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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1925)
o o 0 o e PXGlTC FOUR MKDFORITD MAIL TUTRHNR MTCDFO'RD, OTJKOON'. TUESDAY. OCTOF.TCn 1.V192." Medford Mail Tribune AN INDKI'KNDENT NKWHI'AI'KR J l'UBUHUKD KVKHV AFTKHSOOil EZCflT HUN DAY, BY THE MKDKOHI) 1'itlNTINU CO. Tht Medford Hunday Morning Ntin In furnfhMl iubwrlberg dcairing the seven-iiuy dully newa paper. . Office: Mali North Mr itrect. Tribune Building, l'lione 75. A consolidation of the Dcmorrutlc Timee, the Medford Mill, the MwlfoH Tribune, the South rn Orfgonian, Uie Auhland Tribune. - ROBERT W. RUIIL, Editor. 8. BUM J 'TK It HMllli, Uuuugvr. By Mali In Advance: Daly, with Hun. I ay Hun, year Daily, with Huriduy Nun, month Daily, without Sunday Him, year ... Dally, without Sunday Hun. month . Weekly Mall Tribune, one year Bunday Sun, one year , ..I7.S0 , . .G.' . . s.oo . . .00 BY CARRIER In Medford, A-Maml. Jarkxon ville, Central Point, 1'bocii.x. Talent and on I Highway: Daily, with Bunday Sun, month t .7ft Daily, without Hun Jay Hun, month (Jfi Daily, without Hunday Hun, one year... 7.60 Dally, with Hunday Bun. one year 8.60 - All tern by carrier, cash in advance. Entered n peeond-claM matter at Medford, Oregon, under act of March 8, 1870. Official paper of the City of M.Mford. Official paper of Jack-ton County. Tht only paper between A tunny. Ore, and Oh loo, California, a distance of ovtr 400 mi lea, baviug leaieij wire Auociated J'reaa aervioe. Sworn dally avenue circulation for all montha ending April 1st, Wt'H, Hli;o, more rtinn double tlie circulation of any other paper pub- uaned or ctrcuiateu in jacxaon t-ouniy. MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED FRESH. ' The Aeaoclated Prm la ex'luaivcly entitled to Xht uae for republication of all newa ilia patDttee credited to It or not otherwlae crwlliwi In thli paper, and alto to the local newa pub- lianM Herein. All righta of republication of' epeclal dla pa tehee ntreln are alao remrved. Ye Smudge Pot By Ariliur ferry. ! . The President left tlie worhl slm-Iok game yesterday in tho third Inning, unable to tulerute the nnnsenKO uny lunger. An Arkunxax town Iiuh piiflsfd nn , ordinance prohibiting the cracking uf 1 peanuts in a theater. This in a hum) tou-arda a law to curb nnorora who j wake evorybody up but theniuelvcH. ' ? ' Upatate heresy la revealed nn fol ! lows, by editorial comment in . the : Portland Telegram: -' A paator newly arrived' at a ' : . Portland church thla week aaid j.to Us: "I am not going to have .It anything to do with controversy. I'm not going to dlKctiaa funda mentalism or modernlRm In my pulpit. I'm going to preuch Christ And His power to save.'' t 1 Mr. 8chepp, the cocoanut king, In still In hot pui'HUit of suggestion to ; get,' rid of his millions. The report that Mr. Hchepp was a meal ticket to I a; finicky 4d Is erroneous. . 'It is .now alleged by the ulumnus, i that the chief trouble wilh "the ' mighty University of Oregon eleven", la the debonair occupants of two swlvol chairs. - j"lA mulo belonging to Howard Hill l died In tho harness hist week frnni I heart failure, caused by Mr, Jllll speaking kindly to deceased. I '. Miss B. Franklin Is over a cold, and . once more-smiling sweetly at custom ers. While scolding her l'nw. I1AI.M AM) KMI1AI.M (Klatnalll. Falls News) John told mo that he loved mo, 'always had, hut hadn't known how to tell nie. lie also asked me to wait fur hint, anil I ' promised 1 would. Wo figured It' up, and It nmotintcd to five years waiting for him to get Into the undertaking business fur hlniRclf. ... Evoiy now and then u Clalshovlkl, us buwleggeil as a wishboone, stops In ,lhe bus. illst, to straighten the seams in her socks. . Tho futility uf It all! ' What has become of the old-fashioned C'opco slave who rattled his capitalistic shackles out on the street on aiinny days, with a neatly shar pened pencil hack of his right ear? Contemplate, if you have tlie heart, the horror now facing the guardians of wild life hi Oregon. Hawmllls are ' scaring the game out of the timber, and contaminating the best fishing streams. "An Indian never forgets," and In surance agents have it fair memory. 'NH'H I.ADVj XAKillTV HOY f " O'Malilma, ('ill., Argus) NOTH'K The party who bought from a 17-year-olil blonde boy a nice lady's gold watch and gold brsld chain for a few dol- lors'llhy lime after the" 18th of Hvptember pleawe return same -lind receive cash reward. 4 . ,The cuhs-wuiiI puzzle has cusned lis way back. ) AX K.MI'TV IIOl'SK There's swvet fur bitter And bitter for sweet An rinpty house on a full streets- ! An empty hnuse tliirnlxhed and swept: Heine have lnushed in It . Others have wept. (North American Review.) ' ... tVe wilider if Mn.ther Arthur 1'erry of .the ,h,lf..i.l Mull Trlbun.. got thla one. A San Kranclmn dispatch of recent thi- contained tl.,. InlflllKcnce that Miss ui l. f) . Uf t while ci ussIuk .Mm l,i street. ,. "struck uli the surety tone by a id coupe," In council 9 ncc of vhtc,', )lH landed in the hospital, tutvMt'mr t,, the fact that the contuvt wii rather "painful." to say the trust.-.Western ............. ,.(i in(vnji y on; B.ker Priest See. Pope. KOMK. Oct. 13,-1. A. lM-l-,,,,0 .ii. yesterday joceived in iirlval,, nnillencn tlie UlKht Hev. Joseso I- Alutiralh HERE AND THERE '"""HANKS o t, )n(.a fruit crop, tlio Mtfdfurd Imnks now liive . on (li'iinsit ovt'i' $.SI)0,l)00 more tliim they luttl four months itiio. Whi-ii Hit! re! urns tire nil in this tulul Nhotild cxwi'd a million. Here is more ".'round for tfonstnitiiliition and increased confidenee. Money is n (jood thing 1o Intve particularly in the hank. The prohlcm for the averafie citizen, of course, is to keep some of it there. , C '' money, one may I v.. Kehepp, lite eoeoiimit kiiijj, more years to live, he asked the people of the world to give him Mijitfcstioiix ,s to how lo fift rid of some of it, and benefit the human race in the process, lie received plenty of sungestions, five and six thousand every day. These suggestions solved tho problem of getting rid of his' human betterment. The applicants showed considerable interest in filling their own pocketbooks, but no interest at all in raising Ihe level of happiness and contentment. .Selfishness and .avarice are sometimes declared to be the exclusive possession of the pros perous. Old Mr. Sehepp lias demonstrated this is not true. Till') world series this year lias been more interesting than usual. The Senators appear to have title advantage, but every nmc has been a struggle and no team has had n monopoly cither of fighting spirit or skillful execution. There has been considerable talk about lucky breaks. Hut when tho struggle is over, calm analysis will probably show that luck has little more to do wilh success in baseball than success in other depart ments of human activity. What is called luck is usually superior energy, constantly reinforced by brains. 'TM1K world series has been hard on newspapers, however, particularly the poor slaves who have to fill the editorial column. Public, interest is concerned with little else than base ball, and 7.0 per cent, of the day's news has been confined to it. Moreover, the rest of the world appears to sense this fact and no one seems to be doing anything of importance in the ontside world, except perhaps the criminals who are busy all the time. We now conclude our convincing evidence of this condition, end call it a day. QUILL Love is the quality that enables happiness to survive dishwater. The knocking eliminated by not in com'petitors. Perhaps prohibition isn't wouldn't be, either. It isn't a genuine boom if the. intention of keeping it. And yet people were naughty ml was considered daring. . Municipal pride is what makes a man see red when another town claims to be the center of culture.' Concerning Uritain's communist M". P., it is Well to note that he got his money before he got his theories. The automobile isn't perfect, yel. The windshield is easy t see through, but yet too difficult to go through. Put the women who know hoking for husbands, not -jobs. One shudders to think what it will take to constitute dis orderly conduct !l(l years from now. . , Correct this sentence: "He is a failure," said the man, "but -he never blames anybody except himself.'" Correct this sentence: "Why you," said she; "I've known you The making of a good child A sensible .male paivnl ; 2 A sensible female parent. RmplingRJuimos NO WORK "I can't get work," said Sherlock Shirk, his. mien inviting pity) "in vain I trot from lot to lot, throughout the heart less city. 1 wish to toil that I nieces, I nin;e my picas on bended knees, but they are shot to pieces. There are no jobs," si) Sherlock sobs, "for one who's strong it ml willing; on weary feel I pace Ihe street, and fail to make, a killing." Yet oilier men earn fritnc and yen, to work they're blithely skating; if fate should rob them of one job, tl'fy , I'iud another waiting. There's .limpson .lawn, who mows my l;iwn, anil prunes the gaudy hedges, who's making good at hawing wood with saw ami ax and wedges; he tines his tasks and never asks a ineslitin thai is tluit siime year he'll pack his traps and leave me. Knr there are scores of moneyed bores who'd have him in their service; I and thav'd engage to raise his wage their efforts keep ino j nervous. They come and fawn on .limpson Jnwn, and beg liiiil j lo consider; the dread is mine thai he'll resign, auiPseek the I highest bidder. I tin not think that any gink who works with fiery ftnlor need join the mob that has no job and nothing in .9Jie binler..! Kniplnyei-s long forgorkcr strong anil tiiek and blithe and willing; such men tlou't walk around the block where busted onQ are drilling. have too much of it. Old Mr, has loo much. With only a few millions, but not tho problem of POINTS the new red gas is in the motor, effective; but 4 per cent beer anybody buys real estate with in the old days when a corset enough to be ideal servants are I can't even talk about marrying only six months."' reiniires only two things: 1- may boil some cabbage for my would grille me, and all 1 fear- ft I. tM'rt&U' 1 Personal Health Service By WILLIAM BRADY. M. Du Sinned letters oertalnlno to oeraonal .treatment, will be Answered by Or. Brady if tamped, eel l-odd retted envelope le enoloted. ' Lattert should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received, only a few can Da answered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming lo Instructions. Address Dr. William. Brady, In care of this newspaper. AMhrmitle WIhiws, A younj; burliness woman vnt to a a recent number I find n reply to a country Inn for her vucatlon. Hever- query about buthlnp and menstura nl dugft had .the run of the houue.., tion, and it ntate that ''Hwimmint? in Within 4H ho urn the young woman j cold water during the menstrual pe- wuh ho til with asthma that It was necessary to take her home to her physician. In the city ahe quickly re covered. Her physi clan Haw no reason why she should not return to the coun - try for her vacation, She went back to the inn. Everybody welcomed her, ln eluding the dogtt. Within a few days the asthma recurred. Aguln she was carried home, this time to remain: in bed a month. After that she was days, with no ill consequences of able to visit another resort In the 1 course. Hut a woman who would swim country, where she regained her usual In cold water or in warm water dur Kood health. There were no dogs In lng a menstrual period must be crazy, the second country place. No one It would be a wonderful endurance thought of that at the time, however, 'record, though. Jlygefa is still the Months afterward this business wo man built herself a country home near the ocean, and there she thrived, though she occasionally got off a few wheezes. Her sister happened to be the ancient and modern schools of present on one such occasion end . thought in relation to this matter. By sister wondered whether a dog could giving a little impulse to the funny have anything to do with It. for she notion that way, Hygela helps along had noticed that the wheezing usually, another quaint fancy she still cher occurred when a neighbor's dog had ; ishes, namely that "exposure" has visited the cottage. Thla theory of sister's set everybody thinking, and then it was recalled that evefy remembered asthmatic seizure had occurred soon after association with a dog. This was considered as of academic interest only, until one day the family stopped at a roadhouse for dinner. There the luckless woman had a moderate attack of the "old asthma. One of the party remarked that if she did not know better she would assume there was a dog on the Dremlses. There was annarently no dog until a party arose from a near- by table and left the room followed by . their dog which had been lying quiet-': iy under the table. I The plot thickens and the story ! ends here. Not a few cases of spasmodic or bronchial asthma are caused by em anations (dander) from dogs, cats, fowls, parrots, canaries, mice, horHes and other aniamls whose emanations (danger, skin, hair, fur feathers) are foreign to man. Certain individuals seem to become "sensitized" to the "particular protein of some such eman- : ;u ion so that they have a character- ietic reaction whenever they inhale the emanation in question. This ac- tion does not always amount to an) asthmatic seizure:, sometimes ' it ex- presses itself in an attack of hives i with little or no disturbance of breathing. Hay fover is an identical I reaction in character, though the ex-iln Iting cause is of vegetable rather than animal origin, a pollen to which the victim is sensitized. A medical man who had suffered more or less from asthma since child hood, .found roliefjonly nfter it had dawned on him that, his footsteps had been dogged during the worst of his attacks at home qr in far away health resorts by that as some folks . call him, faithful friend of man, that i Hunib, very dumb Indeed as compared wtththo Intelligent feline, unreasoning inimal that licks any hand that feeds him and bites a finger from the hand of his tender hearted mistress when Hhe tries to rescue him from a peril ous sltuntion Into which he has rush ed like the dunderhead, he Is. All that wheezes is not asthma. Many cases purporting to be asthma are in reality not of this character at ill. but merely disturbances of breath- ing associated with very different dis-; ites which it seems of no use to the !a.vnUin even to mention In a dlHCUs- lon of asthma. QI KNTIOXK AXI) ANSWERS Seven Buckets of Blood Kindly inform me whether (4) four marts of blood Is, .an exceptional unioiint to lose at a tonsil operation ?. (I S.) The gains according to the banks Answer. T doubt whether any pa- have beeA as follows: Jackon Coun tient has ever lost four quarts of blood ty bank three hundred twenty three In a tonsil operation, unless it were 'thousand four hundred sixty dollars Frank the elephant, and even Frank $323.4fi0. 00) : First National bonk, might well question the propriety of three hundred five thousand one hun hJvIiik so much of his blood to the dred sixty-eight dollars ($306. 16S); glory of surgery. Old liiidy liygra - I believe you have recommended Hyyeia as n good health magazine. In 00AM,-M , ,v' ( : ' v .IV,. ;vl -H;iUf' ,n'iv".V'''i. m $i.W rJapj.icK ana uavoTi no other pancake flour can f ..'i A-.' v f hope to give you Flapjack", flavor hfcausc ro other ' i ski flour a biended the FUpiack way. To begin with, p i " w use no cornmeal or other heavy nwrnj'ent. ;S The leavening i I, uhne'textured u the tlour itself. That's why Flapjacks, properly maJe, are f always light and todigcst. Flapjack hcMt straight for your0 , hot cake ancctite in a bic-fljvor mv ! ? health and hvolene. not to dltaaae dlaanoslt or ; Hod has flornetlines cauHed xerlouB trouble." Ik that what you call good health Vd vice? (C. McH.) AnBwer. No, maybe they have an old lady to handle the mail in the Ily geia office, I call that uppleHauce. In j the first place H is questionable whether any Individual has ever tried the experiment of nwimniin? In cold j water during the menHtrunl period, and In the next place I challenge Old .Lady HyReia lo cite the evidence on which Hhe base this quaint nuperti tion. Thousands of better educated women go in BWlmming in cold water in the course of menstruation nowa best of heulth magazines and should be in every well regulated home, but in this I fancy the old fady is striving to assume a neutral position between something to do with certain resplra- 1 tory diseases, uive the Old iady time; j remember we old folks can't savvy j fobbed hair and other newfangled j Ideals all in a day. Kwp IIiiihIh Soft and Wldte I Please publish the hand lotion for- 1 mula you gave two or three years ago. We found it exceedingly good. (Miss ( n.) Answer. Boll, constantly stirring, u grains or iragacnantn snavings or chips In a pint of rain water or dis- tmed water until a clear thin jelly is obtained. Add water to make up for evaporation, ana aaa nair an ounce f glycerin and three teaspoonfuls of boric acid. Apply a little to the hands after washing and before the :tmm is quite ury. ine joiion is oiien grateful after shaving. Poems That Live On the GnLssliopiier and Cricket. The poetry of earth is never dead: wnen an me nirus are faint with tne hot sun And hide in cooling trees, a voice will run . From hedge to hedge about 'the new mown mead. , That is the grusshopper s he takes the lead ' summer luxury he has never done With his delights; for, when, tired out with fun. He rests at ease beneath some pleas ant weed, . , . The poetry to earth Is ceasing never: On a lone winter evening, when, the frost ' ' ' ' - ' lias wrought a silence, from the stove there shrills V; . The cricket's song, in warmth In- creasing ever. And seenm, to one in drowsiness half lost. The grasshopper's among some grassy hills. John Keat.a COMMUNICATIONS BaiAc Deposits Inereawci, . To the Editor: Taking the bank statements of the four banks of Medford, as of June 30, aird of September 28th, as published in your paper, you will note that the gaining deposits of the banks of the City of Medford Is eight hundred twelve thousand one hundred seventy- nine dollars ($812,179.00.) This un doubtedly comes, to a large extent, from the fruit business of this valley. Medford National bank, one hundred thirty thousand four hundred eight ($ 1 30, 40K) ; Farmers & Fruit Growers fifty-three thousand one hundred for- "Albcri ltd mis or better Brcdfasts mi m kM top-quality. Even the Mlt used tender, never soggy or hard- ty three $53,143). Total eight nun-1 dred twelve thousand one hundred i KHventy nine dollars ( Itil 2.19.) j I thing this Is a handsome showing and there is unununieuiy more rum ing. m'V CONNEU. Mfdfoid, October 12. 0 JTiT MB'- PlIeiiAriiP' I can't figure out any good in Hi '"IVeiily-rivu Years Ago Twlay tol uiiuin that rim in th newsiuKrM 'ci'pt i remind a hit of people that they're not what they I' lK Who re member lh' olo time gentleman with th NHtied while shirt un plug luit that Hii2 rubbed lib wrong way? (Copyright John. F. Iille Co.) Who's Who Osrar Wells The newly elected president of the American Banker's Asosciation is Os- t car Wells, president of the First Na tional Bunk of Birmingham, Alabama. During the past year he was vice president of that organization. He has had con siderable banking experience, having been connected with hanks in Platte City. Edger ton and Carthage, Missouri. Fort Worth, Houston and Dallas, Texas, before coming to Birmingham i n 1915. From 1920-1925, Wells was a mem- ov-ipujen. ., uer .oi me tuonn , . " liquidating com mission under appointment of the fedora reserve bank ofwhleh he is the RUth di8ti?'hieineVot TK" od-; visory council and the Cuban presi dent. Wells was born In 1875, in Platte County, Missouri. : Death Threat Received. PHOENIX, Ariz. A letter con taining a threat of death, as a result of the hanging of George Dixon Sujy namie, Walapal Indian, was received by United : States Marshal George Mauk, The letter came from Angeles. Cook with gas. tf "DIAMOND DYES" COLOR THINGS NEW Just Dip to Tint or Boil to Dye Each 15-cent pack age con tain b direc tions so simple any woman can tint soft, delicate shades or dye rich, permanent colors in lingerie, silks, ribbons, skirts, waists, dresses. coats, stockings. sweaters, draperies, coverings, hangings everything! Buy Diamond DyeB no other kind and tell your druggist whether the mate rial you wish to color is wool or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton - or., mixed goods. . Mm W,V X.-hk gk DATE TRlj :0-'3 October 13, 1873 52 yn fo Cecil Rhodes matriculated at Ox ford University. While an under graduate at Oxford, he met Mat thew Arnold who unknowingly in spired him to colonize South Africa,, which he successfully accomplished by establishing Rhodesia. After organizing and monopolizing the diamond fields at Kimberiy, Rhodes returned to Oxford to complete his unfinished education. In his will he founded the Rhodes' Scholarship which provides for the education at Oxford of 175 se lected students of all nationalities. ., 1'uuyilgltf, I'rcmhi Sxulkilv. liw,. : 25 Ounces. Scents jbr over .YEARS. r Hi".-. Th2 Testimony of Others IN i my new book which may be ' had FREE upon request, on ' PILES and other Rectal and Colon dis orders, 1 have reproduced nearly 100 letters from among those received from my thousands of patients. These tell you frankly of their years of suffering of their ; trying home remedies and even opera-! . ttons, and, finally, of their complete cure! bymyNON-SURGICALmethod- These i are from men and women of ' every itatton, many oi whom you ; may know. You will learn by reading tni&nooKwny lean Biv a WRITTEN GUARANTEE to uue oui Pile or return your fee. ' ULAN. M D Inc PORtlAND OFflCtS: SEATTLE OFFICES: Dr Dkan Duiioin? bui-mmiw Insurance First Insurance Agency A. L. HILL, Manager Phon 1C5 30 North Ctntral Medford, Ore. Poa Ckiiet Mediciit rtr Trasttaeat ol Arato ftn4 ohreale PtiiwM ol Heel and Wonts, .Sm t 515' fe' hTT -A VA v nlWong mm Cmt tn tnixir tTMtM. Mint M. tT. bladdfr and Momarli ImbN, the. fc.m'l, ruvtip. coldr ftm.l tronblse, par lr1 ttrrt tManonA Mtbmt and tfcrmt trimMva. ftianm.tt.in, amauorrhnra fottn. Knannptloii, aatarrk, ttlaa, hdrffaU, basin OfflM Hmif M M b . M. CwMulutla Fret o