Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 06, 1929, Image 4

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    MF.DFOTtn MATT, TTtrnTTNE, MEDFORD, OTEnoyr, SATURDAY, JCLY fl, 1959.
PACE FOUR
MEDFORD MAIL f RIBUNB !
Dsllf, lundst. ffMll
i m til il f.a. ri
auBIUlT W. IL'HL, Mils,
t tUtU-TtK 1MIIU, lay
la IndtimidMil Niwww
blind M Mioud Out aaltsr it Kadtara
., 1W art tl M" 1.
UHMTMIHT KIN llTU
ftl Mall U Adftun
011, IUt Bundty,
luiii. llb uW, Bwulb.. "
Itall, tilfiwul Suudar. er -
lullj, vitwui BumUf, fcoitU). ...... . .
Wecllf MU TrltHiw, in X W
BuHtl?, om jv ....... yt'
bf Mirlw, lo Ailituwi In Mdfod. tUlta.
iiri.uDtllU, Central FuliO, ttMwa.
Hill and ufl HUbMfi.
lialir, Hb ttuuokf, awatk
Daily, pltbfwl BuiMUr. ui'Ul
Dally, witltoul BuimJu, ow tr I '
Dilf, lUi Sunday, dm '
All termi, ea.h in imt
UKMHtU OP THK AlWItClATBD PMUV
RmIHI KuU LU Wirt (Wnit.
Tba Anoclate Pre la auluiliBly aniliM to
lot tna fur (.ublkalluo of all newt diiMbM
wed) ltd to It or tfltervlM erwIitM) Id Uilt W.
aoJ aiao U tin local tw putillsbad bei-tlo.
Ail rlgiiti fur pulillcalloa at ipaclal iUUU
feartlo af alio rwrfaU.
Ofnelal papar of trw Cllf of UdTr4
Official pH of jKkuo Couoty.
worn dally itffata ttreuUUe for ttt
aodli Pet. 1, MM, HBfc
Adwtlilni Beprwtnutltw
If, C. MOUENSKN COMMNI
Offlua la N Yort. ttiitwu. Ifetrofc, U
rraodMo, Amel, Beattla, PortUod.
3a
Ye Smudge Pot
y Arthur P.rry
Neither the drug HI""' nor "Id
Hi, I i'jii Inn n liiily'H nrm " viii'-
t-iiiution or a wurl won I slnnv.
I
One uf the players on tin- I'oit
l.iiiil hull liiini nuy lie feels !"
"gtiintf in work on the .seetion '
lillil, In dale, I In- Houlhi'in I'lii'lfic
niilriiail llovs no Inrllnut Ion In
j.iivn a trtiln wn-t-k.
.Iiisliri' Tufi has liiim- to I'an
inlii. Iloiil Noli tl innl y i.-n-.
l InilliinaiiollH Mar.) Wi' 'lon'l
know what the Latin ana
Ither, Inn It look nice.
(loofclii'iry wlnv Is on a nr
Willi Kooseliciiy lll'.
The Kiirlnx ihlckeii nulinil Ik
III.., m n-Hily in K.l mil In lac inlil
ille ofjhe mail anil leap lliln the
ti-yiiiK pan.
XOTAIll.K. IS ItlCMT
(liine News)
Very Kreal credit l line to
tin volunteer flrn flKluern,
who rCKpomleil wo' pnnnptly
unit wnrkeri no hard lo Hive
tnrthi-r rtamuKP. It was a
nollllile rnct thai tliey were
not In uniform.
Siwernl have lilt out for the
hills, to he a coninilKsaiy for
moMiiullocN.
The Imnlm are ilihpliiyliiK the
new and wmiilti-r currency lll
r.iully. The old KIOIIO hlllii Hliow
no Tiiore wear and tuai', ttian the
new ones.
(las ffilnH are not as thick as nl
leKeU. Six Hltert have heell men
tioned for n court houiie.
Wanted A wile with plenty of
lonK hair that boch down her
liiick. ,M u k t he liiiiilit and wllllnx
to work. .My first wife moved
away and raised ihe devil fill Hie
time. Wnnl n tame ouo for my
Hecond wife. KleorKhl paper.)
And, If she wenm IiIkIi topfied
whoes and uses a hairpin for a
hlltton-hook, ho mueh the hetter.
One of the fldnety Older (Hits
reports she Is 11 "ophlstlcate,"
whatever that iiipiiiih.
It'H llhuut lime tllure wiih an
other fllnht aeruHH the Atlantic at
tempted, or Henator llcflin'H hoy
cot drunk.
The profesKlonal women ure
concoct liiK a plrnlc. A cominltti-e
has heelt named to keep tile red
tints out of Ihe atiKet cake, and
mules, from sittliiK down In the
duller.
One of our linotypes has heell
worktnK all week on a lawyer's
Itrief. unil only Utili tianes are left.
There were two SnmlayH. nnd
two Silturilay lllttht dances In i:ie
current week.
Wtrislon Sparrow Hkldded Into
tile Del (h'tehell hank window as
the velvet dusk was falltliK last
nlKhli nnd never attain will roosl
oil II front hllinpei'.
Japan won't ltiit long, fine of
thoir poets bad a poem pulillHhed
In the Literary Jhuest last week.
om: sum 1. 11 woiiKY!
I vt-ry mueh prefi-r long balr
bllt cannot tiudi-rstand why Ihe
brethren are so sot against hohbrd
hair and they never uny one word
llgalnst the halt being plaited.
I'lalted hair Is as mueh con
demned as having Ilie bead shorn.
(There Is 11 illfli'rene,. Iietw 1 '
bobbed and hhoi-11 iuilr). Thi-n
being adorned Willi JrwHry Is also
eoiiilenined, ' but 1)10 dear hrcthri'il
seepi .lo forgi't all about this 111.11
expensive jertelry fashion and
Jump on lo the one foolish fashion
that u poor glrj can afford I am
not endorsing any of It. I think
the1' girls, as well as the rest of
us.1 should avoid the iippi-iirauee
nt evn and do our best not 10 ol
fend even the least of the siiIiiih
anil, all should eot-tninly avoid all
forma of world llni'ss. yet why do
Ihe preachers tour their shirts otf
their ibncks over bobbed hair and
yet they never cheip about hav
Inn: the long hair braided or
plaited and never 11 word about
the expensive fashion of wearing
Jewelry ? I Soul hern . Ail vocule ) .
Ford Production
DKTHOIT, July li. (VPl-The
Ford .Motor company produced I.
nori.cao cars and lnu k dining the
first six itioatlm of the eiirrenl
yimr. Ihe coinpiiny announcement
said totlny. omosttc liroilucUuii for
Juno totulcd 177.4m units.
' Muhler. Htatf hlglmny rom
misslon put nsphull on Iracka here
anil ollln otieratlonn will atari
onI. ' .'" ' "
THE BREACH OF
E
VKRYOXK ncrce them arc
rliniiiiiite Nome of llu'ia '
t on why not sliirt willi the laws that justify these unsavory
heart tiiilm suits ,'
Miieli to the nlertiiiiimeiit of idle hands and vulvar minds,
I'rn nk S'. Ii!irdiii).'e, ii vi'Menihle, mid wealthy oil heater iiiann
faetnrer, is ln-inu sued for !r-'0,(!ll(l hy sprihlly Anne Living
ton, crass widow, from TuImi. Okliihema. There is standin!
room only in the C'liiciio court room. Aeeonlintf to one feature
writer, the trial is better tluin n VHiideville show, Old .Man llar
di;i";.' is n sinam, and the sprightly grass widow "as full a'
epper us n .Mexiean tortilla."
Xn doubt. Hut lejiiii'dless of the ouleoine how ean the ends
of justice or moral betterment be served .' This ease, like every
otln r brouoht under t!.e statute, is a plain ease of sordid black
mail. '
NO xi i-l with a hear! that can he broken ever seeks redress
in the courts. No self-res tin; person, male or female,
ever brinjiS action for cardial' ilainaj'es, for where one party
is opposed In earryiii!; out nn ciifiiiKciuent for marriaoe the
oilier parly is lucky to escape.
While in I lie middle ajres when women were properly, 'there
n, ay have been theoretically some basis for breach of promise
suits, I In re is none today. As a praelleal mailer, the law helps
no one who deserves il, and si rves solely as an encoura(.'einent
lo till unprincipled and unserupbiiis, --j.'raflers, shysters, black
mailers and Iheir iljj:
Far better lor eveiyi ne, and for Society in general, if every
heart balm law in i xisienee Wen erased from the statute books.
Where the desire for marriage is not mutual its justification nil-
lomalically disappears.
BEAUTIFY RURAL
A1
1,K rural school children less
X jl .Miiure inan city seiiooi ctiitiireu io nicy appreeiate
unkempt grounds, outbuildings of i'imil'Ii sliealhiu boards, de
icrepiil fences, llariii); heat of late sprint; and early fall suns, or
I Ihe i liilliiiL' blasts of wilder against an unprotected anil rudely
const rilcted school house?
j Anyone tnuriiii; Ihe country must arrive at the conclusion
jlhat rural sebool pupils are insensible to siirroiiiulin'.'s or that
j their parcnls consider that environment does not influence their
children s charaeleis, or desires to learn the rudiments of edu
ction tauolit in rural schools.
This is the view taken by many of the country's students
of progress and of human diameter, with the result that n
iiioviuiieiil lo revoliitioni.e conditions surroiindiui; the public
j schools of rural districts has been inaugurated,
j '
AI.IU'AllY committees are at work in various portions of
( the country to bruin about chani;ed conditions for the
j rural school children. It is rfcornizcd that rural school dis
itriets cannot be supplied with the magnificent architectural
structures creeled in metropolitan cities. However, rural school
authorities are beinr; shown that a Jeiidency to such . modern
loiislruction and faeililies as is possible in rural districts pro
duces salient results not only in the characters of pupils iittend
ii'K them, but in their education.
Still further, these rural school authorities are licintt tauuM
that ground iniprovenu'iit and bcaiitifieafion at ruriil schools
has the result of keeping Ihe pupils interested in their sur
roiindiiigs, their own rural pleasures and pursuits and thus
dissipates their desires to break away from home ties and enter
the cities.
THIS movement toward betterment of rural school condi
tions, while yet in its formative st;i"c. already has become
nation-wide. It had its inception in a small rural 'district of
South Dakota, where a locid chapter of the Uaak Walton League
took up the beaut ificatiou of its neighboring rural school
grounds as one of the league's many consirvalion activities. The
league's Hi HID chapters throughout the Tniled States were in
formed of the plan willi the result that already, in a great many
communities, the tirst steps toward ground beanlification have
been taken. Met tor eons' ruction, of course, is a matter of lime
and financial condition of the various districts. However, it
is pointed out that ground beaut il'ical ion is a matter of no cost
whatever. Hence, tree and flower bed planting, clearing up of
debris and brushwood, building or repairing of fences and out
buildings, are works in which the school pupils and their par
entsare rapidly becoming interested. Indeed, a spirit of ri
valry already lias been produced among chapters of the league
to tdiow which locality can produce the most artistic as well as
useful results in hcaulification of the rural school grounds.
i.
We il really like tu live
luniks tin chilil psychology really
Perhaps Ihe hirth nf h-Vi-i'ilnm
liirlh cnnlrol is mlvisnhlc.
MUTT AND JEFF
7CSxMvjTT, i'fA AM INTeRMAt- I BoT WHY ? THAT'S JuST IT THGr FISH ACT" ""IW tt HAWT IV T ""k
Rgvgmug. offices, nouj; THe. f Quee R Bcauss tHc WATCR S 'Jvff- f FnR mv 0'S f X THINK THIS
PRGSIDCM- Hoovfif eiSHCS to UATHlNlG . poiSOfoGD BY MOOnjSHlNGfcS. So Si? iMSewUlT L X. SUePoSe , FISH IS GOING I -r
SANS F.SH rVW BMf VJ. pS Tlte W AV T D TttCf ' T I Wfc0NG IO &
T ACTING Queel!. r4 rU-rl Trt F H' HR'S A pi? DTGCTlU TrtcX UioRLti I5f I. wAVi I ,"l
PROMISE FARCE
too ninny laws. 1 ticti why not
And in Ike ir ol' I'liiiiina-
SCHOOL GROUNDS
susceptible to the beauties of
i'iiiuioi tn see if liny nf lliesc
prmlucc any I'uliirc presiiletits.
is iiniilhci' instiince when
A Sardine Leaves No
Personal Health Service
By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D.
Sltfixd Ivtwr arutoing to poraonal booith and byiivna, tot M dUaaM tflaiioala at
titastuc, 1)1 b lumitd by lt. Biadj If a ttaupod, ali-addrtaa4 btriof to tucioMd
' ttra ahonld b tortaf ud wrlttoti In Ink. OvtL to too Ury iiubft of Utlr r
colvad, ooly i lew mo bi amwerod bar a. Ho tply mo bo vado io qoarta Mt aooforv
ini to InatrmHoM aVHa Dr Wllllaai Brady, la eaxt of Cbla oappt
. .
WIIATS THK MA1TKH WIT
'I" Ik local dotior U o upcTflf lnl
In his fxanln;ulfn of the patient,
that hr? doeH not
InRplre quite thnt
desrive f confi
dence nnd trust
the patient would
impose In him.
The local dot-to r,
utmehow, n e v er
lookH tio Kood nn,
the doctor fart
nway. Kven ini
the p r o f e k HlonJ
dinlnnce , lendH ft rertaln enchunt-1
ntcnt; when a doctor from far,
awny comes to town with a new
idea we ulve hn n more respect-1
Cil t....rlwiir lli'in Wl lilt if IIP l i
.... ........r, ........
n locnl man. And if n local rnanj
has a new. Idea he will do well to I
to away off Kornrwhere and pre
nent it to a medical society far
from his own community.
People residing in Wiseburs
like to travel down to Knowvjlle
lo consul) il spneliiliHt or have nn -
opci-atfon, and Knowvllltt folk are
In the habit of running up U
Wist'burtr whi-n they want a thnro
examination or (he b'st Ktirgk-al
perhaps the local doctor snffern
more froth Ihln uin-er distorting
effei-t of elose vision when he hap-'
pens to live In a small town. Vt,
when It eomes to sheer profes
sional anility the small town doe-
tor, the eoontry dortor. measures,
mi very Well when eompareil with
Ihe average of professional ability
In the ellies.
The loeal doetor Is quite likely
lo be rather rounh nnd ready
without many airs, and not much
In his bedside manner, here in
WbelmiK. Kilt some of his pa
tlenls ouuht to we hlin when he
Is readlni; a paper or taklnit part
in a symposium at Knowville.
Intiilored victims of tubercu
losis always have, nnd probably
mine or them still do. travel aim
lessly In quest of the mythical
"eurnllve climate." The home
ellniaie Is like the local doctor,
Isn't It
The locnl doctor (s generally n
lot better than some folks realize.
Ql'KKTIONK AND AXSWI5KS
AisftTii valintr A anew.
Yes, Old Dear, hut here'H the!
(HH'stion. Why do I have thiHl .
tliiiu,' you t-iill erl In the winter- It works both ways. The sap
and not In the mm.rnej-? If, as disappear when a district Rets
you say, I have somethine; wronKjdry, and u district gets dry when
with my nose, is It not the cold i the. sap disappears. - ' -
winter weather which makes me j -
know I have It? ir it's there, I Americanism: Howl nK about
don't know it until winter comes. ; the cost of battleships in time of
You have said so many timeH that neat; howling when war comes
winter weather has nothing to do ! because those fools at MashinKton
with the Wi. tra-la. '1 rely weren't prepared.
completely'' on- youc fldvloe. that
must have the answer. Agtien.-.
I. K I have just read your exn'
planntion thnt It Is the paucity of,
ultra-violet rays In winter sun
light. So that's that. Thnnks.
Now I'll go to the doctor and let
him have u look see. More anon.'
Answer Your epistle, my deal'
Agnes, reminds 1110 . of the om
from SI. Paul to tho nrteslnns. A'
St. Paul Dune ordered an artesian
pump and when the pump came
he could find no handle with It,
so he told the factory folk Just
what he thought of their methods,
.lust before he mailed the letter he
found the handle, so lie added
n postserlpt moll fying the com
ments In the letter. 1 hope i i -
doetor doesn't find very much
wrong with your nose or throat,
and that you will treat yiurs'lf
to lots of ultru-viulet new that
the open senson Is ' here Your
success In evading tho '.lltniv iolet
In Ihe winter lime Is only pan
of the explanation for winter lime
vulnerability. Perhaps shoiiage
of Vllamin A In the usual winter
time diet is a faelnr. loo.
Clubfoot. ., I
My baby was born with a de-,
formed right focTt. The font turns .
Inwardly below the ansie. m inn
ean be done for this anil at what
age'.' She Is now two Weeks old.
Mrs I. W.
Answel If It Is clubfoot. II
should be trealed Immediately. A
series of manipulations hy the
doctor ano pinsn-i iimm 1
the foot In corroded position. Is
Ihe usual lioatnienl. The earlier Insanity Is . considered "total
this Is attended to the IwHi-r thel tnw:,,ity" in life Insurance, and
final result Is likely lo be. I'lllh-,' )t K astonishing how few people
foot Is merely an arrest of tbc.im, takil)B advantage of this pro
noinial development of the fo"1 visiim ( n,elr policies
unil leir before II VI II. lion oiuy
knows why it happens;
knows.
j Wilier anil Sleep.
1 am '2i years of age
mi
Footprints
t
f THK LOCAL lC(TOItS? I
fluid the caUKo if my kwlw: vel,i!t j
IKnd hnve loo much ntf(t. I drink I
about 2 (inuriH of wntr n day I
and t?et nl leat eif;t; hours of
tdep each nlht. Mi-sj H. F. I
AnswtrV-ThiH M. Tlrt is 1 rob-.
ably Hen'n brother, M-ke.. Neither
1'cn nor Mike i quite renpons'ld..
Your wat,pr drinking and Kle,ep
are all rij;ht. Why not h.ive your
doctor make a health xamlnatlon
and -'ee If he can discover why
you are loHlnK weJi;hi
(Ci.pjTiKht Jnhn K. 'l);;ie Co.)
Quill Points
I
Some people are normal and:
nomo Kpend money for books
when they haven't a single good
tire on the premises.
If only the manager, whi-n
things ko wionK", could warm tip
miolher utnpire,
As a last resort, wo can ko back
lo the old-fashluned aehenie of
KsirhinK youth to he decent Just
for the sake of deeeney.
There Is some use for modern
liquor In ease of snake bite; you
can pour Home on the snake ami
enjoy watehlnft' him -suffer.' '
The only ihinK sure about
slimmer resort Is that most of the
'disagreeable, snobbish people will
choose Ihe same one you do.
Ami yet Ilie. Iiniinlest Iioiim-s
are the 011114 tliut fiirm't lo
put nn Ilie liuttcr knife unless
here is (sniKiiiy.
If the hnblt of wearins" clothes
made mankind hairless, this no
sleeking fad Is goinp to be a hie
thing for the safety razor people.
Mayhe the reformers could stop:
stock exehunse gamhliiiK by mnk-'
iiiff slock eertificnien round and
,.alUn(r then, chin.s.
TJ'U HflW to pevpotunto, peace be
tween . lCngland irnd the United
States: i'ermit no man to orate
or write for print unless he can
prove he in't u fool.
Tho French haven't forgotten
the war , and . they probably ex
pect that Maine boy to claim all
the credit for the Yellow Birds
flight. ,
During the war, people of the
south drank "coffee" made of
parched corn and sweetened with
molasses. Hut they didn't call ttj
an exercise of ''personal liberty.'
The gowt hotels now lutvo
everything- to make you feel
at home, except a ilrlppiux;
faucet and a window tlutt rat
tles all night.
Itunlt isn't everything. General
j0rs necepted Mr. Itnskob as an
,,nUait hut the Colonels don't.
Tho trial marriage Idea is as
old as history. It's only the niod-j
crn name for it that is new.
Tho flood didn't rid the world
of imperfections. You see, there!
were a few Imoeelle slowuwuya
., ,.w
Correct this sentence: 'She is
ko charming," said the gossip,
"that men never notice what
nwful ankles she luus."
m . I I 1 llsWsMlsf"sMI saWMTMsMBlsWIiMsl' isM
MAIL' TRIBUNE -
DAILY cross-word;puzzle
ACROSS
I, I.anr.it cod
Unci
i. Plan ,
B. Emperor
It. NprollT. .
TOt
It. Sonlli Ameri
can eiltble-
11. Vail
12. Timartl
It. Coniiilruer
IS. Eniteuicirci
19. 'I ante havllir
power
tl. Abend
'tt. Common la
borer J. Wltrn
4. Sour condi
ment fa. Contemptnonl
name for a
I. lid
30. Tuk.a oue'a
war
SI. Mine
UH. Cover
ul. Tips OTer
34. Conltellntlori
3. Mystlo lllntla
nord
36. Itnvel
37. f.'u.tom
3ej. Strong- adhe-
Ives
40. Slllltflt Yfltll .
molHturn
Solution of Yetterday'i Puzzlo
UT A R S
sir t vtTi
tTb Te
C3a"f LJiaaPit!Rl6Esa 'tl;
0PM llTRElsl8jrJi;lAjR .
f ri lUlftjlT 1 RpTi7A!Mje l
nf 4 ?S I 6 j T BE3 ft i A EPj5Sl
FlAIC tHA Siol I ttgAS E .
rToTt" EUaTilA 7E'MTR"rM 'i;
QRlTE"nB"TlAlLlt' nTtIE P
ST o "IEf?Txf"L je6e 3J;
'TAlNsYta"pEBiAp0iED :.
41. Kple poem
4t. Mother
43. Fcmlnlna '
name
40. tireat T.ala .
48. Kind of rut).
licr
to, 'rom
il. Ulllllral clor
after li. Pelt of cer
tain anlmula
63. Tile common
froir
' 3 "FT R fv I r is 19 o i
'
TT Ti 2-t- Pv'2s : Tf
Wm ;L
3 9 . .. 31
Ji H
' ' -
55 55 - TT5T
j j j ;fe m
46 47" li Tr"s3
-
; 1J :
I 1 1 1 1 I -? il I 1 1 1 1 J. '. A 1 1
Brisbane's
(Continued from Page One.)
After , you have read that
hook and waded feebly tliroutrli
the .400 pages, chiefly of ab
struse mathematical formula,
you will be triad to return to
the happy .level of average
kntwk'djre.
' The gigantic telephone company
puts through 100 telephone calls
EVERY SICCOND over New York
City's 1,750,000 telephones.
-v M
Men read that, and pass onn tak
ing for granted the greatest scien
tific miracle and industrial achieve
ment. . - -
If the calls average only two
miles, from telephone to telephone,
the statement means that human
thought and words are carried with
out effort 17,--'00.000 miles In a
month. - . . . ;
M
It means that all the transporta
tion facilities could not carry to
and fro the millions that, without
moving, met and talk on the tele
phone. The public owes a debt to in
centive genius and industrial
efficiency that work such wonders.
Secretary Mellon says the treas
ury department NKVKR planned a
seven-foot barbed wire fence along
Canada's border to kep out ruin.
The secretary is too practical lor
that nonsense.
China tried the fence plan 2200
yeurs ago, starting 300 li. C. the
great wall 1S00 miles long.
It couldn't keep out Genghis
Khan, or other energetic Tartars.
And no seven-foot wire fence
could hold , hack .the: Ameri
can brand of bootleggers, rum run
ners and hl-jackers. Today they
would cut through It, fly over It,
or tunnel under It.
I 4
1-ast Tuesday Milan witnessed a
ceremony that seems to titke you
1000 years into the past.
Prince and Princess Paterne Cas
tillo of Piscari, married for 25
vears, decided to enter the religious
iife. v-.
Pajlrt
ronrl to
l.ifetlnie
in,
BROl6lSPljJlNlK 11.
EtylEUA'RrKtrE
i piGiEHTi li eTo!g ; e
7t1erUcTi'o:s:. jj.
ol it O n I
mil Ira I
Pleee of nn.
Suvied tlnibi-r
Curl', for
Food nn
I.IouM
men urel
PreKenl
Openinirt
So mute It lie
fllniln penfual
JllfTereiil par
tie, nulled for
n enmimin end
Itonr front
lleslre.
f:mnli dlirnl
tnry
French writer
Homor
Prononn
l.nkeit
t oiilllrl ot .
nrm. .
.Hurket
FinlNlied
lllalunt
Turn lo the
left
Fmploy
Pluy on word!
Short for
Arthur
Note of the
scale
Three. toed
sloth
, Cardinal
point
to. Iimect ' "
67. Layer ' '
1JOW.V
1. Opposed lot
nretlx
I. tsliortlr
I. That In alilir.
4. Serpent
. 6. Sutrlllta
e, rieiMi
7. Fathor '
8. Kxtrema palua
! On Tuesday he became a priest
I under the name of Father Ignatius
and she n nun named Sister Maria
of Jesus.
j
As she knelt at the altar railing
I the mother superior removed her
white veil of nnvllinte and her
I husband saw her face for a mo-1
jiuent and for the last time as he I
covered the face with a black veil.
Pather Ignatius then chanted a I
!te deiun, placed a crown of roses
on the head of Sister Maria of
Jesus and they parted.
King George may pass next wln-
Uer in South Africa to escape cold
land fog. His subjects there will
Ihe glad to see him and his black
I Bantu' tribes will be especially de
'lighted. . ( .
j What white civilization mistakes
j for "loyalty" Is a survival of the
I savage desire to bow down to
j something a wooden idol with a
pink . nose, or a royal personage
with a golden crown.
When will the foggy British Isl
ands become merely a' European
'main office for the Rrltish empire?
Whither will the empire's heart
be transferred? Will It go to Can
ada, Australia or the wonderfully
fine lands and climale"of Africa? .
Probably to Canada. Room, work,
and the right northern climate theBV;
for all Uritfshers now living.
PARALYSIS FATAL FOR
F!
PA NT A ItOSA. Calif.. July G.
fWiThomas .1. (leary. former con
(gre.Hsmnn from California, anil au
jthor of the Chinese exclusion act,
jdied here early today. . He . was
75 years old.
. Mr. -Oenry, who became n nn
jtlonul figure through his vigorous
; campaign for .the exclusion of the
, Chinese, was stricken with par-
a lysis two weeks ago. He suf
: fried a second stroke seven days
i Inter, and then it appeared that
Ihe end was imminent.
Raker. New hotel under con
struction will be ready for occu
pancy by August 1.
40,
it.
44,
46.
'41,
Do You Remember?
TEX YEA IIS AGO TODAY '
(Kromthe files of Mall Tribune)
July 6, ll. '
I P.-34. Brilii-b dlrlttllile iirrlven
safely at Mineola,, l.onK ; Island.
j Toledo Tex Hlckaril ilenirs
Dempsey-Willard matill was A
fake and is backed up by the
j boxing commission. ' (
( New York Liberty bonds set) as
j sua. 00. -
! Pickets placed at Jdedford llome
! Telejihone Co. curing strike, but.
I no violence reported. : '
j New York 10,000 U. S. soldiers
: arrive from Europe on O . trans-
I ports. .
President Wilson's war program
condemned by house ot represen
tatives. ' '
TWKXTY YKAUS AGO TODAY
(From the files of Mall Tribune)
July 0, ltltlK.
City council ' petitioned to pur
chase block nt corner of Jackson
and rt. streets us PltB for a new
county eourt hoime, same , to bo
purchased for 4!ISU. ,
Editorial:
the county
"Medford should he
seat of Jackson
county."
As a result of the local July 4
eelelirntion the city garnered only
$4!i from drunks and iiiftorderlysi
President Tuft expects to veto
new tariff bill Just passed by con
gress. Communications
Impressions of Alexander Ix'gge
To the Kditor:
With reference to the appoint
ment . Alexander. Iegge us presi
dent of the federal farm board,
the press seems universally to as
sume the altitude that he was
appointed because bs Is au out
standing business man. It Is true
that lie must be all of that in
order to hold the position which
he docs as head of the Interna
tional llaivesfr company. Itm
his business all his life has been
intimately associated with that of
the farmer, and, if any business
man in this country has a thor
ough knowledge of the farmer's
point of view, it . Is Alexander
Legge. His closest acquaintance
in farming Is, of course, with the
grain farmer of the middle west,
where he was born: hut he is fa
miliar with the farmers' problems
of production and credit wherever
the International Harvester com
pany does business, which means
from the Argentine to Russia.
He, himself, wiw a green farmer
boy. when, in ISilt, he commenced
work for the McCormick liar- .
vester company nt Omaha, and
he looks a good deal like a typi
cal mid -western farmer yet. II
is well above six feet tallr broad
shouldered, raw boned and red
headed: t He has n- v,oicj Jike-n fpg,.
horn and his language Is quita ".as
foreeful and picturesque as, that
"Hell An Maria" Dawes. He is
a man of action? but of cool judg
ment and is not likely to he-led
astray to follow any wi!l-o'-the-
wisp in his quest for. mns of
farm relief. -
I met him first in 1017. though
several years before that I had
some business den tings with him
in a profoss:onal way, which I had
forgotten, but which he remem
bered. Perhaps it was because
he was one of those who paid tho
bills that he remembered, "while
I merely received payment for
service rendered, i I, in common
with thousands of others, had
gone to ashington to find out
what I could do to help win the
war and he was then vice-chairman
of the war Industries board
in charge, more particularly, of
the raw materials division. I was
sent to see him by one of Mr.
Hoover's staff and his laconic in
structions to me were: . "(io back
to California and do what you
can to increase tho production of
Chrome. We need the shipH that
are bringing chrome tovthis coun
try to carry troops nnd supplies to
France." ' . .
This I proceeded to do, not only
in California, hut In several other
regions, till the armistice was
signed. After that other rulers
arose "who knew not Daniel" and
tho poor chrome minur was left,
to hold the. -bag. hut that Is an
other story.
aijHkrt nrncir.
Medford, July (j, 1929
Agate Reach. orange Aid, con
fectionery, changed ownership and
improved. N
Reavcrton. f Hl.ooO bond issue
approved to provide funds for en
laiKeinenl of blub school.
By BUD FISHER