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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 25, 1929)
PXOE FOUR SfEDFORP TRTRTTXE, MEDFORD, OftEnON. STTNTVAY. 'ATfirST 21. 392fl. " Medford mail tribune EVERYTHING IS ADVERTISED BUT PEAKS Utllf, tUDdir, Wl PufclMwd by HKDFOHU CXINIINO CO. 18 it-31 N. lit m. Tbut t ilOHI.kT W. Rl HI.. Editor I. aLMiTEK 8MI1B, ilariaer An IrMlfPfMlanl Nrpawr Cottfed aa larond f!ai sialttr tl afadrar4. Orri,a, lUKkr Aft id Mutt I, UTS. OOKIN'O over a recent "I'acker" we find the Washington iioxed Apple ISurcau made such n success of Inst year's Brisbane's Today (Continued from Par One.) luncrtisini; campaign that they lire to spend 1 ;U,i H iij m advcr-1 weighed then ninetv pounds. lisiiiB (Hiring the net SIX months. I Her woik has 8iven comfort in The Western Growers' Protective Association of I.os Angeles m'!"TN wb,'ch "7.' moM ,,.,, ' ant thing that religion con do. on! IS tO Shentt tltinilrefts nt llirnivniK u r.f .I.Jlnro nJi-octiLinr " .An.. I. I. f. , ........ ...... i ! berg head lettuce" in the Saturday Evening i'ost and similar j that ' more imt'oriani. ?a I puiincaiions, renelnng i:i,ihni,ihmj consumers, Mrs. Augusta Siet;on. ono of j eiWKIPTIO.S IUTU gr Mill In Arfva: Pallx, ltb Sunday, far lull, sltb fluialftV. Btulitll p.:i, Mm loidu. ttu. e.f.o; Kvervone knows how cxieimiv.k- nn.l c;.f,,llt. ih .!lm I Mr- best known undent !; i T". ' .'? ' . ' ,. ,, . . (established tho first Christian Sc. 2 l'r':.T'. f'.":::::.: f;8 . industry California has a.lverUSe,! sun kissed fruit, while it enc church in New York City, it, a T$.'ft"SSi . ,s ,-lai'"e'1 si,"il;,r -'"Ivrtising has literally made millions for to"'v ,iT Z.iTZ'V. ,.i, . , I"'"-l'I'le growers oi Hawaii. itaily, icru.ut Sunday, nunlh , Xi pal:y, Itlut Sundty, ttu, T.Ofl at Luxemburg, in Belgium, and the restaurant owner is gcttlnK rich. Crowds are anxious to be wait ed on by the kaiser's brother-in-law, who is extremely polite. DEDICATE TABLET T pally, ltt HukUr, am rev,. All urmi, ea'b. In adianrt. 1.00 MEMBKR OK TIIK AHWH UTtHl PKKM Urcrirlni Hi! I Uttarf Klrf Htrilfa TU Aitwiaitd Weua U exelualMly entitled to the u 'or puolwtloo of all nrn dUpetrbu rrt-dltrd to It or ottorvUe errditod In nt4r, tnd aim to Uw IbroJ lwi putilblMd befdn. All rlititi lor but'ls-tllno ol fpedoj dlnmrboi bcrelo art also retenrd. WlkUl piprr of the HIT of MFdlord. Olflclal uatwr of Jatrtou Countj. Adrertlilnf BrorfitntatlrM M. C MutiKNSKN k tVMHSt ortlm In N Vorl. Oiltajo. Imr.lt, franrltco. Loo Anfrltl, Seattle, PorlUul. And yet the iear industry, so important to Medford and Jackson County, has, until this year, done nothing at all in the way of increasing the demand and therefore the price of its I product by a campaign of national advertising. This vear a start lias been made in the inauguration of a special Huso sell ing campaign in Detroit. We hope this campaign is a success. For in our opinion there is no question, whatever, that national advertising will bring the same success to pears that it has to oranges, appl"s, ami similar table fruits. Smudge Smoke A DVK t sal,.; Comment on tb weathr-r lias lt-n favorably, the prist l'-n day, arid dcr'r'rvr'H all the nice thlru;s naid about it. Dock James ladison Keno, tho robbr-d and horny-hiuidcd tiller, was in our midst lat-t week, in :t li.iir of ice cream pants, wblcn were all the rage In Salem social circles, the summer of the second lime Jtryan ran for the presidency. Hddie Jlemmer left Krl. for Ne vada, where be will do the plain and fancy punting for a college football team this fall, unless some other athlete can out-kick him. The .Moaning Chapter of Old Ore gon Alumni, will hol.l their first meeting under the grandstand at Kugene. the first game after the Pacific Fanthers and the Willam ette Kearcats are eradicated. Th i theme song will be: "A First Class Kicker Wouldn't Do I's Any Harm." The usual shortage of hay pre vails, as attested by not being able to see a haystack, by looking straight up. The Preachers have been busy the past week handcuffing people with two hearts thumping as one. The Chas. Strang grandson, who raided such a rumpus when he .got a haircut, in his Infancy, is visit ing his Orandpaw, and is air-minded, and reads such lively magazines as "Popular Science," "Scientific American," and "Metaphysical .Re search." , Not a redskin bites the dust, In any of same. i iiu ursi. uuw or tne season, was on the grass Sat. laornlng. . It makes luwn mowing tough. II. Klcwher. the local hirdbov, condescended to walk one day last week. A proprietor of a new 4d faint ed Thurs. eve, w hen a modest ve hicle committed lese majese by passing the -Id. with no apparent effort, or snorting. The false teeth installed In July, are all working fine. Only 1 weeks until time to shoot a deer, if it Is a deer you are shoot ing at. All hunters should make a reronnaisance before pulling the trigger and balk Ihe undertaker. Purewatcr Jim Owen skedad dled up to Portland Tues. Krito Kado, plans to climb Hoxy Ann with a mop handle this a. ni. Kdw-ard Carlclon of the Hedskln Orchard, did not take the stump last week. Jl. Von Hoevenberg of Samuel Vale Is busy with his orchard and committee work. One of the horticulturists swap ped 40 tons of pears for a motor vehicle last week, with Oriental stoicism. iOVERTISINTJ costs money. But in this dav of modern smaiiship an industry must spend money to make it. In fact it is our belief that pears would benefit more from in telligent advertising than almost any other similar product. I For pears have, as the saying goes, the "goods," and vet, being so inl known, are less generally used than any other fruit in the horticultural list. However, whether or not this Rose campaign is a great suc cess, sooner or later, advertising must be adopted by the pear growers, if they are to enjoy that prosperity which the merit of their product justifies. It is only a question of time. Rut time being money, we are particularly anxious for the success of the Detroit experi ment, so that needless time and money may not be wasted. ience above drills" was her rnotto. She and Mrs. Kddy are both gone. Old death justifies his mot- i to, "I come last and win." PouTLAXn. Ore., Aug. 24. fl) -Flags of two countries, his own HATS OFF TO PORTLAND AimoBt ninety years ago, on the I and that to which his deeds of land now part of Arlington cenie-1 meani so much, were unfurled tery, Jim Parks was horn, a slave i at the Crown Point Vista house of fieorgn w ashingloii's adopted I on the Upper Columbia lilghwav' son, C. W. Parks Curtis. Jim Parks ! udav as a bronze tablet was ded'i worked on "Arlington estate" as a cated to the memory of Lieutenant slave, when "freedom" came. Play- W illiam K. Broughton, Lritish imb ed there as a child, worked there ! ject and I lie first white man to long years us guide, lie saw cof-1 navigate the Columbia river t flnu . l.ir r.lt..U or,,.- !. ... . . .... 1 civil wur, saw oilier wars Increase the number of white headstones. . Now bis death adds one to those headstones, lie was buried yester day where he had worked by spe cial permission of the war depart meni, which usually liars civilians. that point. Ii was a colorful assemblage that siood in the shadow of Mount Hood which Hroughtun named. The goiil o:aiu ot captain C. C. Ilobson. Captain R. .1. (Jnnim of the roval marines from the British battleship Colombo, and the 24 seamen and marines contrasted sliarply with the uniforms ot a detail of officers and seamen from the L'. S. S. Kar ragut. The dedicatory address was Rv. en by Homer I). Ans. ll. president oi tne 'I rail Keekers' council, and the tablet was unveiled by .Mary Katheriae Beeves, daughter of nrigauier General Jus. H. Beeves, and James Cable, son of Kric drum Cable, new British founsul here. The consul responded in ihe name of tireut Britain. II would he far Barer, I realize, to postpone the cheering until the event occurs, in lune with the saying that "he laughs best who laughs last." True enough, but I would rather cheer pre maturely than not to have the chance to cheer at all And whether it lasts or not, those bucks Just now are playing wonder ful baseball. U Jl. Gregory in Oregoniau. Q' E HEAVY FIRE LOSS SPOKANK, Wash., Aug. 24. M'l A mass of glowing embers covcrng damages estimated vari ously from 1.150. Oi)n to $f,tio,uuii, was all that remained today of a dozen dwelling houses, an apnrt lnent I, nil. ling, n sanitarium anil Ihe storage ami fuel yard of Ihe .Mi'doldllck Lumber company. The fire started early Inst night In a lumber pile and soon was whipped Into a conflagration by a gale-liko wind. Kvery piece of fire fighting equipment, but five, held for emergency blazes In other parts of the city, together Willi n pumper from Coeur li'Alene. Idaho, manned by I remen from both shifts, fought the hla-.-e for six hours before u was brought tinder control. Industrial properly. Including factories and wnrehnuse. worlli several million dollars, were men to ed. true. And we believe Mir. Gregory is justified in ng n celebration now, rather than waiting for tlie final game of the season. For baseball is notoriously uncertain. And Portland hasn't had n championship team since Columbus discovered America. Moreover, the achievement already gained is entirely worthy of cheers not only from the Oregonian sport writer but from all baseball fans in the state. 147 E think the column on the left should be particularly int pressed and feel impelled to show its good sportsman ship by handing the Ducks a bouquet after all the "horse-rad-ish" it has been seiidinir iln.ii- Vi-..n- ihiu u..n-,.., .,.i .i, .seasons of the past. To our mind this is the most sensational upset in the sport ing history of the entire country. With Portland winning four teen straight, tied in second place and battling on even terms lor first, it is plain to see that iu the realm of sport nothing is impossible. In fact, we are not going to be surprised if l'.obby Jones fails to qualify and Chan Egan wins the national amateur golf title for the third time. And Corsh, wouldn't that be nice! Had anybody asked Jim Parlts to define a free man, he miajit have said "look at me, I am free" and he spent his whole life in Arling ton, fed by bis master-owner, on a slavery basis, fed by t'ncle Sam, later, on u wage basis. And Ihe destiny of Jim Parks was not different from the average. Wo are confined to Ibis little round graveyard, the earth, doom ed in time to add one to its graves. And we also call ourselves free. Pete Huddleston. Georgia farmer,, fifty-three years old, had a daugh ter. He is now dead. Marcus Brown, fanner, forty-two! and married, paid attention lo the I daughter. Her father told hi in lo stop. "Meet me on Main street with l shot gun." was Brown's reply. c ,.i.: r 't: : UB- King . ., ......... u u uim, "b-I "eorge anu yueen .Mary left Buck loie me .lwiii street siore, in CIO- ingnam palace shortly after 12: 3D ver, Ca. j today for the country palace at Brown came wI, his shotgun. ?m!!fV,Th,'V t,?v"d,,n emptied its charge into Huddle- ""spaltain ston's stomach. Huddleston, dying. ' aw, ,,, ,,' , fcr'cial nam fired from the chair, killing Brown ; Crh " JU''ney ins'nntlv. then he died. I nr, , ., JIate Is a powerful emotion. Each I from iCkTnei nm , r"ya P"rt' m i,n ihn. h ..i ...i,i.i.,!Irum "'"kineham palace was w,t- ...... .. i"tj"i. nessed In- Xeither apparently WHERE IGNORANCE MAY MEAN DEATH TpiIEHE is a strange and deplorable ignorance about adoles 1 cense, particularly among boys. So few people, including parents, seem to realize that from the ages of ten to fourteen, nearly every boy is abnormal. Physiologically speaking, he is a barbarian repeating the history of his race. The jungle period in evolution is the adolescent period in Youth, That is why so many hoys at this critical age get into serious trouble. Only a day or so ago a ten-year-ohl Portland boy shot and killed his playmate because he was tensed about girls. And h few days before a boy in Los Angeles, about the same age, shot and killed his father. It is n very critical period in youth. The boy is supei'sensi t've, moody, suspicious, often emotionally uncontrolled. As a result all parents should watch their sons very carefully from the tenth to the fifteenth year, and treat them with every con sideration. A proper understanding of adolescent psychology may often prevent a great deal of needless suffering, and not infrequently a tragedy involving more lives than one. 'If stinback garments promote good health, why he content to make people healthy on hut one side? If they are going to eensor all false advertising some gals we know can' save a lot on rouge. A magazine, editor savs most, of the stuff editors rriect is good, but tloe.su ' explain why they accept the other kind. How ugly of Kurope to keep out American uoods bv means of special laws instead of a tariff wall. The Constitution forbids cruel and unusual punishment, and :yet Mr. Sinclair is kept in Washington in Aliens! WILL FIGHT FIRE llin.KNA, Mont., Aug. 54 W fse of the Molilalia National filinrd In fighting forest fires ut Columbia Kalis, Helton and Apgar. where the Half Moon blare Is be yond control or hundreds or park, forest and rallrond crews, wus ntithoriied today by Governor J. K. Krlckson. Adjutunt-tienercl K. II. vtuiiunii it checking wr the nitu itlluu, Love ami honor may he old fashioned things, but they never bring yon to the point where all depends on the testimony of an alienist. Airplanes find it ,.,isier to cross the Atlantic from America to Kurope than from Kurope to America. And cash seems to have the same experience. Perhaps the shortage of fish may simply indicate that our native tendency to lie has been previously satisfied, during the ii me tux period. j England need not remain poor. I.et every Eimlishliian buy jsomctuiiif lie docsu't need uud pay a shilliug Uowu. be killed cared. When the she woir adopted lit tle Komulus and Hemus. the babies did well. They nrohab'v had some thing or Mussolini in them. Hut when the power trust adopts a newspaper, on a cold cash basis, that newspaper rinds It hard to di gest tho new kind or milk. John C. Eastman dicil In Chica go, leaving the Chicago Journal behind him. The power trust said, "come little Chicago Journal. I shall adopt and protect you, and teach you to say nicn things about your toster father." crowd estimated to numner oouo., all eager to catch ihe first glimpse of the king since July 2nd when he made his last public nppearnnce attending the thanksgiving service in Westminster. CUDAHY FACES FINE I.OS A.NCRLKs. Aug. 24. 0, Michael J. . t'udahy, 21, son of ' 4 j'ne lute .lack Cudahv, meat pack- But the little Chicago Remus-, Ing official, today faced a fine of Journal, Is dead. After the wake. ! Jioni), recommended hy a j1T It will reappear as a tabloid. You I which last night found him guilty enn't discourage the power trust, of driving an automobile while in which has plenty of money. tnxlcated. But why Chicago, refusing to ac- Sentence will bo pronounced on cept a trust financed newspaper, the youth next Tuesday. The court full size, should accept one, half i is found to the decision of the lurv mi iiAiiiK ine line, wnich came after three hours deliberation. The verdict terminated a trial which lasted two days. Tho scion of the wealthy packing coniii:inv size. Is not clear. Why the Chicago Daily Xews, us ually Intelligent, should hold so poor an otiiniou of Chicago Is an other puzzle. Victor l.awson would not have! family was charged with d,K-i,, wished that nuisance on his gener-1 his automobile into a car owned Otis city. by Charles B. Bang on the ninhl of On the stage of life, we play P"'1 many parts. Alexander Subkoff Germlston, located a few miles can prove it. i from Johannesburg. is 0v,.,.,.,i , Ho was a Russian ballet dancer. Then he married the Princess Victoria, sister of the former kais- Now he Is lie develop, d Into South Africa's principal airport. It is prohab!" that large shipments of refimtl I gold will ho made from this field restaurant waiter, by air to Km-ope an, I India. -'!p)f72 $(Y (extract fmmJJormgs teller UMat to- 2)dJij ukxa afWijQ a iWfcYn unti I'lut'on Lv'ltlxi: tfu tiiqftf 'idea tftaT Ji'llMi A071l IkaLltLuZ 0TUA at COATS - ADRIENNE'S Autumn Fashion Revue Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday August 28, 29,30,31 Presenting on living models the formal mode for Autumn 1929 For Sport Wear For Afternoon For Evening Autumn Millinery Smart in their, excus ive individu ality, many Paris inspired, expressing the latest dictates of Dame Fashion in tasteful, chic millinery. During the run of the all-talking; picture, "Close Harmony," we will show on living; models between shows for fcur nights beginning Wednesday, August 28, the new style trends for Auf.imn 1029. Ii ItfCkWli take yotiK car, J sir " "It Is Cool in San Francisco" FIRST ANNUAL AUCTION MILKING SHORTHORNS Oakleigh Stock Farm Monday, Aug. 2g 1929 ':. head, heavy producing cows, heifers bred and open and voting service bulls. Many of the cows nre capable of high production records and are safely bred to Kdgewood Viscount, he is a son or imported Kelinscott Viscount, tho great Show bull and site. Ihe heifers are most desirable and nre carrving cahes bv the services of Oakleigh Majestic. This sale furnishes an Ideal op portuiiliy to secure a foundation ot the best in Milking Short horns. The cattle offered in this sale nre the results of many genera tions of breeding and selecting hy Mr. Harrison and ibis is tin first annual sale at the new location. detail"1'110 10 0WIUr or "o'es manager gives Sale to he held en the Onklelgh Stock Kami 2 mi. nortfi from tcntriil loint. t, miles North from Medford and I no miles South tioni Itosehiirg. Visitors welcome. Oakleigh Stock Farm, Owner E. A. RHOTEN., Salem, Ore., Sale Manager SAN DV KEITH, Auctioneer, 507 Guaranty Bldg., Portland THOS. HARRISON, Mgr?. Central Point, Oregon SEABOARD DAIRY CREOIT CORP., Clerk 507 Guaranty Bldg., Portland Luncheon aerved by the American Legion Auxiliary i parkinc troubles exist at I he M .ir.x. The doorman takes your car when you arrive and places it in a garage connected with the Motel. Just hand him your key as you leave the car that's all. Located in the heart of the City near everything. I j Service, QtiaUtvJIospitalitv- OtjeMANX MOTEL A SAW FRANCISCO WEDDING Announcements and In vitations, "socially cor rect,'' made without the e x p e n s e of u copper plate. S WEM'S Kodak, Book & Gift Shop duu Hour St.. Pmohs AA A Complete Cleaniko aid 7 m& watch xesi " , . . ' WW r Pi A initir fll wmm ! Mil 1 8 a Electrotherapy Chlropractlf Dr. H. P. Coleman fth Successful Tear In Medford Treatments by Annolntnu-nt Fooil Selene j Natural Methods i . BatttMaWMf i Medford Center Bldg Phone 96