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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1930)
PAGE FOUR Medpord Mail Tribune Daily and Sunday , I'utolMwi tor V MKDPOBD PRINTING CO. 23.27-29 N. Kir St. ROBERT W. Rl'IIL, Kdllor 8. SUMITKR SMITH, .Minaitr An Independent Newspaper Entered la second class matter at aledford, Oregon, under Aet of March 8, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Rr Mall In Adianee: llally, alth Sutiday, rear.... $7.n0 llally, llh Sunday, month.'.; 75 Dally, altlHjut HuiKtay, year 6.50 Dally, without Sunday, month (15 Sunday, one year 2.00 By Carrier, In Adrance Medford, Ashland, Jirssoniille, Central Point, Phoenix, Talent, Uold Hill and on lllihways: - Dally, with Sunday, month. .. i.t. ... ,t .75 llally, without Sunday, mouth 05 Dally, without Hunday, one year 7.00 Daily, with Sunday, one year 8.00 All terms, cash In adrance. Official paper of tlx City or Medlord. Official paper of Jackson County. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Receiving Full Leased Wire Service The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to Hie use for publication of all news dlpa'clies credited to It or ollierwle credlfed In this paper, and also to the loral neus puhllshed herein. All rights fur publication of special dlpatehes herein are also reserved. MEMBER OF THE UNITED PIIESB MEMBER OF AUDIT III IlK.tU OF CIRCCI.ATIONS ave ending Marrll .11. ln:io. was 4:122. Dally average illslrlliution for six monllut to Msreh 111, IH.lt) llifri. Present net paid A. B. C. 4150, Present press run, 41105. Advertising Representatives M. C. MOUKNSKN COMPANY Offices In New York, Chicago, Detroit, Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle, Potrland. Ye Smudge Pot . (By Arthur Perry) . FKKKDOM'S FOGIIOHN O! Muh FrlrnrtH, Mali Countrymen! This rank IiiJumMcc, Ih n-frwlnc to bust u. But jut' keep HiuftKln, ItiiffKln' on' Pliiffglii Along-. For toot, toot, tooly! Fruit, fruit, fruity! I'm clicwin' on Uio world I For some reason, Portland Hum dingers have voiced no protest thin year, that It takes 63 hours to get to Chicago by rail. - This Is supposed to be an c lightened ago and yet the fool fako chock passers are showing up right along. (Pendleton East Oregonlun.) Thus nothing of tho fool fuko check takers. The fear thore would be no sum trier, Ih not borne out by the ovl donee, and whist shall be done with tho citizen who alleges! Hint ho enjoys the heat. ... LAST WEEK'S WISEST IDEA It might be well to turn the Statue of Liberty around every onoe In a while ho hIio can nee white's happening behind her back. (Arkansas Gazette) "For Salo Cufo and fountain, $250 with handle. Phono 5117" (SouthwoHtorn Oregon Nowb.) Tho propor equipment for $260. Thero Is no- great excitement over tho rovealment that Mary 1'lckford, tho film quecn, enjoys listening to a risque story. It is doubtful If thero would bo any Brent oxcltoment If Mary Plckford luld a risque story. It appears thoro nro moro spe cial honors at tho University of Oregon, than 2nd loots in a lively war. ..The up-puymonts on 8-cyllnder uutos, havo started to Hlzo and sugar. ..... Tho percnplta wealth of' Oregon Is 14244, and tho statistician who did tho figuring did nofcarry out his compulation. In cents. This makes It bad, ns the average clti en can produce,' un Bhort notice, no part or parcel of his per capita wealth. A horsofly was In town today looking for a borne. . All tho backward gardens tiro full of forwurd woods. Wo don't suppoHO tho time will actually como when overyono will run a filling station and tho popu lation will llvo by selling gas to one another. (Detroit News.) Whoro wo nro drifting. Ml.VKHS The great man turned to me and mi hi, "Mining 1ms go no to Hell tho lust ton years. Do you know what's tho matter? Tho confound ed automobiles! Thoy havo near ruined Noviida. Nobody's finding mines any moro. These fancy oro soouta stick closo to tho highways so us to Hparo their tires. Over two-thirds of the big mines In Ne vada woro found by burros hunt ing for grass, or by their masters who swopt half their Uvea hunting for the strnyed burros." Fancy scouts! Well, the pros Doctors had changed, certainly. Hero were a score of them surging about this pit. All wcro dressed in nenil-nillltary stylo, with leggings und macklnaws with not a single board amongst them. (lone aro the rule-of-thumb old timers who prodded tho burro. cursing meanwhile every tooth out of their heads, and braving heat waves that would have daunted Abednego, (American Mercury.) DR. GRIFFITH RITES TO BE HELD TODAY HALKM. Ore., June 10. (T) Tho funeral of Dr. Lewis Frank (Irlfflth, assistant superintendent of the Mate hospital fur the Insane, who died late Saturday, will be held from tho Rigdon mortuary hero at o'clock today, with com mittal services at tho local mauso leum. . Dr. Griffith's Immediate family und his (later, Mrs. Helen Olese of Portland, were with him whon ho died. .. f - . Single-hand cigar lighters have appeared In Oermnny. O oGE0RGE " I "MS sudden iintl liockinr dentil of George Joseph, Itt'piib- licmi candidnte fur fiovcrnor, (lenionhtnites Iiow imicli more sonsatioiial fact is tliaii fiction; mysterious real life is, than ever maifaficH to he. Here was comparatively a with his election as Governor of the state Kcnerally conceded, who was not only enjoying the best of health, enjoying life in all its phases but, as far as known, had scarcely suffered a sick day in a (piartcr of a century. fX -A bright June morning, at Clatsop lieach, be stands be neiith I lie waving flags, to review a regiment of National fiuard troops, and as he chats and jokes with the commanding officer, suddenly crumples, drops to the ground, and the final chapter in his dramatic mid pieturesue life is written, the spirit of (icorgc Joseph, so alive passes to that "undiscovered country from whose bourn no trav eler returns." As the book of common prayer well says, what are the pomps and vanities of this world, death. Who knows who holds? ' I "O Mr. ,loseih'ri ninny I'ricnds, mid particularly to the nieiii- 'liers of hit) family, so cruelly bereft at (his time, the entire slate extends its heartfelt sympathy. Only that faith which passes all understanding can be of any solaee at such a time. Siieh tragedies to them can't be understood, they can only be endured, witli the trust that somehow, some day, what is in comprehensible may be clear. r,IIK death of George Joseph immediately reveals the unrc- ality of political strife in this thoughtless world. It was Shakespeare who claimed the good that men do is "oft interred with their bones." This is not true. With Mr. Joseph, as with other public fig .ures of his militant, magnetic type, it is the good that will be remembered. As everyone knows, this paper did not support Mr. Joseph in the recent primary, our opposition was sincere, the convic tions we then held, we still hold. Hut, as we then remarked, in our opposition there was nothing personal, and in the bitterness of the campaign we gladly conceded the man's courage, brill iance, and his capacity for constructive accomplishment. T Is1 these things thai will be remembered. Against heavy odds George Joseph made his own way, to wealth and power in this state. Whatever his faults, and like all human beings he had them, no one ever questioned his unswerving devotion to the development and betterment the welfare of the common man. His death is a shock to everyone, his place as a stro'ng anil pro gressive force in this state will be bard to fill. The bitterness of the recent tinplenaiitness is forgotten. The resentments pro duced by a political situation, place. : rKATli does not change facts; it does evaluate them; it does not alter error, it does reveiif the inner truth. And, in the ight of this truth, all the people mer foes, join in paying a tribute to a man who fought tho good fight, who gave no ipiarter and asked none; whose energy, 'bril liance and fearlessness, qualities have so suddenly been stilled by SLAYER OF P AGENT WILL FACE ALT UK AH, Cnl., Juno !. (I1) A first degree murder charge- was expected to bo placed today against Kodttoy Kclhy, 3I, Indian Springs service station operator, who surrendered Saturday night after ho had been sought since Inst Monday for tho killing of Prohibi tion Agent Albert ltrown and tho wounding of Agent llnhcrt Davis. Helby gnvo himself up to O. J. Kuleher of Lookout, DO miles southwest of here. Ills shoes were worn and ho was near collapse from hunger and exhaustion. Kelby declared ho fired at ilrown in self defense after tho agent had shot first. , Tho shootlnsr occurred when tho agents sought to nrreHt Helby on a charge of selling lhpiuor. Home toy makers of Cuba are using modernistic colorings. MUTT AND JEFF A WHAT ARC WO COTTIW6 Hot.es iw oor DtRBY HAT Fofc, MUTT? J JOSEPH how much more dramatic and any artificial dramatization of it yomi man, in the prime of life, and vital a few seconds before, "in the midst of life we lire in can know, ''what the morrow of this state, or his interest in that has passed, now have no of this state, friends and for so greatly needed in this world, death. PILOT KILLED TRACK ACCIDENT POKTUXNI), Oro., .hino (!') Clmrlia Mcdlnnls. 31, ot Uresli nm, Oro., votoran utitonioltlln rue Ins drlvor, whs Innlunlly lilllod yoa lonlay at llio Kpceil bowl nenr Cortland wlun liln ear craxlu'il throiiKh a I'onco In front ot the KianrlHtand. MelilnnlH wati titnlni; U IiIh racer preparatory to partlti. palhiK In tho rai'oH. As ho finished a lap ho lost control of his car, which turned from the track and catapulted through tho fonco, pin nltiK MeUinnls underneath. Ills skull was crushed and ho died shortly afterward, llo Is survived hy his widow and a l yenr old son. Miss Aftnrs HUkH tho Highgato, Eng., girl who Unpen to break the women's chaiimM swimming record (his year, has had DO proposals of matTinge, Including two from Rus sia. Fair Exchange Is No THAT'S i Meets A STRAW MAT HAT,JFF.' a r i r " MAIL TRIBUNE DAILY CROSS-WORD PUZZLE AC HUH I. Sll ni Irk rd i. t'rrrtrheil it j ear L I, amp ol rurlh I. Aclil fruit i. UvliHlt a. UHriuen! imtiKu ifu m i. iia n mot b -t. I rein ni i, Howrr 1. 'I lung Hbttrnt from ftt-liuul wllliittil Icutr I. ulrlt .11" I. i. liexlrrlly X hrea i. A pin J at wliln Solution ot t. AlloHiince wntte '. Sewer J Tart of a lirlilRv i. IWlif iWittlj ). Olil i-lolti mr attire I. A tied 51. Ht-lft Mri.irfl Mummer id. lhMk uf 60. Technical Jn rin 61. Wtlrd Rt, irlKli HI. SppiI filter In 12 On the urn run a. Itlntorlc I. MMillral tower tin 1 1 IfKti lp 66. hfrn 67. :iinrne -AS. Stnlns . Mir I. CniTFt! Wnnhri 'i. Ituituin ttrnnzr 61), i.ri ii itnml ' MtpnSlEwnPRlAl! Ie nIf f i tTeTa RJ ?Ta g l e 1 u s u pI1uInioer "nH-lS a" r einJSe r i gfTirVl sr. n& SSWsOT EllD Sdcio n ner1 5IifjB.iN3 riQ7s TjSl PI A I N ' cJl. A n i G EjtliJ aTrItKo; DiP'RaE hi DS s pTITa k ej a ISy IS a yli T ATssjEtHR kr'ET Ee elNlrlElROylsiElRkl 2 13 U l:r JS u 17 I? w ey ' " 2 2o 21 , 72 23 2l 2J 28 2f ; , 5o 31 32 33 rrz, t?7 vrh wwa ttt" 'tv:p- "rr v "" M!L lllll!!L ll5 4445 S2 ztst . SS V$iSi SJ SS if To TTi if 2 - i Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Binned Mien pertalnlmt to personal health and hyftJene, not to disease, dlagnaili or treatment will be answered liy Pr. Brady if a stamped self addr&ised envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the Urge number or letters receired only a few can he answered here. No reply can be made to queries not confirming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady In car of The Mall Tribune. THIS MEDICAL IJHERTY SQI Tho hard llcker party is not shouting ho much about pcrsomil liberty lately. The noise, perhaps, did not promote' business. Rut wo still hoar vague, hissings and grum blings from ob scure sources about medical liberty, whatever that may be. I, for o n p should fight the last breath sueh an atrocity as com p ulsory V a c c inatlon of myself or my did not approve of And 1 believe und children if I vaccination. assert that health authorities who. by means of trickery, compel sumo people, to submit to vaccination u gainst their will, are narrow, big oted and untrustworthy officers of the stnte. IL Is trickery, mean and contemptible "when the state hits one law compelling attendance at school, and another excluding chil dren who nro not vaccinated. No honest physician or health author ity or sunitary expert can Justify this nhameless class legislation and legitimate persecution. So fur as "medical liberty" opposes or re sists such injustice I am for it nnd with It, though I like to keep my self and those who depend on my advice well vaccinated. "Medical liberty' implies that citizens' right to choose their own healers or physicians or methods of treatment or remedies is imper iled. It Implies that one "school." guild, clique or group of physicians Is monopolizing or seeking to mo n o p o I I z o the healing business scheming to compel every one to employ only the one kind of doc tor, regular, medical, allopath, call him what you will. How much actual -truth Is thore In this frightful lden?Darn little, Merger NUTTf. How ARfe Don'T ASK poousH hfovi GONNA SET A STRAW QuesTioNs; just Follow olX Boy BY CUTTING MoTT ANt LARN I hANSUjtfc ia THAT.' t 1 ifli,4 Saturday t Puzzle iirinuk mm lirllitr llrri-ft Ili'Hlli PMlrr l.itlrt Shitrl fi m a un iiuiuu ia. Wait i.' tt it- ,nif is. Iiiil'.m rMj 311. It.' Mir it -Hill ol v lid iinlmul ts ilhilliifiil T.1 Miifflii-d 3$ llille (! nit nl ti. I lill.IlPiti inlk JS. In liiTitllilntt 11 Ihililfr nf It'll i- l.r;mti'r nl tern in 17. 0M-iiHiirft fit (trie l.t. nri'iiii M .Murk ol a Ufiuiid M. Anthill IrUn ciinl.i'l it. Slutrlf Mlliip il. Hnnr-1 A6. Hitlf iitrt a7. liuil of H litire 4H. Ihilhin i rllii-i ly fit m II j f9. It tt II tlHU fii, Itlvrrt Hpnn lull HO W.N I. Alnrk t. AiMHitidlng la Itliii 3. Anililnn rlileftain 4. I'lense IiIkIiI; i. i;nrlled about prlca 6. silkworm 7. TurhlHli title nf rKiect B. IMvnrf l. vo n rail nun) I ruin AWIC IS A SMOKE SOKEEX I regret to say. I wish thero were reasonable ground for it. At least I wish tho stato were far enough advanced to fix soma sort of mint mum standard of qualification for healers and make every person comply with ,tho requirements in order to obtain his licenso. That simple, straightforward plan of li cemuire Vould be fair to everyone concerned and it "would put an end to a vast amount of chicanery that is now foisted on tho unprotected public. The charlatans, quacks, nostrum vendors and mail order swindlers who contribute most of the med ical liberty propaganda know well enough that they must feed and stimulate popular Ignorance, mis information and prejudice against regular, reputable, recognized phys icians recognized by the stntc-Mn order to postpone as long as pos sible sirch regulation of the heal ing business by the state, for the regular medical profession alone seeks and advocates such stand-1 ards and tt will be a sad day for these "medical liberty" chaps when! the state does cut out the fooling and the grafting and sets up in honest test for would be healers j Certain kinds of alleged religion! are neither recognized nor toler ated by the state or the govern-1 ment; mormon Ism, for Instance, j Docs any "liberty' organization! conduct a campaign of slander and abuse against those religious faith which are recognized by the state. on the ground that the accepted religion.- seek to prevent citizens from practicing mormon ism ? The shady gentry supporting the "medical liberty" racket merely use It as a smoke screen to blind pros pective patrons to the truth. KSTIONN AM) AXSWKUS Horse Dander liryxn. I n m not a proficient horseback IF YoiJ AiN'T' GoofV- A TURK! c""th IMS H C Fa rider, but the .several times I have tried rldintr I havo been affected as .though by a soyum cold in tho i head. My eyes closa up ana I weep copiously. The- Instructor think it is a kind of hay fever and that I miKht be inocubued ofa'Mrist it. H. K. Answer. - By means of Bktn tents a physician - can determine whether you are annuitized or hy pensensitive to horse dander, horse hair or other thlnps with which vou mav come in contact when you take riding lessons. If th ource can bo so determined, prob ably you can bo Immunized against it by a series of gradually tncreas inff homeopathic dosses of the ex tract of the specific substance. Kvanoraled Milk Is Wliolwrtmo. Is the "evaporated milk" of the dairy companies wholesome? What ingredients are added in tho proc ess of evaporation? Stains it makes on cloth will not wash out. My nure advised" asalnst its use when I was ill recently. C. M. Answer. .Nothing is added to unsweetened evaporated milk. I am unable to tell you why it stain ed cloth. Evaporated milk Is quite wholesome, though I should ad vise pure raw milk in preference, for all who can havo pure fresh milk, say certified milk. llniiif iitUmablo Symptoms. riease mention in your column some of tho symptoms of sinus trouble. I am very nervous, dizzy, blurred spots before my eyes , ; .. h. U , Answer. What, and start an epidemic. No, 'brother, this being a health column wo cannot provide readers with symptoms. My ad vice to anyone with such symptoms as you mention is to forget ama teur diagnosis and complain to a physician. Why Children Should bo Kftrly Abed. Why do children havo to go o bed at a quarter to 8 every night when you are 10 years otd ? (Jean B., 10 years old.) Plese anser. Answer. At 10 you require 11 hours in "bed every night, Jean. So you have to hit the cornstalks by 9 o'clock If you get up at 8 In the "morning. In the hot sum mer I'd let you stay up till 9:30 or 10 o'clock at night, sometimes, if you were my kid. In the. coid winter I'd want you all tucked In by 8:30 or 9 o'clock at the latest. (Copyright John P. Dillo Co. 1 Brisbane's Today (Continued from page one) (Continued from Page One) public service, is inharmonious ly off the track when he says : "The radio will save family disruption by the automobile.' Instead of disrupting family life the automobile unites the family out of doors as tho radio unites It indoors. A machine that enables the peo ple to conquer tho enslaving law of gravitation, making it possible for the family to be united and happy out of doors, In the fresh air, is the gretest existing Influence for, keeping families together. You might as well say: "Break fast disrupts family life." Wise are the British. Deserving citizens are made happy with titles that cost nothing, and deliriously happy by giving them a garter to put around the leg and a star for their chests. Such happiness is for the upper ten. The lower ten thousand are made happy in a different way. When the Prince of Wales takes his fa ther's place, sitting on a golden throne, he rides to the throne from the palace in a magnificent, jew eled carriage. Cream colored horses drag it slowly through the streets. A servant rides on the hack of each horse. There nre servants sitting up in front, more servants in the rear. The young prince, who cares little for show, probably smiles cynically as he steps Into that car riage of gold, big enough to hold a hippopotamus. After the ten thousand have seen it pass thoy say to themselves: "We havo u KKAI king, a HKAL prince." And they, too, are happy. That carri age, paid for long ago, costs noth ing. Senator Howell, of Nebraska, very dry, learning with grief that the British embassy has received liquors and wine from Kurope, pro tests that foreign diplomats should not he allowed to import alcoholic drinks. How would tlie dry senator feel if he were sent as ambassador to France, for instance, where nobody drinks Ice water, and he were not allowed to have nny ice Water? We must make allowances for I'M . .,i Quill Points You can't tell Just what It costs to elect a senator until you seo how ho votes on a consumer-frisking tariff. - War mlBht foe worse. No nation yet uses a gas that prompts tho ilouRhlioy to llEht a match to look fur tho leak. Buying graduation presents Is enlightening. You find so many things priced under $5 that aren't worth a darn. Free service is the pat ou tho buck you get when you luiy 15 cciiU) for u 10-ceiit uriicii'. A trud patriot is one who bus been bullied by a lawyer with tho silent consent of the judge and still loves his country. Ah, well; paved highways will still bo useful when everybody flies. A smooth surfuco is easier to sweep up. Americanism:. Fashionable 1 la dies complaining because $14.95 frocks aren't woll made; soro--eyed garment workers stooping over machines for ten cents an hour. Speedways are called "proving grounds" proving that numbers of people valuo their necks at less than $50,000.. For our part, spinach is so mvful that wo couldn't even 8 tit ml it with ginger ale. Tho first great shock to tho graduate is tho discovery that old fogies have charge of job distrlbu Hon. It Isn't working on Sunday th.it makes caddies doubt that story about Ananias dropping dead. j If tho jaywalker sacrifices his i rights by risking his neck, what buyer isn't as guilty? Correct this sentence: "No visit ing for me this summer," said the college girl; "I just want to stay at homo with you and dad." CASE BEFORE COURT Tile criminal action of tho Htuto iiKiilnxt 1''. W. Snyder-, . charged with the alleged uttering of a forged contract in connection with tho Halo of a monument to 1 Hooker, of Ashland, was on trial in the circuit court today beforo a jury, Circuit Judge H. 13. Norton presiding. Tho amount' Involved is $600. All partifH In the action are resi dents of Ashland. Snyder has been a resident of this valley and Klam ath Kalis for several years. semlbatbarouB foreigners that do not take ginger pop with their saddle of mutton, or breakfast on huckwheat cakes and sausages. Lady Wilklns, wife of the Arctic explorer, passenger on the Zeppe lin, took with her a black cat, with whito whiskers and white paws. . She says the white whiskers and paws give tho oat's owners good luck. In l!t:!0, that amuses every body. Including l-ady Wilklns. A thousand years earlier, ravens flying In the wrong direction might turn back an army from its pur pose. A great battle was about to slart when an eclipse of the sun caused both armies to go homo. New York Is big in many ways. It will have this year 825.0011 li censed automobile drivers, llu.ooo more than last year. The traffic problem may solve itself by mak ing traffic Impossible. It is hard Tor city officials anywhere to think as fast as the automobile Industry goes. Automobiles are now building at the rato of only 5,000,000 a year, even under depressed conditions; tl.000,000 probably represents the minimum necessary to replace oh solute vehicles among 25,000,1)00 cars now running and grntli'v the creditable desire for the latest model, j Do Yon Remember? - TEN YEAIIS AGO TODAY (From files of the Mail Tribune.) tin no 10, 20 Washington President Wilson asks for mandate fur Armenia. John C. Mann to open annex to his store on Main street. New York Jos. H. El well, the bridge expert, mysteriously slain (Murder Is theme of one of present day "lliilo Vance" detective stor ics.) Don R. Newbury, Thora Smith n nd Mary Truax of this city, grad uate from U. of O, C. of C. receives "bushels of in quiries" from mfd-wcftt residents. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY (From files of tho Mall Tribune. June 10, HMO General rain fulls, over valley. Subscribers to Crater Lake roiul fund usked to remit. Mrs. O. V. Myers' uuto skids on wet pavement and knocks front wheel off of tho Detroit-Chalmers "30" owned by Gerald Sooy-amith In front of tho Nash. Young Burgess will pitch Sunday against Central Point, and bus agreed to do as tho old heads toll htm. Court Hull says ho was young once himself. Walter Antic out after fall from step-ladder. sV3 A. jrS.sj WINDS' HOME By Mary Gi-alinm Homier ' Tho East Wind had gone back t home. At first she had thought she would go with her Huiny Weather compan ion to visit some other place, but then she had de cided she would lot her South Wind sister have a chance at some traveling. The Little Black Clock had Introduced John and Peggy to the Knst Wind, anil they had seen the West Wind drive his sister nnd Ralnyv Weather companion away. Not only could tho Little Mhick Clock turn tho timo forward or backward, but he had magic enough to take them to meet all ' sorts of creatures and understand what they were doing nnd saying. Now ho was tuklng them to sci tho homo where tho Winds lived. As thoy arrived thore they could not decide whether it was warm or colli or what the weather was like. It was because tho different members of the family were all having family dinner and. talking about what thoy would do next. Whon the North Wind and his Breezo children talked It was very cold nnd when tho Soulh Wind talked it was In a much milder tone. Their bouse was far up in sonio loop woods, for usually they went there when they wanted to rest and talk over their plans. The Pino trees nround sang and laugh ed ns the Winds talked, but when tho Winds really wanted a lot ot exercise they went traveling. The Knst Wind hail come buck here, and her Italny Weather ('um paninn was nut far away. h, you've come back," siiiil South Wind. 'Then I'd like to go for a little journey, with Huiny Weather if she is not too tired." "She's not tired at all." said the Kasl Wind. "Hrotlicr West Wind drove her away you know Iwvv he is!" "I know." said South Wind. And ff she went with tho Knst Wind's lialny Weather friend for the South Wind liked to play with Ualny Weather, too, every once in awhile. Tomorrow "Their 'np." Oregon Weather r'uir tonight with lower tenipern tures In tho cast portion; Tuesday fnir with lower temperatures i" the cast portion nnd rising tem peratures in the Interior of tho west portion. Humidity below nor mal. Moderate west and north west winds on the coast. By BUD FISHER