PAGE FOUR Medpord Mail Tribune Dtlly nd Sunday PublUhwJ by MEDFOBD JpaiNTlNO CO. SS-SMI N. Flf 8L Pb9M TB BO BERT W. RUHL, Editor t. 81'jMI'TER SMITH, MUMer An Independent Ntnptper EDtertd u Meond elm nittrr tt Medofd, Orcfoo, under Act of ftfueb 8, 1878. SUBSCRIPTION BATES Br Mill In Adnnee; Dkllr, Willi Sunday, jreir $J.30 Daily, with Bundiy, mwitb .JJ Piilj, vllhout Sunday, year 6.j0 bally, tltbcut Bundiy, moulb Cf Suoday, OM yen 2.00 B Carrier, In Adianei Medford, Aihland, Juksontille, Central Point, Phoenix, Talcut, Uuld Bill and on HUhi. Dally, vitb Bundv, month I Dally, without Sunday, month 5 Dally, without Sunday, one year 7.00 Dally, vitb Sunday, one year 8.00 AU terms, cash In advance. Official paper of the City of Medfurd. Official paper ' Jawn County. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PKE88 Retelling Full Leased Wire 8errlce The Awodated Pre la exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all new diinalfhtf credited to It or oilier wis credited In thla paper, tod also to the local newi published herein. AU rUtita for publication of special dispatch berelo are also reaerttd. MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OK C1HCUUTJONH Adterthlng Itepraentalltei . . M. C. MOGEN8EN COMPANY Office in New York, Cliicauo, Detroit, Ban frandseo. Lot Anjelei, Seattle, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot (By Arthur Prry) A copious rain (ell last evening on hill and dale, mid your corr.'B now hat. Fame la fleeting! Who remem bers the name of the gal who two weeks ago danced aboard a battle ship, beneath tho tropical moon, with tho I'ranco of Wales? One of tho valley Nipponese has showed up with a goatee. Now hain't that something! 'Thieves entered the homo of Mrs. Randall and stole a port able typewriter. Mrs. Itnndall Is well known as a poet" (.Mitlln Messenger.) What could tho mo tive be? The legislature has mado such an , outstanding mess of things In general, that thcro Is a strong do mand for a proventivo against similar horrors In tho future The way to prevent future outbreaks or mental outlawry, and Homl-ldlotle capers at Salem Is simple, but not as simple as tho legislature. Only by abolishing tho legislature, will there bo no legislature. .'James Bates, tho tonsorlallst, helped out tho Standard Oll yes terday and drove to Ashland, lie says ho saw wild revelry. A group of Uatbbath breakers were pluylng croquet. , Tho atato of I'omiHylvnnia slaughtered a woman this morning in tho electric chair. This method Is not as bunglesomo as hanging, but Just as wickod In tho eyes of Clod. The victim wus ircno Hchroo dor, called ''iron lreno." Tho records show that "from earliest girlhood sho was an ardent devotee of terpischoro." J lor pat was a former Hunday school teacher, and together they ran wild, lie also "ate a hearty-breakfast nnd walk ed with a. firm step to his doom." They dropped everything worth while;'' to Stop to tho blare of Jazz music - Between dances they en Caged in plain and fancy banditry, and the law cuught up with them. From these fow details a fair ser mon could .be. whittled, but those who noed It most would never heed. " With wine-making permissible In tho homes, a record breaking amount of Jelly will bo put up next full. A male quartet Is sought, to offlctato at the burial of John J. Depression. , Tho trouble .with a hastily formed mulo quartet. Is the danger they will lncrcuso the de pression. WOMAN'S PJjACIS (Emporln, Kan., Gazette) ' We ' read in tho papers whore the Women's club mem bers In Sabetha have organ ized a coyote hunt. ' If .wo.wero chairman of tho Chamber of Commerce In Bahetha we would orftanlxo an Intrepid band of good mon nnd true to go to tho hospital and have a whole idler of babies. - Sovorul gardens are In course of construction In the residential nrcas, but as yet none of the gar deners havo enjoyed fried chicken for suppor. ' There Is always a little Rood In tho- most depraved. Taka the I'rlsco brat, 10, who heat an nged lady to death with a eluh, and then act flro to her clothing to cover up his hclllshncNS. If ho had It to do over again, he told n policeman, ho would nut burn and beat the ugod woman, ho would be kind, und shoot her. "I am a girl of S3, and havo boen married for ten years. My husband Is very unreasonable and objects . to my having old hoy friends cull whllo ho Is out of town. Thry nlwuys h-avo between 1 and I o'clock. 1 am unable to break him of being- old-fashioned . . . (Love Agony Col.) A girl of 33 should know better and not be to reasonable. Itrlilge DtTilNI T'llII.AHCI.I'IIIA (CP) llalph Modejeskl. cliRlm'er and builder f tho Philadelphia - C a m d c ll bridge over the Delaware river, recently explained his plans for a f7G,0Vft.0OO bpun from San l'rut-vlseo-to OHkumri. The bridge, he told tho KtiRlneers club, will touch Goat Island sod will lie reared higher above navigable water thon any other bridge In tho world. Editorial Correspondence KXKOLTK "WIUX'OX, Ariz., Golilim .State Limited, Feb. 20. Wi are iloin;; our licxt tlii year to booxt the K. I'. stock, back to normalcy. Hut tliey aren't making mucli out of tlie editor this trip fur it is u week end excursion, the best bar gain tbc S. P. ever offered, - about lit) per ctuit of a one-way fare for a round trip. The train is a lotij; one and well filled, whijh shows that the S. i lias some brains after all. For these trains JTAVK run, the overhead must be paid regardless of the income, how much better to have a crowd on board instead of a baker's dozen. No doubt all the trains iKi'iug out of i. A. tonight are similarly packed, and the boats, too, for that matter a 10 round trip rate to Han Francisco if we remember cor rectly. If more of these ex cursions were put on we have an idea the railroad problem financially would be solved. We notice by the Medford papers that the legislature Is seriously considering a cigarette tax, which raises the question once moro as to whether or not wo live hi a Democracy. If wo do, thon this bill should never get to first base. Kor the people of Oregon Imvo put them selves on record twite that they DON'T WANT A CICiAKKTTIC TAX. A similar measure wbb beat en two to ono In 1925 and throe to Olio nt tho recent cloctlon and yot, according to our Information, the members of the legislature arc determined to put this measure Over, whether or no. The present writer smokes cigar ettes and frankly has no objection to paying a few cenls additional to save tho state of Oregon from bankruptcy. Hut that's not the point. The point IS Iho people as a whole don't want it, and to in sist upon forcing them (o liavo It simply to dony them tho 1'iallon able right of self government. So ns a matter of principle we oppose this cigarette tax und hope tho leglulauuro will seo tho error of Its ways, and dump tho measure in tho waste basket. Conditions may bo bad from a financial stand EI February term of circuit court will bo convened tomorrow with the drawing of a new petit Jury und fixing of (ho culcudar. An order continuing Iho special grand jury Investigating tho ilea til of Hvorntt Ha hac k last December, during a raid on n Heose Creek moonshine still, will probably ho Issued hy tho court. This grand Jury, ol' which J. J. Skinner Is fore man, will he empowered to hear criminal cases now pending. Whenever Asslslliiut Attorney llonernl Willis W. Mooro is able the grand jury will rosumn Us hear ing of tho evidence In tho Dahnck case. It Is expectoli that Mooro will ho nhlo to resume aetlvo duty within the next two weeks. Thcro was no Houston of tho cir cuit court today on account of the observance of llcorgo Washington's birthday. SMOKE IN BED IS CAUSE EARLY FIRE K I ru, iuuihimI liy a ternm' Himk Inff lu btnl, resulted In tlauuiK" f $'-00 to a mom lit the KlvirnUto ApitrtnuMitH at tS;30 thin mnrulnK. Tho bhru wiih quickly placed under control, and Iho tenant, M. V. WIIMumn, a Ha legman, wan lodged In the eounly jail im a min peeted drup; adilirt. He In heltiR held for lnvcHttK"(ion. MUTT AND JEFF Shoot Is a Two-Way Word IfjCFF X Gch .. iTT I (WW X).D VovT VOoRSC". MvfT Hs ;P I I i, ifscRQX, MUTT " lJ-1 wew HC R C 'S . MEDFORD MAIL point, but they can't be so bad that the people of Oregon must be forced to accept the one form of taxation that they have twice re pudiated, the second time less than three mouths ago. As a last word on the movies, we might say that the best picture we have seen this trip is an old one, given at a second rate theatre In Pasadena last night, "The Ilight to lxive," with Kuth Chatterton as the bright and par ticular star. As are all of Miss f Chutterton'a lilnis, this is very in i tclllgently done, no hokum or ! hooey, u chunk of real life, effect ively and impressively portrayed. We don't know anything about it, but have a pious idea the film has not been a succes financially cer tainly not Judging by the size of last night's audience. One hears a great deal against the "low brow" movie magnates but when all Is said and done, the fault rests not with them but with the people. The people in the last analysis get just what they want and what they want Is what they are willing to pay for. The quality of moving picture entertainment will improve just 'as fast as public taste im proves, and no faster. It Is silly to blame the producers. They are not philanthropists and can't he expected to run their business without profit any more than Indi viduals In other lines. If Miss C'hatterton In "The Right to Love" hasn't been seen in Med ford as yet we can recommend It highly to those who like their entertainment as a mental and emotional stimulant rather than a soporific or Irritant. Speaking of cheap rates, It's sim ply astounding how tho cost of living has reduced In a year In Los Angeles. We mentioned oranges at 75 cents a lug box the other (lay, but on the highway near Pasa dena they uro selling good looking ones for ,15 cents a box. And, Judg ing by tho prices on dresses, cloth ing, groceries and food, everything is more or less in the samo pro portion. As a woman on a street cur remarked today to her com panion, "Ain't It hell wliut you see when you ain't go no money?" We are duo at Phoenix at 0:30 In the morning and the flourishing metropolis of Willcox east of Tuc son about 2:30 or thcreuhouts In tho afternoon. Wo liavo uu idea we are tho only passenger on the train wllh a ticket for Willcox. There is only one reason for going to Willcox, namely, wo have been Invited there by some women we liko almost as Well ns the Arizona climate. If that bo cause for di vorce, Mr. .'Ipeakor, you don't know HALF of It! It. W. K. Hy "half" tho author means tho other "half" of It. START CONCRETE J'uuilnpr of concreto for tho new AVaHhhiKton m-liool on Peach and Dakota Hlreeta Hlurted UHh morn Inu; with ntoHt of the inaterlalH Htifh an relnrorehiK nteel, Hand and Kt'avel on tho jirroiinda. WUIIain Maulthy in limpeetor on tho Job. rcpreHcnthiK tho Mori ford Hchool dlHtrlet. Tho work will bo upeeded along uh rapidly iih pohsI ble, Hl AhIi, contractor, Htated thlH mornliiK. Tho building will Include IB roomn with combined K.vmnaHtum and auditorium, HlriH for ctmHtrtictlon of the new high m-bool building will bo opened hy tho board Saturday and tho general contract awarded. Contracts for heating, plumbing and wiring thu building will ulso bo awarded, 'OTlIliN' IS TARGET OF WIFE M KM IM I IS, Tenn.. Keb. 21. (Pi A woman who mild ahe nhot an other woman bocaun it wan "the only way out" was being held to day. Mrs. (iuufdo Itertha Nelson, IM. wlfo of a pressman, surrendered to police shortly after tho fatal wounding last night of MIsh .Made lino llrown, iMi, a telephone com pany employe. Sho told police n friendship between her husband and the slain woman had driven her to desperation. FOR WASHINGTON m SCHOOLpijW TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD, MAIL TRIBUNE DAILY CROSS-WORD PUZZLE ACROSS L Orerk eoddir of the aiuOD ; I. Itubber ,13. &lor uniform 14. LntBDl 14. Rivulet: dcotctt It. tJtr in The i Dm mod '11. lmeri: bbr. II. South Amen can animal killed io tht camel 19. KuroLean flab 21. Top card 23. Japanete aarr 24. Bali nt thread or yarn ti. Not aver 27. Squeeze 23. Chlkirn't game 23. Kemtnin nam 30. lloifl bark 33. Takes on cargo asalo, ST. Am K Si. Bntangfe 19. Masculine (0. Mather: rtlaL 1. God of iov Solution of Saturday's Puzzle erausjleekUse M I C ADAIP pSarEID pFlfflrJktH DIE S E R TiETR nPtjE SjT e lHsie empCTorta B ARPAJl mSMlP A T L AIsBr A T EllR E fESLBAS S E RTEiD C3RE E L0T R O YCIl KAME RADftlSP AT iiniTgRMnigR tIeid tlTiE In Is e us t v ti. Neiincrt Latin 44. MoorUh , kettle-drum 48. Live agalo 45. Oelatinllhe carbohydrate found tn agar-agar 49. Exultant 12 13 4 S U I 7 I If V " a wi& " , n h jm 30 31 7,2 J3 34 3S W 1 i ' " i I I i Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Aliened letters pertaining to personal health will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self and written In Ink. Owing to the targe number of reply can he made to queries not conforming to Tim Mall Tribune. THE NON-OPERATIVE It, may not be a downright dis grace for a man to vote the samo ticket hta father and grandfather always voted, but it la circumstan tial evidence that he is a yes man. 1 was brought up to believe, and 1 have ulways be lieved up to this year, that the rad ical operation for hernia (breech, rupture) Ih tho only eliuctive reatment. I have taught that hero, for many yeara. I have been quite arbitrary about It, insisting that euro of hernia in an adult by any other means than the radical operation la too remote a possibility to consider. 1 have urged upon all adults subject to such a nuisance, menace or disabil ity tho advisability of entering a hospital and undergoing an opera tion for the sake of Increased ef ficiency one enjoys from the cure of hernia. 1 have taught that a f pontaiieouH cure of hernia, in the infant, a natural cure, may be ob tained In many cases if tho rupture Ih properly 'supported by a suitable bandage, dressing or supporter ap plied as instructed by the physi cian, but Htich it natural cure is scarcely to bo eNpeetcd after the baby is a year old or older. I'lnally, I liavo taught, as I be lieved, that regular exercise done while the patient supports tho her nial region with his hand, espe cially simple leg raising exercises night and morning, will sure hernia in some cases where tho protru sion is of recent occurrence and small and reducable. The year when T. It. was run nlu I voted for Uryan and his hank guarantee plan. It almost killed father. He made me prom ise at least I'd nevor tell. All my professional lifo I've been just like most doctors, a bit too ceidulous about the teachings of our medical authorities. Tho radical operation for hernia Ih not. so uniformly sutifaetory as I have always assumed. 1 beilevo now that this standard treatment fails to cure the hernia in quite ORF.flONT, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2:1. m,1. f, NVknarsa to Helen I. &xn f. Uum retlo S. "Pro" 9. Arabian ear ment 10. figure ol speech IL Omita in pro nouncing 12. Keeumes IB. (Jerman mini clan tt. Locations 34. Fatty portion or milk 28. Organ of hearing tt. Crony 29. Goes to bed 10. Injure n. Click oeettv 12. Mexican diib 13. Knock 34. Member of the tribe of Dan 35. Foot b 11 team 36. Withdraw S3. Draft animals 4L, List of actors In a play 42. Take out ; io. Old spelling of Donk 47. Roman boost bold eod 60. Bui Ida 61, Calm DOWN j. Continued story 2. Manifest . Pertaining to a penitential season 4. Flnlsb ami hygiene, not to rifcraie. diagnosis or treatment addressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should he brief letters received only a few can be answered here. No Initructlom. Address Dr. William Brady la care f CURE FOR HERNIA enough cases to excuse the poor man who pays his own way for his hesitancy about undergoing the treatment. In the past I have al ways been impatient with him about this, for as I say I sincerely believed the operation was virtu ally a sure thing and hence that it offered the working man a way out of his difficulty. I even con sidered the cost of operation an economy as balanced against the cost of lifelong monkeying with trusses and the like. So you see it weighs only " conscience sure, I have one yet when 1 realize at last that quite a few hernia opera tions fail to cure. 1 feel I owe an apology to victims of hernia whom 1 misled. Like the quack who gave you an other bottle of his nostrum abso lutely free It the first six bottles failed to do you any good, I now offer hernia victims 4tbo ambulant treatment, which, at any rate does not interfere with the patient's reg ular occupation and involves no great risk, und no harm, if it fails to cure. This ambulant treatment is now heing used by many good physicians. It consists of a series of injections of medicine into the tissue about the inguinal ring, through which hernia protrudes, and this brings nbout a deposit of fibrous or scar tissue which suffi ciently closes the ring to prevent further protrusion. Of course the injections are not so easy as they sound it requires real skill and thorough knowledge of the anat omy on the part of the doctor ad ministering such treatment. It us ually requires half a dozen, moro or less, sittings at intervals of a week or more. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Immunity 1. Is there anything that wilt make a person immune for syphil -is? 2. Is there any simple way to test food for germs before eat ing it? t II. I Answer 1. No. 2. Only a bac teriologist can test food for germs. I may say that no one need ever fear contracting syphilis through eating food. There is no evidence whatever that even food handled ! or served by persons havisg active I syphlllB ever carried the disease. I i High Liver My doctor says I have an en ' larged liver. When 1 eat my food ! seems to stay. K. W. J.J Answer If your doctor Is com J pentent to make the diagnosis he should be as competent to prescnuu thetreatmenl. enlarged liver has no particular significance to me. Paraffin In the Chocolate Kindly tell me whether the paraf fin In the enclosed recipe is harm ful. (Mrs. S. L.) Answer The recipe Is one for making a chocolate crunch and It Includes halt' a spoonful of melted paraffin. That is quite harmless. Haraftin Is commonly used In can dies and pastries or cakes to pre; vent melting. It is no moro harm ful than the familiar "mineral oil," otherwise known as liquid petro leum, and Ruesian oil, which is commonly tnken as an Intestinal luoiicanu Paraffin Is the samo thing in solid form. Of course it is not a food and Is not absorbed or utilized by tho body. A Marathon Bun Finished My brother had a running ear tor IS years. A year ago he began using the drops you suggested 10 grains of boric acid in an ounce of alcohol and the running stopped after a few weeks and never re turned. (C. H.) Answer Assuming the car did not stop running from sheer ex haustion. The vial should be warm ed up by standing in hot water just before It is used, and one or two drops only dropped in the ear ech night and morning, over a period of many weeks. If your druggist gets unpleasant about providing the ounce of alcohol, I can't do anything about it. (Copyright, John P. Dille Co. 1 V .Parents LYING FOR rUXISHMKXT By Alice Judwm Peale. One kind of lie that children tell is extremely baffling and inexplic able to the parent who is not fa miliar wtih the most obscure work ings of the human mind. A boy of eight confessed to his mother that he had broken the windows of a nearby garage "just for fun." 'His father p romptly whipped him, and the next day his mother emptied the boys savings bank and took the money to the garage owner. To her amazement he was quite unable to undcrMand the purpo.Ho of the visit, for no windows hud been broken. Children not infrequently tell such lies as these and their pur pose, curiously enough, is exactly what it seems to be to bring pun ishment upon themselves. This desire for pumVhment usu al iy springs from a more or less o 1 iseu re a ml co m p 1 ica ted sen so of guilt. Sometimes a sympathetic talk with the child Nvil bring to light the cause of this guilty feeling and servo to clear up the difficulty, but usually the solution of such problems require the expert skii! of a psychiatrist. It is helpful, however, to know that in uch instances the child feels guilty about some wrong doing (often a wholly secret one) which he has committed or would merely like to commit. In tho latter instance bis eon science rauses him to feel all tbc guilt which be would experience if he had actually done the deed. The parent should make the child understand that his falsehood is known without condemning him for it. .Make an effort to center the child's interest in wholesomeJ companionship nnd play activities, and to develop at home a spirit of friendly understanding and corn pan iontfhip, are the best ways in which anyone who is not n psychia trist can meet the situation. 1 ' 5 Brisbane's Today (Continued from Page One) this plant is United States math1, nothiuf? from Europe, al though freights from thertvare cheaper. The electrical equip ment is all made hy Westinr house. The General Klectrie Co, must have been asleep. It includes many electric motors, ono that runs the dry mill of three lumdred horsepower and very hirh torque, i.s not much bigger than a moderate sized wash tub, IJs power is applied through a speed reducing ma chine ingeniously contrived. Tho cement making machinery proper kilns, crushers, mills, etc. comes from the Tntylor company m v i .r - v.' 0 '0f4TOFOWU0W-t; of Allcntown, I'a. Mexico, as you see, is helping to meet industrial payrolls in many parts of tue United States, and American work men might remember that, when they hear objection to -Mexican workmen that do. in America. ruu road and other work that limes States citizens will not do. Near the mills that grind clinker and finally reduce tho total pro duct to dry cement powder are steel barrels in rows. They hold 65 tons of cast Iron -peuuies, roil around -.aside the cylindrical mills and do the grinding. That was all done, formerly, by Hint pebbles from Denmark, and there fore cast Iron balls are called "pebbles." All these high grade Amenepn workers are laid, as the United States machinery is bought, with gold dollars, and when they return thev will help Americana to under stand Mexicans Dctter, and Mexi can possibilities. Hut they are m no hurry to return. Sir. Dean, of bong Beach, Cal.. is much Interested in a tract of hard coal, the vein 40 fetet deep, cov ering 25,000 acres. He thinks he will get an interest in tiiat. Some American capitalist will change that coal inlo powder at the mine, change the powdered coal Into elec tric power, extracting by-products worth more than the coal, and ship the power by wire all over Jiexi co's west coast. That may be the start of a great Industrial development sure to come here where efficient labor and unlimited raw materials invite energy and industrial ambition. Mexico, in the future, will com pete industrially with every nation in the world, ship to Europe and Asia from her own ports, and be as independent of the United States industrially as the United States is now of Mexico. Mr. Reynolds, before he returns to Stockton and tiie next MacDon ald company job, will look around for a gold or silver mine, gold pre ferred at the present price of sil ver. There are many of both kinds Etill to be found and developed here.- Ask the keen young Ameri can manager of "Bltore" silver mine near Kacozari, He came down last night to consult the governor concerning labor matters. In visiting the works now, be fore the new veiiicle bridge over the Sonora river is built, you ride across the river in a two-wheel cart, drawn by three donkeys har nessed abreast. Coming tne other way yesterday was a load of wood, drawn by five donkeys, barely able to keep their feet, with the water as high as their shoulders. Pulling was diffi cult, donkeys fear to walk In water, and the load of mesquito wood was heavy. The little creatures strug gled desperately, and, with the help of volunteers from shore turning the wheels by hand, they finally came to shore. Men work hard for a living in this country. As for the donkeys. If there is no heaven prepared for them, that now bear the burden for millions of human beings, there is lack of Justice. While bridges are lacking, the Southern Pacific Railroad of Mex ico, American built and owned, makes its railroad bridges useful to the public free of charge. Over the Mayo river at Navajoa, the long railroad bridge, at close inter vals, is provided with islands of safety built out over the edge of the bridge, railed in and perfectly sale when trains come. The workers, including the Mayo Indians, are grateful for that, and also for the short cuts, as they gallop their horses along the rail road right of way. For transportation in Mexico, ob taining passports,, in which matter Mexico Is most obliging and inex pensive, and for all useful informa tion, apply to Mr. Mike Levy, Southern Pacific of Mexico district passenger agent, Nogaies, Mexico. Young Americans that like to fly should visit this friendly country and tell the people at home about it. There are many excellent fields close to the border, and fields perfectly equipped at No Gales, Ariz.; Los Moehis, on the west coast, nnd at Mexico City, !!ootu Likes Ire Cream 1IOGOTA, Colombia M) In Mexico, where it's really ' hot. hungry people can buy tamalos. chill and like throut-lntrning del Icacies from street peddlers. But here, in a city above the clouds, where It's always cool, the most popular street-peddled food Is ice cream frozen on sticks. I'ISA, Italy, Feb. 21. (B Cardinal I'ietro Maffl, one of the most eminent scholars of the church nnd twice In the past quar ter of a century mentioned for the papacy, is gravely ill here. Pope Plus has sent his benediction. During the recent development of an Bust Texas oil field the population or Longview tripled in three works. By BUD FISHER Do Yea Remember? TEX TEAKS AGO TODAY (Fiom files of the Mall Tribune. l'Vlinmry 28, 1II21. J.ce grantH Mcdford redueUun In lumber raw "Save the Scenery" campaign is launched. Itain is still hoped for by farm ers and orchardidts. County fair dates set. Bert Anderson named on state game commission by Uov, Olcuti, Ashland defsats Medfurd, M tu 16 In first game of serle, TWENTY TEARS AGO TOI-Y (From files of tho Mall Tribune.) February 2. till I. O. A. C. expert addresses vall,y chicken raisers, illustrating lecture with lantern slides. Deer runs out of wood "a mile this side of Jacksonville," and is nearly run over by the "Jackson ville Cannonball," on a regular trip. Kord auto ill Pacific - Panama, auto race finishes fourth although! it lose a wheel on the first Ian. Crowd so thick races could not i.t started on time. Senate starts inquiry into Uu election of William Lorimer, "the Blonde Boss" of Chicago, to the upper house. ' Council acts to move lunch coun ters from sidewalks of downtown area. City Beautiful committee of the 1 Greater Medford club petitions council to remove delapidated fence around the ball park. v vjf r v .2$. 'fftsi They bid farewell to Old Xipntn, do Mr. Puff and Ilun; A fcahy blimp's about to leave they catch it on the run. "You're always late," says sPuff to 'Dun, "1 tell you to your fa.ee; : , . . , t It is no wonder that the Tortoise " won that famous raee." KKCITATIOXS By Mary Graham Bonner After the singing was over one of the Years made an announce ment and different Bays and Months recited poems anil prose i pieees. H o m e of the poems they recited Pefrpy and John knew. Of course. it was natural that ! the Months ami f Days would learn F some of these they spent so ! much time in the world. i Then some of 1 the D ays a n a Months recited prose pieces and acted them out. while the band played quietly in the background. The children felt tho Bays and Months were quite human whon onee in awhile some one had to re mind them of tho next line. And now the Year making the announcements said that the unr ein! dances would take place. Such graceful and beautiful dances ns they did Such wild and furious ones, too, John had never seen anything to equal the dance between one of the Days dressed in a wind-blown costume, and another Day dressed in a. winter costume. It was so wild that everyone eN shrieked With excitement, and then a third dancer dressed in a rIV Zitrd costume came a tons, wlifi? later those in Icicle and Sleet dre Joined tho dance. There was a lovely dance per formed by one of the summer Iays and an early fall Jay, liut the jnllicst little dance of nil was between a Day dressed in a coal timp of tightly closed ypriii? blossoms and a Day dressed in a showery, rainy-sunny kind of cos tume. When they danced together the Mttie spritiK hlnnsmilH ail npeiM'ii their eyes quite wide nnd bee-aim' wide-awake. John and Fepsy ruld bardU' bear to leave, hut they knew tin Days and the Month and tif Yea had been ever ko good to idve them such a fine performance and then the Mulct Hluck Clock bad some other plans now. Tmnomm ".piK-H,, Trip" rhmr (.nut Willi iailM k H H A Mi H A 1 p Ch-win flavored with Karlic as a cn- ceiwion to the tayte of tho O- nea; wcrkim clashes is the plan of a local American tundy factory. Sundown