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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1929)
PXGE FOTTH HEDFORD MUE TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON", TVEDXESDXY, MAY 1, 1929. BEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE Mir, tmitr, WU ruausBM vf xm HtDTOED fUNTlNa CO. tt-iMi m. r . km ri Mm w. test, but - Nut ' rlu. attur IMfard, UBacnrrioN mm., f IM IB Adfirw: .--.. Dtflr, ltb Suixtar, rMr..a,,M,...f.B0 pu, XUi Suin,, Bontt .B IMllf, itluut Buodlr, jetr i.60 iMllr, without Sunrtir, Bootb tl . htl WiU TrlUlM, M iur. ..... . 1.00 ttoMiir, om rev . . 8.0s 1 (arrltr, In Adrince lo Madford, AiUud, JtetMUlUa, Caaral IMtot, CbotuU, lilut, 0ld Hill tci on Hlin.tri: PTlf, IUl fiuodcj.'BOOtb I .TB ' IMUj-, vlthoul Bundir. month oG fullr, without Bundir. om rwtf T.00 Dtlj, wltta BuodftTi om t.00 AU wal, erua Id idnDM. ii:mbi:b or the associated presi I Kealriat Fill Uud Wirt larie. I, Tb AuocUtcd I'rm to euUMlrtlr tntlUed to 11 tkt wm for pubUatlon at iU om mipurbwi I tndll(4 to It or oUxrwlU credlud Id tbU pr, !; Hd ! to too loci! rwi publlibtd brrelD. II All rlihti tor publlatlos U wtdtl dupiitaa " Mrda art ilN restmd. wwro dillr trrnci clreuUtlM fir lis dsIdi Oct. 1, 128, Ul. Ortldtl piper or thi Cltr of HadTord. OfflcUl pnt of Jtduoa.Countr. li Adrerttilne ItprMMtitlni., ! ' M. ft MOUKNSIiN. COMPANf . I trflui In New Tork, Cblcito, Detroit, ll l fruehto, Lai Aofdei. Bcittlc, PortUol Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Parry Grants Pass I "going;' to fih've a Salon duBenute, rtnd nil thin shift less metropolis1' curt ..boast In a IWauty Sliappc ; ' Thoro Is no cuspidor In tlm melt's'.-restroom. (Oregon City Enterprise.) At any rate, thoy'd mss It, or kick It over. FOMTY YKARS AOO Tho lny more helanKlni; to Dock J'lckol rammed a foot through tho front wheel of f.'Inrcnec Ilutirhlnson's new bicycle, accidentally, yester day..;. ; ' , I -"A ,iiuinltor''of local Imslni'ssiur'n nro iniercsted'ln tho project, which Klvcs pmnilsn of being highly rc , moncmtivR for tho tindorUikcrs" (Kisklyou News.) How tho country I icels Uh, supply Of .'"ifcnlal funeral J directors." . ' ' ; . ':.' -r r- ' (Iruln ori tho floor of tho vulloy ' is now whiskor loneth, ' ' ' '2 A" 'typogrraphlcul ' error stilted . that the costumes at. the X.adles' Aid minstrel wer ehideous. Ladles' Aid minstrel were hldoous. '(Pondleton - Rnst OreKonlan.) f Wherein an editor coins a new word to meet a crisis, nnd was , rlirht tho first time. Tho exoneration of the mid-west ilepuly Hhorlff who slew a wife and mother 'during; -the progress of a itry raid,' Is another great vlotory lor the riitlit, unit polltlcnl pressuro when properly Hpp'liod; ,-', . f ., The whooping cough which at lOclied flllKO Mtmii'liit, Is sorry that It attuckod. ; , : , ! Qt'KSl'IONNAIHE ' I ' (Answer yos or : no, or mo no savvy!) ' ; ' I If un tilling vehicle is loft on tho Istrcet until :it' dllntegrates and i falls to pieces-'Bholtld tno remains he. rctnovedl y th. olty, or tho owricr of thoicettiftcato of title? I When 'a drove of shleks sur ' round an auto In tho middle of the jStreet, that Is occupied by throo ;girls, whoso mothers do not know they!- are out, alinulct traffic ho Isiispendotl' until they hnvo their visit oUt, or should tho suld traffic . wind around them? , Hliould tho- lady ownor of a i spanking new car be served three iparltlnK spaces, so she can buck I out iind go ahead without delay, ! or should slio be allowed but one parking space? I l you think It does any good : for -1 01 uutos to honk their horns , 7 rhltiutos at n freight train block ing a crossing, contrary to city ip-dlnance heroin mndo and pro vided ? ' ' What punishment do you favor when nn autoist lets a flro engine iK-at lilm to a tire? If a young man Is caught steal ing gasoline, via a garden hose. Is It petty thieving, or a cute trick? What Is your opinion of tho pro posal to' put penked roofs on auto , freight trucks, so they will not be mlinken or barns? llow do you stand on speeders? ! Do you think they should bo stood . on? . v I Namo'tho 'streets you deslro set jnHido as Ilelllient avenues, for tlto , use of Irresponsible kids -In hlgh- powered cars. He brief.' i If three boys nttd threo girls, a ! grand total of six nro located In a 7-pnssenger car, should they all get in the front scut, or sculler j out a bit ? . . , ; ' .Do you think gasoline nnd j moonshine are mated In Hcnven, or should the Imbiber of cither ; stay at home? . ; llow would you like to see a new wise-crack painted on the ,slde of n rattle-trap 4d, owned by a student nt the Uofo. or O. 8. C. . du e u. A. c.)T What do you think of week-end driving by tho calendar, not tho I mentality? ' Xhould tHo dentist, Who dents , your renders, make amends, both I vocally and financially,- or should ho (most probubly she) bo given , another chance? Whut Is the solution of the Hnt-iurday- trlght - gtiwklng problem? Kheuld the city build a patio nt Slain and t'entral for tho gawkerr), or shuuld they bo nllnwed to take up a htmiestead In the middle or , the street? We tio not know what ' m patio Is, but Is nkln to a plnzica. It. ir built, could be used us a re vlnwlnr; stand on state occasions. I i. inMisAlaniiJ tkAinr Firf rot It r.rf pilot, liquid-1 bUt. All imiKvitisV If WHAT PEICE SENATOR XORRIS, of Nebraska, wants a federal law which will prevent any public utility from gaining control of any newspaper, circulating in the district in" which the utility oper aies. ' , ' 'i With the purpose of such a law we are in hearty accord. We also share the Nebraska senator Paper arid Power Company, has interest in 11 newspapers. But, as we view.the situation, ment of newspaper" consolidations, and chain-newspaper forma tionr of wliich the above purchase is a part cannot be' stopped by legislation. Evasion 'of the law would be too easily accom plished, and effective control of elemental economic forces is too difficult to attain. "' If the absorption of newspapers by Dig Business is desirable from the standpoint of greater going to stop it. . -.'' B UT this does not mean that of this country is doomed, papers of this country arc to be controlled, and become the mouthpieces, either of public utility corporations, or other units of Big Business.' ' ... ' For, tinlike any other business newspaper busijiess is absolutely controlled by the people. No matter? what the financial resources of f any newspaper, it can't succeed without popular support. . . - , THEREFORE, if the people of this country want a free and independent press they have it absolutely in' their power to secure it. If they "do not want it, they have only to let "nature take its course" and that is what they will get. H they'care enough about 11 support it AND ?0 OTHER and support is merely a mat ter of subscriptions then there is not money enough in the world to keep it 'front' them.'' If they don't, then no congressional ora tory or emergency legislation is going to give them what they haven't the wisdom or courage The solution of this' problem of this country to' each individual newspaper reader, and no one else.' ' 5. ' '." - WILL RASKOB STAGE A COME-BACK? WTMIB Democratic party," says John J. Raskob "ought to , A run year in and year put just like General Motors." And. with the campaign deficit 000 tho former finnneiol jliroe);ftrmof.Qcnerl Motors, intrinds to see that this is done. ' , ' But will it ! AVo have our doubts. In fact, we have our sus- pieian that Mr. IJaskob is making in the recent eanipitign--nniT.clyy: Big Business it can do in politics. WI1Y, for exiimple, does ConerH M2l"ors run year in, year out? ' Simply bceaiiHC tlio pooplo of this country ami for eign parts want what it produces year in, year gut. They .want to go somewhere, and Oeneral r. j J ut do tlio people oi tins country, or any otner, wnnt wimr. the' Dciri.oernt.ic party, under the direction of National Chair man Raskob produces year in, year outf Hardly. They only want i(. during a presidential campaign, and even tlieii; judging by th( recent results, the demand is fur front univcrSRl.r ' ' Unless we arc much mistaken, Kaskob' models, with another cairipaigir four years in the fu ture, will even make the self-confident, and optimistic John J. question the practical wisdom of : FOR, as above noted, the American people wimtj to go some where. During tho presidential campaign, some of them aro interested in just "milling tho "outs," and thq "outs" trying to run over tho "ins" but the ibnttlo Once over, only a handful (if rabid pftrtisaus cure' to continue the performance four years longer. 1 Therefore; with President Hoover in the AVhite House, and tho Republicnn party in power, of political "go-cart" production for which there is practically no Mr. Raskob and a few of about in tin effort to hold up the Republican caravan,- bury as oven .the-rank ntid.filc of their own party realize, tins' is all that can bo done, until the next campaign; any substantial following is far from probable. FOR, like it or not, the American' people as a whole, regard loss of party, do iiot care for partisan politics as a steady diet "year in, year out." Having selected a manager for four years, they want results and action, not mere obstruction and "aivti" propaganda. '' ' - i Consequently wo fear Mr. Raskob is going to be no more successful with his (ieneral Motors "of the air," in his second campaign than he was in his' first. " MUTT AND JEFF WE'Re P"ooun6 Trie IMRecToR OF TrVS TALWieS I H6 AIN'T VdlSC Tt THS RvjBBeR TUG. lDA(. an wepj our. voice TRICK' SHIRT STOD TALKIMS IN) THfe TSeeP BT sWATCH VOUR .'Jv Kn' fwwwwi 1 f 1 K7. L.S " I I Hi,.. r V I IV., . , i rti .: I A- I , yr : ' ''"----stJ - ----i si j w 1 txiuir , kNi- 1 . s&. uis; " .vr.---t.-'-g ii: 1.1 . 1 km: f. ' ra .... 1 ' . . , --r -- . . itet FREEDOM? ' dismay that the International recently acquired a $10,000,000 ' , ', the present nation-wide move profits, no nuin-made laws arc , tho free and independent press and that eventually the news in our modem civilization, the . free and imlebemleiit "press to to get for themselves. if nhsolnjely up to the people of $1,550,000 reduced to $800,- ' ' the same error now, he made that 'what money has done in ' Motors supplies the modiiun. the popular demand now for his program,' ' '' 1 ;.- t. ; " ,'. ' nrourid" 'the "ins" obstriKvting wc feav this 3G3-day program is going to produce something public demand. his lieutenants may like riding traffic and obstruct progress of Another Good Idea Gone Sour in the Talkies IAvic TO comss out of THINKS t'rV TONCS H UleCS-L TP AMD 61UC 1 TrtS RIGHT ANSWieRS TOWVf.J t ' ' 11 1 iiiT '' m f Iffl1' - ' ... iryi u...-.-.;. i. Personal Health Service By WILLIAM t 81fnf ltttn pcrtatntnf to ymou kctltb anl brf1ii not to 44 dUDafa tt fnatBrat; will be anmrtrtd by Dr. Brsdr II ft unpd, tH-kddrM4 mlp la tttcioMd. Lettora fthould b brltl and wrltUo in Ink. ' Owto to A tiifi amber of, littm ra olvd, only lew en b ftnewend hr. Mo tpj an tw mad to querlco oot oooiona Ing to Inctraotiooo. Addr Pr. Willi Brftdjr, In ouo of taia nowipff. LOW BREATinXG AVD tf - Ahen tbe roatier notices some.' thing nbout hich blood - presaure horo and writes in to ask whatfi good for il, I c'nn't tell him the. remedy, because I don't knoW ot" any. . When-a reader tells me he has h.Rh blood pres-' sure or that his physician says so, I have some gen eral advice for; him If he vynnts' It, t h o u gi of course I cannot surmise from this diHtance.-.what ails the reader. Sometimes I fear readers who' have high blond pressure or, worse, who imagine they have It, will suf fer some dire complication by rea son of a sudden Increase 'of the pressure on receipt of my answer to a request for a remedy. They take It so ill that I hold myself out as a real doctor and all, yet cant tell a person a remedy for such a simple trouble. As a mat ter of fact, it in precisely because I am that I can't ask any reirl doc tor If this Is not so. '' Now, friends with high : blood' pressure dr even just an?, obsession thereof, come up closer and listen carefully, for I have a brand new remedy for you today, and like all of my remedies this one will do you no harm if ft does'you no good. I urn glad to say that this new rem-1 edy for high blood pressure cannot be bought In any drug store nor can it he ndmlnfstered by a doctor or a nurse. You have to tako It yourself If you want to try it, and it doesn't cost a red cent. I do not say It Is absolutely foolproof, as aro snmf or my remedies, but I hf'llevo It Is simple and safe enough tu merit tho widest puhllcutimi. ' Of course I might name the rem edy In a single lino nnd ho done with it, but if I did Ft, I nm cerT tnlu, a lot of people1 who ought to know of this remedy and uso It would never learn of It at all, I havo had a lesson about this way of presenting Ideas, and I know how it works. For years I have tried to drlvo homo to readers trio physiological truth, that almost anybody, if lie has a mind to,- may get, along quite comfortably with out the help of physic In any why, shape or manner. No owe, appar ently, over took that seriously, un til I happened to present the sim ple truth in another way.' with a lot of argument and explanation; then, to my surprise. It began to take, and people began to assuro me that they htfd found I was right .about it. ' j This remedy for high blood pres sure, is a simple physiological trpth: thatV'-might he expressed in hfys1 than a dozen words, but I'm nfit going to. kill It that way, for I be lieve it is a valuable remedy and I want to perstindo as many per sons as possible to use It. In fact, I am -going to make you wait over il day or two for the secret I must soli you on the soundness of it first. It is regrettable, but, unavoid able, that you must keep, buying the pnper for several days in order to gu tho sequel' of this talk when I got ready to divulge the secret I'll print it here without further noticed it may be tomorrow or sorrio day next week. Meanwhile I offer you' Just this one thought to turn over ilj your mind; Tatients with uncomplicated hypertension (high blood pressure without associated organic disease) aro usually low breathers, that is, their breathing habit Is both slow and shallow. gricsTioxs and answers A Happy Thought. AVe haven't heard from Mrs. Sumsey lntely, though we get fre quent news of Ben Told. We hope nothing has happened to tho wlcj ow. S. A. It. Answer. Hist, don't disturb them. It looks as if Ben were go ing to marry the widow and take her away off to Never-Never-Land. Biology. ; Out hlology teacher asked If we believed m the germ theory of dis ease. We all said yes! The teacher asked why. Wo answered because scientists havo proved it. Teacher asked If we had soon it proved, and wo said no. Teacher then said wo should not believe what has not been proved. N. K. ( Answer. Teacher may be stimu lating 5our thought or scheming to make you stydy that's some thing, by the way, a high school pupil rarely does, and so we should not call hlnh school pupils "stu dents": In high schools, as a rule. yoo AV.L ST TAUVC IM THAT WISHT ttOB sceroe BEADY, M. D. fan jiijopTi vres HE y ; y.' ,it Is the baby stuff homework, not I study.. Borrow' from-lhe library "Louis. Pasteur.'V by. S. J. - Holmes, Ph. D., CHarcourt, Brace & Co.) It Is a- hrt biography of the great scientist who gave us the germ the ory arid proved it. ' . '-' Suld the Kpldor to the Kly. In our vicinity there are several "dental parlors.", heir prices seem lower than those charged by In dividual dentists . . . J. L. w. Answer. I can't vouch' for the dentlsts or their ways, Hut"! should give such places a wide befth if I were looking for a good dentist. Just as I should avoid "cllnjcs," "In stitutes' 'and other impersonal schemes If I were cooking for a good physician. Seems to me if a dentist is really onto his job he ought to conduct a drawing'room, not a parlor. Snoring. , ' 'Any way to stop snoring? R. H..K. Answer. Light covers, open air sleeping, resumption of neglected dally exercise, perhaps local treat ment of nose or throat by phys ician. (Copyright John F. Dille Co.) Tho rrhiilual.licws hi tlijL' papers Is loo liigh soiiiulhr. Instead 6' Hayln. "A dnrln' bund It, liehl, up tho Acmo flllln' statlort slngle iuindod lit broad daylight, hacked tho attendant ,l a. closet, scooped up a largo sum o money . an' "csipcl," it should say, "A cow ardly hum Hiioaltcd up 01. tho mi am ted hoy attendant o tho Acme flllln' station, hacked lilm In a Closet at tho point of a gun, grub bed $IfK- an iwcapod." - I don't look Tcr any serious International computations so long an .we'vo got wet; otnbnssies; r. - Brisbane'sToday (Continued from Page One.) been killing deer by the hundreds, coyotes 'eating the remain!). - . y j A New York policeman, .attar- a 1 long chnse. killed a big black dog. ! leader of -a gang of. mongrel ctli's in the city a -outskirts, it had bit en , three . children. Man's best friends need regulating. Gunmen killings are becomingly systematized, occurring on " sched ule time.. Enrico -A renin I told his partner, Denny Tortorict. "They are out to get me. A bunch, tried It a few minutes ago. 'They will .try,; itsniiy." Monday, five hours after the pre diction, "they" put a bullet in the : back of Argluini s head as he sat in his 'automobile. Organized crime decldos that killing is the. cheapest, surest, sim plest way of settlings quarrels and eliminating rivals. M - A Good Eskimo hunter makes 31000 in a winter season. ' getting $20 to $:10 each for fox skins that used to sell for $10, and he can earn $1000 in one springes benver catch. .At Flat, Alaska, Indians' earn $7 a ' day. Mr. Twitchell, scientist, says this demoralizes the Esqui mcaux, who drink toft much and die off. It is easy to stand hard ship, not easy to stand prosperity, - High pay, gin, and the diseases that come wllh gin, will solve vari ous race problems. ' ' . " Quill Points Typical silver lining: Women don't drive trucks. iHowUild primitive man 'Relieve his feelings when there tre no doors to slam? ,.."' r" There are just two kinds of boys: normal ones, and those who don't enjoy destroying things. Glass feeling is the'nlce Uyill you get when your flivveu creeps, past p. big car on- a'hill,,.; M i'. A: A man thinks It. poor Hport -to shoot a bird on the ground, 1 ml a woman will capture, a 45-yer-qI widower; ' If nli " the automobile's 'were placed end to end, a lot of Jay walkers would try to squeeze be tween them. . "If I quit her," the youth says, "It will break her' heart." Thus matrimony becomes 'a penalty for vanity. ' ' ; " ; Amerloansim: Boasting that you are "just as good as unybody'; joining a crowd that blocks traffic to whtch some celebrity, enter r hoteh ' " - Rheumatism doesn't - really af fect bone. Who ever heard df rheumatism of the head?- . Human nature in the same every where, and, the soda-jerker in a crossroads general store feels vast ly superior to the rube whq lives four miles out. - - You can say one; thlnjf for home hwiv, It givow thmhatli . tiih something:. 10 u-Umyooii v . SntliMlttyrSi: .iy?'1 i . .a , , . ,.,.'; It la estimated that each thou sand of population contains 87 young hopefuls : whoso 1 parents think their work just' like Bud Fisher's. " : . There's just so much of every thing; and with congress in session perhaps there will b6 less wind elsewhere. ' . . -' Perhaps Nature knows her stuff. Dieting to get thin makes the fool ish ones easy prey for germs; and the sensible survive to preserve the race. . ... . Why waste sympathy if -call money costs 20 per cent? Tho crup shooter-gives 50 per centVto.'ono who stakes him. v . r Communications To the Editor:' '- It seems as though the ' service stations are being made the brunt of anothjer attack. v: Ode tot our newspapers a while back Instigated a price war like the cities were mmm I - rH . V -';: ,', -, ; AUTO PARKING QUESTIONNAIRE ''Following a joint nicotini o meratei's of the ilerclinnts' Association, City .Council and Plnnning'CommisHioii nt which nn ngreemcnt was i'cnchcd on the essential points of 1he pro posed new traffic Wdiiimico, tlio' C'ity Pliinning-Commission wished nn expression front the public 'in general on a "fcv 6C the points concerning parking regulations'. Therefore the following questions will nppenr in this paper every day this week, and it is requested that all readers, both, cily and country, express their vijsws by clipping out the coupon, ad dressing the same to the .Traffic4 Conimittec, care of this paper. .", '" '' .' ' r5'. .'." " ' - '.' - ' '"''.' ::!: .Answer "Yes" or ''No.';.- ' , -. h: 1 -S ' ' 1 Do you favor .ori'ii lionr parking in' the' central busi ness district? '.:.:.'....;..trn. :j ' ' ' ' V- ' 2 Do you favor haK-hour pnrking in the central business district? ..'ri ''' '' . ' ... 3 Do you wish the presenara of limited tiiiic parking extended to increase jnorc territory? .....i..'.;., . - ' 1 Do you wish the limited time perking to bti in effect until 9 p. m. Saturday nights? ..J. . , . 5 Should double parking be prohibited? 6 Are you in favor of limiting service station driveways, in the central business district, to' 18 feet on each street in order to provide more pnrking room? .". Xamc u'....v.;:.:..:.A.'.'..'.r..j......w.. . ..... Address ,. ., havlnic so that Medford would not appear small town. Well, they got It, and does It Drlng any creau 10 Jfedford Not much. It's cheap ening to drive up the highway or j down Main street and Bee nine dlf-1 fererit prices- for the same article Now there 1s a move on, Insti' gate by one of your worthy bUBi rieBs ' men, to shorten the service station drive tb 18 feet. Just be cause one Saturday evenins ne' Darked his car In a service station drive and when he came back it was moved alishtly to make drtv 1ns rootrS forifJars- to cm In and go out of the statioh.' -I ask the people; aren't' the ' service stations Just- as muoa part of the- bust-' neRs aa;.the department stores, irrocery--iuires; ' etc.? ! ; Wouldn't it be aMurd lf'-we wefe to park oui cara on the sidewalk in front of one of these places of business so that -people could neither get In nor out? -. Our dally newspaper, as stated, has. the sen-ice stations In a place where , they aren't making ex penses.' Now to satisfy the whims of one man, there is a move on to shorten the drives to the width of a garage edtrance so that It would be imo8sible to get some cars and buses into the same. I wonder if they realize that for each station there would, if this move were ac complished, be Just one more park ing space, and there are from eight to ten cars parked in the station. If such a move as this were ac complished, and the service station owners wished,' where would these cars' park? ' ' "' : The service station owners are wilting now that cars 'park In the station out of the drive, but whert parked in the drive it hurts busi ness." ' ' -' - - ' - ": There' are- other ways the city could encourage the downtown shopper other than hurting busi ness. A wiser move would be for the city to put a stop to the pres ent' gas war. The city of Ashland put a stop to a sr'.'ilar war. . ' n. f. siNonten. ' Tliniika I'lilillo and Paper - A To the Editor: - . -Dear sir: Through your columns I would like to express -to the people of Medford nnd southern Orciron our nppreciutlon for the woofferful 'reception given'" the deiejrallon of Hen All Shrlnei-H who wero' yriui- Buests last Saturday. '- . . AVo do not know of any place where ''the. spirit of hospitality shown us could he equalled nnd wc wiMh to'thank you and youe people. Less than five. ,pereent of those on our special- train had ever stopped in Medford before-' and they mnrveled at tho beauty of the mountain country around Prospect where the majority of the deleua tlon spent Sunday. , We hope that some day we will have the plea sure of coming again to Medford. ' Vou are nlso to he congratulated on the fine special edition Issued and tho generous publicity given to lllllah Temple by your publication. .' ' .Faithfully yours, , f ' A. W. OLUCKMAN, . j rotontatoj Ben All Temple, ' . ' A.A.O.N.M.S. ' Sacramento, Col., April 30. ' . ... lt. " Diamond in Can. ' ASHTABULA, O., May 1. (fl) When Mrs. Frank English oponed a can of salmon and dumped the con tents Into a plate',' she heard some thing rattle .like a pebble nnd searching It but, she found It was a diamond. A Jeweler appraised the stone todny at $l?fi.' t Bi nit Do You Remember? in VITA n ARO TODAY . . (From files of Mall Tiibune) . -' f ' May 1st, 1919. : In vla'w of the' record henklng t fruit cropJn sigha labor-shortage' Is expected, but. ns ops have as yet been taken to meet il. Rex Lampmnn of Gold .Hill Is in I'arls, on the staff -of theA. E. '. F. paper, the "St,-irs and Siripes.". Smudge: Two more -straw hats showed up on the avenue du Molnt Wed., to-wit: 8. L.. Leonird and a stranger in our midst..-,i Clarence A. Kelsur-of the 91st Division, over six feet tall, and John Knlahokas. 6 fti 3. arrived here today from France via Camp Lewis.. They aVe called, irutt' and Jeff. -, .; I ' Assistant Postmaster Tllll War ner rejorted today, rione-, of -tho bombs sent , broadcast .over the country in a Red terrorist -ploti had- been received- at ' the local postoffice. - ' f "Vi...- j. V; 20 YHLRS. AGO TODAxT ' (Prom files of ftlall Tribune)' May 1,- 1909.- ' . : W. T. Beverldge,' civil, engineer, lins formed the Southern Oregon: Railroad corporation," backed by eastern ' capitalists and ' will make a survey for a railroad from Med ford to the coast. Central "Point Is raising a cash bonus and 40 acres of land to secure the , teW; mlnal. - ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' L i' 1 "Yes," remarked ' Jesse' Enyart today, "the trout possess remark-, able qualities of jumping. - I re call one summer at Prospect of seeing a trout pursued by a wild eat. The fish jumped to the top of the hill, took a running start and leaped far out In the vallej,-, landed In a deep poof nt the bot- , torn.' . H was a jump ot 496 feet, j I measured it; myself.". a 4 v. ,-; F. H. Hopkins- reports bractt-'' cnlty no damage done to hi or chard in .Central Point by frost. Ho ' says' calamity stories havo been' circulated by "knockers." ' Moso Harkdull. Is spendlng' the week' end vlslilnK'..:Mlko' -llanley on -Little Cutte. ! - -'A ;- J; - A, C, Allen the well known- or cbnidist of hear .Medford, proved hlirwelf a oou neignoor auring the recent frost by smudging moat of1 the orchards, near Central Point, . An accommodating wind drove tho smudge up tho .valley, where It settled over the orcnarqs and furnished excellent frost .pro- , tcctlon. ' ',' ' ,'r " '..' ' Mr. waiters :,nas arrangeu wun Mr. Charles Hazelrlgg. to conduct the ever popular opera "Mascot,"'-' with. Mr. --Burgess, as Prince li6 ronzo.', . . '--:'.; ' ,' .- ,- . The . Elizabeth Stewart placb, 480 acresr two, miles' east 'Of ;thft city, has been sold ' for . $36,000 to a local syndicate, composed of F. E. 'Merrick, Dr.- F. O. Page, ! M. Cummings;-nnd W1 . 1 T;.,,Tork,. There Is fine coal on. the place . , ':. ., ; .- ;-. - Oregon Weather ' -' lnl.t Vnt.lnlt, nn.l Tim anir . ht Increasing cloudiness ; west, with ; moderate temperature. Moderately; low humidity. ; Gentle, .-. variable winds. v. .' -.. - v.. Kelief rrom Uas Stomach Fams ; V Dizziness ; v ; - . . ' '" . . .; --, '-' V..'. . " the doctors tell, us that 90 per cent of all sickness is due to stom ach and bowel troubles. You can't be well if your digestion is bad; you are likely to get sick Unless you relish food and digest it properly. Tanlac has a wonderful record. as a relief from digestive troubles, even those of years' standing. -Mrs. Annie' Waters, of 2762 44th Ave. S.W., Seattle, Wash;, sayw n suffered from nerve-wracking stom ach trouble. , Every available rem edy brought no results until I tried Tanlac. It built me up till", my stomach trouble -was : cured." If you' surfer from gas, pains in. the stomach or'trowel. dizziness, nausea, constipation,, . or -, torpid! liver; if you have no appetite, can't, sleep and are nervous, and all . run down, you need Tanlac. It is good, pure medicine;'' Made ' 'bf roots, herbs and barks;' Get a bottle from' your druggist today: Money back1 if it doesn t help you. 51 MILLION BOTTLES U5ET By BUD FISHER tf,l)ri y,tmf ..Trait .flrttu U I Pt. Tanlac