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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 9, 1925)
o o e o o o o o o. o o o o o o O n O v PAGE TOVU Mjjm99 MEnFoRf) MATT, TRTBUNTK. oMKD .OnEnO...XI!ESPAY.-JTI,9...19r I5dfod Mail ikibunr AH mniCPRKnCKT NEWSPAPER RBL18HED EVERY AFT1HN00N KXOBP1 SUNDAY. BY THE MEDFORD PRINTINO CO. ft Ufdford Sunday Horning Hun U furnlahed ntecrltwm docirlng th mo'daj dllj mw t9- ' Oftlest Mall Trlbunt Building, lS7-tV Port nr trt. I'hoiic 76. - A consolidation of th Democratic Ttmea, th HfOford Hall, toe iirdiora iriuuni, u oquid tra urtgomtn, uie Ainuna inuunt, , BOBEKT W. RHHL, Editor. 8. BUMFTEK SMITH. alangr. U all In ArWanr' Dally, with Munday Sun, year t7.ftfl ,. Dully, with Sunday Hun, morito in Daily, without Sunday Hun, yar ..... 4.60 Dally, without Sunday Sun. month ... .06 Wek)j Hall Tribune, on year 1.00 SHifKuy nun, one year Y OAHRIF.R In yedford. Aahland, Jackson , rllU, (Vbtral Point, Phoenli, Talent and oi ' Hiartmava: 1 Dally, wftb Sunday Bun. month I .76 Dally, without Sunday Sun, month 6b , Dally,, without Surtd:iy Sim, one year... 7. ft" Dallr, with Sunday Sun, one year 8.60 AU u-rmi oy carrier, caan in advance. ' Knttred at fteond-claBf matter at Uedlord, QtKin, under of March B, 1M7U. klKHBKltJ OP THE AMrjClATrrrJ TTIKSS. The Awwlnted Prfna Is eioliiaively entitled 10 lue uat ior re)iiiuioation oi an newa uia patdiea credited to it or not otlierwlae credited 9urQ nerein A,U rfrtit of republication of apeclat dla wffhr herein are alao rewrfed. Ye Smudge Pot Bj Arthur Perry. Winter has boon Hitting In the lap of ftprlng long enough, und Spring's foot must he asleep. The President disapproves of the "use of gas In war." It would not hurl any to Hhut off Home of the pence time nupply. Secretary Jnrdlne Is coming June IfBth, and no doubt somebody will call him Secretary Jardiniere. HORRORS OF TltlTII (Press Dispatch) Judges, prosecuting officers and members of lcKlHlativc bodies, both national and state, talk, act ohd vote one way and daily drink another. They have neither the courage to voice their true opin . Ions nor the cha meter to conform their private conduct to their public professions. ' Nobody is buying the smutty mnga- alnefl, the disappearing piles in front of tho newsstands being duo to evap oration. i 1 Gooseberries nre ripe. A gooseberry being1 a ulster to the carrot, the latter being occasionally found in soup. The gooseberry is used in plea, und if pro perly approached will squirt like a grapefruit.' A gooseberry In good health, findH no trouble In penetrat ing the nincademteed lower crust of a pie. On the bush the gooseberry Is not bothered by tourists; uphills, or woodpeckers, A dog owned by Lester MnCann had to bo shot as It was acting like a rabbi. Ho gave that family u good Mure. ( Ua k or, O re., l)e m ocrn t . ) My gosh! William Jennings Bryan says he rlH stop talking when the monkey ttial Is ended, which is no sign he will cease speaking. IIKRK'.H VOIR M KHALI (Ktiut Mills Sentinel) Karly und lute, to the eminent jeopardy of our intestinal tract, wo have preached vociferously tho doctrine of spending home money with tho home merchants. Inflating of molehills into Roxy Ann's continues unabated among our professlonat civic disturbers. Every once In so often a kid shows up on the Main Stem gulping a sugar coated piece of broad and butter, and falls over a dog asleep on the side walk, while watching a newlywed couple being escorted through the business district on the bow of a 4il. The Notro Dame system will be used by the UofO football team next fall. Here is a chance for a religious fuss, and the revealing of a pupal plot to sneak up on the kampus. EIXSTKIX TMKOHY COXriHMKI) (Salem Capital ttnurnal) NIAGARA KALLH. Out.. May . 21. (A. P.) "Kour-polnt-four beer went on sale here this morn ing and thirty Americans flocked across the International bridges in hundreds to sample It, Will you please tell uu if it's proper to allow a,, dear friend to kiss you lifter hringhig you home ut night? (Portland Telegram.) Yes, Haroict. KCI1CNCK Some leurned gent With beetling brow Steps to the , fore And tells us now Thut man Is what He eats. Just that, Which ought to knock Man's ego flat. There's naught In that To puff and please A haughty gent Who's fond of cheese; Nor can It swell The heads of men . To he the fruits Of hog and hen. And Surely they Are much put out Who find they're Just Some saur-krnut! Or Is thnt man More sadly cursed Who needs imisf be , A Wienerwurst ? The girls, of course, Tome out A top: - JCach la. no doubt, A lollypop. .'But fthowtan guess, However rash, , What Is a gent Who feeds on hush? , . iBultlmore Sun.) IT MUST f EDF0RD pledged herself to I. tional Gunrd to Crater Lake. To date less than half this number Needier to say this pledjre must be carried out. It is too late now to consider the question from any standpoint hut that of Med ford's reputation and iood faith. To assume this gigantic: undertaking for it is a gigantic under taking may have been wise or unwise. That is not the point. The point is t he obligation has been now, is simply unthinkable. I'rettv phrases, however, won't will ('hautauqna salutes. Kvery citizen of Medford, who this trip or donate the car for the filled and Medford 'k deserved reputation is to he sustained. RESTORING CONFIDENCE IN ENGLAND. IN illh FAC'K of unemployment trade. Stanley Haldwin. British ing the strife between capital and labor and in making a start at least toward the solution of the multiplicity of problems, which have troubled Groat Britain since early in the war. That the Hald win administration has been a success, none will doubt. When one succeeds after others hiivo failed tho niihlin lodks rround for the reason. The reason for tjie success of the Baldwin premiership seems to lie in his genius for obtaining co-operation be tween all groups. The method by which he obtains this singleness of purpose is explained in his own words, "Confidence 'breeds con fidence, and I would give it in the fullest and largest deirree." For tho benefit of his countrv labor and consumer Baldwin is instilling into every branch of Brit ish life the thought that lhn nmhl eniR of t.lin British TCmnitn nre the common problems of nil of tlicm toward their solution. Another leKSOIl lllP nnV llrifisll Of Enirllliul 1H tllllt the Solutions of worked out grnduiilly and nt a snail's pace, l'ainful experience has i.uiniu uie jrmsn unit mere is only disappointment in those reme dies Kiiarnnteed to work an instantaneous cure. QUILL Well, America ns would be hard ple began to covet their natural They have found platinum nenr Now all they need is a factory to Grass quickly obliterates the sears of battle and all trace of the labor you did on the lawn last week. ..''Jlornla'' usually iiieniis your the soft jobs and not kick about doinu the dirt v work. It is a queer world, and there who couldn't name a mere half-dozen film stars. Observing the frirls flash 'by nt that a horse once had to be "so COMMUNICATIONS Vrgos Support of Chautauqua. To the Kdltor: As advertised, tho Elllson-Whlte Chautauqua came to Medford last Saturday for a six-day program which ends next Friday. Each number given so far has been well worth the price of an entire season ticket not only from the standpoint of entertainment, but the Inspiration and Rood to be drawn from them. Surely no man or woman, boy or girl, could fall to receive inspiration from such entertainments as those of Mr. Alton Packard with his splendid car toon work und songs and mimicry, also the story by Captain Oudmund son is bound to have a wonderfully good Influenco upon its hearers. And the musical numbers are delightfully different. Yet a large percentage of people of this locality take no Interest in attending Chautauqua or in urging RipplingRhimos ty Walt THE CHECK BOOK. TIIR MRRCIIANTS in this town of Heck are always plad to get my trade, for when I buy I write a cheek, I ask no tick, the bill is paid. The merchant princes ""of tho town look rather pale around the pills, for they grow weary runniiiK down the men who do not pay their bills. And they admire the stately pent who packs his check book fro and to, that lc may pay up every cent, when buying hens or liquid plue. And be, that stately pent, appears like Caesar on the villapc street, he swells his chest and wnps his ears, nnd nobly wields his hiiuphty feet. He meets all people eye to eye, his bosom knows no cra ven dread, he does not owe for pup or pie, for bran or brisket, broth or bread, lie flaunts his eheek'book in the store where he has boupht a quilting frame; upon the slate behind the door no poods are chalked npninst his nanie. And when lie goes to blow some eoiff he do's it wit a lordly air, he orders worst or tenderloin as iiionarehs might, if they were there. The man who alwj-fs In debt, acquires nu abjit, slinking niivn; be off Ihe old bill yet. nnd wants In 1'iereliaiit prills let him wait until the payinir 9iiies aregoue; they're always speaking of the slate and his account inscribed thereon. He's humbled in a score of. waysOhe's jolted in his self-respect, and he's pursue throughout his days, by people anxious to collect. BE DONE. take the members of Oregon Ka- To do this, (KM) cars are needed. has been secured. assumed, and for Medford to fail put this proposition over. Nor has a ear, must agree to take trip, if this pledge is to be ful and threatened loss of foreign premier. has succeeded in nnell- and for tho uiIfmo nf nunitnl iukI that nil must work together cinvnpunmnt line fnmrlit tltn rmnnln tilt, pniintl-v'u npnlJnmo m.iut ho POINTS to "subdue" if some other peo resources. the diamond mines in Africa. make boudoir caps. 'duty to lot somebody else have arc creat and successful people sixty miles, it is hard to believe fteutle a woman could drive It." their children or anybody else's chil dren to see and hear these wonder fully Inspiring people who come to us on the Chautauqua circuit and offer their program at a figure that Is easily within roach of the average purse. Nest winter, perhaps sooner, Med ford merchants will be again facing the petty thefts and depredations that occur from time to time, yet many of them are refusing insur ance of the finest kind against such plunderers .when they refuse to sup port the comparatively few forms of wholesome entertainments for the young people (as well as older ones) that come to this valley. Vou be lieve that "an ounce of prevention is worth n pound of cure," then why not furnish the young people such delightfully inspiring entertainments as Chautauqua provides for them in stead of a Judge and Jury and ro form school later on Think it over, folks, which way Is best? M US. P. F. CLOSE, Medford, Juno 9. Mason can t pay hoy some I HI is green. me , m 'I' I- . XT .1 CROSS-WORD IN 'jj 3 June 1-4 the month of 2-3-4-5-6, so they say, but I am sure roses bloom 7-8-9 on 22-23 to the fall. I found a rose 35-36-37 in our garden in December. One very 2-H-13-18-21-31 finds roses in winter, however. 18-19-20-21 sifnee that time I have looked 33-34 our bushes 5-10-15-21-26 day. 28-29 you like roses 33-38 much as you do lilies 3-9 do you like them both? We have almost a dozen rose bushes in our garden we have 14-15-161 30-31 Ma says it's a 6-11-16 to pluck (lowers 17-23-28 then let them die. She says flowers feed her 38-39-40-41. Croihei 14-20-25 said the red roses look as if their 25-26-27 might come off 29-32-34-39 something. I don't believe they are dyed. Do you ? All our roses seem to 10-11-12 with one another to be the very prettiest rose in the garden. ' Answer To Last Puzzle 1-2 (of), 69 (go), 34-36 (on), 1718-19 (car), 37-39 (Ed), 33-34 (to), 2829-30 (use). 35-36-37 (one), 17-21-23-26-28-31 33-35-38 (conductor), 2-3-68-12 (fares). 7-8 (he). 10-15 (me). 10-1M2-13-14 IMoses). 20 21 22 (lol). 4 5 (or). 4-711 (oho), 25-27-30-32 (toes), 1316-19 (ear), 18-22 24 (ale), 23-24-25 (net). Cdtiyright, 1!)2S. by The International Syndicate Personal Health Service By WILLIAM BRADY. M. D 8lgnsd (altera parulnlng to Mrtonai nMilh im hytim, not to dlauM dlatnotlt o TMtmwit, will bo anowrd by Or. Brady If atamDod, oalf addS-Mood anvalopo lo anoloaad ttra hould"ba brief and wrlttan In Ink. Owlna to tha laroo numbar of UHara raealvad. onh faw oan ba antwarad nor. No rply oan ba aaraai or. .William braay, ir "ra of utit nawapapor. Wc's Hotter in Nowadays in certain ways we're getting better and shelter, as I, a well-meaning1 pessimist, I should say, am bound to admlt, yet candor com pels me and 1 confess I enjoy lining driven by candor to qualify this admission by V,a(lding that we ,.Sem -to bo t just marking'' tlmd- maybe falling back In other ways. These observations apply only to our physical well being. As I view the situation', our general progress Ini health is rather like that of a can-i didly obese wmonn 'getting out of n flivver If you catok her In the acti you think Hho is Just getting in. Tho lines" along which was nre making good progress in health building are mainly passive, for. In t our attitude toward health better-1 ment plans we are much like the old churl who, toward tho end, con sented to have a regular doctor at-, tend to him, but he assured the doc-j tor he had summoned him only to ptense some anxious relatives nnd he, j himself, had no fnlth whatever in j doctors or their pills and potions Tho doctor blithely responded that such a triflo made no difference at all a mule has no faith in a veteri narian, but the veterinarian goes right ahead and cures him just the, same. Typhoid fever which was for-J merly In. our midst as regularly as the autumn rolled ' around, is nowl becoming a curiosity, it is so rare' in civilized communities. The reason for this is not flattering to our In telligence, for It is wholly due to the sanitary precautions taken in our be half nnd generally' without our; knowledge or consent, by the public health authorities, and not In the, slightest degree to any interest or effort of ours as individuals. I Idle speculation and half baked theories aside, there is no known measure, no secret of .diet, bnthing. exercise or thought .whereby an Indi vidual can insure himself against the chance of infection with typhoid fever. It doesn't make n particle of difference 'whether he keeps fit or not. Typhoid bacilli have never shown any preference for unfit per sons, nor have they shown any pref erence for the system or blood of persons who are "full of poisons" according to tho half-baked theory of a certain shortcut healing cult. An athlete in perfect physical con dition, a vegetarian of the strictest type, a healthy vigorous young per son who religiously obeys every law of personal hygiene, or a simpleton freshly fortified by, any of the new fangled cult methods ls quite as likely to develop typhoid fever if ex posed to Infection ns Is anybody else. And such an individual, even though he has no belief n doctors or no faith In what he childishly cnlls the 'germ theory." is just as readily tin-1 munizeri against typhoid infection by the prophylactic hacterin or "antity-' phold vaccination" ns is the doctor himself. No doubt a few thousands of the men so Immunized In thej armies In the world war had no faith In such methods, hut strangely enough typhoid fever didn't partici pate in the casualty lists In the world war. The conquest of typhoid fever is only one of ma ox ureut blessing con ferred upon a pensive people by our iclh" !i'iio am hor 14V. and the conn ii0 1 of typaVid frvcr is only In part founded upon personal immuni zation with typhobacterin. Much edit must be given the universal care taken to prevent-epidemics thru pollution of putilfc water siQilles and the general practice of chlorina tion of such water. - - PUZZLE0 STORY . JUNE mada to vuariaa not oonforalng to Inatruotlon Some Ways. Another time we'll endeavor to ex plain why personal health better ment is so backward as compared with the steady progress of public health protection. QVll:STIOXS AND ANSWERS. Fond fo Company. I am going with a married man with a family. Is it right? C. T. W. Answer Well, some married men are.'' 'net tor company than their fami lies and others are vice versa. I am unable to say whether tho vice Is versa in your case or not. CoIIego Physiology. Our professor of physiology told our class (freshman) that the women today can wear narrower shoes be cause they remove the little toe. and after a while they would be able to walk even without toes, that we will become n toeless generation, rs all this possible? H. R. O. Answer It is possible to walk In a clumsy manner after one or more toes have been removed. An indi vidual may stump about after the toss of nil the toes. The amputa tion of any except the great toe scarcely affects the gait, that is, the loss of one toe does not cause limp ing. Sand for the Kids. Is whUo sand injurious for chil dren to play in? J. M. J. vnarr io Kinu oi sana is inju rious for children to play in. Any sand pile may become polluted, how ever, by the excrement of children or animals so that children In It may be Infested with the invisibly miall eggs of various intestinal para sites. This risk, however. Is out weighed by the benefit to health from t open air play In the sand pile. The sand pile should be rather In a sunny spot than In a spot always in the shade. Every kid should have a sand pile to play in. Yeast and Beef. You Informed a correspondent that "yeast Is as nutritious as beef steak, pound for pound." Have you not slightly overstated the matter? Com pressed yeast contains 11.7 per cent of protein, whereas beef steak con tains up to 21 per cent. Of course, yeast contains 21 per cent of carbo hydrate, while beef contains none. C. R. M.. Answer Beef steak, as purchased, averages from J2 to 14 per cent pro tein. It yields from 635 to 1000 calories to the pound, as purchased. Yeast yields 625 calories to the pound. Yeast is rich in vitamin and beef steak is poor In vitamin. Yeast contains more mineral matter than beef Bteak. Tho protein of yeast is of good quality and quite as suit able as the protein of beef. So I do not think I overstated anything. It does not Imply that yeast is a satis factory form of food for man. THAT COZY NOOK Main and Riverside for Fresfc Country . Buttermilk Sandwiches Coffet mad in acoffee p frsh every hou. Portland and Ian Francisco Newspapers and Medford Mall Tribune "O, I reckon ther's good luisban's niV bad husban's, but Pd study a long wlille berorti I'd marry another man Uiat ex,et'ted me t' blossom out after raisin' seven children," sighed Mrs. Joe Kite, t'day. What gits me is how them French alarmists who are wor rying' over what President von llin dcnburg'H got up his sleeve, luippeiicd t' overlook his vest. George II. Williams. Missouri's new senator, George H. Williams, who was named by the governor to succeed the late Seldon P. Spencer has practiced 1 a w In St. Louis since 1897 and has been Identified with the Republican state organization for many years. He is 54 years old and was born in Cali fornia, Mo., De cember 1, 18 7 1. He was the son of Circuit Judge J. M. Williams. He attended elemen tary and high GfcO. WILLI fttVis schools In California and took one year of college preparatory work at Drury college, Springfield. He enter ed Princeton university and was graduated in 1894 with an A. B. de gree. Taught hi High School. Williams then became an instruct or of Latin In a high school in Cali fornia, meanwhile reading law in the office of his father. One year later, he entered the Washington university law school and wns graduated in 1897. Of late he has specialized as attorney for banks and large commercial and , industrial in terests. He was a delegate at large to the Republican state conventions of 1900. 1902 and 1904, and at the latter wrote the party's platform. . He then became a member of the Republican city committee from the twenty eighth ward, and subsequently its treasurer. His nomination for the circuit ' bench followed in 1906 and he was elected, serving until his resignation In 1912. While on the bench he re-drafted the Juvenile court law of the state in its present form. He served four years as chairman of the board of children's guardians and resigned in 1920, after twelve years as a member of the board. On the U. O. P. Kxccutivc Body. Williams was a delegate-at-large to the constitutional convention in 1922-23 and was chairman of the committee on phraseology and ar rangements, and a member of the committee on submission and advices to the people He was chairman of the committee on resolutions nt the state convention at Springfield last year. He Is now a member of the executive committee of the republi can state committee. Williams Is married and has two sons, Stewart, 22, who is in busi-' nesd here, and Howard, 20. a law student at Washington university. His wife Is the former Miss Harriet Stewart. V' A Crack Golf Shot. His favorite form of recreation is golf, at which he is proficient, riay inir recently In Jefferson Citv he completed the 9-hole course in 33 j strokes and recently completed the St. Louis Country Club course in 79 An unusual feature of his appoint ment wns his recommendation by Robert H. Davis of Fredericktown Mo., who generally was regarded ns his only rival for the favor of Gov ernor Raker. Safety First Clean Windshields Dirty windshields and windows are dangerous. A bottle of MOLE will Jteep your car clean a year. MOLE, the new liquid, cleans and polishes glass in half time without water, f- soap, powder or paste. No muss or fuss. riUbIS "Digs under the dirt" all Grocer Mason, Ehrman & Co., Distributors Phone 144 Who's Who CliiltJ'cn'sol'ictoiia! Cross Word 511ZZ' HOW YO SOLVr PUZZLE. The words start in tte numbet square!) and run either across or down. (Inly one letter is placed 13 earh white square. If the proper words arc found each combination ot letters in Ihe while squares will form words. The key In puzzle Ihe lirst word is Riven in the drawing. Below are keys to Ihe other words. " El IVaMant Kunning Across. I. In the picture. Word I. Word 4. W ord b. uret'iatiun. Word V. Word 8. A carpenter s tool. A rout hern state. A by Relations. Company. Abbreviated, i' resent indicative of Word U. the verb "be." Word 1U. Another rather. word tor Word 11. A croup of Islands iwned by rnicl States in the i'uciiic. ADbrevihtion. 'Wor- A type of monkey. Word 13. A city in Alaska. Running Down. Word I. A dried fruit noted or iis iron Word 2. Io possess. Word 3. lo rfet away from. Word 4. What children do with a rope. Word 6. A system of words or other symbols used to take the place of ordinary words in a mes sage. Word 10 A structure built to hold Lack water, YESTKKDAY'S PUZZLE ANSWERED. Poems That Live Ode. We are tho music-makers. And we are tho dreamers of dreams, AVandering by lone sea-breakers, And sitting by desolate streams; World losers and world forsake is. On whom the pale moon gleaniu, . Yet we are the movers and shakers Of the world forever. It seems. With wonderful deathless ditties We build up the world's great cities, And out of a fabulous story We- wash ion an empire's glory, One man with a dream, at pleasure. Shall go forth and conquer a crown; ' . . . . And three with a new song's measure Can trample an empire down. We, In the ages lying In the buried past of the earth, Built Ninevah with our sighing, And Babel itself with our' mirth; And oVrthrew them with prophe sying To the old of tho new world's worth. For each age Is n dream that is dying Or one that is coming to birth. Arthur O'Shaughnossy. Wong Pon Chines PVtr TvnlmcK of Arotp anf ckrnk WscwaM nf fttbn mi WntnVi. C"mIm- t"",.r !""". M- tfM X.. ., ' """ and throt fottra. - Offlc Hmim A. 9 hi, ContuMtl.n Fm m r..-, si. m-- 4 4