Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1929)
PAGE FOUR MEDFOllfl M3TL TTtrnTTNTl, MEllFORD OREGON, MONDAY; JULY 1, 1929. MEDKORDMAIVfRlBUNB! ti-iv-s 5. u i. 1 , HuHKltT W ML' 111,, M1r ftLMPTKU IMiTU. fcUMtw lottrri m Miod Hut salttr ti VtfM frtfuti, und Aei of Mm I, lt. lUUTRlPTION IATU tr Mill Id Ainaim Dally, with Buwlajr, tut .....If. BO UftJlf, vrltb BumUjr, u(ttb Tft Dll;, tltbuul HuiMlay, jt 60 lully, wliltoUl BumU), munlb 6 , Mall Trll'Uu, tut u I 0l Sunday, vol rev If By (wrier, In Adrtne In Mwtford. tjMarMl HckMtIU, Central Folut, FbowU, Taltul, Oe' Hill and on Ulitmaii: lull;, with Bundcj, oot6 I TO liailr, vltboul Sunday, oiootb. ...... . & Daily, vltbuut Butfdar. on ftv f Q Ualy, vltb Sunday, one yr o All ttrau, e b Id fhaoca. MKMBEH Or THE AIWOCIATR!) PHKM Mellrtf Full Uad Wlra Brnin Tfaa Atfuclittd I'imi b ieltwlely mlltld U tbt una fur uubllrallori of alt orwi dlnpateha it edited to It or (iihtirwlM eradlted in thla patr, Ud alio to the local tnwi pubUiiwd beralo. All rtghti fur tiubllcaUoa ef apelal tfbpattta karelo we alw rewrtad. Official paper of the Clif of Medorf Official paper of Jacawn County. Buorn UUy amaf ttrrulaUot ftr ati cant indlot Oct. 1. 18, 44SH AdrerUilni lttpreMntatl 1L C. MOt-ESBKN 4 CUMFAOT Offleai In Net York. Chicago. IWroti, Ban rraucUra. Uu Anftlaa, Beatlla, PurtUM, Ye Smudge Pot y Arthur Parry Many are :is tanned hh harvest hands, who went no nearer u har vest field than u drug store. To iluli' ii" nlihl wiirlh wlillc Ntih been produced In ihn'llri'Kiill iii'i-hh fur the gambling bishop mill emi nent reformer.'. It looks like some editor could I Ii In l !f KDlllOlhlllK. for Instance, "Let he who l With out Hill L'UHt. tllll fll'St Htlllll'." While going nl ll lircuknocl; peed yeslel day lie nlily broke. 'a l.'g. - All oroKHWoril-iHiz.U' fans will liriihalily lie highly pleawd to learn thai their old fuvorlie, the "einu," Ih on the free list In the new tariff hill. (LoiilHVille (Ky.) V.'iiipm.) The two Infill men and one lady who are xtlll enKaged in w.rliiiiK them, will lie delighted o iiear Ihe ahove, ' .' ;", rOKFlGX MISSION IlTNr fokliihomii Cliy Tlmt'H) '' ' Minister Akp 0: rellrlnc ' from paNiurul wnrlt; ' muni Imvp Miplnyuiftit. Connie- . lent and In Bond health; cun , inmllfy hh looul oi tiaveliriK K.icnniun: bird Hlorc or pt h t (i c It IhihIiichh; rntaiirant nmnatfor; hotnl plork, or Bhlp pliiK clciii. Opotl iiii-xei'; able i oiKauizor. What, huv yoq for ! a man of ability and i clcftn rororri ? C, A. V u t k I n h, Okpene, Okln., Box 135. The CbuIdH K"t hurl from Nn in-askn Hip IuhI of the' woek, with t-HKlne and niealn inlHHlhR. ' The Vawter b(y uavt; the new money paHted on n window In the v fidurlary depositary. The nlllH nre neat nnd artiHtla, and can he readily iut'iituii'ii hh npua (lullck.s. The tre:inury dopurtment of the United Htatoa reeommendM that the people "Kt nnipjalnted with the :w money." With the old money, tho acquaintance con Minted chiefly In kiHSing It ttoouoye for the si'cut mujoiily, and Uie hew money will nlwaya be going Koine place. ,1. Piurpont Wind han n noiiiued IiIh Intention if navlng the community with one hand Ucd behind him. Uuy.vtackH have Htuitcd dotting the landscape. There will ho the U tat a I Hhoitago of hay next wlntW. ' T)i6 Kpantsh nvlatoi'M who es-qayt-d a flight ueroN the Atlantic have been ichpihmI and till Hpuin Ik Hinging. If they had managed to CHcapo drath going ta.st, it whh their hit tMit ion to renew their at tempt at, Muicide hy a return trip. They were udrll'ti off the Astorew for nigh unto week. liy Fri day the world whould know what brand of cigarettes Htowvd away aboard tneir plane. The l'orthtnd chamber of com merce, from whence till Oregon hlcHflngH flow, and the originator of the ()uult notion that the tttate docH not need railroad develop ment, haw "butted In" again and thUK -tmveil the commonwealth the disgrace of having it representa tive on the farm board. Weather to continue, ( Albany Democrat Hdllne.) Am generally expected. . HM.lll.lt KDKATIOX The two Harvard inUHical mara thtjnern, who wll Htrlve to out llHten each other In the nlutng ami llHtenltig emtm anee cinlet to be tituKed in a inuxlc niore un Holy ' oke ntreet, Cambridge, will xwing Into nctlon ut S o'clock thin aft ernoon, when a well known the atrical mar will it tart them off with a wave, of n Crltiimm banner. The HtudeniH will then chimbi'r into ihu wlndowN of the nhop and the fantHMle ulrtiKKle, the flr.st ut Hh kind, will get umter way. The two Mudent.i will Heat thcniKclveH In op posit i wlndow-N, each with u vlclrola and more .than 2ou reo tn tin, iiikI. Have ftr bi lef interval, when they will be permitted to withdraw for a few moment, they Will llHteii continually to tnuefc tin I II one of the 1 wo faints, die, falls rttdeep or becomcH tnrmnc. The ' two boyn have agreed that the routes) ran he ended hy no other eaue than one of these, Hrflon Post . (ii-mlnnle Willi DNiKlller SI'lll.N'G VALI.KV, N. V. o1 ! Mis. ltoa Potem, A, und her 17-year-old daughter have been grad uated together lit Ihe Mining Val ley school. .Mrs. I'ctciK.lhc w to ol a Coltm eg.ttliinal "nttnirtcr. took n four'your ooiiik In order to qualify for n position uu music U'uchtr in tlio public uiliool.. WILL WE EVER SEE ANOTHER "WORLD WAR?" WITH the hi":iiiii! liy Jiimii, wnr is now liimiinn nprn woi ld. v A treaty, like 11 lnv, is only us strons; us public opinion be iliiud it. IhiI wit li world opinion wind It tliere is no dnulil 'this piict icpri'scnts 1 hp p:r('iitost inlviinctf tnwiird pcnniint'iit ! world peace thnt liislory Iihh ever Keen. Win' is detested now ,tix it never Iiiik lieen detested l.el'ore. With the experience ( f KM4 still fresh in the minds of the . I i .iple, there is niitnrally eonsidernlile sheptieisin eoneeniin;.' this iiyieeiiient. It wns only n short time nl'ter the Hryan nrlii tiiitioii treaties had heen signed that the world was plnnied ill the most terrilile wnr the world has ever seen, j lint there is a striking difference lie) ween the prevailing' ; psychology now and whal it whs fifteen years iijj". Fear was Ithe dominant note in Kuropean psyehoiotry in 1HM. Students j of the World War are now pretty fienerally agreed that, out Lside of the professional militarists, no responsible, leaders in j Kuropc really wauled war. Hut the liclicf that sooner or later war had to come, was I so general and the fear so strong, thai if one side of the bal ance of power ilid not start it the other side would, that no '.treaties designed to prevent war were, or eould have been, ef fective. . Tin? silmitiim today is allo;:ether different, and will con tinue so for many yeais lo come. That the armament race lhat Iransfoianed Kuropc into Iwo armed camps will ever be lallowed In Main the momentum of pre war days, is lint hinUable. 'il only is public opinion afainsl it, bid economic conditions render il praclically impos'itible. , o sensible person believes the Kelliij.'K treaty or any other liealy wdll suddenly transform Ibis ball of dirt into a ' warlcss world. There miisl be a Iransformal inn not only in our political and economic oi'Kani.al ion, bul in limiuin mil lire, before any such cnndilinii can enmc aboul. Hill there is reason to believe I lull Ihe acceptance of this treaty will mark the end of war on a lai'tre scale, that is any repetition of the ealaslrophe which licfcll the civilized world just 5 years ,'iki today. " JAPAN AND TNK two coiuHrios wlicrc tliis htriloj-rg trcnty will tnct't willi tin? Iras! populnr fiivoi. will imdouhlctlly bo tlio two (oum Irir.s wl. it'll represent tlx Mrcjilcst politicnl contrasts, nnincly, Sovicl Russia and .Japan. Soyicl Russia preaches world peace, while it prepares more nnd more seriously for wnr, not war nii'mst any one nation, hut war apainst the entire capitalistic world. .Japan, temperamentally, is more like the (icrniany of pre war days than any rthrNcountry in the world. Vigorous, effi cient, ell'-t'onlidcnt, tho,ranU and file is. 'still devoted to the imperialistic theory of u blood and iron.'' Russia will umlonbtedly' regard the treaty as a hypocritical gesture by the 0 rchL.GodJelji m moi ; while no one will be sur prised if the ministry responsible for the signing in Tokitf should fall, br 'im.;e war is still regarded as the"gmtlesl sport of all." HKRK are represented two forces which must be reckoned with in any survey of the future from the standpoint of outlawing war. Hut there is hope in the fact that in the next ten or twenty years these two countries are destined to undergo marked in' tnrnal change. Russia, undoubtedly, will goon begin to move more to the right and Japan more to the left. Knlcss all signs fail, long be fore the world has recovered from the material exhaustion of the World War, these two countries will be forced by economic necessity to give more thim lip service to the Kellogg pact out lawing it. , ( base adorns the new $10,000 bills. Hut as a rule people who get hills of that m:'.p get them without a chase. If we understand the Ifearst prize winner correctly, it won't hurt to lie run over by a fool driver, if he is drunk on wine or beer. " Mr. Cnolidge uprainetl an arm while fishing. Tsually it is done while talking. What is worrying us is just silver cups, say about l!M!t. Vim cim'l cXii'cl iimrli i-cviT!'iic( fur llu cnurlx us limn in wlit'ii i-vii''oin' kimws whi'lhi'f llii' acciiscil is innocent or srnill.v. no one knows wluit 1 1n- jury will do. Most ol' tlio siiuill jolis me lirld ly the Idinl of mon wlm 1'i-cl clii'iili'il Ihtiiiisi' llicy )fit no return on I lie money pniil for neei dent insiiriinee. MUTT AND JEFF A hui I, mulct n -Wr;o, TOO HAD A JOB AS A ! Y0O FAIUGb IN -Ytufc doty! : C w . hot i sh v ,v -- r u i aj 1 fl'pS I m 'I' Mfv 'I ! ' is " . i ti ''i"' ' i ' yiu,i wiy mnw n l.jr:h the Kelli!rK trenty out linvintr praet ieJ j y (he i'iitiri! civilicil . , SOVIET RUSSIA where Hobby .lours will put Gentleman Must Let But, JvjDGc, X COULDN'T GRAB HeR. BY THc Hair; SHe uAS WEARING A Boyish BOB r VI Personal Health Service By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. I Blru Wt9t9 urtalnutf to pTonaJ bealtb and hrtfltnt, not to dleeaM dlaifooau or i uvatiM-ui, 1I I br aitswarvd Oy br. Uradr II a ataupod, aclf addfaMd auvaiop la ooiMd. 1 ittra abuuld ba brief and emttan to Ink. Owing to tbo Urge ouaber of Utters re 1 ririwd, onlr a ttw eJ b aoawerad here. No reply cn bo iMdo to quwrte oct eooform i tnf to tna traction Addreoe Dr, W1)lla Brady, to oar of cblo op ! " ;001 DISXFK'TANT' AT HKASONAIiLK COST I In 3!M& the United StateH pub lie. heall:i nervlee- bowed a flve c:nt pamphlet describing an effl- t'ient iMlUit! OIH- int'ectnnt, w I t Ii full directions for niakins It, and the total cost for the (11b lnfctunt wan e timated a t 50 centH a gallon, at that time. It in called 11 y B ieulc luhunttnry Pine- Oil diHlnfeJant. It Is mini e from 5.5 pounds of pine oil, good Htruined North Carolina crude K rowin 'l.'t pounds, and 2 5 per cent nodi urn hydroxld solution I.I pounds. Pine oil Is a name given to frac tions from both the destructive dlHiilallhm and the Kteam or solv ent process for the recovery of (urpentlni' from waste wood of the long leaf HoutlK'in pine, but for this disinfectant only the oil from the steam or solvent process can be used. It should be freshly dis tilled, for on standing the oil 1ocb its germicidal power. This disinfectant may bo used wherever any of the usual, coal tar compounds are used. If Jk more pleasing in odor than these more costly preparations. It does not injure fabrics or metals, and Is very efficient as a disinfectant of articles in the sickroom. It, has a not displeasing taste and may be used as an antiseptic spray In nose or tin oat and' in tooth wash or mouthwash, of eotirse diluted. This disinfecta nt might ln a good one to adtl to the cutting mixture in machine shops where Ihe men suffer from bolls und fes ter from infection or contamina tion t,f the cutting mixture by pus germs from the boils or festers of men who remain at work when they have such infections To make the hygienic labora tory pine-oil disinfectant the skill of t ho chemist or vlim-maclst is neccHsnry- '(,", Anyone who wishes to make use of this disinfectant may obtain full particulars for its preparation and use by sending five cents to i he government printing office, Washington, D. C, for a copy of Reprint No. '34 from public health re porta. "An ,. Efficient l-iiuld Disinfectant." OCICSTIOXK AXJi AXSWF.IIS In Other Wfntl.s I wonder w.int you would say If Quill Points The secret of success? . Well, 0 u,... , i ...... .,., n ...ith a little more energy behind it. ' The fluccessf ill farmer raises every t hing he needs." Including plow hands. Pyorrhim isn't n specific cli.icnso. IfH jut whntover you h.,. tlmtj necessitates $ I S5 worth of work. It's Htill n hie town If you ran recognize Saturday by the number of cars on the street. The cross-word puzzle Is about gone, but anyway It wasn't as much fun as trying to guess what the talkie is saying. All the supreme court need do to make Its' embargo against pa cifists nbsolute Is to extend Us Jurisdiction to the stork. AVar will end some time. Doc tor quit bleeding patients to cure typhoid, when they found out 1 1 didn't work. Atnprlcanliim: iionouiu'lni; an nntUly iu'l;hlHir: cU'unlnt; your own pri'lnlsOK with Krt'at cntlui Klaiu und Nvttilng the U I rt Ih--hllul Die iloor. t'nelo Ram Isn't ronlly n . Shy loeU. 'I'he throe Wills thai reveal his ooeuiiatlon nre liase, lonniH anil Knit IuiIIh. If MetriniolltaiiH nre no supe rior, why Is Ihe nioHt popular i-olyuni the oui lhat soumls liUe n sewing elrcle? Min riyern tliive lieaten homer a Lady Drown WHY DIDN'T You GRAB SH vwAS WGARlMG HG 15. BY H(5 , CLOTHING THEVj . THdYT, Y'O" BOM I CLOTHlAOG I were; an intimate friend and came to-con mi It you. I have thai trouble which you are fond of de- j daring non-existent, neurasthenia. M. J. W.) j Answer I'd sny get out of here, i i iMurt, or else leave your alibi out side nnd let me ee if I can find out whether anything nils you. Anemia Please write on anemia, the various ; kinds, . and. the .proper management u n d treatment. ( I f. T.) , Answer T here are virtually only two kinds, namely, ordinary secondary anemia, which is a symptom of many diseases and an effect of many kinds of poison ing, sometimes an effect of bleed ing. If you have secondary anemia send for advice by mail; not forgetting to enclose with your request u stamped envelope bearing your addless. Then there Is primary anemia, pernicious anemia, and no one knows the cause of that. If you have per nicious anemia,' send for a doctor. In pernicious anemia here is something to do while awaiting the doctor: Kat half a pound of liver, any kind of ' liver, cooked any way you prefer, three times weekly. The liver will do no great hnrm even in ordinary sec ondary anemia but It Is not u remedy for secondary anemia. Cows Ihisklug In Sun In a radio talk a tuberculosis specialist said that exposure to sunlight has proved of great value in the prevention ami treatment of many forms of tuberculosis, and in the season when there is little sunlight, a sun lam serves the purpose. He also said nurs ing mothers get something from sunlight that benefits their in fants. Jlc claimed that cows lhat get plenty or sunlight or ultravio let lamp exposure give milk that cures rickets in chickens. Are you "agin" that? (!:. I). D.) Answer I believe it is just so. There is now on the market a kind of wire mesh having the inter stices filled with substance transparent to a large portion of jthe ultraviolet rays of sunlight. This Is much used, not only in cow and chicken houses, but for win jlowji In. human habitations. If is so cheap that litany chicken farm ers, buy It for the coops, ns the ultraviolet makes the young chick ens grow and thrive nnd improves laying." : (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) pigeons in a race, but pigeons i still lead In the relative number of landings made on purpose. . 1',.,, .l.w.'l x.uwl liw.tlt, 1,1- ; , , , .,' ' Jwt 1,1., mssln(5 ,.,,((1 without stopping1 to investi gate. Peru nnd Chile can cement their friendship by means of competi tion. In sports If they can arrange some way to-haVe the same num ber of winners. Mr. Hlcuso, Is determined . to make foreign diplomats dry, so evidently there is somebody else there who can be counted on for free drinks. Correct this sentence: "If that was my tootn, saut tiaa 10 oaugn- ter, I wouldn t neglect it another, day." Brisbane's Today (Continued from Page One.) short. You mijjht lose on tluit, nlso. Mr. Ixive. represenllUK beet sugar refiners, says I'reshlent Hoover ts In favor of n lilKh sUKar tariff. The I'reslilenl knows uhout SUKar unit what happens, in war, when you j can't get it, ami porhaps lie is not In favor of iliscnurnKhiK Cuba', i Ho knows that hiKh simar tariff means enormous profits for sui;ar 'Kiowers In the l'hlltiiplnes anil Ihe i Hawaiian Islands. Simar from those cmmliles pays no tariff. The good missionaries in Hawaii, 7Q r:-x-'fr x BACKUSSj OMG-PtGCG SvjiT ArJt THGRG UIAS WO mail tribune daily cross.word:puzzle M'ltOh I. Particle a. Iiottny IV. M'ltlll'O of I fit uiy IS. JlniMtr U. Ariinoillf I'lnnt IS. Itlvcri riiuiilb I". I'litr up IK. AVIMt IU. muni Me in. Menu KnlMt ii, ll it l r nn tru U. Ordltuiry illHcmirk Solution to Saturday' Puzzle "yjnEiL xi-piriciQiAisiTis rIeJmTa" IK JSiAiG iL S.X tIi IjiUFiH-rs" A tl. IIHilltiil rhiir iMlcri I Clir. til U ttl. UclMicriile ST. Well kiitiwn :il. I.IkIH tuU4-h KS. r.xM .14. wiiurmiv :t.t. Onif i m ilnr ah. (-'nrwurd n;. .unuiiiH 3h. iiittilliiti fabric .11). Itiiite 41. liulriuifp I.1. Ty (in aiiuarr 13. ITepoNlt Jon ut lireHciice ll. HirV uiiDie IS. liniHideil !jrnt ii hum lire heal t fnllorf. 47. I'll rt t "to 4. Mure Heiiiltfe .'.(). Clinrlty il. "Tin vloum lIJl(" . (til. Ilu ntrriiid fil. 'InUlivil fl:t. AllKtiikH B4. y ue 111 lt,i. Ilucknuyed (10. Slim ii 67. or h alt-kiy hue AH. Odor ill). Sliiii'r. efflcer s I M p 11' s I n ol u t. o p lp roliU tIIFa"g tie s S I N I A I ft I eTrIJ P j R 1 A 1 R j r Al. Tfiunrd uo, Hf inter llli u- ll c i p F ryj 1 i5 iy is 9 io i i2 " ' 25 " ? r " ; . 11 28 i9 3o 3 31 33 1 II J4 V3S" . sr- 36 jfS 37 I u'?,; l. p. T 43 "JT ' 7 ". it' t3 w 111 not letting their right hand know what the left was doing, gathered In all the sugar properties of Ha waii while they were saving the natives, now largely extinct. Haw Hawaiian sugar is taken to the United Stntss and turned, each year. Into 700,000 tons of refined, sugar which doesn't pay any tariff. This amount, of course, will in crease gigantically. The high tariff will crusli Cuban.1 fiigar Industry without helping the' beet sugar gentlemen so much as they hope. j if war came we should he com-1 pelled to look to Cuba lor our sugar, because bringing it from Ha-! wail and the Philppines would be too far and dangerous. it is dangerous to plan the ruin of Cuban sugar production at our very doors. Today endless talk about prohi bition seems to annoy President Hoover. No wonder. To be elected President by a plu rnlity of 20.000,000, with 120.000, 000 people enthusiastically expect ing great things and then do noth ing but talk about bootleggers and their murders, prohibit Ion enforce ment and Its killings, must be tiresome- to a great engineer. He did not run for tho office of "bootleg manager." Prohibition officials had printed mnny pamphlets, planned the dls trihutlon of them In public schools and ft great prohibition campaign in all the public schools. President Hoover has squelched the publications anil the school campaign. Washington reports that when you go to Russia, tuklng a letter of Introduction from Senator Hornh, yon find everything wide open, the soviet union delighted to see you. A letter from Iiorah is called "a mugtc wand' in Russia. ' -M This doesn't mean, as someone suggests, that Senator Horah is in sympathy with Russians thai shot the czar. It means that Horah has common sense, knows enough not to tell a firmly established govern ment wilat It must do. He Is ex actly tho right man to be chairman of the senate foreign relations com mittee. -M No strings are attached to Ho rah. pulled hy silly boy bankers of couldn't GRAB He RRburo'tTT TH tJUAlST BCAUSS SHC WAS G(SGASDJ At I DiON'T "DARe GRA15. Hfc BY THG: ARM S I lit l W U J - v K ' A t v I II, UiiiilBli-Ameri en ii pliiluntliro llHt 13. fin nil I Ruro tieu p aliurk eriHlHlng to lite kidney a in. tiult uf a linrse SI. hulti uf full uciu tn. Hrlieme . Si. lerlt id. Snore ease ii. lioumed tH, '1 lie noiilar . iV. t liurti 31). Wruth 3S. (,'irru.t Induienient . M. iiiaur .17. Annua to. bevel 41. Ileer 43, Wen pons 47. To tlie KlieN teretl side 49. I'rmrastliiate 6U. Forest In "Al Ynti I.Ike It" 68. Hun of a s S3. Oiieru bi Verdi Color 1 r.o. Away r.7. v mil ) solo fifj. Young ho rie Ml. Irish Bl. Hold tach 02, Adilltton to a house 05. College degree , now 3i 1. Stngea of life 2. nubed cloy X. Kitg-Kliitrayi 4. Uciisuiu fi. SUp fl. Ib-imtfnff a , IIt'Ktl(lll . r 7. King r beasti b. Vciienious . per pent 9. Concerning 10. Dart Wall Street that lent money to I Russia when an Incubator baby might have known better. , (iermany lifts the ban.' The for 'mer kaiser may live In his native j land on one oi his iiumeious es tates, if he chooses. Hut he probably wont' go. Hoi i land is calm, sale. Germany might be "different." And the familiar drive In Unter en LlmliiUijli'ouKli the uranuen burger gate, would be soured by the thought of the old Imperial General Hlndenburg running a Ger man republic. The Rev.. Dr. G. Campbell Mor gan,' British.-'justly crtlcizes mod ern biographers for speeking the ugly things In life. "Two prisoners looked out from be hind their bars, One saw the mud, the other saw the stars." Many biographers see only the mud. One much advertised biog rapher reminds you of an individ ual who should write about Jeun Jacques Rousseau, mentioninr only unpleasant details from his "Con fessions," ignoring "evils" and "the social contract." Hishop James Cannon, of the Southern Methodist church, is crit icized, unjustly, because of invest ments, or . speculations, through Kable & Company, alleged bucket shop, now bankrupt. The bishop, who has the right of every American citizen to invest in American securities, did not know that the firm was a bucketshop. As to his making a profit of $11, 35(i on an investment of $2300, nothing iinusual about that. . To quoto Samuel Johnson's say ing about the writing of Ossian's poems, "Mnuy men, many women and many children" could have done it." Thomas R. Ryan once mentioned t lie names' of the ten smartest young rich men in the United States, predicting their glorious fin ancial future. The wise John D. Iiockeller, Sr., is said to have remarked lo his old friend. John Shanley: "Yes. John, but give Thomas F. Ryan a $2 hill and in four years he would have all the money away from those ten smart young men." Kleven thousand .'tfiil is not much . 1 1 1 - -, I UNDG.R. THG. y -v. 1 . i r' S I '- ''-"' " " I . v .. II ' ' ' . 0.i Do You Remember? TF.X YEARS AfiO TODAY (Krom files of Mail Tribune.) ; , . .liny i. now , i Columbia. Ohio. Win. Jennings. 'Bryun leads funeral of John. Bar- - leycorn on u camel. Washington. Prohibition' goes, into effect, but department of Jus-1 jtlce will allow mle of beercon1' taining no more than 2 per cent alcohol. i Atlantic' city, In spite o na-,!; tional prohibition all saloons did business as. usual today, disnens,-, Ing whiskey, brandy" and gin. Byron O. Works -of - Talent,'- wounded In the war lands aboard hospital ship "Comfort" ,at Han , Francisco. Mr. and Mis. Newton florden leave on motor trip for former home In Strasburg, Va. Prosecuting Attorney Roberts mnvir-ru Hiirriunn Fielder of Cres cent City , of having a pint of whiskey In his possession. I'leioui is fined $ir,. ' Smudge: "One hears that pro hibition is a greater blessing than peace. All hands can stand peace while prohibition for a lot of folk Is hard to Hwallow. Still :", . TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY ; (From files of Mail Tribune.);; July 1, 1MI1B ', Med ford will make the eagle scream July Fourth. Burden L. .Dodge, father of Ira Podge, purehases O. H. Corey tract near Westerlund orchards Tor SI n.nn. Two years ago Corey purchased the orchard for $41,00. Postal receipts jump from $12, 7f7 to $1(1,72(1 a year. Kleven people die of heat in east. I.emniering, Austria 13. H. Har riman Is regaining his health here on a diet of black bread and beer. Kealtle. Crowds are now flock- f ing lo Ala.ska-Vukon exposition. IN RUSH TO PRAY MEXICO CITY, July . 1. OP) . Fifty persona were injured, crushed and almost suffocated In their anxiety to attend the first Sunday mass in Mexico in three years yesterday at Our Lady of the Ciuadatupe cnurch, near the , city. Those Injured were treated by the Red Cross. Tens of thousands of Mexicans flocked to the little church, which Js the national shrine, .as soon as bells tolled the, hour for the masses, . , It was the first Sunday'mass in Mexico since August 1, 1 92ti. al though masses have been said at: the Guadalupe church and other churehes In Mexico pity Thursday, Friday and Saturday of last week. Battle of the Sexes Now Playing Rialto When life no longer has a mean- , Ing then and then only will pic- ' lures like D. W. Griffith's "The Buttle of the Sexes," now playing at the Itlalto, stop providing laugh ter and tears to human beings the world over. - Love, life, the modern homo and the sex lure has made and unmade empires, fortunes und men, these are the pivotal points around which. "The Battle of the Sexes" Is set a-whhilng. This pulsating drama hits every hearth, heart and home., Into the soothing quiet of a typical modern household comes conflict in the person of an irresistible gold digger. At n fast night club the wlfo sees her supposedly hard-working spouse carousing with the capti vating vampire. 'Then the,' story builds up u terrific climax tlb-" picted in the inimitable Griffith, manner. , I And tlie enst! Jean HersholJ js ' tho husband, Phyllis Haver the gold-digger, and Belle Bennett tho suffering wife. Don Alvarudo and Sally o 'Nell are aso Importnntly cast. 1. Mt. Angel. Loeal cannery starts packing operations. profit on $2500 In these days. The difficulty is to keep it once you1 get It. .... By BUD FISHER your honor, our. vjcRDtcr IS .THAT MUTT-DID AUi A GG.NTtC.rAAW COtjt.l Dg CIKCUMSTAMCC-S. '