Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 27, 1929, Page 4, Image 4

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    TAOF. l-T.tTIt
AfKOFQUI) M A1 Li TKITSUXE, MKDKOKH. OTiEGON, MONPAY4 M.V 27, 1929.
HEDFOKD MAUL f RIliCNE
fullUtad W U
bdtoed ruimMii e.
ti-ir-u a. m sl
, BUBBBT . H'HL, Crtltof
t IUMITHI SMITH. UooW
la lofepMyWRi Www
ftfUrwl m Miad cum boimt m kMlart.
nou. vuior ta Mm , lf.
(DBDCKIPT10N HA TO
r Hod Id AiIuum:
Dll, villi Hllnlir. JMT. f.;o
: Dolly, Wtb fund. awDlb ,'o
lulli, lllKJt awdar. ur JO
Doll,, ititMut imw, mooih........
WMklr Moll mm, ooo ;ur t no
liuidir, oh fur t.00
Bj Corrlor, 111 Adti In Mxtfiirt. AiMond.
oeiKinTUio, Cinlnl tula, PhtMU, Tolool. UoU
UlU and on Hlihoon: , ,a
Dolly, itb gundor, aunm
Dolly, ffltbiitn flundoy, nooUl So
mil, lllt Bundir, ono loot J 00
Mr, olio .undo,, ono ft I 00
AU locmo, cub 111 odrooeo.
MEJ1HEH or THE A880C1ATKD FKKU
Baetlrln. roll Uuod Win botMo
Too AjweloUd Prui lo tuluolnll wtltUd u
ioo om tor publlntloo of oil oow, dlwatrho.
tidlltd lo It or oUiutlM erodlud la Uila oopor,
ind olio to Vat loul new pudiuiko mcou.
II rldiu lor miuietuoa or opoooi
rroin oro tun rosonod
urrlclol papor of Um Cltr of Mtdford,
rffclol pipor of Joefciop County.
Adionblng BecroMaullTM
M. C, MUUfcNBKft UWirANI
Olfleoi In No Tori, Clileogo, Drtren,
ftiueUsi, Loo Antoloo, AtollU, Portion..
Ye Smudge Pot
.' ly Arthur P.rry
It was Btf . cold yesterday that
many of the hienfolks who have
been standing- in Rogue river ur.
to their, hip-pockets, trying to
catch a fish, would not go to the
hall game for fear of contracting
pneumonia.
Spinach is being served . with
whipped cream upon It. Spinach
doeB not have muoh chance tt
shrink a plump lady when thus
accoutred. , ,
JUBtlce is hard put trying to savo
a sixryear-old Kentucky hoy who
slow a playmate in childish way
wardness,, from an 18-year term in
a reform, school, and Alphonso
Caponu, Chicago racketeer and
wholesale murderer, from a year
in a Philadelphla,Jail that Is a sort
of a playuouse for erring grown
ups.. ,
The high price of stigmas Is re
fleeted In an upstate editor, who
In a rhlghty burst of righteousness
declares ha "would rather be freo
und poor thun be Harry Hlnclalr
with his flUO.UUIMOO branded
with an Jndeliblo Btlgma.' Many
would lis willingly stigmatized the
first five naughts of Mr. Sinclair's
wealth, let tho cumtt fall whore it
will. .
Much of tho hay fever In our
midst Is alleged to have been
1 caused by the roses. '
ft NOW. VOU TKIIi ONE
(Kugono Itpglsler) -EUOKNE,
Oro May 18.
(To tho Edqr) Wo, road In
tho Hoginter a fow days ago
of Mrs; Borger haying her
. flowers '..stolen, and' of the
farmer Who Is troubled with '
tho hunters breaking down his
: fonces and shooting his live
stock, but that doesn't com
pare with tho sneak thief who
went Into my orchard and dug 1
out eight of my best walnut
trees. WARD JOHNSON,
A carrot is a carrot, evon if tho
chef does cut them into letters of
(he alphabet before ho casts them
into tho soup, .
The corn In tho valley Is coming
up fine, UBsurlng ono and all of
plenty of corn-meal next winter.
Hood Hlvor Is becoming nn
awfully noisy place they uctually
have a cannery whistle down thoro
that blows. (Tho Dalles Chron
icle.) That sisterly fooling be
tween the cities, ?
Several weary souls who have
been sitting down'' on the. front
fenders should lie down on the
running boards.
Tho Malhuer Kntorpriso tells of
dispute In which a cltison threat
ened another, first with a pistol,
then with rifle, and was prob
ably looking for his machine gun
whon the war ended.
Tho young lsdy wormed hot
way into the rumble sent last Fri
day and 1ho rescuers estimated
sho would bo thuwed out onough
this afternoou to dislodge without
the uno of on ocotyleno torch. Her
accomplice In tho Hying wedgo was
extricated thin morning.
'v. .SUNDAYS ,"
On Easter the rain marred the Joy
of the day,
And raincoats and goloshes peo
pled tho street,
'Twus out of the question to make
a display.
We grew philosophical next Sun
.i day may
Be sunny and bright and dry
under feet: .
On Easter thb rain, marred the
Joy of the day.
Wo hung up our' Rlftd rags and
i hastened to say,
"We'll went our old things
though they'ra not vfcry
neat."
'Twas out of tho question to make
The following Hunday our now .
clothes ah nuy!
Again It was raining with In
sistent beat,
As on Kaeter the rain marred the !
Joy of the day.
Again winter wraps or our ruin
coats so gay,
Enveloped our drosses-disgusted
complete;
-.'Twas out of the question to make
a, display.
J-'or the ho vent h time Hunday. we
tried to array
ourselves In our finery dututy
INVITE THE
ACCORDING to preKB reports the state grange lias deeiiieil
not to hold their annual convention at Marshfield, be
emme no agreement lias been readied regarding the housing of
the delegates. Tlhe chamber of commerce declares the grange
should handle the job, and the local grange maintains this should
be the responsibility of the chamber. Ho a deadlock lias been
reached and the president o the grange declares. Unit Marsh,
field will not get the convention because members of the grange
do not care to go tt'hera-t!iiey are not wanted. t
Why not extend an invitation for the grange to hold their
convention in Medford? There would be no local difficulty re
garding the housing of delegates. Thcro is no place in the
stale where tho grange1 has made more rapid utricles than in
Jackson County. " ' "'
; , If it is too late to mukp the cfliangc for this year, then it
would be in order to start a drive for securing the state conven
tion 'in 1930. Medford has gained the reputation of being the
best convention city in Southern Oregon.
The .Southern Oregon Medical association has decided to
hold their annual convention here next year. There is an ex
cellent chance that Medford will be' chosen as the convention
city for the Professional Women's club in lDliO.
An invitation by wire to hold the grange convention here
this year would do no hnria" If the effort should fail for this
year, it woidd pave the way for success a year from now.
As far as conventions are concerned, Medford 's attitude is
the more the merrier. Here is a good chance to advertise this
fact to the state at large.
MISINTERPRETING
THE PORTLAND JOURNAL'S fear that the recent decision
of the Supreme Court in the O'Fallon railroad case will
raise railroad valuations twenty-one billion and rates two bil
lion, is scarcely justified.. : v
.. Such estimates are made upon the assumption that the Su
preme court has held that the valuation mlust be based entirely
upon what it would cost to reproduce the railroads at present
wages and prices. The railways never asked the court to make
any' such decision, and the court has not done so. In its opin
ion tho court Raid, "No doubt there are some, perhaps many,
railroads, the ultimate value of which should be placed far be
low the sum necessary for reproduction." Its statement that
cost of reproduction must be CONSIDERED "along with all
other pertinent facta, " and that the valuation of some railways
may be. less than their cost of reproduction, shows conclusively
that it has not held that cost of reproduction alone must bo con
sidered, and til ut all es.timiiitcs of the probable valuation which
are based upon the assumption that it has so held, are wildly
erroneous. 1
That the valuation must be imide larger than it would be if
nlade in accordance with the method favored by tho commission
is ibvioiis, but how much larger is entirely conjectural. It nec
essarily follows that all estimates of the increase in liet return
that the railways will be legally entitled to make, are matters
of pure conjecture. .
!" "" " , ' ' - t-i
f The railways have recognized hi the past, and they un
doubtedly will recognize in future, the fact that public senti
ment and economic conditions cannot safely be ignored. They
will undoubtedly seek opportunity to earn n net return suffi
cient to enable them to pay reasonable -dividends: and to raise
capital adecuato to the development and improvement of their
facilities,. They always have recognized, however, that rates
must be based upon "what the traffic will beat'.". Rates must
not be nutde high enough to interfere, with tho development of
traffic, and they are and always will be largely influenced by
competition between the railways themselves and between th
railways and other carriers by water and highway. No de
cision of the Supreme Court can make it possible for the rail
ways to afford to ignore public sentiment or competitive and
other economic conditions..
The decision will be far from as advantageous: to the railways
as the Journal maintains. Oh the other hand, it should afford
a much bettor assurance than they have had heretofore that
they will be allowed, under good management, to cam reason
able dividends for their stockholders ' and tumbled to raise
enough capital to furnish the public the kind of transportation
service that the publiu demands. ;
Jules Verno once ujrote a fnmiiful yarn about going abound
tho world in 80 days. The rooent. flight of the Foit Worth
bliowft thnt going around tho world in less than eight days will
soon bo an entirely practical matter. J (
And yet no one ever won a
hurt nnybody's feelings.
All educated man is one who knows what became of those
who flew the Atlantic before Liiuly did.
Yes, heredity is a great influence. The harder Dad's nose
is pressed o the grindstone, the mriro his kids' noses turn up.
MUTT ADN JEFF
0P-tf.RS MuTT AMD 0CFF, I
WAnC.OO "TO BRCAK UP TH
PfeTTlWG PARTieS M UOWtR'S
yoo see sPoomimg;
PUBUC rVeCKIWG HAS
60TTA Be STtPPET.'
GRANGE HERE ,
THE O'FAXION CASE
place in history by trying not to
Does Mutt Love His New Job? Hes Nuts About It
ir to
o r.f 1 uui-r 111. IJCLK.I t :l: :: h: V. rVA aU I NT . I v;v.V I 1 111: I II fT II I f II r. j. 1 1 1 1 1- v I v"l - I
i j ' W-Aw J SMACtC . 1 i r i m
Personal Health Service
By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D.
Sigotd leiur pertttolnf to personal baltb M bjfltne, not to Oimmm ctittfrtoti
uvatmrut, will be tiunrrd by Dr. Brady li a (Urnped, wU-sddrewMl envelop u eu load
ltterf ehouid b brief nd written tn Ink. Owing to the Urg Dumber of lttre r
fld, on) few esa be tncwrred here. No reply eon be made to qarl Dot eonforq
tpg to tnetrnrtlono Aid" 1 WJIJUbj Brady, to ear of thle aaw-mapor -
KLXBt'UN
:, A coat of tan was formerly
calamity In tho eyes of fashion
A few years aeo I received lotn of
inquiries " f r o m ;
readers who hud
IncautlouHly ac
quired a little tan
while on summer
'vacation and now
wished to be rid
of it in a hurry.'
Today no sucu
inquiries come
in. N o w t h e
young people are
counterfeiting a coa; or tan when
they are unable to acquire a nat
ural one.
It in not necesnary to bo burned
In order to become tanned. Phy
sicians using ultraviolet light,
whether from the sun or from a
lamp, strive to avoid even mild
burning of the skin treated. Some
authorities on the use of ultra
violet light for the prevention of
rickets In infants believe the treat
ment is most efficacious when the
dosage is so, small and so Infre
quent as to prevent even tanning.
Heretofore physicians have as
sumed that the process of tanning
was at least a good index that the
ultraviolet tight was accomplishing
the desired cure. At any rate, in
hospitals where sun bathing and
artificial ultraviolet treatment is
used extensively, the children with
all forms of tuberculosis da de
velop .1 deep mahogany tan of the
whole ifjody surface as the tuber-
culoua lesion or nrocess bcnmM
arrested, Tho texture and healthl- I Answer. Cataracts do not grow
ness of the skin seem to improve over the eyes: cataract Is merely
with the tanning. AVhen a patient -a' clouding df the crystalline lens
has acquired a rich mahogany tun ,n the eye- Reading is all right,
his skin seems always warm, and Tno Patient should not postpone
the patient feels comfortable, when .consulting an eye physician,
and where most of us would be I teonIni:
chattering with cold. LaHt yetu' thanks to your ivy
Sunburn is an extremely un-! noi8on Prophylactic, irty I4-year-pleaaant
accident and in severe !old eon scaped poisoning for the
cases it is quite as serious as a ; ,irBt tImo !n hil lifd' e began
burn of enual area from fire. Kven ! eRrly In March to prepare him.
a mild or first degree sunburn ! Tnit vear ala8' we did not beeJn
! (simple reddening of the skin ln time' and hc has bfeen a week
j without formation of blisters), does i0Ut of school with an attack of
not hasten the tanning process and ttho old Polso"lne. following a
so the yound indoor dweller who'Hh,'rt walk. in tno country. "Vu'd
seeks a coat of tan in a short sum-?-11 ba uiKe to commence tho pro-
mer vacation had better bo cau-
tlous about exposing the skin to
tho sunlight. It is a good plan1
to follow a graduated schedule
exposing the skin only five or ten
minutes at a time for three suc
cessive times, tho first day; In-
creasing the periods of exposure;
the sunlight is strong and nearly!
vertical, even these short exposures"
may prove too long. i. i &
For tho relief of first degreq
ourn (whether rrom BUnUght, arc;
lamp or mercury vapor ' quartz
lamp, or fire) culamln lotion .in
grateful, and this may be followed
by a smearing of tho reddened')
skin with boric ointmont or with1
freshly made cold cream. CnlaminM
lotion is much used bh a soothing
lotion for burning, smarting. Itch-:
Ing skin trouble and consists of n
mixture of one-half ounce each of i
zinc oxide and culamln powders,
ono dram of glycerin, two ounces
each of lime water and 5 per cent
phenol solution, and enough rose
water or plain water to fill tho
half pint bottle. This must bo
shaken up and the lotion patted
upon the skin win the hands,
wtihout rubbing.
"When the burn Is of the second
degree (blisters) the same care
must be taken as ln dressing a
fresh wound, at least In tho first
fow days. Most of tho popular
remedies do more harm than good.
Never apply cHrbolic (phenol) in
any form where there is blister or
-.nJ "
on,vv oi.uu.u uu usim, U any.
vim Hil . .Stt . a .?P. prP"!thy th" of the days when they
ntT, ,?P U8ed" IL l8"0 W a"' their charms were
r"'"1 1 ' if U ovo wua' left entirely to conjecture? Marian
petrolatuin from a coilapsmle ut.iu,,. hn-rat(. i- ...
is preferable to any home made-
oil or greaso or salve. Many pro
prietary ointments offered for
burns contain phenol or. some phe
nol derivative, and will Inevitably
delay the healing process If used.
What I have called "Old Doc"
ointment seems to huvo all the
soothing properties any such aalvo
can have, yot does not delay heal
ing: Horle acid, bomtolc acid, of
each 0.5 per cent; zinc peroxld,
3.0 per cent; zince steareate, 4 per
cent; zinc oxid, 12 per cent; in
petrolatum, scented with aromatic
oils.
QI'KSTIONH AM) ANKWl.ltS
llnpturo
llusband examined by mill doc
tor, and surprised to leain ho has
rupture, lie Is ordered to be op-
SH-H. TrtERfi'S A
SHEIK AMT HIS
M SHEIK ArJT HIS S : L FOR MCKIrOG AO PUBLIC.
sweetie Neck
THAT B 62
AXD TAX
ernted on. (1) Can it -require
operation Tvhen he did not evnn
know ho had It.' Sometimes - It
appears and he can hardly, rind
the placo. (2) Is operation! the
only cure for rupture? (3) Are
trusses any good? (Mrs. 1.1. S.)
: Answer. (1) Yes. (2) Yes. (3)
Only for makeshift support; "a
truss never cures rupture.r I take
it your husband is not an old man
and If he is not. lie should avail
himself promptly , of the, surgical
cure. ' .- -,.'(' .
Cluilk for Imllgt-Htloii
Is there no cure for indigestion?
All advertised remedies seem to-be
for "relief" only. I have attacks
every three or four weeks, and
after the attacks I am sore and
tender in the pit of my stomach.
(Mrs. N. J. K.) .
Answer. Any pain or distress
that remains more than momen
tarily Indicates something the mat
ter. "Indigestion" is a meaning
less name and never explains
painful or distressing attacks. A
dose of prepared ciialk (calcium
carbonate), say as much as will
cover a dime, will give as much
.relief aa any other remedy . you
can safely use. You should con
sult a physician and find out what
ails you., I might suggest likely
causes for your attacks, but that
could do no good.
Cataract
Is reading dangerous or harmful
when cataracts are beginning to
grow over the eyes? "What can be
ne for relief or cure? (M. M.)
,"J ,aa' . meuicauon now r (i.
B.'S.)
Answer.-
-No. Now the doctor
A. should supervise any treatment.
Tho Immunization method, which
I. am glad to cxptnin to any reader
who requests it, is advisable only'
for prevention, . ,
(Copyright John F. Dille Co.)
I wonder if snappy ole ladles
Hont ffl ninnrl an- -f..l wh-n
tire an' buy a farm, an' here's bet
tin' she'll never feel like singln'
again.
Brisbane'sToday
(Continued from Page Ono.)
Two pianos, about to fly to Eu
rope, were told by radio: "Ono
thousand miles of adverse weather
over the Atlantic. Heavy rains on
Uie other side; wise to postpone
flight." "llhey postponed accord
ingly, starting perhaps, tomorrow
morn tug.
It Is difficult to realize the amaz
ing fact that, at this moment, no
I t vr ffrvTiMts TffmK Turf)
1 '
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MAIL TRIBUNE
DAILY CROSS-WORD PUZZLE
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22. ilptlri- .
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Si. t:MnvtsIon of
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20. pact.:rs ,
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::is. Uterary
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r,i. nind
4. Ifiiliirn i
42, Hpnulfcli hero
43. HiHly of HHler
41. KlIi.Ti-nl suit
4'n t'oiidnlnc
47. Htr(iiotl
moltusk
4D. -N'-sullve pro
lix SO. I.osi of
sni'Dcli
0U. I'SKtto Ira-: .
l. '1 rc trunk' i
(li. Krror . .
Title
81. Additions to-
houses
C5. Hocky
' tain park
60. Inrrcusect ,
1. Twist
S. Pennsylvania -city
rft, Helmvlor
tL M'Ptli
68. y,ost
l lie
STf EjElOjelftgA'C CiElDlSlP
c nTrtniA xKi bTaTl 1 oTe
1 c- m s & oftATL puETR
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cere' si3teT3 t I'A f.T T i
elMc t E offAjM A 8 s'g 0
, tio TTr v y u l els'
spr a is EiwU s IsTa 2 sTF h t
;,: rftflg vi'-H1 0 " u H- t
H P I N tVfJ 0 j E IT E STT S
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n " 5 W- ; ! if
10 ', : 21 : Tp, 22. '. 23 '
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26 i7 . " " fHF 29 30 5T tz
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So''" Sl Sl , :Y-S3 54 55 56
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57 S$ Co
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Mf. :
' ti? '
civilized liumiin being is separated
from any part of the world, ns to
Information, by more than one
fourteenth part of a second.
No one can be farther away from
another than : halt, the distance
around the earth. It (altos one5
fourteenth of a second . for riidfo
to travel that distance, going 186,
000 miles a second, Anf 'Ameri
can might know'what happened in
ChiOa within the last 840th part of
a minute. j ' i -j.
Mars, when we become worthy
of attention from that civilization,
millions of years older than our
12,000-year-otd barbarism, will tell
us by radio,. "Our scientists an
nounced such a discovery, four
minutes ago, by Greenwich time.''
It is not merely a small world;
it is a small solar system.
In Kentucky a boy G years old
is sentenced to the rel'orir.atory for
15 years. He will be released at
21. A new trial is asked. The
boy committed murder. Not a trial,
but an examination by competent
authorities is needed.
If the boy, at large, would men
ace others, restraint is necessary.
Eut 15 years In a reformatory
would surely turn him. out more
dangerous to society than any boy
could bo ut (i years of age. It
seems outrageous to imprison for
15 years a boy of that age. But
civilization hangs many men with
minds not moro Hum 7 years old.
An unconscious longing for revenge
has something lo (lo with that.
Tho young Princo of Sagan, 19
years old, son of .lay Gould'B
dnughter, Anna, has shot himself,
and will probably die. Ills unfor
tunate mother announced the trag
edy, saying it was caused by pa
rental objection to the boy's mar
rying a young girl with whom he
was violently in love and that the
only cause for objecting was tho
boy's extreme youth.
Tn the newer country, where the
Princess of Sagan was born, a boy
of that age would simply run off
and got married, the modern motto
being fWo do not ask parents, wo
tell them." '
-
Those that have been annoyed
by "wrong numbers," forgetting tho
marveloust young telephone women
!
11. MoTPment of
the Neu
12. Opi'li citurt
li, lnrliiiiiliini
SI, l'urtirlilul
KufTW
23. I'urmcr irrs-
(lent
25. Tli In pi'rfor
i at id iu;lul
S3.
Knrly Hip!ia
UfUt cliuruc-
ters
S7. I.cjrittluto
SA. And not
3l. Hint I n in
pin mint ion
!J!. Siniirt
32. WiitrliPd
rlosply
33. JlemullKli
i:.f. A)Milnts '
37. Nra swiiKows
SM, intention
41. Nprnnd. fccll-
InifS
43, FtiNtfiiliitf
4it Tropical
Tin ps
46, 2,IM)U ponmls
4H. I'dsstitfunuy
rl. Comlilnc
ui. Kleviiliou of
Kround
M. ?lc Utile
64. Illbllrsl tow
er: den
65. The Kternill
City
fiS. Killed
fiA Choose: rore
3, Fastidious
4, Flowers
5, Spinning- or
pint of a
spider
. Tinkle
7. Color
8. Fruit of the
OHk tree
9. MHrtlniqae
rolcnno
10. Marked with
an asturUk
are nearly always right, will learn,
now, that wrong numbers may be
useful."
In' Ilroolilyn n family of eight
i were sleeping la an apartment rap
i idly tuning-; wrlth gas, ; A wrong
j number aroused the sleeping fa
rther. -'Almost overcome by the gas,
i he opened the windows and doors
I in time -to save his family.
i Danger frqnJ escaping gas might'
j be: minimized by nixing"? with all
Igas distributed to families a low
I percentage of :'sneezing gas." The
family, beginning to sneeze, would
I look for the leak. Women often
work, ln kitchens, with gas escap
ing, from an unlighted vent, with
out knowing it. Tho Biioezing gas
would prevent that.
Valunble suggestion for our sen
ate. The Turkish parliament, in
secret session admits only mem
bers. Hut man cannot live by dis
cussion alone, and one, servant is
admitted to serve coffee and light
the members' cigarettos. This re
liable offlclul is deaf and dumb,
cannot liear what Is said, could not
repeat it, if he heard.
Our heavy old earth, as rigid as
though made of solid steel, has
not quite settled down, although
it has been turning urolind lor
more than 1,000,000 years. Kartb
ouakes In DenMuirk Saturday prove
that everywhere there is still some
thing to bo adjusted.
Quill Points
They have raised the taxes on
Mr. Hoover's farm, and that means
no tractor, again this year.
At hiAt n way to make the kids
keep Mill. Get a movie cam
cm and yen hi to make notion
pictures of them.
The world Is so full of a num
ber oT things, it's no wonder we're
all as broke as kings.
It's a queer kind of tariff relief
lock hiaup,jFf: i'll
Be. along
FIFTY PPi CEr)T- 0,F THe
evfDSNCG
fcfc SO'.
Do You Remember?
HI TEARS AGO TODAY
(From files of Mall Tribune) .
May 27, 1B19.
Homer S. Cummins, national
Demo cratlc chairman,- declares,
president Wilson will run for a
third term if tho Leajjuo of Nations
Is defeated.
3" :
Msiior TL. AV. Clancy receives fi-
f nal disohai-pe from army and pre
pares to resume ilia medical prac
tice in Medford. .
Mercury soars to new season rec
ord, 100 In the shade. (
District Attorney Roberts serves
notice .on Foley & Kurk carnival
to close all games of chance.
Bardwell Fruit company decides
to enlarge plant. . .
E. X. Welch and party of Med
ford reach rim of Crater I-ako by
walking through snow flv-e miles.
. k
Subscribers to P. & E, fund de
cide to retain control of railroad
as eastern purchasers appear ln no
hurry to close deal.
20 YKARS AGO XOUAT
(From files of Mall Tribune)
May 27, 1009.
City moves to condemn M!ko
Hanley'.s land for right to cross
with city water pipir.
Heavy rain delights farmers and
fruit Growers suffering: from
drought.
The pleasing rumor of a railroad
down the Illinois river has tickled
Grants Pass, but if they don't look
out Central Point, Gold Hill or
Medford will play tho trump card.
R. H. Whitehead of Ashland was
a Medford visitor today. ,
B. V. Carter of Ashland drove
down today In his new Chalmers
Detroit "30." He reports the road
in fairly pood condition.' Ho mado
the trip in an hour.
that makes the farmer pay moro
for the sugar used in sweet mash.
Inscription on a bronzo statuo
in tho year 2085, when the world
is perfect: "Ho attended to his
own business."
The debenture plan, briefly, Is a
scheme to enrich brokers and keep
the farmer voting right.
Man's vocal reactions to a fly:
(1) "Shoo!" (2) "Darn that fly";
(3) "Gr-r-r-! You're a heck of a
housekeeper!"
Greater lovo hath no modern
than this, that ho permit a friend
to use ills car.
Americanism: Acquitting a man
who burns an orphan asylum; send-.
Ing him to jail for sassing tho
judge. -
Education pays. The ordinary
millionaire in jail doesn't know
hpw to do anything ljlit ; pound .
IUUK8.
Ah, well; perhaps it's all right tn
call them talkies if you call that
talk.
'A hoTiiHii doubtless Is the
kind that swallows IiIh tobacco
when the clerk slums him pa
jamas decorated with litUo
flowers.
Happy thought! If France can't
get reparations from Germany, sho
can affect her financial status just
the same by disarming as Germuny
did.
It .vroniH strungo in Ibis efficient
modern world, but nobody ever en
courages tho hen that delivers two
eggs in ono wrapper.
"Louis XIV." by Sisley Huddle
ston, is ho good you could onjoy it
even if a book club selected it.
Correct this sentence. "John Is
more careful of his personal ap
pcarenco since he got a new ste
nographer," said she, "but. I'm not
suspicious."
Had Stomach Gas 35
YearsAll Gone Now
"I suffered wllh indigestion and
gas for 35 years. Since the first
dose of Adlerika, T have not been
troubled a bit." D. Carlisle.
Adlerika relieves gas and sour
stomach at once. Acting on ItOTH
upper and lower 'bowel. It removes
old waste matter you never thought
was In your system. Let Adlerika
give your stomach and bowels a
UHAT, cleaning and see how good
you feel! Overcomes constipation.
Heath's Drujt Store.
By BUD FISHEP
uj(TH Tti otHeR.
IN AM HoVJft.
and sweet
As on Kftster, lh ruin marred tiie I
. Joy of the day,
'Twa out of the question to make
a display.
r (Kanns CUy 8lnr.)