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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1931)
II;'., PAGE FOUR IIedpord Mail Tribune .. ... . pnstiad . HIDroSD FUMTINO GO. .IHf-tl K. far II. as f 1 IOKBT W. SDHL, UIW - - If -' tMMHn 8M1TB. Itoimr 1 If lUpnlH Nwtuwr Man Meood cU suttar it HttiKi, taaajaa, mtm Act af Marcs BbSC!l"T'0!t BATH i mi, iui auodar, rur ir.to , Kails, iHlh SuMv, moot" " Dalit, wlUxnt Siradar, raar 6.90 ' Dally, aitlwut Sunday, BtooUi 0S Rucatar. aaa rr.... loo '": Br Carrier, la Adranea Medfcrd, AabUnd, JacUnvUla, Central faint, PrwoU, Taunt, Uold BUI and on Mlbaais. . , Dallr, with Buodar, month. .T5 ' Stall arithnul ar..utMt. BUintll.. . .OS Dattf. TKhua Bundar, ooa nar f .00 Mir, IUI Bunds?, ooa raaf. a00 V All lama, east In adranea. ; .- . Official papar of Um Cllr o MeoYord. OfkLal papar at Jackuw Courts. nr. THE ASSOCIATED PUSS 1 1 Baaalrlai Full Uaaed Wlra Barrle ' TIM Associated Frata li aiduslnlr artltled la as aa for publication of all ntwl dlipaletna .wadllad la li ar oltarwlia credited In tlm papar, and also.ls; tha local nan published herein; Al ritbta (or putlleaUou of special dlipatebai Barauj ara also fessned. HKHBEB 0? AUDIT BUBEAO t or CIRCULATIONS i AoWlMf BaprcaKnlaitrai I II, C. UOUENSKN COMl'ANT Offices In New. Yor, .Clilcano,. Uilolt, i, boa Antalaa, Seattle, rowans, Ye Smudge Pot (Br Arthur Perrr) ,', The eminent politicians of the statc,' who worq .farmers during ; the i Grange convention ton duys ano,: will bo JournnlliilH tho comlnK . weekend, u tho state editors will ,hold a convention at Sitlom. H An eminent astronomer admits that In his calculations, he was only, off a mere 6o,poo,000,000, JOO.fJOO.OOO miles, Xour corr. could not havo missed tij.e objpetivo moro .completely. Cong. Hawley has announced his Intention of running for congress again. Thcro is a political egotist born every minute to runuglnst him. ' i l,(MIIO '-,.;. (Morrow County News) f:vC( F. Bergstrom, an Eight- mile wheat farmer, wus doing Some trading In the county ' seat Thursday. Ho report plenty of rain which ronlly hasn't come too lata but tho crpps are alt too early. ' . i-BBNTIHT FINDS -TOOTH"- (Mdllne Portland News-Tologram) In accordance with long establish ed oustom It was probably tho wrung one. " ' ; ,(' ''MEROHArW TAKES WOMAN FOR WWUT-IDqI Norto Tripli cate). How unique and novell . The list of questions propounded ;by the state trafflo department, o determine If a motorist Is men tally capablo of navigating a gaso line propolled vohlclo, mivHes no rnentlon of what to do In thn event of the crossing boating tho motor ls. to the locomotivev . The depression ha demonstrat--cd that man can .evolve a long face, and moan like an alto saxo phone, and not profess rollglon. There will be no horse racing In the valley this fall, and look out for an epidemic of suicides. . It's a pretty good world after alt A holo showed up In an elbow. .that might have been too cloao tu . lilppocket. - ' has recoverod of aUima" 7 Now see If you and whittle , f'Chostor Hnort from an attack (Paisley Items.) can be brilliant .wheeso out of thut one. OH, HAVE A HEART! A PORTLAND paHtor 'dcmandH that, on his return, Mayor. Halter be niibbetl by all rilitcous citizens for drinking clitunpamie fa France. . C'oine, come "Brother," ian't that going a bit too fart If the Mayor of Paris should visit Portland, would you insist that, he drink all toasts in his native champagne f If not, then you are woefullyinconsistent. .-. For drinking tejasts in uhampagne in Paris, m just as legal and as much a matter of good form, as NOT drinking them is in the City of Roses. Insisting that Mayor Baker, as an honored guest of France, refuse to follow the approved customs of that country, in the matter of wine, would be precisely ,thc same as insisting that the Miiyor of Paris, as an honored guest of this country, refuse to follow .the approved customs of THIS country in the matter, 6f ice water. .', f. ... , ,,, s., :. f ,t "When in Rome, do as the Romans. do,;" when, in a foreign country, qbsqr.ve the jaws and customs of that country. ; : Mayp'r Bakor, instead of being snubbed fort gracefully con lorniing to the customs of tin country .entertaining him, should; bo comniefidcd for his good manners, good sense and we he- ieve his sobriety. j : &UTH ' NICHOLS' t ' : :, . 1 ,' i ; WJS ADMyEMjss Ruth Jiehols' eounigu.' We sympathizo j with her as sjio lies in a St. Johns liQspital,, painfully injiired,, as a result of oyer-sjiooting tlu landing field, onj tho first leg of her contemplated (transatlantic flight. Her spunky dotcrmhiffition, to hop off on tjlio Lindbergh trail as soon an she fnd her plane arc mended is; all to her credit, and, unden the cireuinstances, perfectly natural to one of her gallant spirit., i Ncvcrth.ch;.'ss iC this second craek-up, should necessitate the indefinite fostponcmcnt of tljo present flight, we believe Miss Nichols will 'eventually . agrtjc that what she regarded as a jragudy, was in reality a 'blqssing in disguiso. . i i , For in. view of her recent experiences we"' can't believe jhat Miss Nichols is sufficiently reswrccful, and, skilled as a pilot, to undertake such a dangerous and, hazardous flight. Her. first attempt to. hop-off from New York ,.qnded in a minor, accident; her first attempt to land ended with more serious results It seems to a man tip a tree, that the lesson of these two disasters is plain. ! . "''"' ONE, criuik-up might have been credited to plain hard luck. But two. in succession, neither involving problems of uin usua.L diffieujty,, Qprtaijily,, justify,, 0w .ossujiiption that Missj Nichols bIiouUI spend further time in training before she at tempts, .to fly alone across tliQ. t'rcacherois. Atlantic. ... . ... .Young, women of Miss Nichols' , spirit and .courage are rare. But in view of these two warnings,' wo feel that if she insists upon risking the Atlantic flight, it will ho moro to the credit of her fearlessness than her good judgmout. , j Vq hope, therefore, that some kind friend will impress upon her tho truth of tho stiituniont that discretion IB almost always the Imttor pni't of valor, ... . ., A TOUGH JOB FOR HOOVER ' ' Franco Is manifesting consider' able diffidence about acceptance of tho' war debt plan, dostgned to restore world prosperity... Tho dlp- luinats and elder slHtosmen do not know what to do about this pln lfonded bullheadedncHs. They will probably hold n "conversation," and propose art "ngondA." ; Thox should turn the mutter over to 8onlto Mussolini of Home, Italy. He stands ,for no nonsense from the Kronob, tuid luu snttltvt, several arguments in the lust 'five, years. the simple process of entniln llig soldiers for tho Kreneh-Uallan border. 'TJJlli soiiiidness of tho war debt moratorium rests directly upon tho truth that in tho modern world, there is no such thing as national isolation, ,', ,. .. ,., Ono half of the world can't bo normally prosperous with tho other, half bankrupt. .Whether we like it or not, the fact remains that economically spoaking, the civilized world is a unit, whatever benefits one nation, benefits to a greater or less Cx'tcnt all ; and what injures one nation, can't fail but injure, directly or indirectly, all of them. '-, UNFORTUNATELY, . however,, what i;true economically; , isn't true politically. That is why this debt moratorium, while economically sound (from the standpoint of recovery from the .world) wide depression! mandatory) i8 politically fraught with serious difficulties and dangers. , 1 President Hoover can, fignrativoly speaking, steer tho ship of his hew international policy, safely through the rocks aiul shonls of nationalism and polities, then certainly' no, fair minded 'person will deny that at this critical timpiu, wor'.i history, ho has displayed the highest qualities of leadership ami statesmanship. , I,t is a tremendous jolt. The chances of success at this writ ing, we would say, arc no better than 60-50. , ,f- MAID, TRIBUNE : . ; - DAILY CROSS-WORD PUZZLE1 x : ; ACROSS , 1. Obtain . ; , 4. Out of data 9. Apropoa It. Southern con stellation 11. Tract ot low ground be tween Dills If. Pertaining to father -or - - mother IT. Ancient Itali an family IS. 11 a iron U. Uiltter . ZL Jumbled typo ZS. Him 2. Atmoapherlo disturbance 87. 'i'op cards 29. Spoken- , 31. Urazlllan money ot i sccount 22. Regal resi dence 14. Calyx leaves SS. Devoured 37, Anglo-Saxon 1 Solution of Yeitcrday'i Puzzle TF1 10. MEDFORT) MAIL THTBTTNE MT3DFORD, fQT?EfiON', TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1931. ' ' . & -, " ' 1 11 1 Jgg gf.. , ' the nuit, popular nostrums havfl arrived via the prescription route. . . M. A. T., Ph. O. Anaivor Vnnr Dlea Is accepted. I agree with you about the sell lnB ot poisons, . But your tenon ronce lies in the notion thin a emit, nf Conner .ulnhate 18 P01' sonous. Of course It is not. It Is simply a good quick emetic In an emergency. I agree witn you that physicians too lazy or too Ignorant to. write their own pre scriptions are the chief agents In the popularization of worthless nostrums. I don't mind calling anybody Ignorant when he is. At that I mav be ignorant myself. and I may drop around some day and park myself behind you., counter and learn something. Thank you. brother. Your . omiuiysis. . rton tell mo what to do when tho urlno discolors the vessel with reddish sediment . . . M. 1 Answer Well, don't turn In a fire, alarm or send for the ambu lance. You might try eating more fresh fruit or fruit Juices or fresh green vegetables or relishes. Skin Slill Homnins imiiT" ' How can you reconcile this ar ticle with your claim that nothing can go thru the unbroken or nor mal skin? :Mrs. o. L. ' , Answer I see no need for a reconciliation. The article tells of some ntiempts to immuii dren against diphtheria by ru"" blng the -toxin-antitoxin on " 'into" the skin instead of Inject ing It' into thes ekln. Acndomic, my dear Watson, and klnda- silly. (Copyright John F. Dll'.e Co.) IPIAISISnTlRTATM A T O PUR I S SLA6I0 PjA RlijcinFi E A HI 1 X E ATkT QIMPhIA Ll-IlriO V E L R EHw AlV elQfs Itfl A T E ' A Mpp.l RTeIC T ORkBA 6 po J A ft OPT "o mIeda n a E N A T iQP O Ll01op I N pIeIneTIb i riodFiRie"c t ' rl ' 1LP AfftstlelR if D I IV ETgS"EnuARS EISIT E R A sflL ArElsflTP E A wlErrlsLtElLlAlTlEljNlEiAlR. 47. Lxiw caale ' ' 1 Hindu ' . , 49. SYcncn author fii. Supreme au- -. - tborltjr. i '. ' 5i Pertalnlna to' ' S. Came to earth 58. Billiard stick Ift Llghtnlngl 67. t)y archaic 6S. Smile arrect- 43. direction " ' edly " ' 44. Guineas: abbr. 60. Superlative ' 46. Clower ending alav - DOWN 1. Opening.-, 2. Root out 2. Ancient Irish capital - 4. bangulahed 5. Insect 8. Old-timer ' 7. Vena S. Syllable of bealtallon 9. Ilelstlng to rvral life and scenes High In tha musical acal. II. Uoll mouad 14. Outlet 16. Uenua 01 king legged In aecis 20. Small Dody of .r land sur rounded of ' water 11. or the Pop. 23. Departs tt. Pious 28. Fogs 2a. Holatlng ma. chin. 80. On the ocean 83. Copper coin 35. Communion Plata 38. Essential oil or orange flowers 41. Egyptian deity 48. Adhere ' 48. Biblical coun try 48. Parasitic In. ' sects 49. gVld over on 60. Unclose: poet 63. Russian vtl. , Inge com . : munltv ": 68. Clear above expenses 65. Tensile strength! - abbr. . ' 12 W3 . rwr MM4S 4bm7f-48m &i wml , i w" ! Mm 41 fL - fL -JL Personal Health ' By William Brady, M. D, signed letters pertalnlns to pennnal health and hygiene, not to dUeane, diagnosis or treatment will be aromered hy Dr. Brsdy If a stamped self addressed emelnne Is eneloned. Utters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing tn DM larga number of letters received only a few can be answered sere. No reply ran be made to Queries not eonormlng to' lnstruetlorj. Address Dr. William Brady In care of llte.AUU Trinune. , ;, . . ,;. . . . . . . . . . .. , l . .lOl llNAI.I.VriO N.MAIITMCSH . Xist night a large man with a squint in hi. eye innio Into this office and Inquired If the rdllur Was In. Wo wore, alone,, und ho wna an exceedingly largo man and there wiua a certain nervous ness about his manner of apoech that we didn't iine. Ho wo said the editor wasn't in, hut we would slip down stairs and oall him. He dropped In a chair, and we wont 4own atalrs. On tho stairs wo met another very largo man, who hud the an me nervousness of aiieech. He wanted to know If the editor was .upstairs.'' Wo told him the fjdltnr was upstairs reading a pnper and was exceedingly croaa. He went Into th office and a Jrw momenta later the most ter rific fight we ever heard about bt'Kun. (Winona CI lobe) ,' 1 Nothing fponis quite ho uhcIoss ns n $3(1,000 mnu when tho uonipBuy iNij't mnkiiiK monoy UEAIj SPKCf.VTJ6TS AND BUiSS ONKS, il Frbm'iiho letters I infer yiat I nnvo" ho 'uso for epbclnllsts. That Is notnol Tho trouble Is that you and 1 have dif ferent COItCCP 1 1 o'n a 'of the mcUning of spec ialism. 1 have little or ho use for your kind of specialist. But let's not get to calling ench other unpleasant names over this. Let's sew If we enn't reach an understanding. 1 find that a-lay-mnn, tho terribly dumb and often quite obstinate In his, notions about matters of health, physiol ogy, hygiene and medicine, now and then can see reason if some body will only tnko tho,- trouble to explain things to him. 1 know I myself haven't enough patience with the layman who comes with that ' air ; of knowing sor much about these things. My Impulse Is nlwnyM to utter some remark and let It go nt that. Hut niter all. enrrasin la wnted on n dumb bell. He just gots- hurt or indlg nnnt, where a mora iuti lUgont vic tim would wince, ier!nvja, ,''' thonihe'd think It -over nml pretty soon he'd come back with a grin something like the stage English man seeing tho point of tho al leged Joko. A real specialist In a physician who has nut In several yearn nt OuUiib, A dy SPont watching n spare tiro bob up. am, town I """"H,: " 'nSirTv in front of you. What thin country nec'ls iji a great deal less talk about what thirl eouutry needs. ? ' . A. group ot duck-ralcing farmers near Hprlngf lold, 0. havo provided stonni-hentcd qunrters for their fowls. , . ... -. , , 4 '. . ., Tho moro tve ouaefve great minds at work on human problems, ho moro wo believe. In iirayer.--.Vlnn-etpolla Wlnr. ' ' f e',VTsjr' r.-j,'.-. i piutlculntly sueccsatul In some speolal tlolil, ho niunogcti to take, say, six months, of n year off and returns to ai-hool for postgradu ate Instruction, lit thut special field and then goes back, ' but not back to the mini's. Ho goe" back homo nuil sends his 'cards to all hist mctllcal colleagues but never to tho public aniiotmc Ins that ho Is limiting his prnc The Oqvernment Is definitely tlco to whatever specialty he out of the. wheat markot, but in-, elects. definite aa to how much It la out. A real specialist does not treat American I.umltormnn. Thourth H , D. Kellety, of Mt. Holly, N. C, ha.a 40 cows, he has grown . moro feedstuff thlB exason than ho can uso. , Quill Points Brisbane's Today (Continued from Page Ons) . Ml 11. r aaOi'ltd. Even the r iooo but no statesman tried to fix it- , You can now get any kind I of shaving cream except one that tastes good when., you think it is tooth paste. Of course you know why a sport model .costs 8285 more. It has 1 13.60 worth ot shiny metal. You can't tell when you are do ing good. The Red Cross quit "hina because the more It saved the more were Dorn 10 The humble are those who think It wicked to be proud of anything except humility. FLIGHT 0' TIME (Medfortt ant Jiufcw-ft County History Front tbe IWea of The BU, Xrivbon ott M and 10 Yean Ao.) 7T..uftnr tiio dumb to sycak Isn't much of a nilrado. Vou juat acfcmit tliem to a movie, Tho first big job Is to distinguish between those , who are above crime and those who are merely above the law. - Then too, there's the possibility that Mr. Coolldge doesn't choose to write because the boys don t choose to pay bo much for it. The relative worth of ancestors and wealth depends, of course, on which one you have. , . only such cases aa nro properly within his limited province. ' He I depends, not on the; direct- patron-1 age of the public, but upon the confidence hi medical colleagues have In his special abilitythey rofor their patients to him for his: special examination or treatment, or opinion or advice. I liraBs BpvcInllstR your kind would starve If they hnd to watt for physicians to refer cases to them, for their own colleagues know too well how Incompetent and untrustworthy these short cut "specialists" are. Brass spec ialists shrewdly appeal to popu lar credulity and to the Ignoramus wiseacres who Imagine that if n doctor calls himself a specialist he must he better than ordinary doctors. Brass specialists. In short, aro tho shame of modern medi cine. Most of them aro born spec. In lists that is they burst upon tho world fresh from medical school, with no experience at all In private rod oral practice. They are the pampered pets of wenlthy relation 3. 1 A real specialist does not poss the patient around to half a dozen Mussolini speaks of the Vatican oTsTfirnment aa an entirely foreign nation, complaining that meetings nt "nnthnlic. action'' on Vatican nll can bo - compared with his Fasclstl holding their official meet ings In the city ot Washington, D. C. i Mr. Mason, an editor, wants the best story about ''How I got my Job," only graduates of 1931 classes to answer. . . ' Getting, a Job Is only moder ately important. KEEPING A JOB, and achieving success where you start, is the big tiling. . When James Simpson was young, he decided to work for Marshall Field, because Field was tho great est merchant in the world. He worked, for.. Marshall Field, and is now head ot Marshall Field & Co., and owns It. , 'John S. Burke, out of Yale, walk ing along Fifth Avenue in New York, liked the looks of the new Altman building, and said to him self, "I think I'd like a Job there." He got it, STUCK TO. IT. Now, since the death of Colonel Fried Barn, lie is head of Altman & Co. -There ore exceptions, but. suc cess usually consists In STICKING. It you can't succeed in one place, ybit probably will not succeed In another. " - . f '. From time to time in this col umn vou hive read about tho Diesel engine, predictions that it will solve the flying machine proD lem, reducing costs, ending fire, and predictions that tha Diesel en gine will make the Isolated farmer Independent of the power company. Did you notice the Diesel engine In the annual 600-mlle automobile race at Indianapolis? one car, not especially, built for racing, hnd a Diesel engine and It was the onlv car that went through the race without stopping, or taking on fuel. . It averaged - nearly ao miles an hour, and the total cost for fuel, most Important of all. was one dol lar and seventy-tl,ve conts for 600 miles. i " The driver could Just as well have carried four passengers, and if he had been going to California, tha trip for each would have amounted to less than two dollars. That is somothing for railroads to think alwut. And why don't they, by the way. build light tialns, or individual cars, driven by Diesel engines, and thus forestall airplane competition other nneciniiaia. Ur mnkr.9 his 1 for. years to coma and make full use nl tneir marvelous rignia ui way? United Slates mayors that wont on a free trip to France return "Indignant at tales cf the COB.1r.ct abroad." . Mayor Key of Atlanta never said "prohibition is abomin able." . Mayor Porter, ot Los Angeles, didn't walk out with his wife at llnvre, because he saw men drink- to j lug wine, to the health of the Presi- or,dent of, the United States. He left own examinntlon, nml If he neens further difla he nsks the family doctor for the Information. a,Thls may not be so Impressive to the wiseacre customer, but It Is more economical and moro effective In getting at the patient's trouble. QI KSTIOXS AMI ANSWUIIS lMcn of Guilty AtvcpttM. You accused a druggist ot being Ignorant becauso he refused sell copper - sulphato to ono your readers. As a roglatorod because he thought the party wus druggist of 25 years I must plend ovor. guilty to tho same kind of lgno mnoe. If a doctor wishes a pa tient to havo poisons for Internal use. let him write them over his slgnnlure. Needless to say 1 road and enjoy your articles dally and feel that If you could personally snenil a few hours bcnind a nusi , drug counter you would view, In a pagan temple for 1.000 drugitlets in a mors charitable ; years. "That s long enough, said .Nothing hag been heard from the mayor who made a speech at the tomb of tho French unknown sold ier. Silence is always observed at that tomb, but erhaps the mnyor thought silence had lasted long enough, like Mark Twain. Ho saw a sacred light that had boen burn Amerlcnnlsm: Laughing at the medicines granny used; thinking soda great stuff if the ad. gives It a big name. '. A male movie actor is different. You can tell whether he is a star without looking at his legs. If you wish to know who really bosses, a life insurance company, observe who provides jobs for his relatives. TEN TEARS AGO TODAY June 23, 19W (It Was Thursday) School board purchases the base ball grounds ' as; an athletic field for high school. - ,' ' - Local merchants stung by blonde lady passing bum checks...' ; ,. Treve Lumsden has accepted a, position with a, Los Angeles b,pn(J. Ing houpe, and wll leave June 28. Henry Mackey, photographer will take, a two months., vacation. , "I have had the flu two. winters in a. row. and I want to get the pneu- monla out of my system, and away from the click and clack of Fords." He will Bpend two weeks in, tua hay fields of Klamath, county. , Bova of city moro exoited over Demnsey-Carpentler championship" fight than their elders. Bulgin evangelistic meetings at Ashlandi close, audi ate not the financial and attendance success of the series held in: Meuford. . ; TWENTY TEAKS AGO- TODAY June 23, 19.11 . . ... (It Was Friday) ' V.,' George. V. amid, pomp and mag nificence is qrowned king q Great Britain. . - , y Mnvnr flnnnii issues proclamation Commanding air citizens to attend Lean vs. Fat ball game. ' ' ' , In some regions a good citizen. seems to be just a darned crook with Influence. , Aa ugoit. is a niun wliusc fountain pen won't work until lie dnrts. it at your best rug. . Man may be superior, but he can't keep track of four bridge hands and three scandals all at once. - , y -j " Correct this sentence: "If I had a touch of rheumntlsm like yours," Services ot a policeman and seven citizens - required ' toi' get Jimmy Hicks, a gloriously drunk transient to jail, after he created a. fuss, in. front, ot" the Meaiora tioiial' bank. ' Franltie Frazier defeated by Billy Brooks for pool ! championship oE city. . .. ,, : -. ,r - - Governor Os West leads posse. that Captures.' Jesse Hall,, escaped Salem convict. - .,- " ,. Bountiful rain, falls, over valley,. cheering orchardists. i- ' - , 91) F-V A' , said the den tint, teeth out !' : "I'd yank all my V I whatever happen ulomr. He trr-nts light- .May I remind you, that 'Twain, and blew It out. STRANGE COMPANIONS By Alice Judson Peale Two boys age six and ten, who happen to be neighbors, have be come Inseparable companies?. Each morning, immediately aftor broakfast, one always calls at th3 door ot the other. They spend tho whole day together to the exclusion of all other companions. Tho 6-year-old apparently Is thrilled by the exciting companion ship of a-chlld so much bigger and abler than himself. What the older child gets out of the relationship is not so clear. - The mothers of both children are concorned since they feel that this type of companionship cannot be wholesome for either child. Before taking any steps to inter fore with such a strange relation ship, it is necessary to discover. If possible, what motivations lie be hind it. Why . especially does the elder child prefer a playmate who can contribute few ideas and who can cfler little stimulation of any sort? Perhaps the only children of his own age available aro especially domineering and aggressive and he Is unnble to hold his own with them. Perhaps he feels physically inferior to his age equals. Porhaps he is of the introverted dreamy type who prefers the com panionship of some one whom ho can draw, without resistance into nis own world of fantasy. Perhaps he is snfl'orlng from emo tional conflicts which arise out of his homo situation so that he unequal to the challenges of moro normal play life. Certainly both children should be oxkrmi as much as possible to numbers ot other children of thel own age so that while neither is forbidden to play with the other, both gradually may be helped to seek and enjoy more wholesome companionship. Our hero and his valet trudge to; Pleasaih View this morn, ; i . And though, they won't confess: It,, they are both a trifle worn. "I'm glad for one thing." Puff re marks: .'.'since we ve not closeu our eyes,.1 ?' K Here's tones' -the' Rooster can -boast that hols, the first to Irisc.'.' r '- .v J ' A . iloped l hot (Uy Mary Graham-'Bonrier) Two nut richer were ivim?'.''ln near a date tree in the deBert-'ilqbn and PefjRy sat down, by ..'tho i.it'-' Black Clock un- der the date tree, too, and the Clock said to the os triches: "Mr. and Mrs. Ostrich, thesa aro my friends, John and Peggy." The ostriches grinned rather foolish looking grins, but John and J'egjjy Imag ined that their own smiles looked They folt ON BARBED FENCE ( PENDLKTON, Ore., Juno 13 Uuth mint, 19, daughter of Mr. and Mm. Karl Hunt of Hep IMier, was gravely. Injured ytr dny when, a horso, sho was riding threw ' lar " Into n barbed wire fence and dragged her. Her left leg " below (he knee wn almost severed liy the wire. The other leg was badly cut. Her condition Iss critical. MUTT AND JEFF4Moe Than One Way To Skin A Cat rViATootJ.e infr Vni i r rvna i v - : A Boy, j. SHowti BABQ vrH how T6 BAT- I ar - LOPSnjeT). THfe ATHLtTICS FAR AHAT" AWt BOSTOM FAR BCWNTj ARe Too I : IS TOO J ' to 6o to boston amX : STRK)6THeM THfe. TSe.O Sox! -- I I ajsasaHHSBMBaaaH aaVT I I lili NiX- we. WANT Nou to 6o to PHlLAXieUPHlA ArJt WAK.N) -me athlhtics: j- By BUD FISHER f - foolish, too. eo strange being Intro duced to on ostrich pair. ' Tell them," continued tne Clock "how It hns beer, .-aid thst you' hide your heads In tho sand. "ou see." he told John and Peggy, "I thought,, of thorn when we were having that talk about 'ducking'." . ' "Yes," began Mr, Cotrlch. "that Is what has been said, but there is no truth ir It. .,.-( i "You mean that you don't hldo your heads In the sand when dan ger Is near?" John asked. "l'v0 always heard thut about you,." "ThatVi the way It Is," said Mrs Ostrich. "It Just showrt how a story can get around without any truth to H. . . . "At least," yhe went on, "ther I Just the beginning of truth ahoSt It. Hut that Is the snd part shoot It." i "Yes." agreed tho I.lttle Black Clock, "that Is often the way will stories. There's just a little bit of truth at the beginning and the " et.i a'.l twisted. But tell n' frWnd about It." ' ! .- ; !' "When we are In danger." ''' Mr. Ostrich, "we Ho down very fln oa the sand so that wft Minnofc J seen. It gives the appearniice. from a distance, as though there were just nnd and desert every where. We do not stand up t show ourselves to the enemy." Tomorrow "Mr. Ostrich Ex plains," . ,