s
Q
T"OE FOTTR
MEDFOTm MATTj TTtTBTTNTS, MTCDFOTm OTiTCflOX. FTUDAY, MAY 29, 1925
HEdford Mail Tribune
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
KTBUSHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXOIP
niTwniV nv the
MEDKORD PRINTIN 00
At Medford Sunday Homing Sun la furolahed
UMCritwra oeainng mm aeeu-uj "-
Office: Will Trihune Building, ISiT-sft
porfb Fir straat. Phone 7 ft.
- A eonaoltditlon of the Democratic Time, the
If ed lord Hail, tlie Heuiora inuuna, ui ouuui
tnf Oregon ln, Ui Aahland Tribune.
ROBERT W. RUM Editor.
B. 8UMPTKR SMITH, UmimgfY.
fty 'Mail lo Adrinro:
i Daily, with Sunday Sun, year ...
! Dully, with Sunday Sun, month .
, pally, without Sunday Sun, year
... .70
... 0-60
Dally, without Sunduy Huu. mouth ... .OA
Wwkly Hull Tribune, one year 1-00
SojuLaj Hun, one year 8-0
T CAKRIER In Med ford, Auhland. Jacknon
rtllc, Central Point, I'uoenii, Talent and oi
, , Pally, lih Sunday Bun, month .76
Ditily, without Sunday Sun. month..... .Ob
bttlly. without Sunday Sun, one year... 7.60
f)Py. with Sunday Sun. one year 8.(0
11 terms by carrier, cean in aavance.
nrrd aa aeconrl-elaae matter at Uedford
Oragoo, under act of March 8. M9.
Official paper of the City ot Uedford.
ftfii'tnl puppt of Jackaon Couuy.
H KM HKRH OK THR AfrtttrJlATW fit ESS.
' The Aanoclnted Press la eicluaive ly entities'
M the une for republication oi au newa me'
Mtz-hea credited to it or not other-wine rrfflte
fa tulw puper, and alao to tht local newa pub
ialiMl herein
AD Hgnta of republication of apedal dl
a'uftte hereto are auto reaerred.
: Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
' The Itif flans attacked the French
Tuesday on a river whose nu mo does
not matter, and the French adminis
tered a sevore defeat, unci annoyed
the nifflniiH something awful, by re
treating. v This Is a trick they lea rnod
during the tlreat Fracas.
Another cad has knocked a lady
down mid out. In a rough ronutnee.
Instead of stand Ins up like a man
find beinK pumped full of lead, when
she endeavored to shoot him.
' School Ih out, throwing the care of
the kids exclusively on tho shoulders
Of he police.
&t-'-' O! .DON'T MIONTIOV IT!
' " ( Sh loin Ktntcsmnn )
V -Kditoi' Htatesman:
At 8 o'clock, or shortly after,
') Monday afternoon, two young
men walked east on Court street,
' cutting diagonally across the post
'office grounds, heading toward
Willamette university. One of
, them was attired In blue trousers,
v H light shirt, tan shoeH, and, 1
' -believe a cap. The other wore
V' absolutely not a single garment
)iut a shirt. No shoes, Iiohc, or
trousers. It was not a bathing
suit, a running suit, a boxing suit.
,,,U was nothing but a shirt. And
V licit a - very long shirt at thut.
:i Want ff, tho Wind had been blow
'Alng ev'r so slightly?
1211a Whlttaker Is lame. A cow
kicked her between tho separator and
the. vat. (Clreonleaf News.) Cruel
and unusual.
Nothing much Is doing In the purity
baits of Oregon, of which Portland
and Salem are tho respective centers.
As expected. Prohibition enforce
ment has tangled with . President
Coolldge's devouring puitslon for
economy. Locks will not be knocked
off safes containing public fundH, and
enforcers will not 'be allowed to run
hogwild In the mint. Hence the
President Is not In sympathy with the
18th amendment.
POOH THING!
(Ilultltiiore Nun)
My Slater Hue's a frail young thing
When she is homo with mother:.
Whenever there Is work she has
One ailment or another.
Her back's too weak for making beds
And certainly for sweepln';
In fact, she only uses It
To He on when she's slerpln'.
Her hands aro far too delicate
For sllngln' suds and scruhhln',
They're only fit for her to give
Tho Iv'ry keys n drubbln'.
But worst of all, she says her shanks
Can't stand much errand runnln'
And Judgln by the skirts she wears
They're only good for sunntn.
But. gosh! you ought to see my slss
When she's not home with mother:
She's anything but frail and weak.
Believe her little brother!
Just take her where a dance Is on
' And start the mtiHtc playln'
And watch that back too frail for
work
' Start shlmmyln' and swayin'I
Them shanks that Hhrink from doing
- chores
Can step It off and step It
Till robust cowboys wilt away
And limp home pluinh decrepit.
Yen, sister's dreadful frail and weak
When she is home with mother,
T But she can't pull them alibis
And fool her little brother.
. Here It is Friday, and how many
knew this is "Phone For Your Food"
week. -
. DATA OX 1IKAVKV
: ((WttyNhiitic, Ph., Times)
To the Editor:
Sir: The basis of calculations of the
step of Heuvcn is found In Kevelatlon
XXXI, 16: "And he measured the
city with the reed, 12, oon furlongs.
The length and the breath and the
height of It nre equal.''
Twelve thousand furlongs are
7 02O'uo0 feet, or 150; miles. The
cube of this must be taken In order to
obtain the total dimensions of Heaven
which are 46a,793.0BtMU".U"".oou,oo
cubic feet.
With these figures neiore us. we
rnn ritrure out jum uuw mum
there Is In Heaven for each Individ
ual bouI. A single calculation is given
to prove Just how easy the process
r-Anllv Ih. ' The meeting place of the
angels probably Is the most spacious
and requires at least rSilf tho total
space. We deduct another fourth for
streets and open places. im n
1 9i I'.k 272.nn0.0n0.0lin.000 cubic feel
for 'the octual dwelling plat-'O ot the
angels.
BE CAREFUL ABoSt THAT FIREP
FOREST fires nre beginning to Appear as daily items. The great
est tragedy nature faces is the forest fire. Many of them
are unavoWable ami spontaneous ; hut many are (bie to the careless
ness of heedless folk. The picnic season is beginning and it is a
good time to make a hearty resolution that nature suffer nothing
from your fault tlys summer.
Fire, whether in a city or at sea or in the forest, s a very terrir
hie thing, annihilating in its progress, nftst difficult to control.
It sets no bounds to its destruction other than the consuming of
everything its flaipes can feed on. A match thrown to the ground
can begin it; a cigarette stub or pipe plug can do it; an uncovered
camp fire often does it.
For years there has been a steady campaign educating the
American people in the preservation of their woods and forests.
Still there are fires, for the hardest thing in the world to teach the
human race is self-protection and the most difficult defect of char
acter to remedy is carelessness.
Those who enjoy nature should be the first to care for her and
the last to destroy her.
QUILL
Typical Arnericnn town : One
Among other good Kubstitutes
Some men are born fighters, and
lor reasons more obscure.
A model home is any kind of
outside.
So many unpleasant experiences begin with the words, "It
seems there were two Irishmen."
Americanism: Having two children and hoping to keep control
of the country from aliens who have twelve.
Strange how many "respectable" people you sec in places where
yo uare ashamed to have them see you.
Primitive man had one advantage. He never came home to n
lettuce sandwich, spread with mayonnaise.
Unconscious uhmor: A man pleading an inherited taste for
whiskey as an alibi for drinking while mule. , .
I
There was romance among the gold diggers of '49, but the gold
diggers of 19 think romance is bunk.
The mosquito is like a child. When he stops making a noise,
you ltnow he's getting into something.
Aif idealist is a mnn who has liberal notions about surrender
ing the other fellow's advantages.
You can't tell. Jinny a man gets a reputation as a conservative
merely because he is a slow thinker.
Co-operation is tho big thing. The best pitcher in the world
can't do any more than keep the score tied.
Scientists studying the problem
some suggestions in a flivver's back
At any rate it is sporting to
gives a new man a chance to get
Now that nnuchtiness is snreudinir into the nrnvine.es. the man
who goes to New York on business
It isn't intelligent to be nhead
n peach sprout grow by howling for
Life lias few anxieties after the
definitely gone, and the fenders
Correct Ibis spnlcnee: "Yes,
"I really prefer the paper towels."
RipplingfihijrriQS
'wait
REALISM.
TN NORTHERN Kurope writers toil to show how peasants live
and die; their books are often fragrant of the soil, and of tho
barnyaril and the sty. A wrinkled woman with n hoe wades
slowly through some chapters ninie, and, all she talks about is
woe and griefs that don't take in their sign. The wrinkled
crone has seven sons, tall men wil;h sandburs in their hair, and
they are always packing tons of fhitilo burdens here and there.
And everything they do is vain, no harvests follow when they
sow, their mules are mired down ln the lane, their cows go dry,
tin 'ir pigs won't grow. Their livt's don't know a lighter side,
disaster frustrates all they do; n man may marry, but his bride
turns out next day to be a shrewl A girl may marry, but the
gent who loads her to the village kirk, soon shows ho cannot
make a cent, although his life is nnade of work. And so, these
dreary people trail through turgid pages sad and gray; the only
thing they do is fail and do it iji a dismal way. There is lio
humor in fliesc books, ami if yoti take one in your hand, and
read it in such inglenooks as yon may have at your command,
you will not have a sprightly boor, unless you gloat o'er fruit
less lives, exult in sorrow stark ml dour that haunts the peas
ants and their wives. Yet many soulful readers rise proclaim
ing that these books are great ; tho authors- draw the Nobel prize.
and take in roubles !$ the oraU
iuiren in innue tins world, tins
can't be hired to read sad books
POINTS
that needs another hotel.
for tire rubber is sole leather.
kodic join the Democratic party
structure that will keep grouches
of rising vertically might find
seat.
dismiss a crooked dry agent. It
his.
is really going on business.
of'vour times. You can't make
reaches.
girls are married off, your hair
crumpled.
indeed," said the travelng man,
w&yon ,
AH sorts of people are re-
tearttil vale; and as lor me i
that make me wail.
v f v l
CROSS-WORD PUZZLE STORYj
v HEE HAW HEE! ;,,-
pH sS S& ST- W W 3o 3T- a. iV
This 1-2 a donkey. Have you ever owned 3-4-5 ? They look S
bit like 8-9-10-11-12.
My 21-29-34 said that 1-4 Spain and Italy donkeys are 9-15-20-28
a great deal as beasts of burden, 21-22-23 you know that?
See how very 13-14-15-16 our donkey is. He is eating grass by
the garden 17-18-19-20. He's 17-25-33 the name of stubborn all right !
I've taken him away from that gate ten times and he 3-6-10-16 goes
right back to 22-30 again.
Look he 2-5-7-12 me coming and 23-31 you notice! He turns his
back to mel Ah donkeys are 24-25-26-27-28 for fheir naughty ways!
"I will take my baseball 13-18-26 and hit him a crack 1" said
brother Tom. ,
"Don't do it!" I cried, "He's only a poor dumb animal!"
"Oh, he is no deaf 8-14-19-27, 1 wager 1" cried Tom, "Though he
makes out he is!"
He'll kick you so you'll not have an 29-30-31-32 of a doubt h
means business!" I warned.
'l Answer To Lost Puzzle
1-2-3 (bee), 4-9-13 (haB), 1G-1U-23 (Amy), 2-6-11-15 (ever), 1-5-1014-18-22
(bitten). 21-22 (an), 8-12 17-2U-24 (since), 19-20 (Me), 13-14-15-1U 11
(stran), 4-5-6-7-8 (hives), 23-24 (ye), 3-7 (e-e), 9-10-11 (ale).
Copyright, l!)25, by The International Syndicate
Personal Health Service!
By WILLIAM
8nd IttUrg psrtatnlng to personal nomith end hysiens, not to riliM dlftgnoili or
'rutmont, will b aniwertd by Dr. Brady tf a tampdt fit ad(hMed anvalopt It anoloMd.
LtUr thou Id ba brlaf and wrltttn In Ink. Owing to tht larga numbar of latter raoalved, only
faw oan bo antwarod hera. No reply oon ba mada to ajuarlaa not oonforralng to Inatruotlona
Addreei Dr. Will lain Brady, lr 'are of thla MwoMaper.
Krroiicoiis Ideas
The usual conception of insanity is
a manifestation in language or con
duct of disease or defect of the brain.
liut the law draws a sharp line be
tween sanity and insanity, thus:
(1) A criminal is
Insane if he does
not know the nature
and quality of his
act or if, knowing
.the nuturo and qual
ity of his act, ho dues
YMgftjffL. 1-r t-ih'ht or wrong.
Ajm, :JrVr (2) A testator is
f rX insane If his mind.
memory or under
standing Is unsound.
(3) In a lunacy examination, made
by a commission of physicians expert
in that line appointed by a court of
record on application of a relative
or other person directly concerned.
the individual is insane if he Is inca
pable of managing himself, and his af
fairs. These points of dfferencft be-
j tween the common idea of insanity
and the interpretation of insanity. in
law should be known to everybody.
A purely medical Interpretation of
insanity permits no such clear divid
ing line between sanity and insanity.
Medically a great many persons who
are sane by these legal tests are as
certainly insane by the test of common
sense. It is not at all unusual for a
paranoiac to win his freedom from
nsylum prison by convincing a court
of his sound judgment and intellectual
integrity. The legal definition of in
sanity fails to compass monomania
delusion upon one subject. This per
mits some very dangeiuUn persona to
remain at large.
People generally havo only vague,
and usually erroneous notions about
tho causes of Insanity. Some of the
wrong notions are in themselves harm
ful. In another talk, to avoid confu
sion, we'll consider the true cause of
insanity. Here I am going to men
tion only some erronebus idens people
have about the causation of insanity.
(1 ). Pxcessive smoking, particu-
; larly cignretes. is perhaps a common
(stigma or sign or symptom of a de
fective brain, for everybody knows
j that morons aro the chief offenders
'in this respect, but there is no reason
to Imagine that it is a cause of in
sanity. 1(2). Indulgence in alcohol or the
cultivation of drug habits is likewise
rather an insane net, a manifestation
of an unsound mind, in the majority of
I cases, although we know that chronic
alcoholism, at least, not rarely lend
'to actual insanity in adult or mature
life.
(3) . That overworked notion of
"overwork" with its attendant hokum
nbout "a breakdown,'' so often utiliz
ed to conceal the facts from the, cu
rious public, has nothing to do with
the cnuse of Insanity. An individual
who is already Insane may have cer
tain fixed delusions nbout his work,
business cares, debts and other things
which would not worry him in his
right mind, . ( v'
(4) . Insomnia Is ho more a cause
of insanity than neglect of exercise is.
Here, again, a not uncommon symp
tom in certain types of insanity Is
popularly taken to be a cause. In
nine cases out of ten, insomnia is a
temporary difficulty and the victim is
mentally sound, but now and then the
nocturnal restlessness of some one who
is insane makes such .an Impression
upon the lay mind as to ernse the com
forting observation that It meant
nothing liko that in the other nine
cases. 9
(M. In a notorius quack "museum"
iiich for many years brought poor
deluded victims to the crook who ran
It there were some hideous representa
tions of ihe fate in store for young
persons with bin! habits. The fake
showed the wretches confined behind
bars presumably in "nsylums." what
ever thry may be. Mere, too. the ntue
fact applies; that is. these hnhit8may
be rather characteristic ot insan or
V-stI
BRADY. M. D
About Insanity.
lidotic individuals, but are rarely if
ever the cause of insanity or idocy.
(6.) The absence of any Instance of
Insanity in one's ascendants is no as
surance that one is not insane. Quite
ns Important as cases of frank insan
ity, in the inheritance, are cases of
such heredity equivalents as epilepsy,
hysteria, chorea, neurasthenia (what
ever that may be), somnamulism, mi
graine, alcoholism, drug habits, crim
inality or perversion.
Qt'KSTIOXS AM) AXSWEII&
I was astonished to read the article
in which you said that one's diet does
not affect constipation. I spent the
(winter in Florida and ate. a great deal
of oranges and grape fruit, and while
I was there my bowels never were bet
ter. (D. H. R.)
Answer. I am astonished to read
what you said I said, for I said noth
ing of the kind. I simply asserted that
no wholesome or proper food or ar
ticle of diet is constipating or binding,
and I added that certain foods are
more laxative than others, so you see
you must have mlsundorstood what I
said or else the printers have been
moro careless than usual. What we
eat largely determines constipation.
Send us a stamped self addressed en
velope and ask for Kules of Breaking
Cp the Constipation Habit. ' Please do
no clip this, but just ask for what you
want. I cannot send the rules unless
you tell mo that you need them.
Plucking KyebrowH.
No, It doesn't injure eyesight even
if you pluck all your eyebrows out.,
Cantvr Not Communicable.
Relative- visited us shortly after an
operation (having tho larynx remov
ed), and while here she kissed us all,
espueclalty our 6 year old boy, re
peatedly. Only now have we learned
thift she had cancer of the throat, and
we are terribly frightened. (J. F. C.)
Answer. There is no occasion for
any anxiety on that score for cancer
Ii snot communicable anyway.
Ky clash Culture.
For quite a while I have been put
ting vaseline on my eyelashes and rub
bing it on the edges of the lids every
night, hoping to make my eyelashes
grow long. Lately I have been hav
ing some trouble with my eyesight.
Mother thinks the vaseline is the cause,
and she would like to know before tak
,lng me to an oculist,
j Answer. It Is silly to imagine that
you can Increase nhe growth of tho
eyelashes by applying anything to
them or to the eyelids. The petro
leum jelly Is not likely to bo the cause
of any trouble with the eyesight Of
course, you may have Infected your
eyelids if the .petroleum jelly Was in
an open can. Any such medicament
should be kept in a collapsible tube,
for protection ngainst contamination,
or if It is kept In an open container
then it ought to be sterilized by boll
j ing or other means every few days,,
The feltow who has ho time for his
health today will have no health for
his time tomorrow.
Wong Pon
.Chinese
Medicine
For Treatment of
Acnte and Chronic
Dtscoa of . Men
and Women.
Cftnvr and tumor trtted. In Arena, kid
wy, iJutMrr and stomach trout, (its,
hernia, rupture. coKld, female troubles, par
iIvsjk, frrvr, pneumonia, asthma and throat
trw-Me. rheumatism, amenorrtio, goitre,
oon u mpt ion. catarrh, pi lea, hydrocele, al
bumin Off'ca Houn: 9 4. M. to g p. M,
PAfttllltallM Il
21 Soutti Front St MtdforgVt, II
is
O' course 111' tlulllllKC lius lui-n 1iiu
but If Klntc llorls hud luid nn u -t-
(Into musiui'lio n bullet i-ouliln' luivc
leri lialf of It. JII.'-h l'eai-1 Moots lm
bont'lil a lUkln' suit tin- unto rlilrs.
Timely Views
on World Topics
Steady Improvement or Kiiroiieun
Kconumir Condition Seen hy
liritlMi lx'mler. I
"During the last twelve months
the economic condition of Europe,
has materially improved. And the
most satisfactory fenture of this im-
provement 1b tho
fact that it has
been firm and
steady, not vio-
lent and spectneu-j
lar," so declares
PhMlp Snowden
British statesman,
in a recent article.
He goes on to say:
"The foreign ex
changes liave
made a great ad
vance toward sta
IdlHy. The move
ment of the ex
changes is probably the best baro
meter of the economic condition of
tho world. By this test the coun
tries of Europe may be said to have
passed out of a state of high fever
Into a condition of normal tempera
ture, though enfeebled constitution.
"The stability of the exchanges
and of currencies is the essential
condition of trade confidence. When
the currency of a country fluctuates
violently from day to day, or from
hour to hour, nil sense, of security
Is destroyed. A spirit of reckless
ness seizes everybody, and trade and
finance becopie a gamble. All ..the
ordinary motives of Industry are
undermined. ,
"The curses of Europe in the years
aftor the armistice vast inflation,
depreciating and fluctuating curren
cles and exchanges, budget deficits
if no( wholly removed have been
vastly mitigated in the last twelve
months. .
Germany, Austria, Hungary, Po
land and Russia have reformed their
currencies, and these new currencies
arc maintaining stability. There are
at present no signs of any reaction.
Dawes Plan. JIcliw Centr,? Europe.
Whatever may bo or.? ' views of
the ultimate practicability of the
Dawes plan, there can be no doubt
that the Immediate effect of this
settlement of tho troublesome repa
rations question has ; been to .very
materially help the economic-and fi
nancial restoratoin of Central Eu
rope. "As was the case before the war,
Germany must still be the main
spring of the economic machinery of
Central Europe's trade. A prosperous
and stable Germany will revivify tho
surrounding countr!est and their pros
perily will react on' world trade.
"The main benefit to Gormany,
and to European reconstruction, from
the establishment of the Dawes plan
is that It has put the budgetry posi
tion, and also the currency and
fiscal systems, on a sound basis. The
fixing of reparations payments at n
definite sum has removed the feel
ing of uncertainty ns to what might
be demanded from her which pre
viously existed, nnd which was fatal
to effort on the part of Germany
to restore her economic life.
Poland Gains Proud Place.
"Tho great work of tho League
of Nations in promoting the recon
struction loans for Hungary nnd Aus
tria has had a most beneficial effect,
not merely on the countries directly
concerned but upon the condition of
Central Europe generally. In Hun
gary in particular, a marvelous
transformation has token place. The
budget position Is satisfactory. For
eign trade Is much more active, and
railway traffic returns have Increas"
ed to the extent of putting the rail
ways on a paying footing."
If we, would spend ns much time
and money trying to prevent sickness
as we" do trying to cure it, there
would he less sickness fo-cure. '
QUALITY1
L CORNER J
Fountain
Lunches
and we have Winstel's
Delicious Candies.
Davidson's
Corner Fir and Main O
MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS
Children's Pictorial
Cross Word l'uzle
now TO SOLVE, PUZZLE.
The nords start in the numbered
Rquares and run either acrusg or
down. Only one letter is placed in
earh white square. If the proper
words art found earh combination
of letlera in the white squares
will form words. The key to
nuzzle the lirst word is Riven in
the drawing. Below are keys lo
the other words.
Kunuing Across.
- Word 1. in the picture.
Word 6. The singular of tha
verb "are."
Word 6. Our redeemer or de
liverer. Word 8. Une of the points ot
the compass. Abbreviated.
Word U. A stinging weed.
Plural.
Running Down. '
Word 1. Another name for buf
falo. Word 2. Our country. Abbre
viated. Word 3. A very hard stone
that strikes tire with steel.
Word 4. A fabled mun-eating
monster. Plural.
Word 7. To employ.
YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE
ANSWERED.
Before the Rnln.
We knew it would rain, for all tho
morn,
A spirit on slender ropes of mist
Was lowering Its golden buckets
down
'into the vapory amethyst. ,' .
Of marshes and swamps and dlsrhal
fens ' -: I
Scooping the dew that lay'inthe
flowers, . i l.
Dipping tho jewels out of the se.v.
To scatter them over the land; in
showers. i . 1 . :
-. i
We knew It would rain, for the
poplars showed ,
The white of their leaves, the Am
ber grain . , -1
Shrunk in the wind and the light
ning now , .
Is. tangled in tremulous skeins' of
rain! ; '
Thomas Bailey Aldrlnli.
Tyh Bisiii
mm
'mi
m
HAVE A CARPENTER DO -i
YOUR PLUMBING . -Vj.
RIDICULOUS! you say Yet that . to
what hundreds of people do' every
day when they engage the services df
other than a trained RECTAL .SPE
CIALIST to cure their Piles. No wonder
they receive no benefit and continue to
suffer, and condemn the doctor for their
time and money wasted.
My years of training and experience
treating RECTAL and COLON ail
ments alone enables me to give a written
lite-long UUARANltc
that 1 will cure your Piles
or REFUND YOUR FEE.
Write todiy for my FREE BOOrt '
HFAW s4 n lM.
-i aryj. J, iuii, 11. LF.,III1
rUKILAND UrbJUti. SEATTLE OFFICE.
lean D turning SOS-wa Slwhr StiflM
I AN rVMAlN 6TM AND PINE
CASH PAID
For Second-Hand :
Furniture and Stoves
W.A.KINNEY
Furniture Houi
315 E. Main Phone !t f
I T o t . E M
Q ' E I ti D S
il - T- 1 I
'j roems 1 hat Live
port
Dr O
0 TM