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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1931)
MEDFORD-MAIL-TBIBUNE,-MEDFORD, . OREGON--, TUESDAY, JULY 7,-1931, PAGE EIGHT III fll.' Wedford Mail tribome IB ST 19 ti. Vll 84. noutkT w, hum, fem-- Air Indepmlent Neipptr Bntend m tccond eltti ultar tt Ortsvn, utHkr Art Mir I, J7tV - r -aiiWM HlifluN HATHA By In Adtnre; - . Ifciiy. vllh Sunday, yttt . r . . . , hiilf, vttt) Surnlw, jduiiUi. pill,' wltlm hmdy, worttt,... viiitout humUj, jur fliinilav. bl VMf.. L., ' Mf urner. in aoiirm Mtaura, amuum, jKktonvlllf, rtnlri. futat, Hwcali, Went, uw Uiu via pn Mvimiyi. - jMIIri lth ttuitdar, mriUt ...t iwiy vltiibui khiixlir, mtmih. Dallyi tthuut ButkUj, yw iUJly, Willi Sunday, Dim year,.. All UrM, a In uhuiM. . .75 . e.co sou .T5 .00 TOO 140 MR. FRANK SIMONDS AND WALL STREET OfTtd ptt of tht City of Mtdford. - Official papar of Jackwo County. HBMBKK-Or THB AHHOt'lATKD . ikccifiM full Lead Wire b fet" ! Hit Anoelaled rreu li eieliwli entitled to ttM um for pulilkitkn of tit new dUpitehM credluu W 11 or oiwwim ejeauta in uiu ii, and lo t ti leeil Devi wblkhed twftln. All rltfSiti for pubHeiJtm gf ipceUl difptUba bmla ut im iwnea. ;MKMbCH 0V AUDIT BliHKAU ;.! OF CIRCULATIUNB ' Adm tiling tteprncnlitlrea M. C. IIOUKNBKN COMPANY Ottkm in New Vt.il, CIjIpuo, IXrolt, rrkiMbeo, toe Aifftla, Seattle, 1'orUandv 2 1 P!I0W Ye Smudge Pot . , (By Aftbw Po7) Many young men, unable to pro. feet thoinselveB, are running around In the fashionable nbbrevl ated II -string bathing huIIh to. get a hldo-iutl of vitamin C, and nre becoming colored a, jnundlced brown, llko an oak leaf In mid October. ; : , . .... ' i J If President Hoovor thinks he. .can ram any, of hlfl new-fangled, rroauorltv,'. via. the War 'Debt moratorium, i down . the pocketf booka of. hi, ardent haters, und mailKnera In these parts, he has another think aomlnK They have tukon an oath. tot movo Into th nttlo uf the. poor farm, before thay will aorept It. , Curing of the eco nomic Vis of the world Is particu larly, disgusting to the democratic jmi'ly', which Js now .without a IW campalun Issue, and cltlxens prono to j-un far anything once In times of stress. , FromTiow xn, globe circling avi ators will, land on, the wupt ad isgo.-(Kliiorla, Kan.,, Uusetta.) Let the same go Jor "Maw" Ken nedy, Imco (tomplo Mcl'hcrson, and the 'h.oyden of the films," ye Clara Uow. ' "'HI'KCTAOlllAH PA NTH RE MOVAL, AL,U" Ad Coos Hay Times.) The weather Is Just right for the take-off. Aff lltKKI), l-IOKVKIi 1ADY . ; HnQ fiiandanl) , NOTICK If the bum who " left his hat on my plasu last Sunday: morning. .will, csll at . The Blandurd office ha can obtain, sumo, I also wish to, Inform the said bum that the tobacco Julco which he left behind on the plana .' and house. still remulns and 1 will be willing to pay him If. he, will come and clean It up. Mrs McChusnoy, Clraen street. The next imlltli-ul cataclysm at Bnjem, will be staged at I ho open ing of the ' deer hunting season (unions It rains), TJie oombatunts will bet. the. hunters, keen fur set ting, the country un fire uud ehool Ing each pthor, Incidentally and acqUlentally, fur deer, ami Mie Washington, 1). C, liureuucracy bent on conserving tho forests, llovernor Meier Willi heroic dra matics will champion the cause of the Portland clerks, who have hud thoir hunting plans deranged by the Weather. There Is not a finer stand of weeds, anywhere, thnn along the J'vlllo , lllghwuy. They nre it high, and swuy rhythmically In the faint evening breeses, nnd have grown fmlrr than a Japanese baby, or the tases. Whatever became of the state Inspector of firs hydrant nutsT "Jack Hummel, a resident of Albany for many years, will cele brate )ila tlst binhilay anulvorsary at his homo In Albany tomorrow In a quiet wuy" (Albany Detno-orot-llerald) Hlgns of old age. .... It Is refreshing to realise that with the diplomatic pow-wowlng In Paris the past lo days, no diplomat elected to make a fight "for the hegenomy of Poland." MAUA.INK illtl Olrls described as remarkably beautiful, nirls with ravishing, melting charms Olrls whose lips are ripe and dutiful, . Olrls with Ivory rounded aims; Olrls In filmy clinging rulment. Olrls In bathing suits so sweet; Olrls who love without any pay. Inent. Olrls with microscopic feet: Olrls wJnise lovers are In the navy. Olrls whose parents live at the ttlta; Olrls with hair so bright nnd Wavy. Olrls whose amies give ynu fits; Olrls whom eyee are .lisp and nilsly, Olrls whose husbands bent them up: Olils as a rule by Chandler Christy) Dunging a Pomernnlnn Pup: Olrls whose lot In life Is llnfly, Drinking their misery lo the dregs; Olrls whose fortune. It seems. Is linly A pair of remarkably handsome legs hvery story, about i girl's the beet. ' Tell us a story of something to Ihe girls a rest. I.' - I.., "' (Kxchmna) Slrl every ... ...... . I A'T -A Infill theatre via the talkies Mr. Frank Simonds is civ. iiiif his opinion of the war debt moratorium, which, as this paper announced yesterday, has finally been accepted by France. v . - ' Jfr. Kimonds will never win a beauty prize, nor get far in an Atwater Kent audition. He has nothing above his eyebrows but freckles, and his vocal chords have apparently never recovered from the gas attack he suffered in the Argonne. .- ' But when ho talks about war debts, people who wish to be well informed should listen, for the former editor of the New York Tribune, and world-famous war aorrespondent, when it comes to all phases of international politics, KNOWS HIS OX- IONS. , i-:;' i ' . . I ' ) JiffR-, SIMONDS. eniphaKizes the point that we made when 1T1 prcdidch't Hoover first released his epoch-making an nouncement, namely, that this moratorium is not primarily in tlij interest of Oerrrinny or any other foreign1 power, but in the interest of the United States; that it is not so much a gesture of altruistici statesmanship, as it is a practical demonstration of sound business sense, u , i '.. ,. ; As Mr.- Kimonds remarks,' without this year of grace, Ger many would not only be unable to pay its war debt to tho allied powers, but would in all likelihood icollapso and go Holslievik Such an outcome would inevitably throw all Central Europe into chaos and confusion,' removo fiermany permanently as a purchaser of American products, and eventually bring about an industrial panic in" the United States' that would make 1930 look like the banner year of the late lamented Golden Age. fUPk SIMONDS might have gone farthor and remarked that his view is also the Wall Street, view, , Now: we .can throw all the brickbats we wish at Wall Street this has been a popu lar pastime with certain politicians since Bryan's eross-of-gold oration -but of ond thing this financial center o the world CAN'T be accused, that is of being misled by any Sentimental gesture from tho White IIuiiso or anywhere else." ., r v n Wall Street IS hard boiled. And, incidentally, it has the most efficient fact-finding bureau in the world today: If this moratorium "mean what tho Hoovor-baters are trying to make it mean,' sacrificing money duo the United States.-rTHAT COULD JUST AS WEIJj Bli l'AID THE UNITED STATES, for the benefit of alien bond holders and a few domestic money lenders,. .Wall Street would know it) and instoad of welcoming Biicb ac tion would fight it to the last diteh,U-for,' true) enough, money is what it worships. )' 1 ' ' ' ' OUT Wall street knows tho real. situation in Germany and in Europe, in somo directions it probably knows more about the reality' of tho Bolshevik menace' than even Mr. Simonds knows. Ami it knows that this moratorium will go further to ward removing this menace and stabili.iug Europe, than any other action that could bo taken at this critical timb. i Arid it also knows that with Europe stabilized, tho iworst phase of the present depression, as fur as this' leountryi is con cerned, is over, arid that nothing can thereafter prevent a steady -though probably not a rapid recovery. ' " : So it approves this war debt holiday as Mr. Siliionds ap proves it, and orders full steam ahead because it knows that this aotion justifies full steam ulioad. . When an idealist like Frank Simonds, and n ease-hardenod realist like Wall Street agreo on tho desirability of some inter national policy, the man' in tho street can be pretty sure that it IS dcsirablo. , FARM BOARD STRIKES BACK rrilHRE arc two sides to most questions- and tho farm board question is no exception. 1 1 There has been so much criticism of the farm board that we regard it as only fair to glvo the board's view of what it has done, and what it intends to do, And tho man to do that is Chairman Stono, "whoso statement from the farm board's standpoint is reported as follows: . il'Tba better prices obtained by tha producer through the oper ation of oi'XttuUed co-operative methods are. not taken out of the consumer, nor ought they lo ho. What agriculture Is trying to do, and what we are trying to help It to do, is to take ndvuntuge of production motliods which have ulro.uly been applied to In dustry. "lly thnt I do not mean such a thing ns corporation farming, hut I do mean greater efriclency on the farm, the more accurate adjustment of production to demand and the elimination of waste and lost motion In transferring tho commodity from grower to consumer. It Ib by such methods thnt Industry has been able to win greater returns for Itself and at tho same tlmo lower the coBt to the consumer. ..-.. , ... "Might now there are too many processes and too many Indi viduals but ween producer and cousiimor. A man who performs a sorvk-e for the producer or the consumer has a place In tho syR tom and no one Is going to drive him out of It. Hut the num who performs no service und Is thoro meroly for his own gain Is a leoch, and wo aro going to Ret rid of him." i As an Illustration of how co-operative marketing can bniiont tho producer und still not tnko U out of the consumer. Mr. Stono talked of Texas turkeys, tolling how growers who had dealt with a co-operative set up under tho board's guidance had received 20 to 11 cents a pound for turkeys last Thanksgiving s market, while those who sold to Independent packers got only IS cents. " Nor (Hit the turkeys cost a cent more to the consumer." he declared. .... "They retailed at the genernl market price, and you can bo sure they would have been sold at Ihe same price had the packers got them for the 10 cents a pound they first offered." i uS ih,"" Principally some of the grain traders, who don t Ilka the rnnn hoard and the methods It Is urging upon ag mutual"' tlmcnls, Mr. Stone esplalned forcefully, nro Th owKwItUi ot th. trad, he believed. Is not based on ..; : MAIL, TRIBUNE ... DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE i ACROSS L Adlpoio tissue I. Arrow ft. Brandon flibKUW IX. Iist Jcwiih - niontti II Uainh'n paeu- ' Jonym 14, !! aheep li. Cipher 1. Ultllcul . , II U'lthtlrv 20. Flrftl KMrflcn J I. lbn I'lmr 21 Ascended lb. Unllfd 1 Ui y. Hf win ti. Depart SL Throwp off 33. I,nru roptj 34. CIoiii or in ' Vmi $5 Souk up 38 Sunliurn 37. t'lustem 31 KuMr iree ' 40s Aiiclehl Irish caul I til 41 Must ma lure 4S. Hmunttl loo highly Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle' "PAllAnP!AlRlETgfpXTR OVE "RyQTO'MjAyA C.R E S E V EjRiAXHE vn imTc" is r r i t J dihtffoi r eTso e n e C3siEnJlRin RDT2JBklA pfellRh nIsie s tMfTM rTOJMiA TIEjSillj' N JO'fcJo Oji S UR.Ell5L!E P c aJeTn e tfvSSE0t3 AlrTA ElPjA VTEnRRTviEIKI R E TjRjAJC E BE R jMTl T E AtfelEllE RfflSStiE S W E TIE. PIS 13 P I E I N SjE 1JsHA lb 47. Molhn ot ; 60. Clear ialp, ; fii; Haman ,rod 52. Wlffsllite ' 63. Be for 54. (J.tid;n ploii Anclnt Phoe nician city OOWN .... 1, Turkish cap 2. Liquor S. Having am all towers 4. Wild plum L Wlshta C. King of the . Visigoths ; T. Cremonl ' I. Japanese , porgy 9. Harren 10. Dernoiiih It. So be It 17 Itesume ' 19. Tea tenter' 21. Toward the snelteted side 22. I'uMlcly dli- plaed notice 21 Tase Zt Shrewdly ti Fit-sh of calves ' 20' Eagle 32 Article of food 33. Funnel-shaped - receptacle , open at the bottom i 35. Pleased . SSj Spout oratory ' 40. Color Quality 41. Assert 42. Nerve network 44. Iong narrow board 4rJ. Chest bone 45. Thick black - liquid 49. Native metal ' i ir 3 u ms-.ib t s Hf k k fM, wm.'' . IT - m0& m,W -W-r -- ppTa4 - - t 24 T U 7V7- - i U'ltic Mia, IT ,. f3T , m7 28 2ft SO V '' 1 I -1 I - I II. l any iieBtlon of right and wrong, but principally of self-interest, And as to what he charged were unfuir attempts to discredit the board, he had this to say and he was emphatic in saying it: . ' "I've always refused to do business with a man who tried to trade on someone's demerltB. I've never bought from a man who tried to soil mo something by knocking the other follow. If the grain trndors won't pluy on a fair basis, If they want a fight they certainly enn have a fight. Hecnuse we're going to fight for the farmer. That'B what we'ro here for. "In the business of furnishing the worlil's food) it haB always been the farmer who worked the longest hours, made the, major investment and took, all the .risks of weather and competitive production. Then ho wus forced to creep up, hat In hand, and mumble: 'What will you give me?' .."That's thd condition we're helping to remedy, and tt makes me smile to sea the very men who have been answering the farm er's question of 'Whnt will you give?' by giving him the least, pos sible price now try to pose as the friend nnd benefactor of the poor bid fellow up the hollow. "The organization, or agriculture means the elimination ot some middlemen, and naturally they do not llko tho process. Those, wlio, are- farslghtcd. howover, will swing Into lino with the now conditions. Thoy will Join the cooperative movement. Instead of fighting it, for the movement needs Intelligent, honest men, experienced In marketing," ' We give Mr. Stone's "defense" for what it is worth, believ ing tlie more informutiou the people, have on both sides of ftnv question of national welfare, the better for till concernedl Rundown v- Stories GOLDEN EAGLES , By Mary Graham Bonner , ,. i John and Peggy saw an enorm ous neat, built with largo sticks as the post of the bnld eaglos had been, but beauti fully lined with smull evergreen branches. Inside they saw some lovely creamy eggs with splashes of brown nnd dark gray. Tha T, 1 t t I o Mack Clock had turned the time back, but now ho was turning it forward and thoy saw somo of the most beautiful birds they had ever seen. "You've met the bnld eagles once or twice," begun tho Little Black Clock, "and those are the golden eaglna, their cousins." "They nro marvelous looking!" John extHtlmed as he saw them flying nbout and standing on a brunch. "What beautiful feathers!" Peg gy said. . Thoy were a dark, rich brown, and around their necks the feath ers were deep gold. The fentlnus on . their legs were of a runsset shade of brown and their tails wero sprinkled with white feathers. I They wero a little larger than I thoir bnld engle cousins, and, nl i though the younger ones. did not ! have the rich, dark feathers of thoir elders, the Clock said they would when olden i "We won't bother them.1' snld the Utile. Ulnck Clock, "ns thoy are Very shy. , "Thoy Ilvo further nway ' from poople than tho bnld eagles do, They will never hurt pcoplo as long ns they nro loft alone. "Of. course, if we disturbed thorn at their nionls thoy would nut like It. nnd If they were wounded thoy would show their nnger, which is only natural, but they only ask to bo left to themselves. And I think they nre fair and right in what they want." Tomorrow "Eagles and Freedom' FOR OREGON TILT SAN FK ANl'ISlit)-rtj!-l,v .char ity football game in llonolulii i)p. cember !) wlll-mnrk' the first nn penruuee of a San Krnnclsco uni versity, formerly St. 1 g n n t I u v. eleven will meet .the "Hoarlng Itnlnhmvs" of the University of Hawaii In the annual Shrlners' event that day. Coach Otto Klum of the Island varsity wants games with Oregon and (regnn Ktnte next full If pos sible and already has- made ar rangements to meet Drake's eleven In the mld-rnclfle next season. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. ! Slsnol totfn pertasilm to-prnwal hialth and hnlene. Bit to dteut, dlwxaH or trtttmtnt will be iimrerMl bi lir. Brady If a ilaroped Klt-uldrmed emelopt Is enclosed. Letters ilimild be b;.M aisl .rltten lo Ink. 0lm to the line number of letters reeelred rails fe can I), lowered here. Nn reels can be made to nuerles rot conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. WUUam Brady In car ot The Mall Tribune. . 'itOW THE BRASS SPECIALIST WORKS Almost every wiseacre invalid or valetudinarian these days has two affectations which eventually be come affectations hard to cure. The first is possession and use of an au tomobile much more expensive than he can hon estly afford, but which will be hl after nine more payments. The .second is an ad diction to brass specialists. Just what is a bratis specialists you may ak. Oh, dear,,Jiust 1 explain that all over. t Well'l listen: : A brass specialist Ih almost any physician or healer who Is far enough away or sufficiently stand-offish and pretentious to. tuka! from 50 to 3 00 berrleo out of the snob where an hbnest family phy- I siciun would render the imme or better service for ten. The surtax Is a fair price for the affectation. I There are a few real specialists in practice, very few indeed, -compared with the epidemic of brans ones that scourges the country. A real specialist, is a doctor who has served, his apprenticeship in the ranks, in general practice; a family physician,, far at least five br ten years, and then, having laid' a solid foundation and found out what his own Aptitudes aro or what branch of work ho, seems best 'suited for, returnft to school and 'pursues spec ial study and (research in that di rection,, and finally returns to pri vate .practice and announces to his medical colleaKUed only (not to the public) thnt his . practicd is now limited to whatever specialty ho ho chosen. His work "comes mainly- from his colleagues who recog nize his honest attainments or abil ity In his chorsen field and refer patients to him or call him in con sultation whenever they feel his counsel may be advantageous for the patient His opinion, advice or treatment Is carried out or con sidered by the patient's physician, the family physician; It Is hot given to the patient directly, unless the family doctor requer-'ts It. rhe bras specialist not only does not enter to his medical colleague! he catches whutover custom he gets by very sharp competition against the general practitioners of tho community. He avails himself of tho cheap advnntnge of popular credulity by posing as a erpeclalist in the eyes of the public, and the publio assume that In-order to pede-ns n "specialist" a doctor must be bettor than the average. - In a following talk I shall cite an Instance from actual practice to Illustrate what t mean.. No names, of cour.se, but a typical case report ainanwhllo, I wio.h every reader would ask hlmoeir this question: "How does Brady dare make such talk In the press If he Is not abso lutely right In what ho says?" And also this question: "Why tho sil ence of the beneficiaries of the evils attacked, if there la any answer the briwH specialists in tho regular medical organization dare make to Brndy'ij charges?" . . 4 One doctor said -lack -of acid . I want to go at this Intelli gently . . . find out what is wrong with my way of living, my diet . Mrs. P. A. G. Answer. Xonsenw, ; madam. Co'nsult a tihysiclan and leave, it to him to find out what ails you Your notion of going at it Intelli gently Is silly. i v litehtnliiff. AVhat Is.'best to do if one is! In bathing when a lightning storm comes. I notice some stay in the water, but others seelc-shclter. . . BK. . . ,'' , Answer. - X don't think it mat ters which you do, so far as the risk of being struck is concerned Children too Precocious. am 15, sophomore In high school. I think fully eight out of ten of the boys In my'clai smoke . . .. S. J. C ... ... Answer. Well. It they do, eight out of ten of 'em need tt good hid ing. . , . ' (Copyright John F. Dille Co.) . , Quill Ppiriis Perhaps the people . are using less patent medicine now because they depend on tooth pastes. The chief fault of the sound amplifier Is that it usually chooses sounds to amplify without consult, lng tho listener ' . '' Still, 850 new1 dry agents should make tho speakeasy business boom for" a' while.-' " t MUTT AND JEFF-A Dillar ... a Dollar ... A Ten o' Clock Schol QITKHTIONS AND AXSWKIIS Only a Sweet Memory. I p-yntpathize with your lament about fried mush. I can tell you why it doesn't tasto like tho kind mother lined to make. It Is simply because .the name corn meal is ; misnomer as applied to the mod ern packaged article. I used to grind, my own meal down in In diana.' 1 ground -the corn and bolt ed It through one-sixteenth wire. Tho first meal that goes through mo one-sixteenth wire screen Ih the old-fashioned corn meal thnt made the mush you hanker after. Kund Memories. Answer. Thank you. Gash, it Is nino hours since breakfast, too. Please send me tidings when you find the little backwoods country mill that makes the old-fnrdiltinetl corn meal. One more platter of real fried mush and I can die happy. Proof or Sclf-Kviih'iit Fiietl A large number of readers have recently contributed reports of- tnelr .own experiences or observ ations which eutisfy them that !no illness comes from mere exposure to cold or wot. I am glad to know that the light is permeating the shadows, but ble you. friends, your experiences are not news. , It might be now, at least an inter esting coincidence. If anybody should develop some lllnce within a reasonable time after such ex posure. OT Doc Itrady. ' : tiding nt It Intelligently.- ' Kor the last two winters I have suffered constantly from nausea no other vomplnlnt, Just nausea. A dog takes the place of a child in some ways, but you enh't blame Its - habits on one another's an cestors. . What tho piillmnn company needs, Is nn - nil showing a liuiidtioino youth losing out becmiMu; he tlotisit't nso tipper berth. A hick town Is :tt place vwhere admission to a speViketisy depends on looking tough enough instead of swell "enough. Anyway, it's nice to have some thing wromr with the world that can't bo blamed on the ladles. Americanism:1 Piously pretend ing to be better than-wo nre, nnd thus teaching - children thnt .'vir tu consists in not being found out. - i ' Hut 'why not permit the dumb to drive' They would figure in the accidents, even If they were walking. Changing jtho . iiumhem on a Ktolejis.cair.' doesn't.' dinguise It lunch. o two iVndcrsrnre tlentixL alike. The first news; pictures from Ford's place show that the way to mako a farm pay is to hire ?f men to sod tho lawn. The depression isn't surprising. This country heard enough prohi bition talk to depress" anything or anybody. " ? How strnnge that prominent men are the only ones dumb enough to shoot themselves while cleaning a gun. Tho chief end of mnn may : b in doubt,, but the chief end bf woman is her ankles. Correct this sentence: 'I would not bawl you out, son," snld the father, "if I had done such things In my own youths' MISSION CAST0FF RISES TO SHAME OLD MATES SAN FRANCISCO (P) Tho Mission club here of the Pacific Coant leumie hns reason to.l-q.sret lettltlK "Willie" Lmlolph slip out of Its hands several yeni-R nso I.trlolph, now worklnit for Oak land, recently turned In n no-hlt. ii. .-run performance, against his old mates. 1 Mall Tribune, ads nro read by 20.000 people every day. tf HCff, MUTT, x' UK6 Toj H THAT DOCtAft V0O -RiMSQfuieTi I OP e Afc! ar By BUD FISHER I . A I SA"Y. VftU'B& ArTnli; live -- II T HAV ! li I iv ' ,r, i ; lm 7 mm IS 4USTAS SAF6. As . , ' . t -M ."w wwirw w iu T-r-w vni : rrr . - x- arriLiiw. . . . J . . . I ' j E w. . 11' . ,", . . J ' ' .'7rff"'t",' "',"- -hmsiiw "COMTlMtJITj - oj'S''fc' (Medtord and Jack. History Front tl? Tlie HaU Tribune J sn vm. a . 01 j TEN YEAHs AGO J i .- (It Was TlmsJ.. Ex-convlct killed af,l H.iuuu,i'au nuoq Kiver k refused to surrender tt, uve uagnon of the Coast Line and the boJ eintr-Tuiiroau engnge ment oer the kind nr be used in the Main . ing ana ns a result service to Sacred Hear Is impaired, . The mercury soars to i ana nayers rejoice. P Arizona citizen visited cd band at nlKht, oner, a machine gun and -uurtes or me I'rov seriously. ..Trout flshlUR in rtt, tourists from Maine. ' Two members' of th. Order leairuc testify grand Juiy .investigator. sticrtrr s office. ' Theda Bara, "siren screen" secretly wed. TWENTY VEAUS AGO July 7, 1911, . (It Was Friday Celebrators returnlnj a fire that destroyed of .wood belonging to Oore. They .threw fjr. Into woodpile. . Council 'will ' instmr.. t of "the Adklns block nt i Centrnl. . Reddy's jowelry store at night;' hnd iiollcenion bui-Blnr with the booty. Hill nfriclnls nrnmlu P. A E. over ' the hins ana trom nero to the k . Weeks and MeGowan J prize for. store front df. on the Fourth. i "Captious1, carping splr. by .'Grants Pass newsp: sented" rends a headl: article made fun of 1: celebration,, and charged was charged for' a glass oj -- r- 9vj rn "What can yon am" ourM f. M lHm unit her nnd tiin I 1 a trapeze net,? tlie i says, "uiKiii a limb." 'Anil I," tliu ,;crinnn SN vowh, "a,iH master 1 rlnjr.V I brir yom4 pnrilnn." 1'nft "but that's my Job. old para ff)R--.I rONVESTHof .- By. Alice Jiiilson I'tMll .At. the. ago ot seven, Teil with, .his brother and slsifl haled lieforo his . m"th stood griinly hpUllliB a stmtl hand. - . , , ... ... Tho young apple tree wb been set out only.a. few tft fore had been found that 1 1 cut and hacked nt the base ;-Phe was convinced that - thein was the culprit and t termined to win n confessio i Kach child was questinc! each In turn proclaimed lnr.1 Uelng a mother of the ol! sho refused to admit deft the eulprlt would not conlH would whip each child u'l mission was forthcoming. It was Ted's turn first. his teeth but tho pain ; than he could bear and. a qulto Innocent, he said H done It, even explaining If I how he had used his no ! to accomplish the damaee. The resentment und hur l of that Incident, has la'' yeura. ..From that time 'l has hntod and feared his 'I Itut bitterest of nil has I self -contempt for his cow.ir ' Few parents today resort' brutal measures, hut mnny.f! lleve that It is right to force fesslon. They do not realise th we wring confession from ' I we subject our relntlonsbi: I him to Krave hazards. The moment wo nttemptt' confession by any mean" 1 ever, we nre temtiting hi"1 1 "nd to halo both the n' and himself for doing s" No nmtter what a chi ' have done. It Is less lmp"r'.' he be found out and puni' that he keep his self-r1: his fnith In the love nnd j. his parents. . .. Cash la klnit In tilt '.t N'ehawka. .Kvb. All th stores have banned creii