0 ,
MEDFoitn matt; tribttn'k, mtcdfort?
PAGK FOUR O
OREGON'. TUESDAY, JUNE
ST
4
I:'!.
I'!
Bedford Mail tribute
AM INDEPRKDHNT NRWRPAPEB
FvBUSHEU EVKHY A FT KH NOON 11081"'
; . SUNDAY. BY THB
uenroui) muntinu co.
a " Th Medford Sunday Ifonring Sun la fnrnUhwl
nbacribfeia desiring th aeven-dr daily Dtw
Office: VMl
North Fir itret.
Tribune Building,
Phoue 75.
A consoKdstlon of the Democratic Time, thr
Med ford Hail, the M(dfrd Tribune, the Boutb
era Oregoniau, Uie Aihlttnd Tribunv.
80RE1ET W. RUHL, Editor.
B. HUH ITER BM1TU, Uirugtr.
By Ull In Alvinee:
Diily, with ftunday Pun, year i
Daily, with Sunday Run, month ...
Dally, without Bund ay Hun, year
Daily, without Sunday Bun, month .
Weekly Hail Tribune, one year
Sunday Sun, one year
.7.60
, .7ft
. 0.60
.fit-
8.00
1.00
Y CARRIER In Wed ford, AiMsnd, Jackugn
file. Central I'olnt, 1'boeniz, Talent and on
Blchwaye:
Dally, with Sunday Run. month .76
Daily, without Hunday Hun, month 96
DiMy, without Hunday Sun, one year.. 7.60
Dally, with Hunday Hun, one year 8.60
All term by currier, caah in advance.
Entered iceond-olana matter at Med ford.
Oregon, under act of March 8, 1876.
, Official paper of the City oi Urdford.
Official paper of Jackson Comity.
1 The only paper between. Albtm), Ore., and
imico, uaiirornia,
distance of over 400
ml lea, having
"J ierriee.
wire Aasoclated Preaa
Sworn dally av(r(j rrrcolatioD for Mix
Month ending April lat, 1024, S40B, more Our)
aouoie tne tirouiuiioii or any oiner paper puo-
iianva or circulated in JacKHon Uonnty.
MKUBKR3 OK THR AffflmrutTW. TTtKHS.
The Aasoclated I'reaa 1b exclusively entitled
to the une for republication of all newa die
pa tcli Pi credited to It or not othcrwlae credited
m tnu paper, and also to toe local newa pub
Uahed herein.
All rlfhta of republication of apeclal die
pa'.enpi nerein are ami reMrrefl.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
Atmimlrien Ih not a politician, ho
4 ' when he fulled to reach the North
i..i i. .n. i t
t of the ejuuttu
Kelso, Wn.sh., Ih doing a fairly fcoort
.(job of ImltallliK llerrln. III. Though
) ) our heroically terrified metropolitan
prcHH printH the details of the town
' funs, nrid editorially Hoi monlzea on
ji the evil thereof, It refrulns with k1'I-
iHh diffidence from mentioning the
J j hell ruining organ Izjillon f urn tailing
.i the momentum for tho rumpUH.
li
IU STS KKtUT OLT
( Kuem Krglster)
, iSPUINCKlKU), Ore., Juno 19.
I'hiirleH Hlvelt, of Lincoln,
!NvlrHka, gave u HpontaneouM
Utile at the meeting of the Spring
field Lions club thin noon.
" FarmerH are getting ready to liar
' voHt their ruined wheat crop, and go
;j Into bankruptcy und Cnliforniu next
winter.
'J The cuntcntn of the home were all
J waved by the neighbors many of
Whom wore drenched by the fire hose
while In the net of carrying out
'' Weighty artleleH of furniture. (Moii-
tuguo MeHnenger.) ' The Inevitable
huppena again.
Tho campaign against the white
pi no blister now being conducted hi
Jackson county, has nothing at all to
do with the old 'fashioned method of
handling a boy 'who instated on mak
ing u playground out of Main Htreel.
tiik mi rru:i) knock ,
(Mnrshflclfl Xcwh)
Martin worked conscientiously
In preparing for the hannuot nnd
Hall made a record trip from
Seattle to reach Coos Hay In time
for the banquet . A. K. Peck,
chairman of t he committee, ex
pressed exceeding regret over the
error.
t "N. Franklin bossed his daughter
;Moii. In about 16 years the daughter
'will flu the bossing.
. ' There was a military shindig last
' eve, and no silk clad shank was punc
i (Hired by n Mpur. The 'night before
the Battle of Waterloo, there was a
tlanee In Hrussels, Itelglum. "Beauty
if lind chivalry were gathered there,"
pic poem asserts, when along came
I, (ho Duke of Wellington!
,
fi i Another Prohibition enforcement
;J iiffieer, who diligently enforced Pro-
jilbltlon foi' the dther fellow, Is en
I route to a federal lock-up.
j The Humdingers, Inc.. will hold a
special meeting next week to deter
Mine whether the Avenida .1 Hi fen-.
irale Nonl crossing, under the smile
of Old Sol. is a bog or a morass, or
both. This batch of paving failed to
jell properly.
4ds are now equipped with bur.
Haw attachments, but they don't need
Ihem.
AN
tiikv m:vi:k iu n; you
(Portland Spectator)
Some years ago, the Spectator
incurred a deal of censure by
pointing out that It wasn't the
the city's business to provide for
a lot of tramp motorists free
accommodations in auto camps,
which were generally nuisances.
The howl that greeted this state
ment 'was no vociferous and of
ficial, that the Spectator felt
quite confident that the free nuto
camps 'were a greater nuisance
than they had been painted.
'jear Aunt Mtcy:
fl J am a girl, weighing HS pounds,
In spite of all I can do, and consid
'jlpred goodlooklug. I have been run
li hlng with a.L'nd loot. Charlie Sta
('bomh, my home guard shiek. objects
'o such carrying on. I told him there
, ; ivere B2 weeks In a year, and he
f 'tMight to donate a couple to America.
; ;ild I do right ?
Worried Lot-al Flapper.
"Still water
can take cat
right. Your
f weeki i n
runs
e of
figure
.rrert.
deep."
herself.
mi the
but re-
America
Charles 1
number
Inernti'
the lie
it
U III be
ra in pineal .
i hem jlint il
1 W dai kest
tvSvtv dawn, liv youiscll'.
MORE GOOD NEWS FOR
TIIK rejmft tlmt the Or
by Riilph I). Suhneeliicli of
sentative of tho Fleishliaeker interest, anil completed to tlie coast,
is added evidence that Southern
dented commercial development.
Accnrdinir to reiiorts from San
is in the interest of the Hill lines,
tween them and the Southern
well to remember that the Pacific
the Hill lines, and Hill officials
erty, at least as individuals.
So many railroads in this part
had pencils, that any new announcements of railroad construction
are taken with a grain of salt. As the Grants Pass Courier says,
tlie people of that community "will reserve their fireworks until
tlie train runs to Crescent City,"
with the recent announcement by
Wcyerlmuser interests in the Klamath Falls, and President Sproules
counter-move of a new line lrom
fornia, there must be some fire, where there is so much smoke.
As Klamath Falls will be the chief beneficiary of new railroad
development to that city, so would Grants Pass be the chief bene
lieiary of the completion of its railroad to the coast, but Mcdford
in: the most thriving city between them, would benefit materially
from both.
The development of Klamath
Mcdford 's most important markets, and the construction of the
Grants Pass railroad to the coast, would mean a water rate for this
city as well as Grunts Pass.
Jledford rejoices in the apparent f-'ood fortune of her neijjibor
iiiK cities, not only from feelings of natural friendship, hut 'because'
whatever benefits one district of Southern Oregon benefits all.
QUILL
Ancient saying: "When!'
Archaeologists come to him who
' 18!I0:
cheek.
liarel'oot boy with cheek
There are 12S7(i kinds
enjoys martyrdom.
Sut, sir, an apple sprout made you what you are; why experi
ment with new methods.
Height of pessimism: Shuddering
other nation may seize the North Pole.
, A hick town is a place where
heat prostration came out of a bottle.
It, isn't (ravel that humbles people. Il is coming home ami dis
covering that they weren't missed. -
It 'might be worse. Suppose
constantly to get something to fill
The trouble is not so much that
there are so many more things to
ji Correct this. sentence!: "I mustn't, blmy out herq, said thb
tire; "there 'k -no'shade for the boss to work in." .
IDAHO FOOTBALL STAR
FARMED OUT BY SEALS
HAN FIIANTUSCO. June i!3. Ver
non (Skippy) mivors, former Univer
sity nf Idaho football star, now on the
111 of the San Francisco Pacific
Coast leiiKtie bbseball team lias been
farmed out. Tho Seals expect to use
him limit your, lleciiuso of iin intact
regulnr lineup si Ivors Rot llitlo chiiiico 1
to play and Miuiuncr Klllsnn fools ho !
should have a- sonson of i-oKular piny-
lint (o develop hlnv. , 1 . '
KINDNESS.
TIIKIiK'S soituMHit' kniu'Uinr at tin; door, m neinlibor, bt'iU
tni khully things; lie's heard that I am sick and sore, ami
nivrrh and frankim'tutse he hrin.iis, and wholesome (lonlumts
from his store, and custard pies and chicken 'h swings. To brinu
me victuals in h tub he toiled along tho dusty Rtreet j what;
though it he forbidden grub?. The heitfhbor's thought fulness :
is sweet: t he doe stands by me with a club and tells me what .
I must not eat. . I!y bus stands idle in the bine ,it will no longer
deign to ebon, and I regard it with a pain, and wonder what I
ouht to do; for much I hate the stress and strain of tinkering
with bolt and screw. The passing moVorists survey my bus from
which no chugs ascend, and some of them will stop and say, 'Is
'there assistance we can lend? I.et us inspect your bnfky dray,
and you sit down anil watch us, friend. M Sometimes a wind
removes my tint, and blows it seven versts or three, which makes
me weep, for I am fat ami spavined in my off hind knee; mid
kindly men, perceiving that, soffn bring my kelly back to mc
Whenever I am steeped in grief, whenever I have woes to burn,
my friends bring solace and relief, and see my "winning smiles
return; and of all dunces I'd be chief if lessons fine I failed
tit learn. ly faith in mankind is restored by some new kind-
every dav; mv neighbors
own min'cnis away. t conic ii
spiruii: nit- to rump ai play.
ml
S0UTHEBN OREGON.
1'iiks railroad wilbo taken over
Portland, believed to he a repre
Oregon is on the eve of unprtin;
I'raneiseo, the lluililinckci' move
in the present railroad war be
raeitie. In this connection is
and Eastern was purchased !'
are still interested in that prop
of the stiite have been built by
which is wise; but nevertheless,
the Hill officials in Portland, the
KLamath I' nils to Cornell, Cali
means the development 01 one of
POINTS
waits.
of tan. 'PJU5: Shod boy with
of worms, including the husband who
at the thought that some
everybody knows that Smith's'
man couldn't live without laborin-
his head. .
a dollar is worth less, but that
spend it for.
G j4. ?. Veterans Meet
Annual Encampment
OrtHOON CITY. Jm.-'e '"23. Blue
conteil, Ri'ay -haired veturans, tliclr
wives. Bona and daughters were Kriests
of tho city today from every part of
the state of OreKon. -The first or ,the
three dnys 41th annual encampmont
of the (1. A. R. opened this morning.
Foi null business will bo taken up
at a meeliiiR In the city hall this'
evening. A blind concert tit 7 o'clock
and tho campflre and pntrlotic pro
gram at 8. o'clock will conclude, tho
program of the first day.
Wednesday a parade1 will be a
l'eiituro pi the morning's, .program.
alwavs can afford to lav their
cheer mc
when I'm bored. i'i-O
CROSSWORD PUZZL1? STRY;
' Y&LOWSTONE PfgK - V
- G
Uncle 7-J4 has just come home trom a trip out to Yellowstone
Park, way out west. He 6-13-2U-28-32 to have had a wonderful
time! You 6-7-8, tlicy have gnzzlcy 1-2-3-4-5 there that are so tame
they will conic right up to your 21-22-23-24-25 door and ask for food.
There is 26-27 big 19-27-31 there like we have at the Bronx. Uncle
Kd told 28-29 that one day oc was lying on the parlor 15-16-17-18
reading a paper when he had 16-24-30-33 been there a minute and
one 10-11 the curtains moved slightly and there was a big grizzley
looking in at him. To 1-8 sure he was a bit surprised at that but
'when he found out that it was a mother bear and that she 12-13-14
two little hears up to the window, too. he was astonished indeed!
The father bear came, 3-9-15-23. only he didn't look in the window.
Uncle's pussy-cat fluffed up and said "11-18" at the bears. But
Uncle Ed had a 5-10-17-25 spot in his heart for -the bears and fed
them all. , '
Answer To Last Puzzle '
1-2-3-4-7-14-20 (ostrich), s-y-10-11 (runs), S-17-23-30 (uses;, 6-6 (to),
6-12-1S-26 (tall). 12-13 (an), 8-1B-22-29 (rate), 15-2128 (eat), 28-2D-3lK.il
(test), 20-21-22-23-24 (haies), 14-15-16-17-18 (cease), 25-26-27 "(old), -6-13
(on), 10-18-24-31-32 (nests). ,
Onpjntfht. IU2A. hji Th InternnUtmnt Rtfntttrate f. X . - ;.'
Personal Health Service
By WILLIAM BRADY. M.
Slflnad l.tt.r. crlllnTra to Mraonal
VMtm.nL will b. annv.rtd by Or. Brady If
Uttt.r. .hould"b brlf nd wrltt.fi In Ink. Owing to tho largo numbor of l.ttora rooolvod, only
a fow oan bo anawtrfrd ri.ro. No roply oan bo mod. to guarloa not oonfornlna to Irutruottoo.
Addrooa Dr. Wllllajn Brady, Ir caro of Uila nowopapor.
DccivllIK
Once I had a patient for a year or
so. Needly to say this story has a sail
ending. Iut for a year or so my pa
tient and I pot along very well toRCth-
I was fairly honest with him
which I now realize
was a mistake and
he was fairly dis
honest, which is al
ways a mistake. My
patient had been a
heavy drinker und
he came under my
observation with his
arteries. , kidneys,
liver and things pret
ty badly damaged. J
Hut I jollied hiin along and appealed
to his eense of duty toward his fam
ily and nil that sort of thing, and af
ter a time he quit drinking. So he
promised n;o, and so he constantly re
assured mo whenever wo.nvet. All tho
white ho was drinking, but perhaps as
a mere symptom of his alcoholism he
felt bound to nssuro mo that ho had
no further craving for drink. Ills ar
teries, kidneys, liver and things re
mained in status quo. Hut we felt we
were lucky to remain alive. One day
my patient developed pneumonia. Ho
was desperately III with it. It was In
February and the air was fine, so we
gave him the air, the open air treat
ment, to tho horror of the neighbors.
Ordinarily an alcoholic patient puts
up a, poor fight, usually a losing
fight, against Npnottmonla. But my
patent was not entirely outa luck. Ho
came through. Not entirely through,
but he coasted along smilingly for sev
ernl days past the more or leas w. k.
"crisis," and ,1 was on the point of
"pronouncing" tho patient out of dan
ger when Just as all the neighbors
had predicted he up and had a chill
and went into a high fever nnd deli
rium and everything, and after a day
or two we found that he had developed
empyema which Is an accumulation
of pus In tho pleural cavity.
Well, it looked bad for us all. My
crazy open air treatment seemed des
tined to ' eternal damnation in that
neighborhood. Hut I was young and
with all tho nonchalance and sang
frold of youth. I announced to the as
sembled family, neighbors nnd sight
seersmost of whom were regular old
Irish biddies who were trying to per
suade the distracted family to can me
and call In sonio good Jewish doctor
and I must admit most of the Jewish
doctors are good that we wer1 gonna
operate at once. Then I argued the
pros and cons with tho assemblage on
the one hand, while With the other I
dragged the patient off to tho hospital,
and with both hands I operated on
him. the operation was a complete suc
cess, as siK-h things go. The patient's
mind cleared up and ho sailed along
the uneventful cortrse of convalescence
for just four days. Then .quite sud
denly ha informed tho nurse fie would
hnvo -a drink;' Certainly. Sha brought
Women are IMgfat
Stopping kitchen mussing on hot mornings
, Quick Quaker cooks in 3 to 5 minutes v
The right summer breakfast ... no hot kitchens
HEATING your kitchen on summer mornings is
a folly. Cook now the vigor food men like and
children need vrithout fuss or bother.
Oats and milk . . . that's the right hot day starter.
Quick Quaker makes it easy.
Cooks in 3 to 5 minutes. Doesn't heat the kitchen.
Keeps the family well protected against hot weather
drain . . . and you against its bothers. ,
All that rich flavor'of Quaker Oats is there. Quick
Quaker cooks faster. That's the only difference.
af-trtj!.f JWAlHfc
HMltfi mnm fivolan. nnl In dlammmm d!..nn.l. nr
a .tamped. ..If addvftMM .nv.loD. I. .mIoma.
tlie Doctor.
him a mug of Adam's ale. He sniffed
it and threw H on the floor: Ho meant
whisky, and bo quick about it. Alas,
the doctor had left no order for whis
ky and tho course could not give him
any. Maybe when the doctor caino In
the afternoon ho would order some.
But afternoon was long years away.
The patient waxed wild again, and
tore tho dressing off and dragged tho
drainage tube out of his side and gen
erally made tho' welkin ring, and by
the time tho doctor arrived tho patient
was raving in tho conventional man
ner, picking at the bed clothes and
deftly dodging the lunges of three
headed cats and wicked assaults f
(cow sized solders and other creatures
too gloomerous to mention. Of course
this mania exhausted what strength or
vitality remained, and . so tho story
endeth.
Now I often think that maybe, if
that patient had boon honest with me,
the story might have had a .happy
ending.
QUESTION'S AND AXSWEHS
lorihi hi First Aid
I had a rash break out on my wrist
nnd I painted tho place with lodln and
the doctor said I drove the poison In
it proved to be Ivy poisoning) and
now the calves of my legs and my feet
arc covered with It. (A. B.)
Answer The iodin may not have
been the best remedy, but you must
have misunderstood what the doctor
said, for of course nothing of the sort
could "drive poison in." Ammonia
water would have been a better first
aid application, had you suspected the
nature of tho trouble. A poison ivy ex
tract for hypodermic Injection is now
available to physicians and one or two
doses of such an extract a home-
pathic remedy will bring prompt re
lief in many cases.
Molasses
Please let mo know if a tablespoon
ful of molasses stirred into a glass of
water and tnken three times a day
would benefit one's health or harm it.
The brand of molasses I use contains
sulphur dioxide. Is thnt a poison?
(Mrs. J. E.)
Answer Molasses is a good food but
of no particular medicinal value. In
liberal quantities it is slightly laxative.
rhe amount of sulphur dioxide in mo
lasses Is probably harmless, but why
not be a little crabid about it nnd de
mand molasses without the sulphur
dioxide. Old fashioned molasses had
that delectable flavor and contained
no sulphur dioxide, which is used in
the kind of molasses grandma used to
give us for our bread tasted nothing at
all like the sulphur and molasses con
coction that purports to be real New
Orleans product today. The old fash
ioned kind was the. product of the old
fashioned way of making sugar, by
boiling the cane syrup in open ket
tles. Some' molasHes la still made in
that way. The modern sulphur diox-
d&n
to 5 minute
Ide molasses is a by-product olfcahc
manufacture of sugar by the vacuum
method and in this process sulphur
dioxide is ut-i&'rally used, for the
badly educated public actually prefers
a bleached white sugar to tho natural
brown article.
, . , . Tlwi 3roa tiers
So many people seem to have a
touch of neuritis pr rheumatism Is
this caused by improper diet? Will
Turkish, vapor or sulphur fume baths
help eliminate the poison (J. C. J.)
A'uswer Most of the people pur
porting to have such "touches" are
just groanern. What poison do you
refer to? I know of no poison which
Turkish or vapor baths help eliminate,
and sulphur fumes are used mainly to
destroy -vermin. . '
Who's Who
Jamc8 J. Stomnv.
Tho raceuc election of James J.
Storrow asi president of the Boy
Scouts of America, mnrka tho first
change in the presidency of that
body s I n ce its
foundation. Colin
II. Living stone,
who has just re
tired" ofter fifteen
years of service,
was 'one of the
f o u h ders of tho
movement.
The new presi
dent has b e e n
c I osely Identified
with the move
ment for a num
ber -of years as a
James J SfOoeow member of the na
tion a 1 executive board and
chairman of tho region covering
the New England states. Starrow
is a member of the banking firm
of Lee Higglnson' & Co., chairman
of the board of the Nash Motors
company, and director in many busi
ness corporations.
Along with his many other ac
tivities, the new president was chair
man of the Boston school board for
three years, 1905-1908, and Good
Government candidate for mayor of
Boston , in 1909. Subsequently he
wasy elected to the Boston city coun
cil and served as president of the
council during the last year of his
four-year term.
During ' the1 war, as chairman of
the 'Massachusetts committee ' on pub
lie safety, 'tfco pblneer organization
of its kind n tho country, he did
outstanding work.
Storrow is a great lover of outr
door life,' and several years ago
went, on a. camping trip beginning
in tho Grand Canyon In Arizona, and
terminating at the Glacier National
Park. In Montana. However, his fa
vorite- recreation ground has always
been tho Whlto Mountain region of
New Hampshire, in which he has
taken annual t camping"' ttiips for
many years. : .. . t..'. '
COMMUNICATIONS
Two r.rcat Americans.
To the Editor: ' .
Two fcrent Americans have recently
passed rrom our midst: General Nelson
A. Miles and Senator Robert M. LaFol.
letter tho one. a pioneer soldier the
other, a pioneer in the world of states,
manship. Their abilities divcrped
along individual lines, but they shar
ed. In common, a trait which was dom
inant, in tho character of each cour
age. They were hot only physically cour
ageous, but possessed, to a remark
able degree, that rare quality an un
assailable moral courage.
'ihey were outstanding personalities
in the march of events Torchbearers
who blazed the' Way and appreciably
quickened the slow process of human
advancement. Each possessed a dis
cerning sympathy and an Inexhausti
ble patience towards those of lesser
vision, who must hovo more halting
ly along tho paths of progress. These
two men have rendered enduring ser
vice. They grasped the Torch of En
lightenment held it high nnd bore
it bravely forward. Let us be grateful
and carry on to tho best of our abili
ties. 'Call here no high artificer to raiso
His wordy monument such lives as
. these
Mako Death a dull mlsnother and its
pomp
An empty vesture. . . . Such as
these
Are tho hidden streams that undvr
ground
3weeton' tho pastures for tho grazing
Kine,
Or, as spring airs that bring through
prison bars
Tho breath of Freedom; or as a Light
mat ourns
Immutably across the shaken seas
Forevermore by nameless hands re
ncwed
Where else were darkness and a-glut-
len snore."
From "The Torchbearers" rtv Ertllh
Wharton.
Ariel Tlurton Pom prnv
Central Point, June 22.
No. 781-0.
In the Circuit Court of the Rtato nf
vregon. tor tne t.ountv nr .Tnrkgn.
In the Matter of the Seizure of one
uinsniooue automobile, motor No
B-11854, 1924, Oregon license No.
141-381.
State of Oregon. County of Jackson, ss.
To W. S. I'ate. Address, Medford.
Oregon. And to -J. Pospislc,. Klamath
Falls, Oregon. "And to whomever it
may concern: '
in the nnme of the State of Oregon:
You. and each of you, are hereby no
tified nnd will take notice that the
following described personal property
to-wlt: One Oldsmobile aiitomnhlic
llconso No. 141-381 for the m.
1S54, Motor No. K-1I8JJ
rial No; .. wn nni.n.i
by - the sheriff of Jackson coun
ty. . Oregon, on the 23rd day of Dec
19?4. at about the hour of '!;
of said day, In the county of Jackson
state of Oregon, In the vlclnltv of
Jacksonville In said county; that said
one Oldsmobile automobile ever since
has been; and now Is. In the possession
and custody of said sheriff of Jackson
county. Oregon, jind Is being proreeded
against In the above entitled court for
the forfeiture of the same for a vio.
lation of Chapter 29. of thB r-..,
f-iws of u-.gon for th
'"ing an a relating to the furrolt,,,-..
i.l sale of boat vehicl.tH nnd othr
mvyaii,-... u., n ,ht ,.,,..,,
ransiwtation or possession of into..
V ' r ill I 171
OUALITV
We-tlM-d t' H'k- of a feller liuv
hnthiH enough t' lo it 'thing, but
t'dUy It's IiIh mtosdiie. .lost cor.
tnln people kin use big words with,
out apueariir ridiculous. " ...'J
'Children's Pictorial
r Cross Word Puzzle
" , Running Across.
Word 1. In the picture;'1'
Word 4. A bird.
Word 7. A small Insect related
to the mosquito. Plural.
word 8. What weeping pro
duces.
Running Down.
1. . A mark at which to
Word
shoot.
Word 2. A prominent city in
Illinois.
Word S.
Word 5.
'A western state.
Upon.- .
- Word : 6. :
An impersonal pro-
noun.
' ' VeSTERDAY'S PUZZLE
: ANSWERED , :
icatlng liquor within the State of Ore
gon: and that all persons having or
claiming any interest In said Oldsmo
bile automobile, are -hereby required
to appear before the above entitled
court in the county Court house of
Jackson county. Oregon, at Jackson
ville. Oregon, by Thursday, the 25th
day of June, 1925, which said day has
heretofore been duly set by tho ahovo
entitled court ns an answer day hero
in, and to defend against said -proceedings,
and that unon their failure.
so to do, a Judgment of forfeiture ot
S.lld Oldsmobile nntnninhltn will hn en.
t'ered.
This notice Is issued nnd given to
you. and each of you, llursuant to an
order duly made by Hon. C. M.i
Thomas, presiding judge of the above
entitled court, on the 28th day of May,
192G.
Witness my hand and the' seal of
said court affixed at Jacksonville.
Jackson county, Oregon, this 8th day
of June, 1925.
DELILIA STEVENS.
(SKAT.) County Clerk.
A cottage that Is ;
painted without and
within Rladdens the
eye of the boholor '
nnd doubles the joy of
those who . make It
their home. Paint up
and be comfortable as '
well as happy. At this
shop you will find
artists' supplies " "6f '
standard . exllence,
Priced right. , . . '
I III
I. . fl '1
em
rollov Poter Paint's Bdvcc '
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