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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1929)
1 .A VI ill 1'UUII iMl'.DKUltl) iMAIIi TiflKUM';, M hUKQltl). OUKUON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21. 1029. Medpord Mail Tribune ' Dtur, Sunder, Weeklf PubUilKd br inoroiD miMiNO CO. -tf-t m. v tt. noM f toiwnt? w. RL'fiL, umr i. SUMMER SMITH, Ueoaiar Aa Independent Nenpapar Cotrd at aeeond ela natter it Medferd, Oreiull, under Act at Merck i, 17. . CBSCIM'TION MATH . f Mill ta 'Meinee: Dallj, .lib Similar, year IT. DO Dally, .lib Sunday, mouth TO Dally, vilhout Sunday, year 6. CO Dally, .luwut Buixlay, Booth 65 Wntly Hall Tritium, OM.yw J. 00 Sunday, one year ,. , . coo Carrier, In Adranre In Medaird, Ahhland, Jaeeumllla, Central fulut, rbueulf. Talent, Uuld Hill and on llliuwan: Dally, .lib Sunday, month .T5 Dally, ullluut Sunday, nuotb 65 Dally, without Hunday, one year f.00 Dally, villi Sunday, one year S.00 All termi, casta In adranea. MKMBKB OK TUB ABHOCIATKD PKKflB . Jtucclvltit Full Lrud Wir Bmlct Tb AMocUtcd Pre it rielmiyely utltlivl to tit HH 'or piiblltuilun of all wwi dlspitebM errdUed to It or ollwrwha credited In UiU wr. 'lod also to Um local newi puttUibcd btreln. All rlgbli Tor publlMUoo of upeclti dlsjutcbtf ktrtln are alio memd. Off kUI piper-of Uie City of Midford.. Oficlal paper of Jackson County. Sfroro daily image circulailnn for all noMln tndlic April lit. 1828, 4G71. - - -. ; -AdttrtUtnf Reprmntatirei M. G. MOUKNSKN k COMTANT Offieti In New Yurh, Chlcaito, Detroit, rrairfitoeo, hot Angelw, Seattle, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry . If the present batch of weather keeps .up, the sock leas gals will heat tho horticulturists, t(i fiuay ('.'ilifnrniu. I'roas dispatches bring tho 1 11 Ings thnt both booze nnd drugs ure plentiful In tho national . capital, hut as yet no opium has been ciiiukf U on the White House btcps. AIMIKltlJ: ntAN'KNKSS ( Aiiftusin, (ill,, Chronicle) , Vote fin joiin b. t'liAVons, .in. for City Council Tith Ward I KNOW I'M NOT IIWII BUT WHY VOTK FOXt LESS? (Found by lX'F.) A nice thing about tho epidemic of screw-lulled I.ostou bulldogs nobody ever steals 'em, Autolsts complain that In tho tougher ntrnl spots. Hie hoy nro chewing bnrhwlio and spitting on tho highway It's about time ho mo candidate for governor ijconnio overwhelm ingly icIIkIoum ,aud patriotic and came out for tho continuation of Kant a CIuus. FRIENDLY HI IOOTINO fcNDH IX 1513ATH (Uorrlfl Times). Jt roust ha-vo hern. Solly Hmlfh, onco a Rroat foath orwPlHht flrJhUu-, .Ih Htlll living but In Ijom AnjcleH aid wcIkIih upward of 200 poundN. (Han FrancUco 'I::amiiu'r.) Tho imiffli'd It nock. Thorp htiM novir boon n thru (n tho history of tho county whon hu few eommitu-ea woro Itcing (oniiulticd. IloblaH Deuel, tho alert and rhlpper woodman, wan oWhHo.iI head of tho American ItOfrlou laHt ovoulitK. Alt'. '.Uonol, In bin -nnnunl addroHs, will tirffo .inuro flroplnoon nnd fiirnacoH, and a hard wlntor. Opiumlllon to tho president Ih deveiuidUK. and not an Oieon Ht'pdm-nder prominently mentioned in tho poHtorhiK' Tho Hockofellor inllllotiR will bo lined in a flvo year Mtudy. of the oauso of povorty. Tho cauno of poverty Ih tho luck of money, and flvo yearn don't m-eni llku enough times to find tt out. ' Tho buckwheat panenko HeaHon U upon um, and, In ncoordanco with ctiKt'om, will contain no buck wheat. The Ivlumnth I'iHh News roportH that the Klnmuth d'alln hluh Hchool Htudents marched down the Hlreet "kIvIiik their coIIcko yidln." "No iik;i:nth own ai:toh" (Hdllno The Dullen Clironlrle.) Tnie more .payment, and they will. Many are. nJoylnc the first eoldH of nmumn. T"ho Older OIHh nluavH Ik note it cold, until they Hiieexe at a hrldfte party. The photoH of tho Jerusalem WailiiiK Wall, hIiow It Is not near nt fomurtfthl hh the Mmdy nldo of the Hill (loro bank, about tax paying tinio. Till; H MH-l't l,M(J STAUTS (Serial Moiy) Hho finally acktiow lnlj;ed . the Int rod tuM ion by HayliiK: 'Jack hhH npokon of you hh , often, lIsH JonoH, Ibat I havo Kometimi'K been u bit Jeatoun, but now thnt I hnvo neen you, I don't feel ho badly about your friendship with him." A 13-yi'ar-old hoy of exceptional HmurtncHH report h via a fond Tiipa, that he undui-Hlnntln the KliiHleln theory. The younK man can now try his luck on the late, but now defunct, Ale.Nary farm bill. COAST CHEESE COMPANY IS ABSORBED BY KRAFT VOItTI.AND, Ol-o., Sopt. a. T) U ni lltiulliiH, Mini ki'tliiK illrarttir tit tlio II,m1 Itork thi't'Mi' rntniviiilcN (if lliri I'tirlflc ruriHt, who hut HlgM niinouncoil th .utiNollilntliin of that rnmiMHiy ith tho Krnfi IMiopitlx, Inc., t'hloiiKO, nationally kntrwn r-ht-pwo rotnpuny, mdil tn. rlny ih inoVBer hntl' hrcn com. plflcrl, The Hfl Rork conrei'n la tho lniRi'l hiochircr' of cottnsa chvi'Ke In tho world. llulrlcra of Itorl nork utork, IlimtlnK eoihl,- till lKcolvn morn 1hti Jl.noo.ooo In ahnrvn of tho new, cumimny. i GOLF SHOULD Av LAN J. GOl'ID, uportiiiit luis a new slant on the Beach which has so stirred the Mr. Gould covered the tournament at Pebble lieach and should know whereof lie speaks. Here is his diagnosis and intercstinir conclusion. Crowd psyeholnKy Is ono of the Blraniiast factors In sport. The razzberrles from a boxliiK crowd are a part of the game. The vocal chorus from the bleachers at a ball game is an insti tution. "So long as they pay their money at tho gate, tho fans nr'e entitled to yell their heads off," a famous ball player said to ine once. "I am never bothered by what the crowd does unless somebody happens to get a Utile ton ' personal. All the razz otherwise rolls off me lllte so much water on a duck's back. The boys who are for you one day arc against you the next." ( The raucous cry of the disappointed Rambler or the leather lung Is taken for granted In professional sport, it Is only recently that tile more fashionable games of polo tennis and- golf, attract ing an ever-growing public Interest, have-had to contend with the element of crowd psychology nnd reaction. ' Ciolf is among the lust to fool a break Iri tho barriers of eti quette and decorum. Onlf crowds have been difficult, to control but the' hostility displayed by (lie galleries of 'Pebble lieaeh to ward one of the finalists, Dr. Oscar Willing, was something new, something; of a shock all because more paijtlnan onldokers dlB llked the doctor's 'unwillingness to concrido' short : putts or his hohlt of standing nearby when an opponent was In trouble or a bunker.1 : i ' ' 1 The trend, however, seems clear. Forest Hills has seen the tennis galleries become more partisan as the game has drawn greater public .Interest, Apparently golfers now must gird them selves for tho same re action for the jeers as well as the cheers. "This business of needing silence or freedom from any dis turbing factor iii playing golf Is largoly a matter of habit," one of the contesanla at Pebble lieach said. "Players in other sports havo drilled themselves to Ignore the crowds mid so can golfers. It may never come to this point, but we may as well be prepared some duy to shoot while some partisans are yelling at us to 'miss tt' or 'nock it into the bunker, you big stiff.'" Stranger things than that have happened; ' When ten thousand people or more become sufficiently Inter ested In golf to gallop all over a championship courso, blistering their feet, Jostling and perspiring; for the sake of seeing the stars make their shots, some pluy for the emotions may as well be ex pected. Kven the polite tTiidltlons of the royal and ancient game cannot nullo control outbursts of partisanship under such circum stances. Tho "razz" may not he sportsmanlike but It apparently lias come to stay and develup in American sport, so long us the big ballyhoo keeps np. This may be correct, but we. hope it isn't. Amateur Rolf is a sport that has never been commercialized ami as far its active partisanship is concerned has never been popularized. We hope it never will be. ITnlike most other sports, sue cess or failure in Rolf depends almost entirely upon the perfect co-ordination of the individual, the perfect, fuuelioniii of the mental processes and the nervous system. "A certain amount of emotional play from the (jaHery no doubt must be expected. lint it was not applause for good (?olf Hiat caused the trouble nt Pebble Reach; it was applause and cheers for poor Rolf on Hie part of n contestant who was doing his best but happened to bo unpopular. This is poor sportsmanship, no mailer from what AXGLK It is refnrded, and if such practice is allowed to continue, tour nament piny will defrcncrHle into a rowdyism which, from the standpoint; or the traditions and spirit of the name, will ruin the spovt, entirely. ' Al Smith and his friends arc pltiniiinj' an 80-slory building. This is the first, time for quite a spell that a Democratic candi date hiis (inspired to anything'so high after election. It only proves you cnu't keep a good mini down! So California's suicide rate is 18 per cent above normal. We know how "California incorporated will explain it. Some people simply ciirt't stand ii taste of Pnnid'ise. The sensational success or bilieily iiingnxinn, now over two million suhscrihers, simply proves to us, al least, the deteriora tion of the American literary taste. ' : : i : " llrishnne says Shell Oil is going to try (o onriier the Ameri can market. Impossible in Met tions have all the corners now. At last !hcy have found the ladies. If they smoke too much talk, too much. If you wonder why so many find one who can do a good job If there's a railroad in Asia the buss sidesmen have overlooked a good territory. Think how our hearts would frisked of alimony, if they lived How it irritates a good man him ns if he were a fellow criminal. Perhaps school days are like off they are the more pleasant Xow for the World Series, ami MUTT AND JEFF A :Y00 SA You'Rfi. BoiltlN6 0N-(AN 2P ANt TMT Y6VJ'(5 60MMA .Da AWOUNti TH UjORuli IN woimg along; l ? IKWKtt ' m- j i aiS:?5,SV'a ' - f r'-' " r Tr,V ti. e . ' . ' ' ....... ! s . j ' ' - , ' .' . . . i ' -r v '- ; - ' ' : , ; ........... . , :- ' . ' : '.-. t v ; ' y ' BE DIFFERENT writer for tin? Associated Press l)r. Willihg (rfsO(l. at Pebble doctor's friends in Portland ford at least. The service sta- right argument to influence the they lose the opportunity to people have "bad luck," try to without being watched. worth fighting for it just shows bleed for poor tricked men in Armenia. to have bis -bnollcgcer treat the cold bath. The farther they seem. then the football season! One-Man Zep Raises l k. I A VAi I A ikitT t I I ' I' i ' i ' " ' ! " 1 ' t " 111 1 . R00(v IN A ONC-MAM ,vfett- . eA ip J$ PooR JfeFFlt ujooLb HAUC I .i?1 -T Hr U OCV&tNj : ,' tT"1 Personal Health Service By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. " Venae) letter peitalirhig ta parmal heiHb will be ammrul br Dr. BraaT If ataaiiMl, aelt . i . j . I . . H )nb II. "M ,n ,ha la.uk r H itu or " -iwbucu, w.-mw"wj nwciupe a, eociofea. Letter BODJa ft. lien lo lot. O.lnc to lb leret DUUber of ktrara retelead rmlr a If ceo ba Knee i replr tan be Bad U suatleal not oIotkiJM lxultoaj. Aattra , .wuual at that oeenpanee. I Ua. J iiV . , ed bete, no Bradf, to ear TIlE KXAJIIV A Here's a letter from a 18 - yc.ir - old boy, neatly typewritten, and It might havo come .from a college' graduate: My Dear Dr. lirndy: I nave n problem ... 1 am 16 years old, graduated, from high school lr.Ht June. In July 1 suffored.-ns it appears, a lapse of mem ory. It oecut'- our final examinations ... Anotherjjthlng. Throughout rny entire jtonlor year my mind Jftts been liu. state of worii me'nt dun to studieH, class ad mlTitstratoin,' debating, etc, and T am constantly subject to spells of moodiness and de pression . '. From these mcntror facts do you suppose that you could poxslbly dlugnoKR my trouble or at least set my mind at ease? Very truly yours, D. A. B. S. . I have purposely omitted mott of the boy's letter because it con tains too many symptoms which might "fit the ease" of some read er. T havo printed Just enough of the letter to servo my purpose. My purpose is to nsk sensible pr.rents, if any, whether It is 'not hli:h time to call a halt on the ex amination racket as this, racket is wOrko,i hi our common schools and tiigh schools, to say nothing of the second rate colleges, about j iiif. country. If a teacher carries a class through a term of study in any snhj t. that t..ach.'r ought to fci,nW j whether (be iimmiiImth of tin i:!an hnVf shown dint proficiency (n tho study. If tin flchool or crdlcKo-lH any nnd at all, tho dally clam, rec ord miKht to show whothor a icivon pupil has done good work, indlf fornnt work or poor work. Why thin farce of a final examination? Somebody BtnntlH to make a little extra coin out of It. That's not the whole reason, nor even the main reason, but undoubtedly tho examination racket everywhere brings In a ruuk little pocketful of chnntfc for coj-tnln functionaries who aro awaocintcd with tho Kame. Probably the main reason for school and eolteRe exiinilnations Ih to provide a dignified alibi for the teachers, for tho institution wlfere the exposure has ocenrrcd. If the pupil Is lucky enough -o pass the examination, that-excuses everything, does H not? Whereas. If tho pupil piny In hard Hick and misses on some picayune question, well, that's his fault, for see how many others in tho class. Rot thrmiKh! Oh, the examination rncket Is n great comfort for the teachers, professors, and C(lleft;e bonrds. Nowhere else In all life Is there a parallel for lliis nlmurd fared', it Is indigenous to the fluid of edu cation. When anyone wants to choose a good doctor, n competent engineer, a brainy editor or an efficient ex eecutlvo to run a business or the state -itself, Is the choice made through a competitive examination or by weighing the record of the candidate? .1 Any school thnt Is worthy of the name keeps day to day records of the work of every pupil. What !s the use of all this record keeping If the thing Is to be scrapped or relegated to a pli.ee of minor Im portance, and a fool Inal examin ation sprung on the pupil to decide bis fate? . I appeal to all parents who care about education to rise up nnd smite the'antedituvian element in the educational field that cherishes and perpetuates this examination racket. ' ' CjrKKTTOXK AM) AX.SWKUS Kindly give me any Information you can on Polypus. If nnyihln evil be used to remove It from, the novo. Mr, R. O. Answer. The only treatment of avail Is BUi-Rlcal removal, usu ally by share. Polyh (f nerally sig nifies some chronic Infection 111 a sinus, which must he treated; or polyp Is will recur. The i.'mova'l of polyp Ih painless, under local anesthesia. , A Spanish strain ..... Ci rand mot her Spaniard, grand father American, father American. mother died when 1 w.i Infant. a Family wwer a r a ... ' it-e.i ."L- is i ' i www tOR wo vbsscmge es , j f i" mv' v i'i and hnttene, got te 4ueaw dlanMb ar treataan - aMretied esrelope b enclosed. Lettm MnJa ha i h., nf hf.v 1 L . rlfcxAOKET 1 Aurfti brought. me up.;l knew' until r was il that ernnn- mpUieiv was Spanish, t ,a'm en gaged to an American. Would any children born lo us be dark-skinned? l have black eyes nnd hair, but my complexion lsh't dark. Hlioalrl I marry? r have never seen a Spaniard. , Are they very dark? C. A. ., Answer. Tour children would have skin, hair and eyes, of an average shnde midwny between your own anrl their other parent's. Spanish peoplo perhaps run a half siiado darker than the composite color in America, but what If it? Do not give serious thought to the old superstition that a' ehjld may lie born a "throwback" having the characteristics of the darkest . or the lowest grade ancestor. That Is nonsense and simply does not hap pen outside of novels. t , I Give It l'p. What. Havo You? I read your articles as regularly an r do the front page headlines, hut onee -In a while you get my "goot" for instance, -now what you call my case, if there is no such thing as nervous breakdown ... I get fatigued so that . . . Don't you write some of your articles to get people to avoid using broad, extravagant expressions In place of den.''rlbing their own complaints to the doctor? A. R. K. Answer. That's one reason, but a- more important purpose. '1b to rid their minds of 'the "nerv ous' complex. Your ease, sir, like all others purporting to be of that nature, ' I give up. What does all you? It tf.kes study and careful examination for a doctor to deter- mtne that. The DrusftlstK Bfiy Was Sred. I took your formula for a hair Innic to my drtiffKisi, and th? chem- !ft hw adviHO(l nat to 1If, ,t a It was a sti-nng polpon. It was 1 XA diT.ms of resorcfn, t Rrain of corrosive sublimate, 1 ' dram of sweeo almond oil or castor oilv and 4 ounces of Cologne, water or other toilet water. I. K. Answer. First place, it was a dandruff remedy,- not a hair tonic. Next place, a one to two thousand solution of coroHlve sublimate is not n wrong poison. (Copyright John P. Dille Co.) Quill Points We are a charitable people, and an official's nhorti.ge of -$50,001) doesn't trouble us If It's- just a result of incompetence. 1 . The Recret of happiness? Never f read nny mHomnMIe ads "excPpt the' Ones that describe the superior car you have. 1 - . Yet the chap who pleads for light wine -is the, same one-time dough boy who cussed it because It mralo him bilious. The announcement that nearly nil klllerM are (hln won't surprise Ihnso who havo tried tho 18-day diet. A scientist Ih a man who finds mine ol dm? ri's-cnibllng a footprint on a hurlcil stono nnd rcofksUTtM the primitive man who was chasing: the ani mal itiat made It. "Americans,0 says a foreign critic, "discuss an -annoyance end lessly hut never do anything about It." Kspeciatly the weather. - . To him tbt hath shall he given. Those who need air and sunshine least are: the ones with sense enough to use them most. Americanism: Getting stung forty times In the effort to get rich easily; biting just as eagerly when somebody offers you something for nothing- Don't blame the school teacher for everything. It isn't her blood that makes the kid stupid. ,-...B-,, , Iont tell VilUe, but many ofjHteady solicitation, cuts down his our groate.-rt men hated algebra nnd couldn't spell for shucks. They pay rich children have moro adenoids than poor ones. It may be the diet, or it may he that MAIL TRIBUNE ; ' DAILY CROSS-WORD PUZZLE l AfltOKft t I. .Ntirmw lumrd t. I.urrH . Ufiiu ti ftTiirnli U. Mnutl rlittre4 lirtit M.rTf n 4uil1ltm - , I ft. siiiridur! IB. A lint Solution of Yeiterday'i Puzzio HlQlSlfenSIAlPlEnAIWiE 1 tTePt u MbiRls. S TIA L EDCH I BWCi tom eDsil 1 htjoEa I. Trnil ronirlilj ID. i;.llilf tiirtti WdllllllDI Itlllllt tt, Ailrlitn: tiM.r. H3. Uryint r Iieurbtit 1. Kfllhf t;. suite ut lie In a HMTl as. In i)il pine 31, Wnnuni' liume 37. I'dinTiM-n Nietul 5H, T 11 ii'ihil nit Ida . XV. ( Inch tare 4 il, t'hiin-li ttitr- ernliiK bixly '44. -A inrer 4A. Kn ttcli cnia . 47. hhifl v' My . Pari of ; rtiiiren 64, Surf uft . 68. hull linovnlill yottiiw- . &. Kur ut timber ut). l.'nmtupRftntila 01. iH'tmf a. 4. ttliice $vfa i vt W, Terinlnaifc ' ... oowii;.'? 1. .Native ut Sent III till , itltiler iilfcc ' timi .1. -, j 1 15 Ajsrag 0 mt 1 y s s HlOlf JeIR jjfifl RARE 1 -yc- vs H-pigs',. 17 tt . Fv'Jl9 10 11 Wz 1. SiM 1 -7 1 a -3(4 " : " ; ' 221 ; . .,:,r. wm nr '??r w t&SZltf.r,'- isr- &fct -1 -lii -t.--- S4 16 (, n 1$ .,. ,-jO 7 52. Wi F f ipfiP W W Is w 47. 8 49 -; f50 -il 'it 53 54 jn ' mw 58. v.. , ; , 5 ,A r4;P lT , ... iJ , . : j ? adenoids, are timid about showing:; activities, thiit is, just the down themselves without any money. jtown folks are' solicited. The mer- ; j chant and professional group nre A free land is one In which tre ! easy to grot at,, so the fund-collec- peopla are consulted about all their affairs rexcept such trifles 'as go ing to war. A typical audience . Is one that RTOnnn when . the local 1HMimfhfiteM.. arises, to' Intro lrtc xa .s")teakcr',6t'thc cvcii- " , Al: Smith 'h,iVd'ft!iis' frienn'i' nr' nlanhlng (in JiO -story building. This I is tho first time a Dcmoerntic.-enn- dldatft has. aspired to anything so I high after election. v nnnA i,ti- card ganrcs wicked and others not. Statesmen make the same queer distinction in tho matter of kill ings.. Scientists keep on discarding old theories, and perhaps the heavl slde layer that forces down our radn rays also forced down New ton's apple. Correct this sehtence: "The free service we give costs up a lot KfcM the man. "but it isn't added In the customer's bill, either." Press Comment A Community Chest Salem has gone through several "drives" recently. In aiding In the solicitation we heard frequent ex pression. 'hf hope' that 'S.ileni might adopt the Community Chest plan -of financing Its Charities nnd worthy enterprises. There Is much to commend the chest plan, h combines In one big effort numer ous smaller drives Which cover juwt about the samt! territory and call for nearly as large an organi zation. The donor gets weftry from contribution: whereas under the chest plnn he might make nn even larger donation and plan for it from year to year. There is another frequent Injus tice in solicitation for meritorious pi . I. Placed nder rest mint 10. l.ahni 11. KB CO (Tit IS. ivorrt m tbt enii nt ft prnrcf . urnnuYj rtotr orucisri auUr , ft. pofictiicn (3. CupHble of eo iturMnittiit t4. NottJ ii A In comb. form m. wiatiiDfr m ch'aci Tur. K rtipiivr coin UK. To 3ti. I,nmb'i pea . nuine , 81. strike 8i Act ut felllriff 34. Foailer pro Hcrri-il In u alio 41, .Mtiii'n name a. Jitnte nolt' VMmnt .. lUelj (;.i.X:y 49 t'listem arma" ' 4r Htt' money -rT arm .i-4. Vocal tolo ,. Sltle hy ma -4S. i.riod oi fait. tun I CitTiccki- . HI). Ktrvet ' SI.' Pr.Flpllatloi r. ni.ru .',s. Walk hcaellr ft. SiirenilM leostl &0. cliyilelanai , nttiir. r. PhlHwitnaf '. 4 trtrtte antt rar. 7. Kcmlf-c uiicou licreliR - 8.. Native of lJtiit,-al tors work the down-town area.. No objection to this of course; but many well-to-do people are not solicited if they are not engaged In down-town business, which means 'that too heavy a share, fulls on the merchant class. , The merchant feels like he Is befnj? held up but he has to come through for rea sons of business policy. He doesn't want bis store to be listed as a "piker." Under the chest plan the entire city could be covered and the burden distributed more equit ably. Halem -will very likely come to tho plnn of consolidated charity budgeting and solicitation and lenders In pcal enterprises culling I'm' vnlimlni'v n.thlU o ,, Rhnulri i-m tn nnrnnivn t.. (;arc of their renui,.enientH through tne community Chest plan. Sa- lem Statesman. EAGLE POINT EXHIBIT AT FAIR IS PRAISED 'KaACSM-: POINT, Ore.,, Sept. 24. (Special.) The Kngle ' Point Orange exhibit at the Jackson 1,,nmtv w exceedingly "good. t-niiwiMiniK oi every kithi oi vege table, both canned and fresn, grasses, grains and products such ns cream, milk, butter and cgs. The background consl s t e d of grains tied in ne.it bundles, sur rounded by 'a solid musti of zinnias. Our community .is very proud of Mrs. A. R. McDonald, resident of Kagle Point for the past ten years and formerly of Idaho. Kvcrything thnt .Mrs. McDonald displayed took a first prize. Including 40 in all. PHOENIX PRESBYTERIAN SUNDAY SCHOOL ELECTS I'HOKNI.V, Orp., Sopt. 24. (Special.) The nnnual election nt oftlcerrt of the Suriilrty school was held nt the Preshytei hm .churen Sunday with the followltiK results: Supcrintcmlnnf, J.. Q. x. failing: assilstiitit Huperintinilent, L'. C. Hartley: secretary, Kilna Dottom: nsflstant secretary. Helen rotter; treasurer. John llonnr: chorister, .Mrs. n. . White rinrt organlt, Joe Hartley. Do Yoa Remember?, TPX VEAltlVAOO TODAY (From files of the ,'MMl Tribune.) Mept. S4, ' .S00 Vocal liVks huvn glorious lime at anniversary picnic. f War camp community service, to give final dance. I.oh Angeles Win. Murray, seed firm worker, cured of earache when doctor remove oat found growing In his left ear. Bob Pelouie, Medfovd high nth lte mimed end on Stanford vur.-dty football .squad. Commercial club nnd Merchants liureau to welcome Portland junkut. , : : 4 ' TWKXTV YEARS AGO TODAY (From files of the Mail Tribune.) , .Sept. 21, lUUtt ' , Congressman Hinger' Herman of Roseburg, visits and "in amazed at city's growth." . ; First term of open October 0, . federal court to S. S. Smith of Kldorado, Kansas returns home- and writes 20,000 word description of Crater Lake for homo town paper. "A Knight For a Day' at Medford theater. presented City reservoir finished. VAaV 9k va "W vi, . aw ' - M "IV The WonOcr f It. (By Mary Graham Honner) The wild looking. man and his wild looking family Junped -about. talking avstrange talk of their own. The . fire was burning brightly.- So excittMl were they that tlnV did nt 'ntftlcff the three visitorr; watching them. The little black clock and John and Peggy stood a -short distance away. "Oh, little , black clock," said John, "wasn't it wonderful that you could turn back-tills far?" . ".Magic, it was tho magic .given to turn myself hack so far.'t tho little black clock said. : While the wild looking man ami his wild looking family were jump ing nhout tho firo, the children examined the man's cave. It seemed a strange place in which to make a home. Thero were some Wild berries in a stone, bowl nnd there was' some dried . grass upon which they evidently, slept. ' The cave was cold and damp. It- was- interesting to eo, hut they did not wish to slay inside very long. .- i You see," Haiti the little bmck clock, "we arrived just as fire was discovered by the man.. These, people, belong to the Stone Age. HefoVe this they hud never known what It was Jo have a flro by which to warm themselves or over which to cook tobd,' "From now on people will know the comforts of fire." "You certainly turned back far this time(" John kept repeating. Again 'they watched tho man and his family. He had discovered fire by rubbing slicks together just us Hoy Scouts nnd campers who know the out-of-doors can do. Put John and Peggy had seen the dis covery! Never, never would they 'forget It. Tomorrow "flolng Forward." 666 I a prescription for Colds, Grippe, Fin, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria It Is the most speedy remedy known . 1 Women's Hote $1.00 Pair Bilk from top to to wttk ... polntod hL . 'S-g j S3 'S I 1 5 j S3 i siiiiiniiiiniiniiiiniiiniiiiiiamiiii' By BUD FISHER