Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 17, 1930, Page 10, Image 10

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    1-
PSGE FOUR
BEDFORD MAIL" TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREO ON",' THURSD AY,"; JULY-17, , 1930.
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Medford Mail Tribune
Publlihfd by
'C MEPF0E1) PRINTING CO. " '''
t8-iTi N. fir ft. Pbow T
. kuBRRt W. RPHU Editdt
, WHITER IMITH, Mumf
An bide pendent Newspiper
Entered u ifcond dm nittrr at Mtdford,
Orefcw. sodcr Act of Mtrcb 8, UTfl.
IUU8CKIPT10N HATs)
By Mill Is Adtanec:
Dftily, lth Huttdar, year.... $7.(10
iJilIj, with Burvliy, month..... T5
JJly, without Bundiy, yrtr 6.50
. JiAtiy, without Suixlir, month... OS
, Bundsj, dim yew 2.00
Hf Carrier, Irr Adranc--Medford, AihUnd,
Jtclsontlllc, Central Point, rboeuii, Talent, tiokl
lllll and o HljJmyt:- . .. , -
Daily, Willi Sunday, month $ .TS
. Dally, vitliout Sunday, Booth., 65
Dally, without Sunday, one year T.Oft
F Dally, with Sunday, one year . 8.00
V All Uriaa, cash In advanee.
Oflc ial paprr of the Clly of Medford.
Official paper of Jackson County.
MKMBKR OP TDK UNITED WtKHS
HKMBKB OK THE ASHOCIATEo HKESS
Rwitlnf Full leaud Wire Sertlu
fht Aoetated Frew li eieluiively entitled to
the uu for publkatlon of all nrm dispalehw
credited to It or otlierwle credited In this paper,
and alaa to the local itewt published herein.
All right for publication of special dlpatebea
herein ara alto reamed.
ME.MBKK OK A1UHT BUREAU
tiV CIRCULATIONS
A. B. C- awage elreulatloR for ill nontha
ndln March HI, 1930, wai 4322. ,
rally ateraga distribution for alx aontba to
Mart SI, 1B30 4076. .
frasent net paid A. B. C. 4459..
Present preta run, 4005.
r - - Adfertbtng Bepreaentatlfe-
. M. C. MOdKNHKN COMPANY
Offices In New York, Chlraxo, Iwtrolt, Ban
Francisco, -Lou Airgtlr.i, Seattle, Pol r land.
Ye Smudge Pot
' There Is not much fln-hgor of tho
nation becoming bankrupt, judging
hy the voliimo of the Walla.
So far local wearers of volumln
ntiH Rolf pants, that nppffnr to ho
nn . the -vvi-tfO' of falling off In
public, have met nobody with the
nerve to give thorn tho final yank.
On ft London rifle range, a wo
man' who. had 'never, handled a
ilfle before hit thn liull'n-oyo wllli
fourteen of her fifteen xhote. It
Ih not known what ehe wan nlm
Ing ' at. '(The ftumorlul). The
meanoxt dig of the week.
THE CII1MK Cl'lll!
(PreHs DlHpa'tch)
Herrln, III., July 12. Since
two gangHtcre were hanged In
thin neighborhood two yenrn
ago and eighteen moro were
Kent to. the penitentiary, thero
lion not been a., killing or a
, crime' of violence In thle com--'
munlly. ' " " " "r
. Our fuvorlto movlo actrcBH show
ed, up thin , week on tho screen,
with n. vivid dlsplny of her legH,
and onh of them looked like It had
been, liltten by . a mUle,' When aho
wan' about 14 'yenrs old ;
A pitchfork flow up Tuc. pm
and thumped F; Bybee; the J'Vlllo
peas'ant.-on theJiHsketv--'
;''In the mldnUof , the , , sermon
Sunday, drttndDtt' VIllB wob .sud
denly taken very sick but was all
right. when hpme -was reaishod. He
mlHsed the lody nuailet' (Plalst
cd Jottings). Tho wisdom that
comes with tho years.'
Tho heart of this city also aoems
to bo the Jawbone, ' .
The latest Oregun murder has
the wanderings of n-'Cow; for a
motive. '
"DRY LAW Y ICR TO SP1CAK"
(Ildllne J)ol Noi'to Triplicate.)
lllvo him a drink, and mnybo he
,won't. . , . ; ". - v
THE llllt:l MAN
T' -r '' (Kxchange
Tho hired man In his pongee shirt
And his wlHlihone,H whipcord
v , Jeans, k: , '' "'' ' -Quits'
his grapefruit rind for tho
dally grlndi ' ' ' v
With his pleasant -and light mn
rhlnes. Garbed like un lictor, ho1 mounts
his tractor,' ,
Which bends to ' lils slightest
whim,
No more he follows the Blirly plow1.
The plow now follows hint.
Far eight short hours ha tills the
mill - " r
Till the soil Is titillated; '
Then his bus he'll lodge In the
farm garagtt,
Oh tho hired 'mnn-clpnted
From toll und sail and furrowed
fields, . V ' "
While his crops surpass the
murk
llut he, ceuldn't describe 'a curry
comb
If he stepped on It In' the dark.
Then the hired man' ' takes ? Ills
safety blade
And harvests his chek again,
lie hides his tan with the Inlcuni
can.
And bathes In the porcelain;
Then with raiment gny ho Is on
' his way
Where tho Jaulest banda per
form For the hired man la the chlof
of tho clan
Sinco the tractor hit tho fai'm.
But the farmer's wife and ' the
fiivhvur's 'aunt
And- tll farmer's daughters' six,
They sunt. at IV on the old clock's
, face - ,. , . ,
And they stick' to It until vr.
No time to primp lior o rouge
. thO Jlps . i J... t
Nor to pluck an eye-brow thin-
nor
For the hired man may have a
, " ! snap,
But be also must have dinner.
Rural Farm
Pr.lMO AND BIG NEGRO
CARpED FOR TONIGHT
I';,t
-f-
OMAltA. Neb..! JuUr 17. Vh
11m orf-aksln, on-agulnr . I0-roun1
bout between Prlmo Camera, huge
Italian, and Ileurcat Wright, Oma
' ' ,WHAT MR. LEGGE IS TEYING TO DO
, A LEXAKDER LEOOE, chairinun of tliej'arm Reljet Board,
abandoned a salary of $11)0,(100 a year, as president of the
Iiiterjiational Harvester Company, to lake his present position.
VMih characteristic energy and. singleness of purpose, he has de
voted his time,' (fay und ninhf, ever sinee', trying to help the
farmers of this country, particularly the wlieat furmers.
In return for his efforts and his personal finaneial sacrifice,
he linsj to date, received nothing hut condemnation and per
sonal abuse. The opposition of the wheat brokers and middle
men was to be expected, for successful co-operative marketiiiK
'would undoubtedly seriously curtail their profits. The United
.States Chamber of Commerce took up the middlemen's cause
ainf lit fflc national convention adopted resolutions condemnin';
the Farm Board, a challenge which Jlr. Lent;e promptly ac
cepted, deftlai'inif he was not interested in helping the miwf
sold the wheat, but was interested in helping the mailvW.ho
lmSEDit. '.''. -.
f T IS preatly to the credit of the National Orange that its lend-
ers recognized the importance of the issue 1 litis drawn, and
'promptly supported Mr. Leggc in his effort to help the farmers
of this country. The (irange favored the wheat debenture plan,
but, when this failed, they endorsed the Farm Board program,
as the next best bet, and urged all members to give the board a
fair cliantui to put tlieir theories in practice.
The Oregon Slate (irange at its recent convention endorsed
this action, other state Oranges followed suit, but, thanks' to
self-seeking politicians like Oovernor Reed of Kansas, the at
tacks on the Farm Board which the United States Chamber of
Commerce started, have continued j and in Kansas at least'is re
ceiving support, licit' only of the middlemen, but of many of the
small wheat farmers themselves, the very people Chairman
Leggc, at such personal sacrifice? is trying to help!" -,-,
' ' v!j ' .. '
OTfLD anyone blaino Sir. Legge for resigning his post, re-
turning to his $100,000 joli, which is open' to him at any
time, and! letting someone else tackle the thankless task of trying
to help the American farmer? Why should he meekly accept
this storm of misrepresentation and abuse, when the very peo
ple he is fighting fop neither appreciate nor desire his help?
However, Chairman Legge
lie is a fighter, lie mucin the
cess Jt 'fa by fighting for if ; now that, he is working for the gov
ernment instead of a private corporation ho is going to make the
Farm Relief Board' a sueeess fly
stances which he can't control
least going to go down with the
THAT is the sort of a raccoon Alexander Ueggc is. All ho
nulfu iu n full i-tlmiww, nlwl Fnftllllflf ,K- !,i l't-nuilmit Tfnnvnr
lie has a boss determined to give
terested wheat, 'brokefs or politicians "get" him lit!" is going to
do one of two things ; '
Either give" the American farmer RKIilEF or
Demonstrate that under the provisions of the farm relief act
actual RRfilEP is impossible.
TTtE plain truth is and sooner or later it is going to be geii-
erally recognized Chairman Legge and the Hoover ad
ministration are, fighting FOR THE .LIFE OF THE SJfAI-l
AJIERICAN'FARMER. 1
For if eo-nperativo marketing
control, of supply) CAN'T secure
are only two alternatives: ,
First, some government subsidy plan, like the StcNary-Haii-
gen measure, or
Second', the taking over of
Business mass production on
pendj'itt American farmer going
im;,." r!..... niiu....'i:., i-
Jim iii.it nun iiiiiivi.: in. Kriu-ruu refill lietl lis lUUlli'llllt.'illl.Y
sounil. ,The second would destroy what "lias always been re
garded as tho very backbone (if
cally and socially, but in a certain sense 'spiritually.'
OUT there is tlie fundamental issue in this Farni Relief eontro
versy. If the American, farmers can't, be persuaded to act
tCfgi'ther, to intelligently control supply to demand, mid thus
eifey (be success that the adoption of these principles has
brought in other lines of business then: , '.""".','". .
. , Tlny in ust lie 'supported' by
American' voters Vet use.' to grant
has been granted through the protective tariff, then
BIG BUSINESS WrUL EVENTUALLY TAKE OVER THE
PRODUCTION OF ."WHEAT
TAKEN QVEITTIE JRODl'CTION' OF ACTQMQB1 LF. AND
oas6lts'e.. ' ;v;;. '.; ; " "',;"s,
, There in, as we see it, no escape from this conclusion. Presi
dent Hoover and' Chairman Legge are fighting for the life of
the independent American farmer and unless thev receive the
support HtttV co-operation of (lie
agriculture 'as we'hnvo known it
TA'lSTNfO' and FA MTLY-S1 ' PPORT ING n'tdustry w'ill eveiitti-
ally he destroyed". -
MUTT AND JEFF
rAUTT,TV tlePonTCI!
A STATftrAtrOT
fortunately, jin not built, that way.
International Harvester the suc
fighting for it'. Or, 'if circum
make success impossible, he is nt
ship, with his colors flying.
him that. Unless the self-in
' ' ' t ' .' ,
" ' " ,."
and ''ost fiction of acreage .(or
the cTsired relief' tlieiv there
; '
American agriculture by Big
tho lhiul with the 'small hide-
the why of the buffalo.
.....ill.' .:..:.'....!. ...i' .... :....l'...':..ii..
this country, not' ohVv 'economi
' ......
a federal subsidy. Or, if the
this aid, which Big Business
ANl IfjORN JUST AS. IT HAS
farmers' themselves," 'American
over '200 years, n SKLF-Sl'S-
' ' - -;'
that Would Make Anybody Mad
rnTiN.; wots .pro
J I A, . - I
VVVM
HR. TO FHMl
OUT HAT'S
o OUR
nuk)T,
.: :. i . MAIL TRIBUNE .l.
DAILY CROSS.WORDfPUZZLE
t . . .
V XCHOSS
Small holt
(. Krult
. ltmterl
1. (Joullnest
13. lleeorullun
t li. Kelatei
17. Impreeatloo
IS. Jlln.r . .
IK. Htalil
HI. Jlnli-d '
US. KluweU '. '
It. Nlulai obhr.
21. J.itllti Seutch
211. I,u d .
31. Kven
33. Aula.
3. Cuuveaett
37. 'J'.rrllile
39. Hero or a .'
ramoai tenr 1
o. jtr
. 43. .l'-emlnlne end
Inic
43. Tivnt prells '
44. KothliiK
46, Kxclunialloa 1
a. Urait
11. HihbII liland
ii. Minute . i
pnrllrle
fie. Treiiiiisers ,
for snme
is. In eunipoied
60. Silkworm
Solution of Yesterday's Puzil
IACR!0DR0!8!ESE
. ., . . i
m UllR aIwBhIaItIe PPT E
E N Oil" DlTAlJNjbEW
Ht i sas A V eIdPsIi rU
B g NflBIA R E 6IE SOAjN T
ERgUoil LSBP AiDA A
s c atA w n Yll6Fpcfs
rllA DPg'EW A RPUm omj
Pru ePdiu p e spfqo nP
S I- Of OA IS tnAPpyL E
''I WTERCHA ?ilGglAtT E
lAlaAlRnTIENlslgBKlElY)g
ti. betotv.
93. Small monnilf
61. c;ryitnl gazt-r .
IIOWN
I. Illnillnic falirle
8. On the ocenn
8. K 111 It
4. (Huts
i. Iluirallsn food
2 3 u s i j. 3-. mm w w
.
,
P!fJ 1 . , ...... So W.SI., J2 S3 M
.;
f13f :.. I
wk ;
l I r'-f'':' I I wy-xx - I
Personal Health Service
By Wimam Brady, Bt.D, ...
Signed letters pertalnlr to personal health stvd hrgtent, not U dlsiisa, dlifnotU or treatment
111 b answered by Dr. Brady If i stamped self addressed wnelope Is encioud. Lcllvn should be
brief and written In Ink. Olng to tin large numlier pf letters received only a fe can be answered
heft. No reply can be mad. Q'lerlea not coufprmlng to laitnictloDi, Addreti Dr. William Brady
Id ear of It Mall Tribune.
TUIiRK IS rOXSIDKRAHLK
,4 . SlTt'ATION, IV YO
.v i- " : . ' ' I'
.'In England McKenzle has gbrte'
on record as saying that he is con
vinced (I quote from an-abstract
published! in Lbe Journal of tho
American Medical association) th:t
diathermy ex'tlr
patlon of the ton
sils will come to
he the method of
choice for adults.
,McKenzie consid
ers It not .luitrthle
for children, tho
In this country
some of the more
skilled thront
specialists em
ploy It with snt-
tHTActjon ' iir s
fo.rf '6tt Cm y
soine children only
years old. The only
reason why It is not so suitable
for children Is that It Is much
more difficult to secure the neces
sary . cooperation from n younu
child. So if depends largely upon
the- personal fnetor both the kind
of training the child has had and
the putieneo or kn-ick of the doc
tor for managing children.
In England, however, they seem
to think tho newfangled method I
not so had. I have no firsthand
knowlpdge of English medical nnd
surgical practice, but from litera
ture I gather that they're not quite
wo radical about surgery over thero.
Over here, to read roiyu of these
medical Journal screeds one might
imagine that It Is lese mnjestor
treason for a physician of imas
sailnble professional stand inn that
Is, membership or fellowship in
hlrt local. Utate or nntlonal medical
.societies - to imply that normal
tonsils should not bo removed, or
to deplore the risks and the seri
ous Complications of surgical ton
sillectomy nnd suggest some safer
and equally effective remedy,--'
All those editorial doctors, are
excellent In their field. Home of
them, however, have never had any
operlenct'to speak of In the prac
tice of medicine. I had had 15
years of if before I becan to tell
f USTiNj; SCHMUrOa
COULtrJ'.r, tJlT Me VUlTHl
I
IMA TGi-ePKONtc
"Botjmi I'LL FIGHT
r
FOR A MILLION)
Dollars, winns
r
J
14. Groaned
16. Ailatle natrr
tn. Split polio el
Ilia P.at
lad les
19. MouBtaln In
Manaavhssetfe
Si. Mfiaiirs
36. fieri- wltlr S
pointed f
wrapoa -. 1
17. Interreeloti '
SB. Rraalllsu
. msruw .
80. AfflrnHitloBi
39. Uouteail.
34. Half aotes-.
36. Afternoea.
faneUua
t. K.l-e ,,, ,(,' ..
41. Naltj. ...T J
44. llraunal. ,asf.
iBg
47. HtmiMinU b! I
eooisuatlos'
4. Not one -60.
Tlie Kuropeaa-- .
bsrbnt
SI. Old . word for
lesra
a. city In
fennaylrsnln
it. former ruler
ii. Top eard
i7. Kaulne animal
15. Proanss
f. Sea eagres'"' r
7.- oennH af seese-
s. Nangeil .
. Kind of tnel '
Id. Wliole nam-
' . tiem - . : -
II. Kufflz Df(l Is
. ordinal... uum-
; utra .-r .
TU'MOR IX TTIK TOXSltj ,
IRS AKR XOT BAE
the world. Therefore T consider
myself n- competent judge of tho
tonsillectomy question nnd of dia
thermy extirpation.
QI IOSTIOXS AX! AXSWEIUS
Wood I'll 1 p.
" -"What Is your opinion of "Health
Knowledge,'' Issued by National
Book Distributors? Are Uiey worth
$Hti? Mrs. A. K. V. , '
- Answer. I think such books are1
worth what the wood pulp in them
costs.
Sympathectomy.
Recently I wrote about my in
fected tonsils. As I am subject to
angina pectoris and have had a
bilateral sympathectomy five years
ago, I cannot undergo a tonsil
operation. You very kindly refer
red me to a specialist who extir
pates tonsils with diathermy. I
neglected to tell you 1 have pre
viously had about 11 x-ray expos
ures, which caused shrinking but
left the pus foci In the crypts . . .
Immediately after the sympathec
tomy my noso became clogged or
stuffed up on the slightest change
of temperature or exposure, and
this has continued .'. . S. J.
Answer. The vascomotor dis
turbance in the noso is perhaps a
consequence of tho removal of tho
sympathetic nerve ganglia. Neither
that nor the previous x-ray treat
ment nor your heart condition need
interfere with the diathermy treat
ment to clear up the foci of Infec
tion in the tonsils. U Is especially
in cases with such handicaps that
diathermy extirpation of the ton
sils is now In wide use by the
better throat specialists.
Wets Converted Hero.
I am IS years old and I. still wet
the bed. Now I have a chance to
go to , but this will bar me. I
have tried everything . . A, W.
S.
Answer. Inclose a stamped
eifVelope bearing your address and
1 will mail you some advice. Just
make up your mind that you're go
ing to overcome your trouble, son;
7thV Public
MAD
IS ANKlouS
to sst THc
CMAMPlOMSHlT
BACrf.rAOTT,
SURfc
BUT t
THINKS V3L)
ARe oAAl
ABOOT
- A 1 . w I II V X...-, 'X ' S It 1 . - Ik. t 1 i m V
i a i I- l iSBBsi -"l r id-i vrcrm
and go right after that opportunity.
i WoutH Ctot (Wlilio Powder,
.i . -you' know of. jt Jt'coal white
healing powder" for, sores on tho
tongue? 'Alum and Bilver ilitrate
prescribed 'by -stupid .local phya
icians only Irritate. I recall a re
port by some reader who told you
your "cool, white healing powder"
had cured . . D, R.
Answer. I can't think what M
was unless you mean nodlum per
borate. -This Is a white powde'r'and
when moistened with water and
applied as a: paste to the sores of
Vincent's angina ("trench mouth")
and the like, is very helpfuT also
a solution ; of a teaspponful in a
glass of water as a mouth wash
many times a day. The pasje 1b
applied once daily to' the ulcers or
sore ort.gums, tongue or ' moutlT,
and allowed to remain five minutes.
' (Copyright John F.' Dillo Co.) '
Communications
v "-..The Editor Blusltrf. ,
to hi Kditort 'tti-ti w.V? j
Bernard Shaw once said we were
under the"'same','6bllgat'ibns "to'pay
a compliment,'1 when dufe, aa. wo
,were: when It was a matter, of
financeand should be prosecuted
for failure to pay ; either. ' 7, -f
; Many times I've called ' you- by
phone, -when you've written' an es
pecially good one, but seldom could
get' you. ; ' ; ",,
I used to read Harvey Scott's
editorials, then Putnam put' out
some good ones and I took hir pa
per: after he wen to ,Salenfc but
he gets too vltrollc. ;
enjoy yours, an T also enjoy
Brisbane? and Rogers. . ,
v-iyotr-say more, use less worMs
.tharf.any f them and J. enjoy and
appreetuK yon. ; - - - .
v J. H. COCHRAN.
'O'rants Pass Ranch. July If.
Brisbane's Today
u (Continued .from'piia ,djm) ,
(Continued from Fag On) -
from -the water, The lktle germ
of earth life first started safeyin
the salt sea, - It developed. Some
enterprising sea dweller crawled';
or was washed ashore. Then earth
life began and- that developed
through evolution. Some ran, some
hopped, some climbed." Some bur
rowed in the ground. Some flew,
and became birds. ' They stopped
thinking then because flying7 nwde
them safe, and thinking" becahie
unnecessary. 1 . , " : 1
The weakest of them. wUh small
teeth, useless' nails;' not mtich
strength and little speed HAD TQ
USE THEIR BRAINS... That's how
we arrived; Scientists will tell
you' that. ' ? -
And to this day, human beirrgs;
and many other animals, tend to
go back to the sea at intervals. The
ocean attracts them., Some-want
to be burled In it, many are un
happy unless they are atloat on it.
Others want their bodies burled,
and ashes scattered oik the salt
waters.
1 A German scientist finds that,
regardless of all that, we, should
go to the seashore occasionally.
Milk and eggs andfhe meat of ani
mals along the seacoast are found
to he rich in Iodine.
On tho North Sea coast, millc of
cows contains 240 "gamma" of Io
dine per quart, as against 30 "gam
mas" In the Swiss mounalns; 240
"gammas" really - amount to only
one-millionth of a gram of iodine
pet4 quart. But that's enough to
keep you tree from goitre.
Shore eggs have iodine also.
Cows and hens eat seaweed. "
So take your children to the sea
side. ....
- '"
When yon contemplate the work
of modern gangs you find that you
are dealing with efficiency and
thoroughness. .
Twenty firms iri New- York's
dress industry tell the police that
they have phld, at the rate of two
million dollars a year to racketeer
gangsters. It is no exaggeration
to say that the gangsters, racket
eers and bootleggers In this coun
try collect an annual .revenue
greater than the nntlonal govern
ment, which, as you know, collects
many billions. That - may have
something to do with "hard times."
Too many kinds' of taxation na
tional, state, municipal, and rack
eteer. . ,
In the way of airplanes, "no
news" In bad news.
I'ntll late yesterday nothing had
been heard of the cabin monoplane
K of New Haven which, on Tues
day, leaving I xing Island, headed
for Buenos Aires, began the long
est non stop flight evjer attempted.
The bad news came that the
plane had crashed and next came
ABOUT lMONrr
I'M MAD
SUA -
ABOUT fAON?r.
II . m S . ar - m I 6 I 1 1
Quill Points
Pension: Giving the man a dime
for arnica after he saves Jour
p'urse ,.,.,;
A . ake-tater'a nine," freely
translated, means: "I belleve she's
dumb enough'to fall for this."
l Mother cooked groat i diu
yierH, but nbe didn't have to .
uMWer -4Jpv doorbell and say.;
No"fort times a day.
Thd onlf hopevnow Is that some
body wilt; invent a -way to -use
wheat f!h'-yWa(k boards or tooth
paste, -t,::.tk-,: :m mimiUB&M
The fiexV great stunt of the
1nch guns down he rtbroai ofcitHeii
Senate. . ; ' ."" T;
- The most plausible explanation
'iii-.thnfv.the gods on Olympus think
this, is a Democratic administra
tion. . '
Americanism: Jailing gamblers
Who risk nothing but their own
money; tipping our hats to gam
blers who shoot craps with the
farmer's living, ,
The three greatest pests brought
to America from Europe are Eng
lish sparrows, starlings and Nor
dics. ;y "
' The funny part of it is that the
states now." seceding ' because they
can't, agree with the federal gov
ernment are northern.
. You can tell tho great at a
. resort. Vnly : a ' great man
shaiied like tliat would linvo
the courage to wear a ba tiling
suit.
The -man who1 puts over "Be
haviotiem" now has a job in an
advertising agency, which shows
genius is recognized by genius.
. Charity gives-people what they
, wan,t;, . .social . .service gives what
is good for-them.
Hungary will feed her soldiers
milk to help the dairymen. It's
an Idea worth borrowing. Some
thing must be done to help Amer
ican growerB of the castor oil bean.
... You! see', America must have
fewer - cruisers than England so
Japan, wilt have fewer so Aus
tralia won't build any to give
England more. .
Correct this sentence: "When, I
get my first million," said tho
man, "I shall devote myself to the
art of enjoying life."
the good news that the crew were
all three sate.
Noise kills human beings, slowly
but surely undermining health. And
while It is killing them, it makes
them less efficient.
New York's city government pro
poses to' kill noise in its new sub
ways. Turnstiles are to be free
of rattle and bang, and tubes are
to be soundproof.
If the cifY can accomplish that.
many shortcomings will be for
given. 44
EVery civilized city should take
up the noiHe question, the howling
horns of automobiles, the miser
able devices attached to the ex
haust, etc. And communities along
railroad tracks should take up with
their railroad managements the un
necessary, horrible screeching of
locomatlves.
LAD UVES7 DAYS
E
BENFRBW. Ont.. July 17. VP)
After wondering; sfryen days in tho
wilderness, eating berries and
sleeping under trees, a seven-year-old
boy wa' sore today, hav
ing; suffered nothing- worse than a
few scratches on legs and arms. ,
Lloyd AVarren wandered away
from his uncle's farm a week ago
nnd until yesterday eluded largo
numbers of searchers.
He was found perched on a boul
der, placidly" eating a handful of
berries, less than three miles from
his uncle's farm.
- "Til ih-VM?71
Do Yon Remember? .
TEN YEARS AGO TOVAf
(From files of the Mail Tribune.)
. July li. l20.
Newcomb Carleton, president of
the Western Union, arrives In
private car to visit his brother,
Edward Carleton;
Sen. (Our George) Chamtier
lnln to speak ut Ahlnnd ch'authu-
quo.-v. - . . f.' ,y .
n...i.,.;i: ah woll: drilling re- '
sinned wlleh lost tlilU ls recovered.
, Forty-mite wind blows pears . off
trees. - 1 . - .. ' i
autff Warna)! nwllPH to' l.'nioil
Creek to Investigate shootlna." .
Trapper hitanother I'trapW
over the head with a board,
Poorest fishing. In years In tho
Roffue. ' ' ' "' ''":..'
TWENTY YEARS A6 TODAY;
(From files of the MM Tribune.)
' " ' July 17. 110." - t
The. Athpn,. Stock playing
here, "gives up ghost and scat
ters to the four corners of the
globe?" ' "
Five lots offered Uncle-Sam as
site for new .-federal, building.
Harvesting of penrS starts Au
gust 1. '- " ' . ' '. ,'t ;"(
Mayor Canoiv vehemently denies
"city worse off than Phoeriix in
case of fire." . .
First of 40 cars of steel for
P. & E.-- road arrive. -v '
New Espee depot to be occu
pied by September 1. .,.!.
Medford Masons nnmo building
committee. ' . " .
4-
MARVEIOPS.TIX BOXKS
By Mary Civahilm BQMn$r .-
'aohn? and Peggy went with tho
Little, Blacki.Clpck jtc visit a field.
They did not., know what they,
were going, to, see and the. .Little.;
Black Clock torn
them . they must
pay great- a'tten-
going tos behold
the beginning, of .
some t hingy e iy.
maryelbtjs. '
Ite told therii
that he'.nacl
brought , 'them to
Italy , arid'-'thaj
while' the person;
they . would ,;see
was not the'-very
flrsf to think .; wp' the discovery,
they .were to .witness, he- was . the',
very first to make it practical' nnd!
real. - ' ''
When they got to the field they
saw a boy working oVer-? sbrne.
boxes mndo of tin which'' were
placed upon sticks. He was, mov
ing eagerly and interestedly from
one of these boxes to aribthef Iriv
which was d "receiver" which' he
had made. ' " ' -; v.' -
"That boy," said the Little Black
Clock, "Is Marconi, born; in 18T4,
and he is fixing up these tin-boxes
and working ont a systenV so ho
can prove to people that'1 tele?
graphing over, mighty distances
can be-accomplished by means of
electric waves. ' - ; "'
"He is going to prove to a whole
world that these messages can be
sent without any . wires--rlght
through nil' nnd space and towns
and oceans and countries.
"Let's watch him." i
And John and Peggy watched
the boy Marconi as he , 'worked
with his hnnd-made tools and ma
chines in ji field. They knew that
the Little Black Clock had turned
the time back because wireless had
become a reality. Then the Clock
had said ft was toward the latter
part of the last century.-
"I don't 'see how- people con
find out ' about waves in the air
and how to use them," John said.
"I don't believe I could ever be
an Inventor." .vt .
"I know I couldn't," snlil Peggy.
"Still, maybe some day. I might,
try." John added, as the Little
Black Clock said that. now they
must be leaving the,, field ..where
tney had seen the marvelous tin
tin
j so
;
boxes that were going to meotfc
much to the world!
Tomorrow "Air Time-Tables."
By BUD FISHER
T4rA A At
- " L fit
ver.iirr T I S J
Ann:
7l .
Sundown
i
h negro henvywelnht, will be held
tonight. - t
"1 Yktn i.u
" - 1 " ' "" ' 1 1 TIJ - lit T I 1 ' - - ' llll n . W T