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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 22, 1931)
Medpord Mail Second Section Six Pages Second Section Six Paget Twentv-Fifth Year MEDFORD. OREGON, SUNDAY. FKHRL ARY 2 No. 335. i OREGON PIG RAISERS IN DrCT ODMV 111 .1 I .ATI I I A ULUI Ul UIU 0. S. C. Report for Year Shows Supply Relatively LnW With Ff-Pfl PrirpC ! K,'nl ic:i.suri-s tor relief of unem LUW' VVIU1 rLLU r"Ceb pL.jwm; there were also llio 80- Ebbing Lambing Starts Upstate. COHVAI.MS, Ore., Feb. 21. P) Hog ral-pcr of Oregon are expected to be in a relatively good oositiun for the coming year in comparison "inl inconsequcntiullty. During the with om.o other farm enterprises, period of legislative deliberation, in tho opinion of specialists of the business and industry havo suf Sttito college extension service who tcroil from nervous chills and high have ju.st issued their 11)31 ari- blt,otl pressure. The Oregonian rc 'cultural outlook report. j calls no session when It was op- "The number of hogs In Oregon ' Ptled to more often for editorial Is relatively low at the present. aia against threatened oppression with a tendency on the part of growers to retain a larger number of brood sow; for future use. tend ing to Increase the total nl the next fer months." If. A. Llmlgren, live I stock specialist, reported. "Nevertheless, the situation ap pears more favorable for hogs to be marketed during the marketing year beginning next fall than dur inc the next fow months Uo.-uu I of tho better prospective demand 1 so to taX one business that a corn condition. I Peting business might better pros- Tho low price of feed grains has 1er stimulated the demand for feeder I Kxctee taxes, intangibles taxes. pigs. and ils long as this grain-hog price ratio continues it will likely i.ae u Mimumimg eueci on nog . .., i ... . produciiun in the state, the report i Indicates. j The entire outlook report, cover ing all branches of livestock, field crops and hortieul ure has been Kamut from cheee-making to rail prepared by L R. ItreUhaupt. ex- roa(,,n(? and even on l0 tho IcRal leiiHfon economist at Oregon State , irofcH(lion uro debated and quar rollege, who took part in the na- vcCl 0ver. uupuii ouiiooic conierence. 11 nas !een distributed to county agents. h'herc copies may be obtained, to- g'Hher with more complete com ments on Oregon condition made, by departmental specialists. j Till? DALLKS, ore.. Feb. 21. ' (Pj While wheal ranchers who al- ready have started preparing their tubblo hind for summer Jallow are turning up dry. earth at a drpiTi of six inches, land lying fal i low last summer, it In said, is show I ing moisture down several feet, he mulched condition of tho soil con j'crving the water content. 1 la ins occurring later in the season will supply this year's summer fallow with much moisture. TII'K DAUlKS. ore., Feb. 1. it. i, ., ', m-; inoai weaiuer lor mmuing, . for which sheen owners are dip iKir:nir. irev:ii' nvni thi soeiinn of Oregon s a revolt of the mild j Unllroad workers demand short- against a fancied public clamor winder, feo.i conditoins are now ex-c- l-'n m nicn may be that has struck the long political cellent. Hecause of lack of mow- employed, though the scheme In-j ears of others, conservative pro ture, however herd owners fear 1 cvitably means higher rates on cesses have been powerless. In lowland pasturage may be dried fi,rni "nd mill products to be paid defense of right and principle up before the time for'thc innu il 1,v industries now in the doldrums, j they too have been forced Into movement of sheep to mountain i'et hs offered a Idll to lung and hampering debates, rung. j reduce the length of frankfurters I This newspaper bero singles out th-it more persons can find work."" individual or group for specific KOSKIU'K!. Ore., Feb. z 1 .iV) tying ktiot.s in the casings. But condemnation. It recites thu fact mhio man iMi.mrw iiiniom win i'v lnodueed In the I iniMiua vallev this season, providing w eather condi-j til amended, the sale of house- leadership, and has been burden tions remain favorable, J. t ' hold remedies by shops tiiat do s ed with yessers who rubberstamp Kcedy. tountv aircnt, believes. Many i not employ registered pharmacists. ' against their better judgment. In dieepmen report as h gh as lliO per cent increase, while the avcr vf it is thought, will be ily Miyhtly below to 0 per cent. V N 1 V 1 : 1 1 S 1 T V OK OREGON, Eugene. (Special.) Radio enthu siasts in tho west nnd those In other parts of the country who pick up stations of the Columbia Broadcasting company, will get a glimpse of college life at the Uni versity of Oregon on Friday, Mar. L'7, from S:30 to 9 when tho half hour program of tho Oilmorc Col lege Ijhzc will be devoted to this institution, according to word re ceived here from Chet Crank, vice president of Rulsford -Constant hie Advertising Agency. Tho program vlt consist of songs, yells and distinctive features of university life, as well as a description of the j institution, with an Interesting bis torienl background. TACOMA. Teh. SI. uT C n eluding a hard dayV work by smok ing his pipe proved diastrou for Howard iM ianey, 4 3. a longshore man yesterday. Delaney had lMen iinloHdiug nitrates from a Fhip at Hupont. En route homo in a bur be tok out hi pipe and smoked It. Finished,' he placed it in bis puikct and hardly a second later iiis tt.trment i-jnitcd with a Mind i i TOILERS CLOTHES i IGNITE WITH BANG ing flah and hip body wa hor- the opening of the roud. ; tainrnt Air Lxprem ct efficiency ribly burned before the fire was! . J record- during the first 2o day cxilnguij-hod. I CoYE. Ore.. Keb. 21. !' K. , of January. W. A. E. ships coni- Me bail a fair chance of recov-'j. Stack land found the cabbage j pletrd 9a. 04 per cent of till :IJ cry Sf complications do not set in.' market bad so he maun 20.000 uled flying, while M. A. f -doctors iid gallon of sauerkrniit. I pleted 100 per cent. O X O The Legislative Fiasco (I'rom rurtluiul Ort-goulau) The a 1 tutted ypan of tho Ore son legislature hatt almost reached itH iduso. Tho forty duya for which the members fan draw pay for thir Horvlce.s have nil but expir ed. Tho legislature Is privileged to rem Hiii in session for a longer: the legislature. When they want netiod. but without remuneration. .i in.i m.ti.m nr mn.xnn.i i,r jit would cause general relief if j the members woukl wind up tho ncccHFury businoss at onco nnd j come home. Tho legislature convened at Salem in a time of tax distress a nd business depression. Thoro was plain need for tux relief by reduction of governmental costs; there was plain need for lutein called "mandates" registered at the polls for abolishment of I lie public service commission and for aets to promoto slate or municl pal "development" of the water powers of the state. From this plainly marked path the legislature has turned into tortuous highways of experiment and for editorial assistance for blls either visionat'y. discrimin atory or costly. Instead of economy as a means of tax relief, tax proposals that engage tho attention of the law makers arc mainly designed to raise more money, or to transfer burdens from one class to an other, or to tax one element for t" benefit of another element, or ol--' taxes, nines iacs. luxury taxes, license taxes, insurance tiivoH uives nn ennui mnrcs. mnif ; V 7" ...' ."I floods of eloquence. Laws to restrain trade and pro- ' r..uUnml mn.nnllllnn 111 11 II 111 rr I li n I ll.o ,awyeM m u.o ,al,K, proniniteu irom naving uaiiK at- lonwy. draw wills, for client-. ; lilliTUj Itiuiviiii, liltMU uuaun.mi I'Ji ; it 11 IIIUIUOUIOUH Uf VflUpiltt'Ilt, l llll lawyers who do not work for . of other sections which muy ham banks. Nothing in this to pro- per privato development but offer mote the dignity of the legal pro- neither aid nor encouragement to fvHlon. Nothing herein to raise the mandated municipal and state ' i " " o...n.-. . un uiiii iviuimjm ui n-fctii ijiuituuiv, ui 1 1 appcHrH on mo accno UUUIIU demand tho attention of tho bar. up in enough red tape to adorn A bill putting a prohibitive tax a thousand Christmas packages, on Imitation cheese passes tho ; Aa a working statute Its practl scnate. Whereupon the dairy in- i cahility is doubtful, terests discover that it is so broad- ly drawn that it applies to pack- age cheeses tho processed, ".spread" cheeses, into which one-1 fourth to one-third of all the U'hcese produced in Oregon finds 1 tu ii ,i,u i.n nn,nn.i...i in I " , tno nouse anu go uhck to tne sen - ate for correction nopn in a iMi;.iiniiry imii, gouu , in the main, but it restricted, un- i Thereby might tho druggist, who now runs a remi-departmcnt store. ' virtually rid himself of compcti- j tlon in package remedies by those with whom hu himself competes in other lines. Though corrected, J this bill offered an example of I what legitimate business has had On the basis of a cross-section to eumbat. of common conversation on tho The halls of houso and senate street and in places where men are forced into long eloquence ; and women gather, we repeat that over whether the governor shall It would cause general relief if tho be permitted to fire Kenneth Haw-j legislature would wind up Its es son from the Port of Portland and sential business at once and come substitute liufus Holmnn- and af- home. TO RoSEUntf;. Ore. Feb. I'l. 0V) Work has started on tho bridgo over the north fork uf Smith river, the l;i.-t link in the construction of the only road into the district. Heretofore there has been no way in or out from tho Smith River community except by boat, and all produce has been taken down the i river by way of Reedsport or Gardiner. Tli rough co-operation of the Isiuslaw national forest and Houg- las county a road has been built by way of Ada, connecting with Gardiner, Florence and the Roosc- velt highway, forming a round- ; enee by the offices employing about outlet, but one greatly ap- workers for the various logKing predated by the mith River peu- I drpurtnients set up by contrac p!e, many of whom aro buying : tors. their fliwt automobiles. j A picnic for the road and bridge j IMntics Set Rntird. crews Is being arranged by the. DENVER. Colo. I'lanei of re-idents as a celebration to mark I ter blockading everything for a time, tho governor accepts Ken neth and tho legislature, swallows ttufe. In the days when wo had sa loons tho drys got nothing from hlbltion or bone-dry prohibition they had to prepare petitions and solicit voters' nignaturcs in order to get their measures on the bul- it. Yet now that we have pro- hibitlon. the legislature wrangles at length, and to tho detriment of other business, over whether the legislature shall relievo the wets of the self-exertion that was Im posed on drys in the Identical is sue: whether the legislature itself ahull submit a referendum. It did not deserve a moment's conaidcr- ation. Tho government of tho United States has mado unusual appro priations for public works as a means of providing employment It has granted new money fortclins anti almost the only link be - federal buildings and for road i tween the eastern and western construction. In Oregon, one con- factions of the Republican party. ception of economy is to repeal McNary in doing his best to bridge the market road tax a tax that tno chasm which Kxecutive llr- provides employment and pro- ector Lucas opened between tho motes tno progress oi me muic. t progressives and tho Regulars, accent mark him as one not borne This newspaper does not adhere when, perhaps on orders from the of 1 picks nor schooled in the Jar to the doctrine that automobile vhu0 House, he sought to com-. goh of mining camps, license revenues or gas taxes are miHS tn(l Oefeat of a Republican I Miners huv Joo Cornwell is misappropriated when applied to market roads. It dues maintain j that tho highway program should not uu restricted in times such as, these. If state highway funds can be used to build needed mar- ket roads, well and good, but 1 money needed for trunk lino con- structfon should be replaced by lKsuunce or bonus or xrom some other source. There arc better ways to economize than to cur tail construction of permanent and needed Improvements. And the "mandates" of tho last election. All, where aro they? Abolition uf the public scrvico ...nu,inn t. nut tn h, one- I man commission instead or a I three-man commission; and homo rule turns out to be an optional, intangible, reversible affair, with somewhat of "homV but no "rule" about it. Public "development" of water- I power becomes a bill copied largo- ly from the federal wtorpowcr law, with which all privato com- pani already must comply In ueve.opmem. , -wnu u.c uu.i.b. ywnei the Oregon legislature aro many experienced, conscientoua , members. They have tried to transact the fundamental business wf Ho session, in a prompt and oi'ilei-lv fasliinii. Hut airainst a ' ....V" .V . " TI,',t - ' - ,vo "l ai"'u umi nu u,n..t- ed less experienced members, and imn. nu i'ni " i lacking in forceful, constructive consequence tho things that it was called upon to do it has not done, Instead" It has explored tbe fields oC legislative invention, hunted burled treasure, pursued rainbows, and put business and industry in tho hot seat of uneasiness. MARSHFIELI), Ore., Feb. 21. Ai A lugging contract for 70 mil lion feet of cedar, tho largest Coos county has ever known, has been signed hero by the Evans Auto Loading company of Detroit, as owners.. and Laird and Garrett. Myrtle I'olnt. nn contractors. The Job will cttend over a period of eight years, working 1 TiO men steadily. Forty men arc already employ ed. The land to bo logged Is about 16 miles from Myrtle Point between the Middle fotk and tho South fjrk of the Hoquille river, with ood roads leading to the a i-f a. Ijocnl men will be given prefer- ?: ah r.ire anu .-uocon OREGON LiSTED PROSPECTOR OF AS'l LAST ELECTION Collier's Also Paints State As 'Half-Bolshevist Be cause of Fondness for Notionary Politics Mc Nary Lauded. The article in full is Working with all his might to avoid an extra session is Charley McNary, the senator from Oregon, UMHiMUiil icuut-r m jveimun- senator, Xorrls of Nebraska. Senator Jim Watson, the leader, 0t am Homewhat invalid, holda ijis leadership by being an engag- lng 0(1 humbug, who In privato can "cuss out" the president more ulctureauuely than anyone else on the nil. Nobody takes him too seriously but everybody loves him because ho is so charmingly, naive ly, amusingly ingenuous. Charley McNary seldom visits tho White House. It Is Jim Wat- son's duty to carry to tho White PI House assurances in which tho tell the story. Newspaper clip White House places littlo faith, 1 pings yellowed by the tinting of return to tho Hill, put out state- mcnts to the press which arc ac-i cepted at 9S per cent discount, and vio with George Moses in con- iriuuung mo uosi wuucism 10 1110 farce that the president Is tho head of his party. Jim belongs to tho old guard, to the tradition of Cameron, Quay, Aldrich and 1 Penrose. Charley McNary, his ac ' . . p . Tm a irsl ,, lM!tt I Perhaps for the sake uf ambi tion, McNary cast his lot with l the Regulars, without, however, losing the confidence of tho Pro gressives. K very body trusts him because ho never deceives anybody which is one reason, perhaps, why he seldom visits tho whito House. He Is a sweet, kindly, j likable person, who get on as well with Norris and La Follette a performs tho Impossible. His job ' t " ' ?f " Republicans and the Heinocrals. How he a ml Jim Watson gel. away with their difficult tasks is morn mhIIv utiilerstond when it Ih perceived thu I both of them aro for the senate first, and only for the Republican party or the administration or whatover the other entity is, second. You have not heard any great yelp of ap proval from the senate for Mr. Lucas attempt to defeat one of tho senators, Mr. Norris of Neb raska. ' Jim Watson would probably say that Lucas was all right in w"at lie (liil, only hu shouldn't havo been found out. Charley McNary, being half Progressive, probably bolls with Indignation at Lucas' deed. But anyone Is acceptable in tho sen- ate who Is for the senate as against any other branch of the govern ment, especially as against tho administration. Attd no ono doubta Jim Watson and Charley McNary are for the senate. McNary comes from a half BolshevfKt state. Tho initiative and referendum started, I think, out there. And fn tho last election Oregon went pink. So McNary " political futuro probably lies with the Progressives rather than with tho old guard. Postponing the Inevitable His sympathies, those who know him best nay, are and have al ways been with the under dog. But ho is not tho kind of man whose convictions make him rigid and Intolerant. He - Is a good friend of everybody, social In his instincts. Ho is not nn orator. His talents all lio in immediate dealing with men. Ho loves tho politics of the senato and has u rare gift for them. If an open break come between tho Progressives and tho Regu lars, his position would be awk ward, for then ho wculd have to make his choice be ween tho two factions. Ho works to prevent that breach. Ho has a selfish In tercM, aside from tho keen plcas uro ho takes In playing tho game successfully, in - postponing, oven in preventing, tho inevitable. I tako it that a special session forced by the Progressives will be n sign that tho Progressives have decided to go their own way atid ha ve a party of their own In 1932. There is not much sense In a spec ial session except ia a means of propaganda for the policies and issues of tho Progressives. It would bo a means of harassing Mr. Hoover steadily. It ljould be a defiance by the Progressives of the business sentiment of the cast, wliliti demands no special session. It would bo a widening of the breach between east and wcl in the Republican party. .cN'iry refuses to belli-vo that tl:ft be a special action. O (C--"inued on Pago Two) BY iVALLEYMOUNTS ONCE AN ACTORi Joe Cornwell, Miner of the j Siskiyous, Once Trod Stages of Boston and New York, Says Grants Pass Report. CKANTS l'ASS. Ore.. Feb. 21. (A) Juc Curnwcll, about GO, with the tongue of a Londoner, I the poise uf an actor and tho 1 ui ti in uueciui , lives aiOlie t ! far up in the mist-hidden peaks of ' the Siskiyous, west of tlrants 1 1 Puss. t The beard of Joe Cornwell Is ! 1 no different than that of any other prospector, but his poiso and his ' "odd;" they say something mys-' j tertous is hidden In tho little cas- ! tie that backs up against a rock ledge. I There Is it Is in u trunk. I Back in the 70 s. shortly after I lhv Civil war. the name of Joe I , Cornwell blazed before the flood-' lights of oil burners at the old ' Hart loss house in New York and , the Community house in Roston. For then. Joe Cornwell was an actor. j Handbills that crackle with age j time cast the stamp of an autor on the man. For actors, even in ' the days of oil footlights, lived ami thrived on publicity, and hum carrieu i.'iih love ! with him into the luring hills of southern Oregon, There Is a suit In the old leath- I er trunk tho trunk that some how! or other Cornwell lugged up 'tllO ninlMltttflltffln 1.. liu Sometimes when the sunset Is about to cast itN last hue upon the skies ( oruwell has, ho admits, donned this suit and gone over tho lines that used to be his in Hoston and in New York. Nanny, his goat, is the audience. But he would not do this for a jnrtn who pressed him for sumo explanation as to why ho left the uoouugms rot southern Oregon sunsets. - ; iitioby DvOV JLlHC ' At Giving Kisses to M other-in-Law 4-4 4' 44 j ! CHICAGO, Feb. 2 1 fl'j I I It cowl money to get in a j position of immunity from a ; mothcr-ln-lti w' biMsiw a ! times. At le:i.st that wjim tbe a; experience of Claudo Erlck- son. t In a cross-hill he reecnlly filed lo his wlfeV divorce ae- Hon ErlckMon charged that sho forced him to liis his mother- In-law, alleging that this was "extreme cruelty," causing h him to surfer a "nervous breakdown.' a 9 YeMcrdav the Judge order- 0(, hiin to ,Kiy wffi ?J n r week allinonv, AAAA4 A--. .Md lo l'roiMrliy. NEW YORK, During EKItl the aviation industry expended K'OO.. Oda.UUO w till other industries, and i its continued progress will lie one meaiiH of bolstering up the ecu- variety for a given sect ion or con nomic situation during 1931. In the dition," said D. D. Hill of tho opinion of I larris 1 la ash tie. college, who made t bo survey, president of Transcontinental & "tints, barley and wheat varieties WcNiern .VI r Express, differ greatly In yielding ability, COUN THE YELLOW BOXES Real Proof That Country People Read Ihe MAIL HUBUNE What Eleven Tubes Look Like 1 I 1 ;x 4v,Jfwl?flM Miss Marguerite Clayton had an idea that the eleven tubes in the new moael In Superneterodyne Plus Philco radio could be held in her two hands but she found they took up a lot more space than she thought. The instrument pictured here is the new Philco Superheterodyne plus highboy, one of the 1931 additions to the line. It is equipped with automatic volume control, tone, control, station recording dial, and is non-oscillatinsr. I IMATII ! A HAQ j 1111 111 I II I II II I returns iWHEAT GROWTH STATER DEBATERS STAHDARD1ZE0; r- i r . r-n LaSlUIII OUUIIUM rullUV,'J Best Methoas, Suiveyj Shows-43 Varieties oi Wheat Grown in Oregon Feb. 21. PENDLETON, Ore (!'! Cmatillu county Hhows the greatest .standardization of grain varieties In the slate, in addition In prod uclng the must wheat In Ongon. according to a cereal sur- vey recently completed by the farm crops department of the Oregon experiment station. Tnls county has 97 per cent of Its wheat acreage devoted to two varieties, Kedei atloit and Hybrid! ! IJK, one of which was Introduced from the experiment ttl.al ion and the ul Iter Ifi mii Washington slate college. I fitch, fltchit or fitchew, Is to bo- Eastern Oregon ait n whole , eoiurj a part of MarshMcld'n life. rihoWH better standardization than j Tho anlmat Is commonly referred western Oregon, the report shows, i to as tho "fitch," but is known. More than !( per cent of the I loo, by its other names, wheat is of four standard varlot- 1 J. T. Metjuiro, former postmant les, Turkey and Fortyfold being j er, in raising them, for their pelts. tho other two. j In western Oregon, Holland.; 1 lies to Sick la-el. While Winter, Jenkln and Mink DENVER. Seventeen hundred make up r. per cent of the pro-I"1"1 Dvtmly-flvo air mile were cov duellon, although a total of 3li i ,,IV'1 u v Tremble In 1 tt hours varieties are grown in tho eleven I ',H'" Hew from hero to Now counties. A, total of 4 3 varieties v,,1'k City, to reach the tdekhed oT of wheat aro grown in cummer- I',1., ..j1',"' cial quantities In Oregon, a drop from Gil ten years ago "There is usually but one best quality and other characteristics. ewer varieties make for greater yield, better quality and higher ill CORVALLIS, Ore.. Keb. 21. (I) 1 Bearding tho lion In his den is a figurative deseription of tho . niMk iiiKk-rtukun by tho mon'H mt0 KuvK n. koii.k to Rem, Z: t0 t" d,vorco The Oregopians will meet Nev ada on tho question "Resolved, j that alimony, except, for the sup- ; port of dependent minors, should ! lo abolished." Tho Oregon State! , mp" wil1 t nfflnnutlvo of ine question on j-ouruary jy. MABSMFIELl), Ore.. Feb. -fP) I inscribed as a species Dependable Abstract Service Wlini it ('nnica to nil nuiMd-H pri-tniiiing lo li Irs, we lire ei(iiiir(l to Nerve yon well. For vi'.irs we Iiiivr liccn eom i I i i milliorltiilivc lille ii-i-oiiIh eiiiiMins iih lo offer Hie finest poHsililo Nerviee. Title IusvriJLca (Cotitlnued on Page Two) iFANCY POLECATS g-SSS ! in imns mi! v t? c ICHICAGOS MAYORALTY RACE WARM 'Big Bill,' Incumbent, Seeks to Exceed Carter Harri son's Record ami Be World Fair Mayer. CHICAGO, Feb. 21 . ,') T Un counted "out' as a pollt.cal puvv er, William Hale Thump on this year bids for a fourth term ' us Chicago's mayor and a long-service record unequalled by ;sis pred ecessors. Carter Harrison Jr., wiis mayor 12 years, as Thompson h.ts bciu, but ho was In flvo terms, 'our tot two years each. Carter Harrison, his father, hIso served four terms. Bulky, ruddy-cheeked, ns confi dent as ever, "Big Bill tho Build er," as he dubbed himself, wants; to be Chicago "world's fair" may or, tho executive who serves dur ing the "Century of Progress" ex position of 1933. In, 192 3 and again in 192S, Thompson was declared to bo "through." Back he came first in 1927 to win over William Do ver, the democratic Incumbent. This year's elections will determ ine whether tho wreckage of tho Thompson-Crowc-Galpln machine . was prophetic. Stmiiirtl ViifiM Tost February -'4 thn reniibHcan nrimnrv Tiwiitm.n'i iionciii , .vm bo tctct anainst. tho sumo I of popularity that put Municipal I Judge John H. Lylo and Aldcr ' man Arthur V. Albert In the race. Anton J. Cermak, president of. tho county commluslon, and suc cessor to Roger Sullivan and Georgo Brennan as democratic. chief, Is slated to oppoao tho re publican nominee at tho election April 7. Althmicrh nersniilfvinir n lirnr.ftn. 1 growimr West. Thomnson. now Gt I year old. Is of tho conservatlvo , l-;Ust Boston was hia birthplace. Big Bill's father wns a million aire realtor, and WiUtrtnT' Halo Jr.," Inherited much of his wealth. - imcu Jioiurm .niifiMiaio Tho quiet entranco of young Thompson into politics In 1901 was In contrast with tho dramatic, dynamic campaigns he since has waged. That year he was tho choice of tho Municipal Voters , league, a reform organization, for Tho Kufc wny in lo deal wltli i (inn wllh un cnlulillxhed rupulatlon for (imillly Htovk utid bimih"! deul iiiK. Wc HtlU Imvn u very complct'i line of. miraury goods, both fruit and ornunientul; moHt liny phmt for which you uro likely Lo cull, and uuw in tho l)ino to Get Busy with tlui t Bpi'ini; nlnnting. Wo huvn u fine UHKortnionl uf Hlmdo troen utMl uhout M) (!crlniK denduru. Nil tuie-9 best UVINC CllltlKT.MAS TltKH. Wo huvo by fur tho most complete line of cvei'Ki'eeu und do clduouH flowering trees und hIii-iiIm to be found In Bouthern Oregon. Wo win and hold our trudo by giv ing Quality and Service nnil lmvo neither tho time nor tho Inclination to huul our goods around on truck or truller and ped ille them from door lo door. Wc have had years of experience and offer you freo Landscape Service planting kiicchIIoiih or n eomplel'i Jdh that will phase without a lot of ehatlor about being cxpcrlti and will gladly match our work wllh that of any of tho aelt-stylcd land scapo oxpeitH. This porcuiilal luml scupo export chatter la . ,' , , , 99 Pure Bunk Wo employ iiin' ncuils. .ilo no cun vasslng. hut wo do seo that you got roilthlc stock and prompt sorv. leo. Again we aay. tho sat'o w-uy Is to deal with a firm with an es tukllshcd reputation for huudlliis ipallly stock and sipiaro dealing. to Valley Nursery H. 8. BENNeTT, Prop. Box 1014, Medtord. Oregon ffK aad Sales Yard 6121, East Main St. Phone 680-J-2 Stain of Oregon Nur.so-ymun'l Llccnso No. 117. , I I . I m - ' o