams! A ship that haunts the sea forever, with all sails set, driving onward before a windless gale, and is not hailed, nor ever comes to port! The Ancient Mariner and the Radi cal parly of today have the same des tination. (New York Evening Post.) People never crowd a shoe too full of foot unless there is available parking space iu the skull. It is queer how unfailingly the neighbors find you out, and how ...1.1 .1. 1 Ml It , , semom uie um collector does. .she, "and John hasn't pouted once." ment to fund the British debt to the United States. It was the general understanding that Belgium's indebt edness to the allies and to America was to be paid from German repara tions. - Franco-Italian Stand The Franco-Italian position, how ever, seems simply equivalent to say ing that until their chief debtor pays them they (the French and Italians) will not (not cannot) pay their cred itors. ' While It Is perfectly true that the more Germany pays to the allies the more they will have out of which to Correct this sentence: "We have been married five years' said haa no relation' to the inherent ability of the allies to pay their outstanding obligations. ' The point Is often raised that if Germany's debt is scaled down, why should not the debt of the allies, one to another, be scaled likewise. There would be some force in that argument if one urges that Germany be let off .for less tluin she Is able to pay. But ff Germany's ability to pay out of her own resources ts iixeu at. rougniy. $10,000,000,000, tho taxpayers ' of America will want to know why France, out of her own resources, cannot pay what she owes America (almost $4,000,000,000.) It will be very severe upon the Germans to have to pay what they justly should; It will also very difficult for the debtor to pay the creditor na tions; but the taxes and burdens upon the citizens of the creditor nations are just as severe and burdensome. The German reparations will have to be settled upon their merits, bo will tho Interallied debts." reckon you've had a pretty bad typhoid epidemic, from the looks of the women's hair." That's Lbe kind of bob I mean by nature bob. And he might have added that the typhoid victims were all going Into decline or something, frightfully thin. The familiar old queries about the hair keep coming endlessly. Among them I find this one from a barber: Isn't It a fact that there is a canal running thru every hair and that if you cut the hair without singe ing it to sear over the opening the sap or nutrition will run out of the hair and be Inst ?" I have dragged many a hair, at great labor and pains, to the micro scope to search for that -canal, but while 1 have seen some sad looking hairs and some fine vigorous one un der the high power lens I have never caught one with such a hole in it. Perhaps we are careless about remov ing these hairs for examination, leav ing the hole behind, but even refer- nce to anatomy fails to disclose any evidence of such a canal in hair. The singeing of hair is therefore as im-. portant us it would be to sear or singe your nails after a manicure. Hairs grow from the scalp where the roots are embedded, ami not from the tips ornds. Man sheds hair con tinually, not periodically as do ani mals inhabiting cold climates. The life of the hair in the scalp averages three years. The life of eyelashes is I from three to five months that Is. they are renewed in about that length of time when shed or cut. The hair of the scalp grows about half an inch a month, in some persons a little faster than that in summer. In many per sons the rate of growth is much slower. This is the plaint of many an unhappy victim of the . cropping craze. The growth of the hair is dependent upon general health and vigor. W hen these are impaired thru any illness the growth of the hair is lessened. Ty phoid fever is notorious for that. Many typhoitl victims shed nearly all the hair. But if they get thru the typhoid all right, without any pro longed complication to keep the gen eral vigor impaired, the hair promptly grows in again, as heavy and fine ns cutting your nails. QTESTIOXS AND ANSWKItS Night SweatM My boy. aged 3 s years. Is subject to heavy night sweats in his sleep. He is very active, nnd his general health seems good. Can you suggest the cause? Will you recommend a good doctor's book on the care of children, diet, etc.? (C. J. R.) 'Answer I am unable to surmise whether the boy's diet is wrong and he has some degree of rickets. Why not have a child specialist look him over? Dr. Griffith's "Care of the Bab" published by W,. B. Saunders Co., Philadelphia, Pa., gives Instructions about diet for children up to 7 years of age. Hum to Hear .In spite of continued Inflations nnd medical treatments, my case of head noises and impaired hearing is becom ing worse. One of my patients told me that you had recommended hum ming as beneficial in these cases. Can you give me any information about that? (Dr. G. H. B.) . Answer Dr. Paul V. Winslow re ported that singing and humming ex ercises produced considerable benefit in such cases. He recommended hum ming bhe consonant "M" in such a way that you can feel the lips vibrat ing, or to sing the vowe "E" for two minute .periods three times daily, placing the tone high In the nasal re gion, with a pronounced nasal twang. Hum around the office, doctor, and sing when the patient is under gas. If nothing serious happens to you, let us hear if you hear any better. Violet Jlay I understand the violet ray Is being used at Johns Hopkins hospital to strengthen the heart. Would you ad vise same for metaltinosis? (W. R. D.) Answer Violet ray is practically worthless as a remedy. But ultra violet ray Is of great value in the treatment of general tuberculosis, rickets and other, diseases. Mitral stenosis means contraction or stricture of the mitral valve opening between tho left auricle and' left ventrical of tho heart. I know of no successful treatment of that, other than the gen eral medical management of valvular disease. , background is. They aavo a money in this way. They pay Wo to me owner uir inw privilege photographing it and usiijg it ln nt; picture. We will all be taught parts here and then taken to the run for a last rehearsal. When tv director thinks the actors have tht'. parts well learned, thu camera shoots it." "Shoots It?" said Billy. "And ffhrV does he shoot it, I should like toJ know?" (Toodles explains the shouting lo Billy in the next story.) ' 1 ! Who's Who James A. Drain t, The problems of ex-service men are I' I by no means unknown .to James a. f Drain, new commander of the Amer-I 1 ican Legion. Drain is an attorney inf ? Washington D. c - -nnd has personally " handled the caaeji of over a thousand fr veterans see king?- ' aid through the f U. S. Veterans' feu-i f reau and other ! agencies. tV The new com. h mander was bornf -f In Illinois in HTO. ' He has practiwd T law in . Nebraska, : . Wash ington and I I the District of Co.r ?' James A1rWi) lumbia. Afterp, serving in thef Spanish-American war, he lost hijk i right hand in a hunting accident, hmi "2 despite this handicap, was accepted in"? tJ the ordinance department' of the fe . arm v. where he served overseas with'' distinction. Drain was one of the first departT ment commanders of the legion in t capital and for the past three years!.- . has been chairman of the district re- re habilitation committee. His first army t- experience was with the Washington , state national guard, where he started k as a private and finished as a brig, f dier general. fr - ANNOUNCEMENTS !lLLyWHLKER1 COI-XTY sri'KKIXTK.VDENT J O. V. MILAM- Independent oandl. S date for County School Superintend i dent at the election November 4th. I'rini'lpiil und Supervisor of school! ? for 21 yearn In county. Citizens and Business Mens CITY TICKET For Mayor O. O. AI.ENDERFER For Recorder M. U ALFORD For Treasurer ' . MARY A. WEBBER " Councilmen 1st Ward A. V. Hl'UBARD paw. Mcdonald Councilmen 2nd Ward El) JAX.NEV DR. BERT ELLIOTT Councilmen 3rd Ward A. J. CROSH t. B. W. PAUL '' Councilmen -Itli Ward .. R. B. HAMMOND ' J. W. JACOBS. I, Correct Ibis sentence: "They arc very loving in public," said he. but they n(Wer quarrel in private." "Drought is unusual along the coast," says the geography. Also strangely enough, along the border. Billy was getting acquainted with the other animals at the motion pic ture studio. There was Ben. a black bear, nnd Polly, a green poll parrot, nnd Big HI ingRhumos sOg- THE BOBBING FAD. Auto Thief Get. Two Years. PORTI.AND, Ore., Oct. 2 Two years at McNeil s Island penitentiary was the icntenru ImiKised today uKn Aluurt Freeman, who pleaded ttullty In federal court to uutomolitlo theft. M w arrested at Drain. Ore., In July, charged with ntealliiK a car at dUiyntiile. I'al. After his urrcst lie escaped, tut 'B4 recaptured. , MY NIECE'S hair is bobbed; I view her with nlnrm; me thinks she has been robbed of beauty nnd of charm. Sho had the finest hair, ero scissors made it drop! No damsel nnv wliere could boast n finer crop. It waved above her brow, it curl ed about, her neck; I froze upon her now, nnd she appears n wreck. Hut I'm n mossback wifht, in love with ancient ways, and noth ing seems just rifiht that happens nowadays. 'When I rebuke my niece for cutting off her hair, she answers "Give inc. pence they do it everywhere! At every modern scheme you mossbacks stand aghast; oh, would you have me seen a relic of the past f V hen other maidens bob, you'd have mc wear it long, avoid the barber's job, and got myself in wrong. When other heads arc shorn, you'd have my topknot great, you'd have me feel tile scorn of people t,p to date." Defiantly she talks, defiantly she grins ; she 's glad she has no locks demanding bands and pins. She almost makes mc feel that she's in earnest, too, rejoicing that the steel was sent her tresses through. Hut.sometiines when I pass her, room I seo her rise nnd face the looking glass with teardrops in her eyes. . Ob, Celia, why those tears? And why that sigh dis lnnyed J Are they because the shears have made your glory fade? You face me with n stare of righteous wrath und say, "I would not have the Jinir that I have thrown nwav!" Volney Dixon has purchased the I reeidenee of J. R. Carpenter at 516 I South Grape street. Mr. Carpenter, who was formerly' with the C. J. I Itreier company, of Medford will mak this home at Glendale. ( alifnrnin. NEW TREATMENT FOR SWOLLEN GLANDS people who have enlarced Klands oiiKht to know that by freely apply ing Emerald Oil dally the Kland can lie hroUKht to a head and all the Kernis and poisonous recretlons dls- chnrced and detronl. Furthermore the npenln wilt heal surely and speedily and without l,av tiiK an unsightly scar. people who desire this treatment should -ure a two-ounce orlfeinal bottle of Emer ald Oil (full gtrenisth) and use as di rected. It Is l very lni -ent rated preparation and a email quantity lasts a Ions time. It ts alo U"d to re duce swoll.'h veins ant! (flssolve Kot tre. HeathV Drug Store and West Side Pharmacy. . - ..Adv. a new performance they were about to put on In the studio. Now, Billy, our troubles nre about to bepin," said Toodles, "for we are all to tfo into the studio and rehearse our parts before they take our pic tures for the film production. I Ju hate rehearsals for some of the an! ma Is are so slow, or they j;et stubborn and won't go through their parts, and it is very tiresome for those who have to wait.1 "What do you suppose we will have to do this morning?" asked Billy. I hear It is to rehearse a circus performance where the two baby elephants are to be dressed up. one in a woman's clothes and the other In a man's. The one who represents a woman is to carry a bin; doll dressed as a baby in long clothes, while the other Is to carry a satchel. When dressed they nre to stand on their hind legs and walk in the grand open ing parade. Every person and animal in tho parade has to do some stunt if they can be taught one. If not, they are to want around in line anvway uo you mean to tell me that this film company owns a whole circus- aiiimn Is. bareback riders, clowns, and all?" asked Billy. By no- means! I see you know- nothing about the production of mov ing pictures . so I will explain to you Kars, a baby elephant, and last but not least a big white goosie gander. They all expressed themselves as being happy to meet Hilly and hoped J that when tho movie people want a he would enjojerformlna with them, circus, house, mountain or anything After the introductions were over else in their picture, they go to the Toodles and Billy walked over to one mountnln. circus, or whatever it Is corner of the stable and ate their own Uhev reoulre for their nlctmn .,i ,b dinners. And this Is where Nick found the whole troupe of animals, people them,when he came to get them for and so forth to the place whore their Children Cry fa MOTHER :- Fletcher's Castoria is especially pre pared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Fcverishncss arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving natural sleep. To avoid imitation j. always look for the sipiature of IaAAlM ,VVofatflr ij''0.-Xg Opiates. Ph,Clan mry where recommcml iu Its purity depends upon three essential f a c t o rs : Wh o 1 eso mo ness of materials; ab solute cleanliness, and successful ' ef forts to keep It and serve It free ot Im purities. Ask for Nutritious Ice Cream Jackson v County Creamery V I IF IT'S I jMIlt WORK 1 In other " words, we pmm have made a succesa- ful effort to combine rwjy r tho necessary modern ML facilities nnd the ex- 'Ify pert human skill es- IN sentlal to the satis- jL factory production of- flk '; high grade mill worlt 'Ifl 1 ' "Milled on Honor" j A I (my. TROWBRIDGE f! W CABINET WORKS j ffi 10th afj Grape Sts. h j jj Meafort. Oregon 3 I I I