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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1928)
Medford Mail Tribune Second Section Six Paget Second Section Six Pages Dftilj Tufnty-thlrd Y.r Wtalf rihr-Mrtnth Yr MEDFORD, OREGON. MONDAY, NOYEMKElb"), 19:28. No. 227. 3 . For COUNTY SHERIFF on the , REPUBLICAN TICKET CH AS. D. STACY "You'll be safe to stay by Stacy" Paid Adv. by Jackson County Republican Central Committee 0 ' ,- -i, A 'xfr' 1 'X' WENT TO SCHOOL- WEATHER REGORDSi EDUCATION ' CUSS ! Mrs. I P. lielknnp of this city attended school wilh Herbert Hoo. j vet and I ho following Interesting account tf tho Republican enndi- j Unto vun written by her brother, L. II. Dursey of Waterville. Wn.. ; newspaper publisher nnd state representative. The "sister" re ferred to below is Mrs. Uelknap: LONG SLEEP MAKES BABY HAPPY AGAIN the i i'iti at it ma) iiclivitiftt, which will be feutuivd in this class. Tho.-o who wish t take iulviintHgf . of tbfg) course are asked to get in touch wit htlif lot a I hinh school i instructor lnuuciliutt'ly, as the class i "Our buby kept wakinjr un several O must necessarily be limited. .Miss , times a nig'it, until we alurtcd giv liiirrluii' may be reached by call- ins liiin a little ( uftoria after liib I UK or lH'i . Tho hit-. Int nursing," say a an I own mother. t r number will reach her around i "He lept mmitdly from the first ti:15 in the evening Qiight and it made him look and feel The meteorological summary for the month of October in Medford, as prepareil ly U, W. Dick, bcud of the lucat weather bureau, is an follow: .The monthly in can tempera ture. 5a. i degrees, exactly equal led the past average for October. Th-re were no outstanding Vitaphone Picture Hunt's Craterian "Having been asked to givo uu,the Mh, and tho lowest was itii.t article on Herbert Hoover. I 'on ibo lath. The adult physical education class, which Is being formed by Miss Maud Harrlger, physical edu cation Instructor of i hi hl;h school, will hold their first ninl ing Wednesday. NovemluT 14. A .,v ' number of local business women tit-men of sillier hluh or low- read- ,ul nowewiven liuvo already sign- uomaii candidate for m a v u inKs. The highest was 80.2 on 'J "I fur tno rnurw' which is to aKaini u former lover who is ruu- " Women They Talk About." is . tho Vitaphone picture now show- ; ing at Hunt's Craterian. Theme Is woman In politics, with cupid somewhere in the off ing. Irene liich is featured as the world heller." Baby specialists en dorse rietcherft laslonu; and mil lions of mothers know how th' purely-vegetable, liarmb-ss prepara tion helps babies aud children, with colic, constipation, colds, diarrhea, etc. The K I etcher Higiutture is always on the wrnpper of gcuuiue Castor ia. Avoid iinitutiuus. Include Minima were below , xtn 'HrH four 1 dancing lesson. l lie classes will' Ik .eagerly respond by giving tribute the freezing point on only I to a bov I knew over fnrtv vnurs daVB. jago. An orphan, who had been , The total precipitation ' also ex-''' I Methodist church hall every truck-driving son. played by Wll- living willi relatives in tho cast, actly equalled tho October nor-1 7"CM,y euuinK nom seven in , Hum I'ollier. Jr. i series or recreational lhlf f(. n-oleftlon. Audrey Ker aud health instructions ,.iK ( ft..tir(..i the iiniiiriu.M- ..f the ladv candidate, and the elaii- hcld at thu destine sweetheart of the mayor's tubers hi the nil- was pent all alone, to live wlthmal of l.s inches. Practically all oli;hl- Itt,t,Ut'lllK exercises will be; star cast are Claude (Ulliiigwutcr i.uru unu given io mose, who Anders Haudolf, Jack Santoro and ; noed such treatment, according i jobn .MUJun. ,to Stlss Hariiger. while those who, Vitaphone nccompanlmcnt Is unueiweigm win be instructed augmented by the voices of the his uncle, Mr. Minthoru, who atjof this amount fell on seven day ;that time was nlso Kupcrintendcnt j the 2nd to 5th and tho 29th to iof a Quaker academy, which had, 3 1st. From the lith to 2Sth. in- :just been established at Ncwberg. j elusive, measurable amounts fell Oregon, which my sister and I on only two days, and in those attended during 1S85 and 1886. ! Instances the amounts were light. The greatest 24-hour fall was U.f2 inch, on tho 4th. I Cloudiness was rather low fori October. Lunnr Imlos were ob-j served on two days; light and dense fog formed on four; and! light smoke was recorded on four. i i -BIOLOGY TEACHER RECEIVES THANKS K. M. Hussong, teacher of biology In the Senior high school, has n very appreciative letter from the; beetles have not been reported be Smlthsonian institution. Washing-' fro mthts sections of Oregon, ton. I). C, thanking him for plantJ Very little such naturalistic and insect specimens from Jackson ; work of this sort has been done county, recently sent to that Instl- j In Jackson county, and there may tutiou as additions to their south-! bu other rich discoveries that ern Oregon collections. Of these await the attention of field col plant specimens, six are new to ! lectors. this locality, and of the insects,, one butterfly, two inotht nnd six 'He was put In the preparatory j department of this academy, and being only 10 years old, and small for his ngo, ho soon beenmo popu lar an tho youngest of tho school; I and much loved for his pleasant, gentle ways. i 'The uncle with whom ho lived days. Light frost, tho first of the; I had no children of his own. and season formed oil tho 11th. and ; being an uncompromising discip- on tho following day a killing linarian, we other students thought Ur0ilt- with a minimum tempera-; he was extremely hard on Her-lturo of 28 degrees. occurred. bert, giving him heavy duties and j Tbnroafter no notes of frost were responsibilities for a boy of his kept. j size and years. ' In genernl. wind movements at "It may be that the seeds for surface and aloft wiire rather light although some surfuco mux-, ima were attained which slightly exceeded any recorded during Sep tember. Tho mean hourly veloe Ity, however, was only 3.3 miles, si ghtly less than In the preceding month. Tho highest surface Ve nning opposite nnus. ! players w hich in high moments of Itnskethall volleyball, clog datu-; the action speak their lines with Ing and folk dancing arc among tremendous effect. ONYX POINTEX HOSIERY For Women $1.95 3 incsiiicntlnl i'lmiartoil.stlo8 wern ,l,int!,l nnd nouriHhcd then; and tho worthy man we now honor developed from thu eurnest, mod est hoy. with tho ti'iu'lilnca or Bcir-dlscipllne, nnd the hereditary liackKiound of impregnable Qua ker principle purltv of livlHE. 1 ,n'hy reKintrred wan 21 miles per earnestness, honesty, nnd simplicity 1 hour, from the northwest, on tho ui tne individual, and an uncoin-li 'i no prevailing direction was promlsliiK position on important I from the north. SUCCESS Bettor Govcnininnt Loniruc wishes the voters of the First Jiulieiiil District success on election day in its effort to restore its judiciary to the tinie-lionoretl place of confidence and esteem that for many years it occupied. All good citizens realize that you must re spect and honor, and have explicit confidence in, the judge who occupies the bench. All realize that and know' that you must not have one rule for one man and another rule for another.. That a 'grand jury should be as well advised, and as free to indict one man or set of men as another. "All realize "that the" 'condition that; exists here' today, is due" to the judiciary mixing in polities. Not in party pol'itlcs. but in local politics. ' The grcut desire of a judge for re-election will cmisc him to do tUTngs for his political advancement. They eause liim to Icun to the cause of one lawyer, while slighting or turning down the right or justice of the cause of another. Tliey cause him to write political letters and promises for support. They cause him to put himself into close association with tlic po litical boss of a district or county, and the clique or ring that always associates with such power. The people know and realize that politicians crave and use all of the power that they can -command. ", When the Dengue undertook this task of helping the voters to purify the boneh of this district, it found that Judge Thomas had built up, by his own advertising, a false record that only the facts could destroy. lie had done this by going with great frequency to the press with things that boosted him in the public niiud. No one could take the time to challenge this advertising, lie created the impression that he had speeded up justice, aud wiped out the technicalities of the law. That he had cleaned his docket as it had never been cleared before. That he had made the lawyers step lively at, his command to prevent them from impeding his progress in this noble work. All this was sham, as an investigation showed. It has taken great detail and much work and expense to show the truth. It has meant that he record had to be printed, so that the public could read for itself, and know-the facts. It meant that specific instances hail to be published, so as to give Judge Thomas an opportunity to answer. This has all been done for your benefit. No assertion of ours has been successfully denied. Sham and insincere generalitiecs mixed with bitter comment against us have been the only answer. Hut the facts, as shown by the record, still stand as we published them, undisputed. Then Judge Thomas published that he had received the unsolicited endorsement of practically all the menbers of the bar. ire claimed election because the lawyers, more than any .other people, ought to know his fitness for the office. He claimed that the public could safely follow the endorsement of the bar. Then came the truth. The letter of Jlr. Ilanna and Mr. Flicgel showed the untruthfulness of his claim. Xo allegation of cither of these letters has ever been met or denied. He did. not have the endorsement of the bar. Now, more than !0 per cent of the lawyers who will practice before him in the event of his election are firmly opposed to returning him upon the bench because they do not have confidence jn him. This is a deplorable condition but it is the fact. Now these lawyers whose endorsements were once so valuable to the public arc now called by Judge Thomas and his-supporters "rule or ruin political lawyers." They arc charged in the press, over the signature of Judge Thomas, with maintaining suits to cloud the titles to real property and allowing these cases to hang for years in order to "blackmail" people in paying money to get rid of these cases. This aroused great resentment iu the bar, as it ought, and as it certainly will in your minds. A judge cannot work with lawyers about whom he lias said these things. They can not represent you before him without great danger to your cause. Fortunately, Mr. Norton is the best qualiified man in the district for the office. For tunately he lives in another county: Fortunately no political boss dominates or controls him. Fortunately he owes nothing to anybody whose appropriation of public funds might be investigated by a grand jury Fortunately no grand juror could embarrass him by the asking of an honest question. W'c have l'n criticised for the great expense to which we have gone. AV'e have done it for the purification of the judiciary and to take it out of politics and beyond the control of any man or set of men. D is absolutely necessary to go into another county for a judge in order to accomplish this result. Whatever we have published has been from the record. If it discredits Judgo Thomas it was he himself who made the record. The truth should hurt no man. ThoXc who pub lish the truth should not be accused of mud slinging. Much less should they lie libeled aud slandered; We arc with you in this great effort. We appeal to you all to sec that the vote is gotten out and the people have an opporunity to express themselves upon this grave issue. KETTEK GOVERNMENT LEAGUE. . Paid Advertiiemtnt public questions temperance In .Max. Mill. Mil. jail thlliRs, nnd In opposition to I 1 71 4t GS : slavery and war. 2 6:i I "A Brent man. who. thoURh by 3 M birth nnd education stronifly op- ' CO ; posed wnr, served this country so G $G efficiently during tho World War '3 teaching and supervising tho con- 7 , 7H servution nnd distribution of food. 8 H", and In supervising the supply or 9 "U relief to tho starving women und 10 i T children of Europe, friend and 11 -. (10 foe alike. 12 S9 ! "At n time when the whole nu-! Ill--, o !llon lb ..culling fur honesty, jus-1 1 i -'.. r0 lien," moderation, h e I f-dlsclpline. IS.:...'. 3 land Judicious simplicity of living! 16 - .-. 110 'tills gi-ent organizer, grown from 11" - the hoy I knew, seems to hold! 18 7(1 !lhe key to all these problems. I I! 74 j "At a recent visit to tho old20 05 I school town, wo wero impressed. 21 118 not by the pomp and boastful at- 22 71 I mosphero usually surrounding a 23 CO I presidential candldato, but by the 24 J TO , pleusunt smile, tho peaceful, nl- 2"....... 68 ! most prayerful hopefulness of the 2(J , -. 119 (cultured people. Tho modest, quiet, 27 ; 05 ! homey towin. a river flowing thru 2S 02 lit, grcut shude trees on Its banks. 2H M tho little, old-fashioned college, -10.... i ... r,l still teaching its Quaker prlncl- i 3 1 M ' 'pics and sending them forth into :the sea of life. Surely, with j?f(e DoVe at ) vlioli n liaj'lir-rniinil h on i-mtut J boy grown to manhood, is worthy iof the presidency of tho nation; ! and I urge all citizens to give jhlm hearty support. I "A. II. 1)0 USE W FH nit r.i 5S lid 6 1 li t t: 49 47 4 1 -I I 4K r.G fi7 C!l r.7 r.G r,i AX r.o 52 5'J t'2 r.ii 4K 51 4 1 4G Pre .111 .52 i .fi2 .04 .11 .Qj Political Talks on Air Tonight NEW YORK. Nov. 5 fP) Politi cal programs on tho radio today und tonight Include: Iti'iHihUt-un 7 p. m.- Attorney General Al bert ottinger of Now York over WEAK, WGY Hnd WGR. 9 p. m. "America's Men of Dcsti ny," a m uslcal progra m In -eluding In Its cast Amelita Gulii Curcl, Krieda Ilcmpel, KUdo Fer guson. George Abbott, Walter Hus ton and Loc Baker over W'J'A and National U road cast Ing company system. - 9:15 p. in. Herbert Hoover overt WJZ and nation-wide, hookup speaking from his homo In l'alu Alto. Cal. 11 p. hi. James K. Burke over WOH nnd nation -wido hookup, speaking from his home in Pitts burgh. lxmiocrailc 12:30 p. m. Governor Smith in a final message to the farnvrs over WEAK and natlon-wldo hook-up. 8 p, m. John J. Farley over WEAK, WGY and WOH. 6:30 p. m. Theatrical stars In Copcland rally with Senator Cope land duo to speak at 7:30. 8 p. m. Henator Joseph T. Ilob Inson over mid-west network of twenty-three stations speaking from his home in Little Hock, Ark. 10 p. m. Gov. Binlth over WJSS nnd N. B. C. network and WOH and Columbia network from Car negie Hall, New Yoi-kO 8:30 p. m. Not-Diun Thomas over WJS5, WEVD aTtd five other stations. (Ttmc.glvn Is eastern standard) An easy way to discover what a woman married a certain man for Ik to wnlt and se whiit sho gt. the Rialto Today tJaurlfico Is tho theme of "The Night Watch," now at the Klnlto. a fjiscimititig film crania, with the beautiful llillie. Dove in tho star ring role, which 1h the most dra matlco rolo ot her starring career. The plot Ik a dlruct and simple one, but Its drumath: power Is heightened by Its very simplicity and the characters of the story are few. 1 Hncrific-o of her own reputation to shield hur husband even tho they are estranged from an un just acuusutlon, Is the high point of the story and tho events leading up to It nrc both tensu und colorful. Almost tho entire action of the ! story tiikcs placo In a single night, with a modern battleship as Its unnsuHl setting. Stomach Troubles "Thero are many lymptonu of ulceri of the stomach, soma of v!1 ? a tyP'c1 chronic pain which occurs from AM 4n tKra. a. four hours following the meal. It a snarp, cuttin axcruciatina; typa of pain, present as aoon as tha stomach has emptied itself of food. "Chemically It is usually dua to a hyperacid secretion. We also find a (treat deal of gaseous distention, a feeling of discomfort, distress and sometimes nausea which is characleristic of this ailment." Th above is an extract from editorial by Phillip M. Lovell, N. D. PEERLESS STOMACAL REMEDY has afforded thousands of people relief from Hyperacidity of the Stomach, Gas on Stomach, Heartburn, and Gastrls Distress dua to Hyperacidity. On hand at Jarmin & Woods and other good druoglite. INSURANCE , First Insurance Agency A. L. HILL, Manager Phn 105 M N. Central Medford, Oregon HARRY D. NORTON For Circuit Judge " I Mr. Norton has been a leader of the Josephine bar for over thirty years and we have yet to hear the first criticism of hjs personal, or 1 litical conduct. His relations with his brother attorneys have ilways been entirely hariiionioiis. JIc is well known, in Jackson Comity as well as Josephine County, and we believe there is not a Jawyer in cither county who would hesitate to try a case before hinl. Thoiifth always devoted to his profession, he. found time to do a great deal toward 'the' up-building of the community. Probably few, if any lawyers in the state, have devoted so much of their time and energy as he to work of this kind. J to served for fifteen years as city attorney of (inints Pass at a salary of $2".0() per month when the regular salary was $l'Ji5.00 per month. Mr. Norton is personally and politically dry and is on record as being opposed to the modification of the eighteenth' amendment or the Volstead act, nnd when Grants Pass went dry, Mr. Norton drew up the Wrdinance putting the Prohibition regime into effect and this Ordinance has been pronounced by dry leaders to be the best in the state. Sections of this Ordinance were later incorporated into the State Law. ' ' Following is a telegram received from the Hev. W. F. Shields, wW for many, many years was pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Medford, Oregon, and one of the ardent supporters, of the dry cause during 1908-09-10 and 11 and for many years previous. The telegram rends: ' ; "I am informed that Harry 1). Norton of Grants Pass, is f a candidate for Circuit Judge of Josephine County.. I rcniem- f.i: her Mr. Norton, a man of integrity., and a good friend of pro- ' hibition. Friends of prohibition ought to be entrusted with 7 the enforcement of (he law. Support the dry candidate, re- - gardless of pW '-..' (Signed) "WESTON F. SIlfFJJJS." " Elect Harry I). Norton Circuit Judge. A man Whose integrity, ability and fairness has never been questioned by anyone. NORTON FOTt CHJCU1T JUDGE COMMITTEE. W. L. Miller, Chairman. Lydia M. lTowel, Secy. ", Paid Advertisement , u I' I