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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1929)
1 1 !!'.' I () ( .' i ;r.t i ! ti 'HI I l! if PSQE FOUR t Medford Mail Tribune ' Dtllr. ejurslse, Wsctlf .,', - immmi by medpoiii) miNTiNa co. IS S7-3 N. Kir 81. ROrlKRT W. Rlini,, Mltor . guMPTCB SMITH, Hum -An Independent Newspaper Entered u seamd rlw .utter tt Medford, Oregon, under An ot liirdi I, 187V. MIRsX'RlPTIOrl BATH tf Mill In ArfTinrc: - Dallv, vlth SiitksV. feir Ikilr, vlfh BHnda?, aaolh Pallr, vltlKMit Similar, etr.... Hairy, wiUsiut sunder, nofrtlt. . . . Weellj Hall Wbuat. one rear... sunder, ene rcir. (7.90 .75 8. SO 3.(10 :.oo Hi lamer, in Adranee in aieurorn, Asuiimi. JsrksoMllkt, Central I'uint, I'lwenfi, Talent, Gold Ulll anil on lllfhnyi: . Iiallj, lth Ruwlar, nwlh...' .71! Dally, without ftnnday, month (Ill Dally, iltlniit Sunday, ana tear 7.01) Hally, dlli Rimday, one year... 8.00 All term, eaell to adtanee. " llt.MHKR or THK ABS0C1ATRI) I'llKSS KerrliliK full Leaned Wirt Smlee Tht Ainoelatrd 1'rrss t eiflualrely entitled to the 10 for puhlkation of all, newa dlspatenef credited to tt or otherwise emllted In this paper, and aim to the local newa published herein. All rutins for pulilititloo of special dbpattbef tiereki are also resened. MliMREIt OK TUB UNITED PltERs (initial paper of the City of Medford. Oftlclal paper of Jaebon County. : A.- H. C. arerace circulation for atz monttu Minn October 1, 1U2!, 17l. Dally aieraae ctlilrllml too for all monlho to rlolKr lit, 1029, 4till. , Present press run, a 82 5. IIEMURR UK AUDIT HDIIKAU K 1'lltCIII.ATIUN AilrerlMlne Rrprcsentatlrrs " """(. C. MtKlENSEN t COHrANV . : -txrieea In .New York, Oileaio, Detroit, Ian rranctscd,' IM Anplea, ftntlM, I'ortHltl Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry Cup I tnl In guzliiR with appreci ative eyoH upon ; the undeveloped roMourroH of the Btutu. Therefore, - It'lH about time a mental plant, of 1'ortlanU, thought up u law iro forahly an Income tax law, n there, hail been no new one for 07 UnyK, that will, thwart this plot of capital. The law should he freak- ' Mi and foolish, and allege a great ' lovo for the farmers. Frank Pearae has hocn Buffering the puHt week and has been mak J lnff roffulai trips to a doctor In Enterprise.' (t.ustlne NoteH, La On. inlo Observer.) Find the root ' of tho trouble, and tho why of U. 1. - There Som' to ho koiiio hoiI of a violent dlMputo $)nK on between, ' the oppoilnff fdrceu at tho tvt lendttifr Institutions of .narnlAR. t Huturdayj' o side of a hill, was . dynamited, for the urpote of I obliterating a Inrpe "O," whleh la; one of tho UmdiiiK traditions of the 1 University of.Oregon. Amoiiff thouc who never wont to college, and t puddle fl for wearing his hat while puBsli.tf a aetiloi)' tho uso of fclyriit mlto U - roKarded as approacuhiK ' tho serlouH. Dynamite I tricky, ' hud unreliable, and devastating. In t the en so In hand, tho noroner wiTh ' not called, so Jt is nothing but a ' "prank of collegians." As a mut ter of fuel. It was a piece of 1 illabuleal nUttinesK. A rock was hurled through the' roof -of a houMO and the lifmatcH, Instead of -having a hearly lunch, fled In terror. Nobody was hialmcd or ' lAanglcd, duo to Providence, not to tho plartntng-of the dynamiters. Immediately following the explo sion, tho plot started to thicken. and get mysterious. An official opinion, as handed down in the Oregon Kmcrald, ts ns follows. "Wo have no evidence at all which would lead us to believe that tills piece of vandalism Is tho work of .L'orvaUlH stu dunts," said titoddard. "On the contrai', I am. Inclined to be ll ovo that tho dynamiting was. done by - persons Jiving In ' Kugene. Whether they were ' atudents or not 1 do not knorw." ' This alyly exonerates all thone 1 drinking deep at tho fount 'uf education, of ull blame. NtudcntH , are rllmliiJitetV. Therefore, the dynamiting niUHt have been the vorU ot male inorons, bad boy, o ti Htray ycgg tumble to find u wfc, J iu crack. One of thu local hllshandtf "Iw lliff abused its winter comes, lie lis wants to keep the house so warm that his daughter's bnw-lcinted IJostotl bulldon from Haleill, Ore' 011, refuses to stay Inside. I j The deeiMlun of the gt'iUlcnicn'M I tityle ahuw in that the correct I hunting coetume for thin Keatun 'cuiodftM of ' ft pink rout, ehi.Hinn 4 1 white punlH, yellow vi'Kt, tdilny bhu'k- ImotH nnd n tip hut. I Would llk to offer h lioohy iM-lr.e I I for the lt tneorreet imnwer tell iiiK what gumo a Kentleiuan would 1 1 f hid who went hunt Inn thus iic I cnutercd. ( Ios AnK'U'M TimeM.) 5 Who will he the flint valley nhn- ' rod to he up-lo-ditte, nnd what j will he he uccideiitiilly hut for? SITU IN I, U K ((Einimrln, Kan., (illicit)') When we were a boy Sunday , schools had libraries. Tbe books i were known na Sunday school books. We read' them all. In-I 'arlably bud boy came to bail ends and food boys generally end- J; ed by marrying bankers daugh ters. At first tho stories mode a treat Impression on us and did more lo make ns lead n good lire than the ndvlec of parents, preach g etrs and Sunday . school teachers J; combined. As we grew older and . 'fell In with evil companions they I taught us to scoff at Sunday school ' books. and helped us to secure i ; literature of a more thrilling and j ' fascinating 'character. In those I 'Stories It was the smart, strong ticnrtcd fellows who won out, re , .. 'nrdlcsa of .church affiliations. Yet i'.nly last week the moral of the) I 'Hominy rrchnol honks' was exempli- fled and varifled In New York I t'lty. Hilly Parker, age 1 2, played hookey. Ho went to the home of i ' his nice old grandmother and tor 'monted her. She tried to get him K to go to school and bo a good hoy. Trying to escape her he fotl from An open window five stories to tho pavement, nnd died on the way to the hospital. Thoso Sunday school boy. were not so far o(f, after all. HAPPINESS TJAl'riXKSS in life is largely a mutter of cmpliusis. Which - is only notlnu way of Haying it is largely tlietated by the mental attitude, the point of view. Few individuals aro free from disappointments and heart aches. But in most lives the hitter is mixed with the sweet. There are compensations, mid thcr are at least fortuitous pleas ures, if the individual only takes the Irouhle to look for them. The hopeless life is usually the life where the individual can see djjynly the misfortunes; and because of this over emphasis fails to see tlie brighter side of the present. '' , "V ; . ; TPAKK Hint iiiil'orliiiinl,!! ymni; liidy from I'liiliuli'lpliiii, for H'XiuiipJt who bccniisu slie found lift) futile, fiidtul it. nil by jiiinpiiijf frttiii an uii'itlnue 2iM)0 ft-ft in Hit' nil'. She doiiit.'d mciitul of pliy.tienl illness, liiii(;lited at .tin; idea of a "hidden sorrow," lint found life mieh a bore she welcomed death, ro- vided it whh Hiifficiently Kt'iiKalional. An except ional ease, j'io doulit. And yet prohably an ex- Hinple of that ripii-it of unrest, and desire for n new thrill, so prevalent nrnoit the younger freiieration, merely earrie?! to its logical conclusion. A S life ffot-H this youitfr lady sands of her sisters. The Shi; enjoyed reasonably good health, but she could see only the disappointments and the futility of things. So she brooded over them, until her sense of proportion was completely lost, arid to her distortetl mind, tlcalli seemed if not the only way out, nt least an appealiiiffly dramatic one. AVEKY lilllu thing might have dissuaded her, for such needless tragedies usually hang on little things. Assum ing there was no physical or mental mal-iitljustment, one word, a single phrase, a few hours before might linva made nil the difference in the world. . . l'erlutps if she had happened to rend the Cosmopolitan in stead of "ltomancc," she iiiiuhl now be enjoying herself, with lier family and friends, instead of leaving them in grief and sorrow. This is not an "ad" for one mugnziuc or any reflection on the other, but it gives us nil excuse for printing the following, which wc regard lis far better treatment of the subject than wo could ever compose. , It is taken from the December Cos mopolitan and was written by tlmt very interesting and gifted young woman (perhaps she isn't so young now), Klsic Janis. I tore it is: ' ' - ' y COMPENSATION , WJIHX my luck seems all out , And I'm down atf'tlic mouth, ."'AVIieti I'm stuck in the North, . . ' And I want to go Sout)i; ' When tile world seem ti blank And there's no one I love, i And it seems tiven (lotl's Not in Heaven above, ,', , " 1 I've a cure for my grouch , And it works like a shot J just think of the things thai I'm glad 1 am nut: A 'bird in n cage, A fish in a bowl, ; ; A pitf in a pen, A fox in a hole, ..... .. A hear in a pit,- A. 'wolf in u trap. .'' t'( ' A fowl on a spit, A niff 'on a lap, A horse in a stable, A eow in a shed. A plate oil a table. The sheet on a bed. The ease on a pillmv, A hell on the door. t A branch on a willow, A mat on the floor. When I think of the humlreds of things I mihl be, I tret down on my kneeH nnd llunik iod that I'm me. Then my blues disappeai, when think what I've got, And' M'lite soon I've foi'Kollen the things I have not. A STITCH TTIK very t'l'licnl t'nntlilinii nl- SriM-i'liirv tf VVtii' (ititnl niiin tlfiiitiiistrfilc.H tlutl (In- time to have mi appendix tint is not ttlion it is mnlwtifr trtilililf hut when it isn't. It is not our prov ince to (five nii'dienl iidvico; lint wc do lirlii'Vc Hint those who still linve iipprntlixiis, wntiltl lie wise to luive tlmt orsnn exiiiu inetl wli.enever they feel below pur even if there is no nente pnin in l htit pnrtienfiir recion. ' " . A luird winter eoinititi, ell ? MUTT AND JEFF-pGuilty With Extenuating Circumstances I . a Z i - sk . . v i m r - win v ' i i am v . r . s.r v . i i -x,-i MEDFORD MAIL picture, whidh is almost always had more to live for than thou necessities of life were provided, IN TIME Well It 'bents n soft, slushy one. TRTKITNX MEDFORD,. Personal Health Service By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Itnad letters parUlnlDt to pononal health and hygiene, not to dlseaso diagnosis or treatment will ha answered by Dr. Drady If stamped, aelf.adilreised entelop. Is enclosed. Utter, should he brief and written In Ins. Owing to too Urg. number of letters recelred, only a few cm bo auwar od here. No reply can be made la queries not conforming to Instructions. Addraao Dr. WUltam Brady, In ear. of tots nowopapor. HOW MO YOU KNOW On ecrlalti dining earn you may order certified milk. Certified milk l the. uurs-iat raw mill: vou nan hnv ' - , , """" i rupiurcii lifter I wan 50 yen of by n medical milk conminwlon, ora((.. Wo,.e u tru for a year. Tha tlnetmn, health authorities, bat.- 0,,nnB denied cloned. Discarded tdioloKlstn. chemltB, veterinary . ... ,, . ,,, m,h n,n.,,, phynlelans noml - nittert or upiirov- ed by the respon sible locul medi cal society.. This com mission su pervises the ex amination and euro of tho ani mals In tho dairy herd, tho hnnd llnir of tho milk from dairy to consumer, tii" oxntninatlon of ull prsons who handle the milk, und the regular nacicrloloirlcal un.l cnemlcul test- Inir of the milk. Of cnurso human natme Ih human nature, und It is ponHlhle that Bonio one in this ur raiiKoment may fall. Rut Juwt the Kiinic, certified milk Ih tho choicest article you can buy anywhere, and accordingly it costs more - than ordinary milk. But It 1b regrettable to note that Home of the people who Herve certified milk do not understand what they are hand ling. They bring the customer, not the scaled container of milk, hut Just some milk in a kIuhh. That immediately urouseH the. isunpicion of it cunLomer who known anything about milk. Where certified milk U sold it Hhould hti delivered or served to the customer only in the scaled container, which ho should bo permitted to open him self, or t least to see opened. The sophis ticated customer ought to refuse to pny the certified milk price if he does not receive the milk In the sealed container. ' Tho next best grade of milk tviiilablo is pasteurized milk. I believe there is Just one grade or quality of pasteurized milk, ho far as liio casual customer or pur chaser Is concorned, and that Is pasteurized milk asteurlzed milk j is any milk which has been heated to, say, 143"HegreeH K. for from to .'id minutes, then cooled again. That's all the difference there Ih between pflsreurized milk and ordinary raw milk. Hut. some times that Jk a grent difference, for ordinary raw milk before pasteur ization may contain some disease gorms, Kiich ,ns tubercle' , bncllli from tuberc.ulouH . cows, typhoid bacilli from contamination of the milk by handlers whd happen, to he typhedd carrlerH, or u malignant type of streptococcus, from in flamed udders, nnd this streptococ cus can cause epidemics of neptlc soro throat If the milk is not pas teurized or boiled. Tho heat paMeurlzution Ih sufficient to any or all ofthe.se germs In any milk. The human factor Is much piore likely to fall In tho matter of pasteurizing: milk than it is in certifying milk. It did fail with dlMUMtt-ouM eohseiiuenoert ill the typhoid fever epidemic at Montreal u year or two ngo. Somebody nl ; lowed a shipment or lond of raw (and contaminated milk to go out j to tho market unpasteurized. t At lunch counters, sodu fount Ptftlns. restnurantfi, in dining V:irs. hotels or wherever you buy milk, H is u reasonable and proper safe guard 6 ask that tlfe milk bit served or delivered to yuu In Uo container In which It whn pusleur- . isMMl, or nl least that you be allow ed to rfee It served from the senled container or have some assurance' ! I hat It Is pasteurized milk. All milk Hold in tho city is pasteurized, ( by law In most communities. . lint1 i when you travel nwoy from homo ' ' tho chaiiceH nre i"0-r0 that raw inllk will be offered. Jt Ih Is per-' jchanco certified, then you are in! jJuok; if It Is not, then you had bet. j ,'ter play sato by seeing that It bo i ooneii uve: . minutes before volt f flrlnk II. aiul especially before you ' parish this afternoon. -feed Jt to a baby. j lictween lr, anil I'o local )'iarisb- ' OI'KSTIOVS AND AXNWEKS .Mean nntl Imv i ' In a complete examination i lit. other, day the doctor found itnil ihy blood pressure Is low. lie sold It was Just two siiincthliig lu.' 1 would like to know It that Is' as ImkI as high lilood pressure. '(S. W. ) Answer. 1 wonder whether the doctor said two Inches, two centi meters, two notches or Just too bad. The paucity of data In your protocol. Sherman, niy boy, leaves rile pawing the air. Low blood pressure doesn't mean anything in particular: .like n low blood count or a low spirit. It happens in all 77 .''" r-- --'- Um. W.lttfj, ZSKiPl" INrCTV.We ORKfiOV. TIHHreDAY, TIM-: .Ml Ml IS ITHE? ' sortH of major and minor nilinentK. i ,lle oilier fust? nf ICtiptiiro Core ! VoU arp '"'"'"Xen. I huve done hard work ull my life. Uecumo ! returned, and sh6rtly afterward on cume on tho other side. I then lieKiin wearliiK a . double truss, wore it over 12 years. Three years ago 1 seemed to be sound, so I dis. carded the truss. The rupture has never returned. (H. M. C) Answer. Well, sir, you have the distinction of being tho first and only man In Nebraska who hi been even apparently cure'd of rupw ture without operation, 'i'he lnui ana man who makes a similar claim declares , that his euro re quired only nbout .18 years. .Life , s MO .,lwn an(1 Hul.Bery su pu:ttium ' . ' no wadays LOS ANGELES, ov. i.--ilP) t'hiirRed wlll coiiHpirucy ,lo;violnte the nutlonal ijielilhitli.ii law 10 persons must appear before Fed ernl Jutlxe William P. JameB in Hun Jlei?o, C'al., tomorrow; for ar raltrnment on indictments arrowing out of a federal grand jury inquiry into an alleged liiiuor combine dur Ing the American Legion state con vention In San Diego Inst August. Tho ImlfcLnientH returned here yesterday charged American Le gion convention committeemen and Man Diego business men conspired with Chnrles JI. Muloch, confessed bootlegger, to provide visiting le-! ginnnulros with liquor. ImllctojlSvlth Muloch, whb ap peared before tlie grand jury! and ';toltt all," because ho alleged he. was "double-crossed," were Logan K. Htiggles. Sarr Dlegoi buslnestii man, alleged Ameriean"Lego ac-I rangerhenis commltteemtin: ( Vil-! Hani E. I'erley, Clyde E, Wnylaml j juid Stanley Hale, all of San Diego, j alleged to Jtave posed as "polltlcliuts able to squarn things with city of-r flctals." and I,, yv. Nellman, Wil llam K. Ileniis,. Peter Nieblas. John i T. Stafford. .1. X. Dawson. (Iconic Drake, Ira SIukh, .loe Main. Adolpn. Xelman, "Wesley .VilllocTl nnd A. V. Desserault; alleged to have been handling liquor under .Muloch'-ij direction Mnln,.h rewllflo. lia' nnl.t 1 l0h ' for a 'concession tt the exclusive f right to' sell' liquor-r.t -the. eonven-! Horn and was'piomlsed lie. would i not be interfered with because "of- i flclals are fixed." He said he took I no precautions to' conceal his a:-1 tlvitles, and alleged' he lost 10tr.- BOOTLEGGER AT EGION CONFAB IN CONFESSION 000 worth oCillquor in a raid be- i"u u,e fore the convention was well und,!"1.0' ";V,e..r-1"- I" " '".' before way.i," . .;' ': f : - i ft " : i EPfSCOPAL MEN i iif s n imiirnAAll Walter Mcpherson of Long .each, Calif., western field secre tary of the Itrotherbood of St. Andrew', men's organisation Ih the Kplscopal church, arrived In Med ford tills noon;from Portland for the purpose of addressing the men of Father AVIIIWm 11. Hamilton's oners attended the meeting and. following thy Interesting address, sfarted a round table discussion for the purpose of gaining all tbe necessary information In case' a lucal chapter Is formed. An ad ditional meeting will be belli .Mont day In St. Mark's (Suilrt hall, and plans 'fiir organizing tbe local rtub will be adopted or rejected. The Hrotherhood of St. Andrew Is an International organization, having been established In Chicago In 1S7-I by James llougbtellng. Its chapters .spreading tnru Curopean countries, Australia and Alaska as well as thruontjthe Pnlted States. Mr. McPhefftun will lenvo for the south this evening. ST,VEMTER ' 14. '"19237 MAIL TRIBUNE. DAILY CROSS-WORD PUZZLE ACROSS For fear tlmt Solution of Yetterday'a Puzzle I. j. w nmlcrlnir In. Uneven 13. Americas In tliun 15. Kat wny IS. i-'emnle miT i;. LqiiIIhI of If). Withont ha'r IV. fotie 3d. Kmllt llfht SS, Compass point 23. Aside ti Hwiss mono' .tains !. Ol.l oath fi7. J'vrlnlnlnr to trocs 81 Insect's civ 12. rronoun 34. Water ticMt sion j 35. Yale ? nit. Ak far as 87. Chinese pagbdft 3S. Sort 19. An Apostle 41. Cross bar on on escutcheon 4!. Inhabitant oft snftlx 43. Myself . 44. Gnl.lo! lilfh est note 45. Jtnlio 4 it. Onrselrei 47. Him iint iH. Released by payment of moTray HO. Felines IBIR AGfTSO OriS POT T A N P AR PUft A Si1 A rt A PaepqE t sft InItIeIp p g FrTj SIT A LfkpPlE.NpL AID l o n mp aIdCjt e l e Y E TO? I c Ov? I DIE N f FL'EC TIRO nZZ3 sel e c tda r e oil a proa Ian Tm at eTd asps EopiIKoNte ST ET .JE R SllS ETS S3. Ilornj growths on. I lie skin SI. That thl tifr ti Last six lines of a sonnet ft, tlod of love 1 Cut with sell. ' sors 63. Territory of Japan SI. More: mai . i:npino 61. l'at letters or a won) in their proper order 7. l-niH'Ct &1. Hoforoi prefl' l 98. Moke amends mk''k - jm - j ; vm m- So ar Ba.-"- pt-- ' -m life ' . WVW;W tH 21 zt if ! W . TS . iSSTF- T 'L.X. Is I .... 34 Tc" 3? ' ' . . - 1. u , ; , , ' ... .,; .;' 57 777 " " ' - 4i ' .47 I ....... r- ML . y iigii 35" fl - ?ih,& l&A & 7 S . " : -. - ftM ....... & liT t?m -srsr ' mz? PirJ ': ""I ' hwl '1 I I' I. mm ma I I I ' Brisbah e4s Today (Continued from Pag. On.) 'ellt loss liii'iit and more ; iee et'ealll i'oolislnr. '.'.S.S. ' . , . V'J;...J i age consider China's most tlisUn-1 Is achieved by supplying mlld com jgulslietl citizen. Kung Teh-Chen, ,i paratlvely- harmless, drinks in i itn lineal nescontiant ot Ming 1 u" 1 aei whom western barbarians crt-lletl Confucius.' An(l consider Iviiu? aehClien's fee!lns wl,el toM nationalist 1,lan confiscate the ancestral es- lH." l '"o contucius taimiy.i J.- Since his death about 24(11) years ( -iii istiuiiiijf , tins ueeu leveruu oy fmore human beings than any-man ; that ever lived; not excepting (he great Jatitlma, at whose birth the i earth quaked, the sun, moon and j stars stood still, tae blind saw, the I lame walked.' - - " , -. . ... Poor Kung Ten-Chen., amltl his crumbling fortunes, might quote the line lines ot his ancestor 77 times removed: "The great mountain must crumble, Tho strong tree must break, The Wise man must wltlier away .,. . like a plant." ; - ' llo many of ottr American for tunes, will trxlsf, hoiv many names iremtqnburjd after. 77 jge'nnnt-1 .- '- . ' Confucius' dusvcndnnla for cen (urles had rnnslituleU the only heildllary nobility in China nntit Knn. Teh-llH'ii reeendy voluntar ily nhandoitcd his title ot fluke. In deference to China's new demor racy. ' 11 ' . Confucius' male descendants number 11.000. Mow many Chinese would there be had nil been cared as well as Kttnjf FuTie's children? A craving for -alcohol ts not easily subdued. Attendants In pub lic Institutions have been known to drink alcohol used to preserve ana tomleal sieclinens In ghtss jars. , -. 8. Pit toffotlier - 9. Von - A lo. Woaotald iirmiih ii. Antlered rami mint 12. Small depres- ' . slon A 14, Dauh f 19. Low ralter 51. Klttmbererft 23. Exchance pre ml am S3. 1'nllid S. Those entered -27. Oiillqnely SH. Lift S3. Any twining stem 30. Agec - 52. JIurrr , Allayed ' 37. fcpnn of horses 4U. Ardor 41. 'To nnd -J 4H. Itngs -; 47. Oily nb- stances . v 49. l.naks for &0. Affection of the Inrynx or trachea n. Cried M. Song 64. To the Inside of Weis 7. Allowance for , waste ft. Wriggling Sfory ft). Toper f.2. Iteforet prefix if-. Parent 69. UoH on tbe ejenu; tut DOW N 1. Deprivation 2. It use for Arctic explorations I. lndlrldanl per forninnees 4, And ten: sufflx t. 'Ftryptlmi prod of tli earth 8. Spoiling hi tlie ehnrnctcr of. .. nnnther alpha lie! yf 7, A a ossnmed .;, character ir. H is,. said .that XcbiOU.'s. . body, brought to. Ijonilon in, a cask of rum to preserve it, arrived in bad condition because sailors drank the j rum- .;"'.. . '.. t ,-; .-: rAt Onnniia, Minn., three Indians j drained and drank an anti-fieeze ' solution from a white man's auto- mobile. 'They died .- t-' t . ' nhtincianceri This country Is experimenting with compulsory water which Ger many contemptuously calls "goose drink..'! , . . , . . . Two or three generations of sta tistics will decide which is practi cal: .- , - . , - . .,. ,' Clilcnwb's civic theatre lias 'be gun producing Sliu'.tespcnres plays regularly and Chicago likes them. No English speaWng theatre except Stratl'ortl produces Shakespeare as a regular diet. Chicago tresis that Boston nntl New York will now back up and stop talking about their culture. Mr. Humbert Fugazy had "the fighting rights" of several heavy weight prize fighters, including tho powerful German, Sohmcling. He sells his rights to Madison Square (Inrdcn company for $75,(100. Madi son Square will sell the fights to a howling public for several hun dred thousand dollars. That's one view of our civilization. --. Communications v Legion Tlmulix Tribune. ' To I he Editor: On behalf of Medrord Post No. 15 of the-American Legion. I am writing to thank you for the as sistance which you gnvo us in raising money for ,our Armistice Dny celebration. . 1 assure you that this was ap preciated very much by the mem bers of the post. Please convey to Mr. llrey our special thanks for his efforts. , D. (1. TYKKI-:. Chairman Armistice Day Com mlWee. - - - . -.' P Rl SO WHuf fAUf rr Vou" AR CHAfeGh- tAJlTH SHOOTING THIS PAfcK. SQURiiCi 1.1 Ll AT 1- v... wnnt no tow J Do Yon Remember? TEN' YKAKS A(iO TODAY (From flics ot the Mall Tribune.) Novi-mbcr 14, I II I II. Kreil Dutton of EubIo Point cleared in five minutes on charce of steallnir cow from W. C. Uulcy of like Creek. Ccntniliit: , Evidence nt coro ner's Inquest shows service Wen killed Armistice Duy. iitttiekcd the I. V. W. hall. l'lttsblirg: ft. S. Ktenilwell, presideilt of V. 8. Purity Fede ration declares motor car lurgely responsible for sexual laxity. London: away, Countess Tolstuf pusses Louisville liere today ,Ky. Two 'tllstllivrW' sold whiskey openl; at 75 per, case Portland: Local service " men compel president de Valcr'a of Ire. land on visit here to discnrdhU flag. " . TWENTY YKAltS AGO TODAY (From files of tho Mall Tribune.) . Xov. I t. lltuil. Frank Woolridgo ot Applegato kills 11 bobcats., but; was allowed the $2 bounty on but It of them. Yale smothers Princeton, 17 to Ted Coy being hero of game. California defeats Stanford. Itugby, HI to 13, a big upset. Ham Corbett of Portland stars on Harvard football team, and is slated for enptain next year. " "Editorial: ' Medford -should; be tbe vliomo, of a .great,, urUtreKnity. 4'limalc ..is ideal, -conditions . pcr .fectVanU.. opportunity is .knock- , ing." -. -f ; " ' THE .Mil TAXI. .. liy , Jlnry (iruham Hotltier. ! ''Here, -,we are!". said John, lie antl .Pesgy had come to meet tho Little, lilack' Tlock. '. ' "That m e a n s wc must be start ing," the. Little Black Clock' said. "Just wait half u jiffy.",; ; ,; T h Vy ; waited half n Jiffy. Peg gy knew It was Just tlmt ' length of time, because she started t!J say "half a ''jiffy?' and before : .: she i was half -through-say-' ing It: .the.iliUloyf ', ' ready.':' He was standing on ' his -short1 logs, little white fnce looking ,so eagerly about him. . ',' "Oh how glad 1 ami',' he- sjiid.. as they started off, "(hat I, tec-' cepled 'the magic offered 'to mo so that have the .power to turn the time backward or forward to any time . at all. 't ' '."I don't mind It at all' lt: the rest of the : world or the :house hold sees .that .1 am. (always 7 o'clock and that 1, don't uppcar to go." -. ' . "Of course not," John agreei.. "It was certainly lucky for us that you said you'd cbooso the magic rather than just keeping tlie ordlnnry time." "Here tt comes." "What?" the children asked. "The taxi. I balled olio." '"But it looks like an alrplnn-.-." John insisted.. "It is," grinned the Little lilack Clock. "It's an air taxi. "I've turned the timc;uhcud a few years. Jump in!" Tomorrow ''Tlir Tttxl I title." Nutritive values of tjauie grasses are . being studied by the Call- ' fniiila Cnlli.gr of Agriculture. Piles Go Quick Piles aro caused by congesllnii or blood in tbe lower bowel. Only an internal remedy can remove the cause. That's why salves and-eut-(ing fall. Dr.. Leonhnrdt's. Jlem Hold. a harmless tablet, suceredt because It relieves this congestion end strenglhens the affected parts. Hem-Hold has given quick, safe and lasting -relief to thousands of Pile sufferers. It will do tho Jame for you or money back. Jarmln & Woods Drug Store and druggists everywhere sell Hem-Hold with this By BUD FISHER r TO YVT. M5 AWAV