Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 27, 1925, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ' 9
C
V(W. F0TT7
TVfD'DFO'RT) MATT, TTITBUNR. MEDFOTID.. OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 27. 1925
FUBMSHBD KVEV Ar-ntRNOOK JUUKPt
.. HUNUAX, BI 111 A
j 3 MRDruHU PRINTIM1 0T
Tfc Medlon. aundr Morning Sun is furnUhad
ntaerlben d n$ lbs Mwoilay laJw ow
WW. .
OHl(:i Hit) Tribune Bulidtu. I 17-19
norm rtr street. riuMw 76.
A oonutiditlon of thi Drmocralto Time, thi
Med lord M.1I, the Mrdfont Tribune, tbs South-
.... -v 41,. Ttlhui,.
ROI1RHT W 1(1' HI., K.fltnr.
8. HUHt'TKH 8MJTU, ii-iugT.
h Hall In Advunra:
Uttlr. with Hum I-7 Bun, year 97.60
Dully, with BuiiiUr Km., immth 76
DnlW. without Hundity Huti, year C.fiO
without Hunrisy Huti, month .... .96
V.eVly Uml Trltmne, on year n0
dwuiar Sun, Oitlt yew t-00
? OAKKIKR In Hcdfonl, AstiUwi, Jackrao
nil. Ontrnl Feint, rboenli, Talent aod on
tligtiwiys:
Daily, with Bundey Bun. month t .76
iUtty, without Hunday Bun, rotith. . , . , .66
Daily, without Hunday Sun, one year... 7-60
Dully, with Sunday Bun, one year 8.60
411 trroe by carrier, caah lit advance.
Knltred aa second -cUee matter at ftfedford.
Otvoi. under act of March 6, 1879.
(fftHrlal pprr of the City ot Bedford,
fifticial pMtr of Jackson County.
(worn dully a for;, mculation for six
avfttlia ending April Ut, 1924, amis, more than
iMll the circulation of any other paper pub-haUt-d
or rlrmilated In Jackson County.
The orly paper betwrr. Albany. Ore,,' and
Ciio. California, a d tut a lire of over 400
tilea, having leaied wire Associated Preaa
service, j
HEUHKR8 OF Till. A WnJMTT T-HE8S.
the. Associated Press la ncliislwly entitled
im the uw for republication of all newa dla
Mtthegt'taHltod Co It or not otherwise credits
m thlr paper, and alao to tlia local oawa pub
Behed herefa
All rifhtfl of republication of special dla
H'chrt herein are alao reaerred. j
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Perry.
wtlliam Jennings beyan.
ttt E AKK HiSnpre . people, and wo .want all arrangementa
VV Dimply niarle." Tina Ktatcmciit by Sirs. Hryan taday, re
tiircliii the funeraV of her husband, strikes the keynote of the
man whose auililun death on Stiiiilrt so ahoeked the entire country,
Sir. IJran was a simple mfu. Ilia fjreatneKs lay in his simplicity,
His strength lay jn his devotion to the simple things, of life. Un
I'Mially successful from material standpoint, Mr. Bryan remained
to the last "plain folks"; devoted at tho end aa hu had been
throughout Jiis life, to what ho believed to be tho moral, political
ami spiritual welfare of the common man ' ' " , " , '
The Great Commoner! That after all was the perfect and de
served Bryan tribute' He was a Great Commoner, great in his
loyalty, great in his fidelity, great in his f motional power. : . . '
It was peculiarly fitting that his' last fight should have been a
icligious. one. For active ' as he was in polities, Mr. Bryan was
never so much a politician ''or o statesman as a great Evangelist.
Even in his partisan conflicts, and iu spite of his partisan vagaries,
he always battled for the Lord; the contest was dramatized by
him as the age-old struggle between Good and "Evil, the hosts of
darkness and tho hosts of light, and Bryan led the battalions of
righteousness. ' . '--'..;
. 'When a public man as prominent politically as Mr. Bryan passes
on, it is usually tair to state mat nc was greany iiaiea ana greatly
beloved. But this would not be true of the Great Commoner. Un
like his more distinguished contemporaries, Mr. Bryan was jiover
iuited. Perhaps no public man was more generally disagreed with
nnd more consistently rejected, but certainly no public: man of his
generation was personally marc generally liked. ,'. :
The tributes which arc pouring in today from former friends
mid foes aro sincere tributes- For however bitterly one may have
fought Bryan, however violently one may have disagreed with him,
there was a sincerity, a simplicity, an iunato goodness and guileless
ness about the man, which calJiid forth ungrudging regard and gen
uine affection. ' '. ''''
CROSS-WORD PUZZLE STORY
. .. EDWARD'S KITE
Summary of morning's effort to fill
tlila; space, and high spots of the
BtrugRle:
'Greatly strengthened Copco ball
team, greatly weakened Sunday, but
held, the foe to a scoro In the early
SO's; ..,.':': . - '
' Hear details or sad swoot courtship
fpr a fish commlSKionor from southern
Oregon, I anil Irate piscatorial enthu
siast calls base botrayor Walter.
. Informed it is hot, ub already sus
lwctcd. ' .
Find . this evidonco ot DJor Kor
Smnek:f
j ; 'Vnncouvor, ' Wash., July 15.
; . Uout, Clarance KisKer, who ba.s
; l)eon in charge of recruiting hero
.for some nonths, has received
; notice of his transl'er td Bromer-. "
I'm whoin U. S. army ranks are
if to be filled up. .
: Abtl-evolutionlst comes up for so
ciable snarl. AdinonlHh him to read
I'salms 13ft,( verses 14 nnd IB.
; pisoover ' poor man" Mil's Vnndor
bill , married only worth $500,000.
; An lujiidlclous serpent moots an
iihtlmely end, acconllng to the Hoso
burg Nows-Hnvlow, as follows:
r; ,Mr.iMcCloud has been bitten by '
(Vrattlor before, and that Is given
' , the reason for tho hito this
) tlmn not cnusing sorlous trouble;
; The snako was killed.
. ,:30. am. Usually through this
front. Cigarette stock depleted.
I What has became of Old Jlm Urloves
ejld Joseph Under?
. Shako hands with new Salvation
Army captain and prcachor friend
from cam of the Cnscades. ' 1
Terrorism breaks loose in florbor,
Calif,' as relntod by Oerber's leading
paper, 'Tho Star:
'M The days aro hot and unplons
. t. but thore is a at lit holler
: place coining to those who reject '
i Hie offered mercy nnd full to no- ,
. ept salvation; unless they holong
'." trt tho nnlmnl kingdom, which, so
j IV' aa we know, has no soul. In
s'uttiose dnys of modernism the aoul
leBs animal triho is being mnnlfcst
..In' tno form of whnt they call
human beings. Drove tho boat.
.enmo to church and propnre to
nilss that hotter place mentioned
In nod's precious word. 1
Topic: "Ut "or buck!" '
Telegraphor starts whistling "Hot
Tliun In tho Old Town Tonight."
!'lko tho swing of the ononlng vorse
of VSonfarors," a poem, which porco
liite? nn follows:
Sljnnghnlod In Ban Francisco,
-AAd I fetched up In llombny:
Tho Bot mo afloat In an old Ulth
boat
Tflut stoered like a bain of hnv. ' "
Xvk panted In tho tropics . '
tWlillo tho pilch boiled up on deck.
A0I I've found gruh In n salt horse tub
Condemned from n naval wreck.
Prospective candldnto for tho logiB
lnture rams head In door, flees. Three
more of the samo, net likewise.
rtoehtn to hihol the following from
Kldorado, Kansas, Tribune. "The
Heretic":
Portia Jason, president of the Ad
vanced Thought cljib, called a hurrlod
meeting last night to set tie the great
hubbub at Dayton, Tcnn. Portia hnd
no sooner. rapped for order when a
ilnimiro member, nnted as a good
noiJBCkeoiicr, siilendld mother and
great help to her biiKband In ovnrv
way. arose and naked to sny a. few
wonls. Portia told her to proceed,
which tho iHdy did. towlt: "To m
mind this thing, evolution la onn of
tho useless tlilnun. Whv nnw.wnw n
much about mtr nneestors? They
nmon t. noip us out any nt the bunk
or the general store, or help our busi
ness in any line. Whv not mnUe morn
of'; whnt wo aro today? . Do betler
I'luerusj oey our taws moro. attend
trwnr own business n little clnRer nnd
try to make Ilfo worth living while wo
are hern Instead of digging hack Into
thff past and trying to change things
from the beginning. Then when we
Iwcopto ancestors ourselves maybe It
won't make tho folks blush when Ihev
. find out whnt we wero. I think I'll gh
noma now nnd sew on a row buttons
and sllek up the house." The meeting
adjourned right nwny. ' "Tho next
time," snorted President Portia to a
fnw friends aa thoy wore walking
homy. "I call a meeting on anything
no Important aad vital as thla here
evolution business, I shall certainly
pica my crowd." ,
; Noon: Pants nrosaer hangs self on
paiitorinm whistle. Holds high aon
rn no note 1 mln. 45 sees, nwmlll
bloat lasts Z seconds, -.. , v . ,
QUILL POINTS
Too many people confuse "liberal iniuded" and "nasty minded."
Bolshevism: The theory that the deuce is and of a right. ought
to bo equal to the aco. ' ' . . ' .
Dayton must admit thut there has 'been considerable evolution
in publicity methods.
An idea seldom becomes a cause until somebody begins to kick
it on tho shins. ! i . ; ,
The partner wished on us last night reminds us of London. Her
I ridic is falling down. ' ' '.! ;
r fTli e happily married aro ' those who have resigned themselves
to'oue another's imperfections. . , . ,-, s '.",
"' " ' i " '': ',
- America isji-'t n real Sahara. Sahara's oases are scattered about
inside, not. along the edges. ";
! Dawes might compromise, and let Senators talk only when they
hnvo something to sny. ', '
Brother 9-10 has two 1-3-V9-12. He keeps them in the wood
4-8-11-14. The kite will 14-15-16 down and then shoot upwards am
then 10-13 such funny tricks!
" 2-5 once 4-5-6-7 a message up in the sky. It was 12-13 heavy
that if fell off and we found it 15-17 the garden the next day.
i '. 1 -:.',',' Answer To Last Puzzle ' ".'V f V-
' 17-22 "(to). 1-2-4-8-1M5-20 . (sailing), 6-11-14-18 (aeaa), 12-13 (It),
16-17 (at), 3-7 (so), 1819-20-21 (sags), 6-9-13 (not), 6-7-8-9 (solo), 10-U
(h). 3-4-5 (sin). ' J) ''
' 11 . Copyright. 1915, by The International Syndicate '' 1 , " H' '
Personal Health Service
By WILLIAM BRADY. M. D- '
(UiM. Mtm Bwninlat w mna nMtik M krfiw not U .Imm .ImmmM w
Mmii, will k nwM by Dr. arato II . tUaiMtf. mH ttttmt wmtw. ) woIom
Uttora hwM'k. kfM m. wrlttw In 1st. Owls, to Uw ton. mimtar 1 toiton ntmt. mt
. mm m wwww Mr, n. nenr m. b. sua. i. iwm. mi
MM. Dr. willtoa tmtt, .wiWl Minsmfc .
i wtmut to HMtrwtloM
Time to Teach 'em Something.
The. jack is useful.' It is used to lift a car, a mortgage and the
family's social standing. '
A flirtation may or may not be harmless, depending on how
determined tho girl is. '. " . ' '
One reason why tho American dollar buys less is because it has
so much mitre to buy, ;
Doubtless chemical warfare is barbarous. Chemical hooch is,' for
that matter.
Correct this sentence:' "Having a wonderful time," wrote tho
family to old dad; "wish you were here." ,. '. '. C
But why did Naturo wasto that hide on an alligator? Most of
the time ho stays down where mosquitoes can't get him. -
Among charnclerislio bits of American architecture aro the, Co
lonial house, tho niovio theater nnd tho hot dog stand.
'Correct this sentence: "IIo has a lot of authority now," said
tltc man, "but he's the samo old humble fellow." . (
RipplingRhimos;
NEEDLESS.
THE grand old town of Needles has sizzling summer days;
tho coppers and tho beadles perspiring go their ways. Tho
brazen sky evinces no promiso of it change; mid clerks and
merchant princes aro fried, as on a range. The mercury is ris
ing while yet tho morn is new, to altitudes surprising, ' say
ninety-one or two. 'When dinner horns are screeching the fact
that morning's o'er, tho mercury is reaching a hundred and a
score". The days aro hot at Needles and changelcssly thoy
come, alike tj.s thoso old twoedU's, tho tweedles deo and dum. In
other towns men languish and suffer in tho heat, until they, .in
their anguish, pursue the weather sheet; thoy mark tho Nocdlcs
reading, and cheerily they drool, "Why aro our bpsoms bleed
iugT, This town is really cool! In Needles heat is pelting tho
voters to their knees, the sidewalks thero are melting, and char
red are all the trees." Oh, Needles, grand old Needles, I would
uol g you dwell though blithe promotor wheedles and argues
passing well. Kor me the cooler places along tho occau shores,
where men don't eook their faces if they go out of doors. Yet
you've a noble mission to make men satisfied with their ab
ject condition, when only partly fried, f hoir lives are dark, and
checkered, they think they're hot xtttil they see the Needles
Teeord. and then thev havf a chill.
Our health course, writes a Chicago
teacher of . teachers' in training to
teach. Includes physiology, bacteriol
ogy, the hygiene of heating, ventila
tion and lighting, and the course has
become a model for
other schools. 'AH
the work is made
personal and practi-
, ; cal. In fact,, the
dozen or so copies of
', -"Personal Health"
which are In the li
brary are In constant
demand. V
Enufi aed. ' That
book Is nearly 10
years old, and It was never intended
as a text book for students. 'The
course as . outllnod by this teacher
future- teachers are probably harmed
less by the reading of "Personal
Health" than they would be by read
ing some of the humbug magazines
that purport to be published in the In
terest of health.
A-Buffalo correspondent (presum
ably a teacher) prltes that hygiene in
struction has been a part of the regu
more benef iciaf to a person's health or
stomach than. a union suit which has
only one thickness around a -pcruon's
stomach . (8. H.)
Answer No. The thickness on the
contrary Is generally rather unhygien
ic. It is a bad principle to clothe or
coddle any one part of. the body more
than the rest
Cyanide
In your department you said you did
not understand what a correspondent
meant py cyanide to harden steel, Per
haps I can help you out. It is potas
slum cyanide,, a . deadly poison. Watch
repairers use it in solution for clean
ing brass and other . metals. . It .is a
rank poison, I feel sure, but please tell
us more about it. (C. H. B.)
Answor Three . to five grains of
potassium cyanide will kill as rupidly
as the notorious, prussic (hydrocyanic)
acid Itself will, the symptoms, treat
ment and post-mortem appeuranccs
being tho same as for prusslo acid
poisoning. It is used by photograph
ers, elcctrotypers and other techni
clans. Even workers In the mirror
allverlng trade use itior removing all
lar work in ohvsical education In one vor n"rato stains from their hands,
of the Buffalo hlKh schools for a num- Whatover value pottasslum cyanide
her of vnnm. And herptnfnro MPh may have In such technical operations,
teacher has arram-ed his own material. .each a -elhttl Poison ought to be more
using various books, and pamphlets,
an arrangement which Is not very sat
isfactory. ThlB teacher wants sugges-
carefuily restricted by the law than
seems to be the case at present. When
poisoning with prussic acid or potas-
ilnn. tr hoin him in. iho ninnnin-r of .slum cyanide occurs the effects are so
a more substantial course, and he. too. "ulck1-' ,ata- that there Is scarcely
mnhn.iin iho rin.iro tn muko iho in. 'time for any treatment to be of avail,
atruntinn nmeiic-ii. an ht nrh in-iiv. One antidote is ammonia inhalations or
Idual may make use of It In maintain- "- -n-ima i uminuma given in-,
Ing his own health in the environment tornallq. A mixture of ferrous and
in n.hik h. ii.... iierric suipnates ionowca ty a solution
Well. now. children, we're getting - Piassium caroonate reacts in tne
. . . . .. .. 1 Jttntlinrh with nrnsole n-iirl rr nalaa.
incereHiea, any now uui ipi us avoid i .
enthusiasm , for as soon as the unseen
Interests get wind ot any movement
to teach the boys and girls what they
should know, we'll be penalized for it.
sure as shooting. Let no mere teacher
or doctor develop grandiose notions
about education. The hidden proprie
tary Interests control these things, and
they , permit no interference on the
part of moro people..
But these letters from Chicago and
Buffalo teachers contained much food
for thought, in fact. Indigestible food,
and they gave me a rather pleasant
nightmare. I dreamed that we hvtl
discovered some way to avoid the ter
rible anger of the predatory Interests
and established the following unheard
of courses in the common schools, all
under qualified teachers who had re
ceived proper training for their work.
(1) For girls from 10 to 16 years
nf agei Care of the baby, 48 semester
hours; homo nursing, 48 Homester
hours.
(2) For boys from 10 to IS years
of age: First nid, 48 semester hours.
(3) For all pupils, requisite for en
trance to high school: Elementary
hygiene,. 24 semester hours; elemen
tary physiology, 24 semester hours.
(4) First year high school: Biol
ogy of sex: girls' classes taught by a
woman teacher, trained for tho diffi
cult sunject; hoys classes by a man
slum cyanide to form an Inert com
pound. If the victim of cyanide pois
oning survives 20 minutes he will prob
ably recover, for the poisoning is fleet
ing In character, owing to the great
vomuuiy oi me poison..
The Screen
Br Ye Press Agent.
At die Rlnlto.
A Zane Grey story, "Light of the
Westorn Stars," opens at the Klalto
theater tomorrow for a three days'
run. Jack Holt and Billle Dove are
featured as the hero and heroine, and
Noah Beery plays the bandit chief,
who Is the villain.
Bobe Daniels In "The Crowded
Hour" closes tonlKht at the Rlnlto
theater, she wears beautiful gowns,
but one Is more interested in watching
her submerge her personal self In the
character she Is playing than in con
slderlng her beauty or her clothes.
ino principal roies aro roayea ny
Misa Daniels, Helen Lee Worthing,
Kenneth Harlan and T. Hoy Barnes.
A Century comedy, "Her Daily
Dozen." an educational film and Peggy
II hi ley are other Items on the bill.
teacher lironerlv ouAllfled tn teach the
subject. I Each year preventable'dlsenses wipe
(6) Second year hlKh school: Ad- l"m P" M ,n population of tne
vanced hygiene. Including practical united states, equivalent to tho popu
pathology nnd the nrovent on of dis- " """""j. .
ease, 4R semester hours. C
() Third year hlith school: Chem
istry of nutrition, 24 semester hours:
diet. 24 semester hour.
And wo wore making great proRross
In tho upbuilding ot health whon tho
Interests got wind of it and I awoke.
QfRSTIOXS AND AX8WEKS.
Who Is Uio licet?
I haw a slek son and I want tn con
sult the bent nerve specialist In the
country. I have telephoned sevoral
hospitals and they have given mo a
doten different names. Surely there
must be one or two who are consider
ed the beat. Win you be good enouirh
o advise me who Is tho best. K. H.)
; Answer There are a thousand
best. I should be glad to recommend
competent specialist in neuroloay
and psychiatry in your own city or any
other city you prefer to visit. I cannot
designate the best. That Is a question
of personal preference. Send a stamp
ed self addressed envelope.
wnen a vikr Nrwl a Friend
Is a two plec suit ot underwear
Tell Blnkk'y's nephew writes Mm
tllllt ho WU HUCCCSSIUI III gill."
tir Shepherd Jury at Clilcngo. an'
....... iM u'mI Point.- Flask I
gravers an' padlock makers hain't
. . . " ...... ,.L,M.,.l.i' 111.
in' only ones mat
on account o' tli' liquor law, as
Klmer Swill curtain roUer fuctory
runnlli' day on' night.
PoemsThat Live
Tho Deslniotibn of . Sonnnchcrlb.
Tho Assyrian. . came down hke
wolf on 'tho fold, )
His cohorts -Were gloaming In pur.
plo and gold;
And the sheen of their spears wns
-llko, stars on the sea, '
When ,tho blue waves roll nightly on
Ufop iaiuee. ,;
Like tho leaves of tho forest when
summer Is green,
That bust with -their banners, at
sunset were seen;
Like the leaves of the forest when
Autumn hath blown,
That host:n the morrow, lay with
ered'and strown. '
For the Angel of Death spread his
wings on the blast.
And breathed in tho faco of the foe
as -he passed:
And the eyes of the sleepers waxed
deadly and chill.
And. their hearts but , once heaved
.and forover grew.': still! .
. 1 ..'''.-' r' , . i-
And there lay the steed with his nos
trll all -'wide, -v I-
But thru it there sqlled not tho
; breath of hiB pride;
And-' the' foiim" o'f ' his ' gasplngs lay
whlto on the turf,
And cold as the' spray of the rock-
beating surf.
And there lay the ridor distorted and
pale,
With trie dew on his brow and tho
.rust on his mall; .. ,-.
And tho tents were all silent, the
banners alone,
Tho lances unlifted, tho trumpot
unblown. . .
And tho widows of Ashur are loud
in their wall,
And the Idols are broke In the temple
ot Baal; -And
the might of tho 'Gentile, un
Bmote by the sword.
Hath felted like snow in tho glance
oi tne Lord! . ,
Unless provided with ample funds
with which to secure proper food, pa
tients wtth tuberculosis should avoid
the arid west.
9 fin
mxnsmsqwtsm
Bedbu& and Fleacl
THE TANGLEFOOT COMPANY.
wwyrua , MICH
The Faicinatfrtg Novels of
RAPHAEL .
SABAHNI
(THE 8EA HAWK
8CARAMOUCHE
CAPTAIN BLOOD
THE 8NARE
THE CAROLINIAN
Book. You Like to Read
3c a Day.
SWEM'S
Rental Library
Cliiitfren's J'iciofial ,;' i '
Cross Word Ptizzle '
w.
- -4
19 ' i i i
Running Across. '-( v'.
i Word 1. In the picture.
Word 4. What the face of a
clock or watch is called. . ' .,
Word 6. A kind of goat. Alao
the new capital of the Turkish re
public. Word 8. A 'fish-eating-, diving
bird. Also a worthless person.
I Word 9. Opposite of right.-
. '. . Running Down. ,
I Word 1. A box used to hold
grain or coaL
Wm-ri 9. A lare-e bird.
Indifferent) apart from.
A period of time. . -..
The male -of the humane, -
Word 3.
I Word 4.
I Word 6,
species. -
Word 7.
Decay, , ,
SATURDAY'S PIIZZL.
. AN3WEBE0. ,:j ' ' ;
CASH PAID ;
Fop Second-Hand j
Furniture and Stoves
W. A. KINNEY
Furniture House
315 E. Main Phone 509
Wong Pon
Chinese
Medicine v.
Tor Treatment of
Acute and' Chronic
Dlseasna . of Kea
and Woi
Ouw and tumor trutvl, Isnmia. kM
ey, bl.d.ltr cuid rtooiwh tioulm AM,
hernlt, rutunl, celdr . Icm.l. troublM, fit
jlj.li, h,r, ,n.ui,.i.. aiUimi and thnal
trobl,, rhnim.tl.ni, ammorrlKM. gvlm,
CadS" "". brdroMM). .y-
OftlM Hour,: a A. M. te g P. M. '
, - Conmltallos Fra
21 Sdiitti Front St. tMfVK. Ora,
VacatiofuJime
t CanadianRwflc
mm m
PlVA ftiefr.n.1.. Ait
- ' 'f.iiiiijf uil
ferent Camps in
the beautiful Can
adian Pacific Rock- l
tes-each one with tS
variety ot appeals to K
everyone-etch nnenf. f
foring the "old clothes
comfort" and pleasure
(or which these Canad
ian Pacific Camps have
uetume so lamous
Most moderate prices'
call ot frooklfli . ,
Camdian Pacific V
DailurAn KHDeaam' t
- .wnarmjf orjajirar? Han laaw .
. S5ThUtl5t MmtmtmmmmmmtfQrtmTmt ,. A