PAGE ETGK MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON', FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1931. Medford Mail Tribune "Enryont In 8(hrn Ortgon rtidi Um Hill Trlluna" Dtlljr um) Bundtr Published tar MCPFORU I'UINTINO CO. JB-1T-28 N. Fir I BO BERT W, RUHL, Editor E. L. KNAPP. Muucer An Indpfndent Nmtvtpw . Enured ti ueonA rluf natttr it Medford, Oregon, under Act of Ureh S, 1919. SUBSCRIPTION BATES By Mill In AdTuwe: Daily, with Blindly, reif , Duly, Kh Sundtr. month , Dally, without Sunday, month..., Daily, without Sunday, rear...., RiifulaT. aim vear. .T. 50 . .15 0 2.00 It rirrlrr. In Adtinet Mntford. Alhland, Jaeksomlllr, Central Point, Phoenlt, Talent, Gold BUI and on IKshwin. Dally, ith Bundiy, month .T5 Dally, without Sunday, month 85 IMilT, without Sunday, one year T OO Dktly, with Sunday, on rear 8.00 All term, eaih ta adrane. Official paper of the City of Medford. Official paper of Jkion County. MEMHIR OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rteelilm Pull Leased Wire Berrlet The Atiociated Preii la eicluiliely entitled to the tat for nublleallon of all newt dhoitehu credited to H or otherwlM credited In thli paper. and alio to tiw local newt pumiinaa nerein. All rishti fur publication of specltl dlipitehM nerein are alto referred. MEMBER OF UNITED PREflfl MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Adrertklnx Repretentethef M. C. MOOEN8EN COMPANY Office In New Xork, Chicago, Detroit, Ban Francltco, Lot Angtlei, Seattle, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Fwry. COMES THE REVOLUTION! The following rule, and regulation, have been adopted for the preliml . nary arrangement for the Revolu tlon, echeduled to make lta appear ; ance next winter: The recruiting' atatlon will be open Monday, Thureday, and Saturday. ! Th three (8) ' Revolutionist to ! repreeent the "Spirit of 1981," shall ' be elected by a popular vote of the ; people.. The. snare drummer ahall .be 1 aelectd from the agricultural ranke, and the two piccolo playera from the body polltlo of the county. . There ahall be no epeechea, and no i led loot, the latter being the main ' horror of any kind of an armed con- ; ciot. The tint anow. If any, on the floor of the valley, shell . be used for a reincarnation of -Valley Itorge. ' No one ahall be allowed to partici pate in the.Kovolution, unleea he la till mad because Main atreet was paved In 1911. It ahall be Sxtra Fanoy treason for any revolutionist to go fishing before, after, or during a battle. Further more, no supporter of the revolution ary cause can skin out for California before the first, fog. , The Revolutionary, flag shall con sist of an unlroned white shirt-tall, as a field upon which glares a tax reoelpt torn In two right down the middle. ' Oltteens opposing the Revolution, when oaught, shall be forced to do the spring plowing for the Revolu tionists. No combatant should get his little nnger cut on West Main atreet, aa the blood will flow and clog up the storm sewer and flood all Intersecting treete. ('The Revolutionary hero, with a bandage over his eye, should be pub . llclr hit In the eye, to ahow the deep alnoertty of the revolution.) Merohante holding Pra-Revolutlon-try Bales, will bt exempt from fight ing until the aale la concluded. On the first and last day of every Revolutionary battle, the bank and . barbershops can close, so the em ployees can see a battle. They must go to the battle, not to a picnic above Rogue Xlk. The cause of the Revolution has nqt been definitely decided upon, but It looks like the last smsIou of the legislature would win the honor. No life-long Democrat shall be allowed to take part In the Revolu tion, aa he would be thinking more of winning the poetmaaterahlp than .the victory.- Any Revolutionist who thinks he Is getting the worst of the deal, can . write a peraonal letter to Oovernor . Meier, complaining about It. There shall be no counter-revolu-, tlon for the purpose of forcing the agitators, who started the revolution, to become active combatants. Ivan Blatskl von, Bunskl has been named field Marshal, In charge. He la botti an orator and a writer, fob. ' To erase all capitalistic taint, the municipal corporations of Jackson county shall have their monickers changed, aa follows: Medford ....Xoarousloukpoua. ,' Ashland .J Lithuania i Trail -.....Roadskl Jacksonville ...Jackograd Ruch .....Bkavaolllnborsraumhaus The first step In seceding from the Union, shall be the seizure of the captured Qerman cannon In the city park, now ominously aimed at the Unlv Clubskl. All able-bodied altlcens are direct ed to start girding their loins for the rumpus. Rights for conducting the first dance during the Chaos, will be aold to the highest bidder. If a Portland politician, by virtue of a political mishap, rises to high position and comes to this sector of the Revolutionary front to deliver a harangue, the Wlvee and Daughters of the Revolution ahaU subsidise him with fried chicken, until the vest buttons start flying. Nothing can atop the forthcom ing Revolution but a good aod-sosk-Ing rain, the latter part of Septem ber. A good old-fashioned downpour, o'er hill and dale, will wash away the despondency and combatlveneas In the souls of the general public The leaders of the Revolution, naturally more cantankerous thsn the -rank and file, need three good drinks of whiskey, along with the rain, to r tore their depositions. ; Vale Corliss s Miller, contractors, completed work on mrldite over Ora ham boulevard and also bridge over Cramer gulch on Hsrper-Westfall market road, Good for the Grangel WE ARE glad to see that tin Eagle Point Grange favors re tention of the county health work, and has passed a reso lution to that effect. The resolution holds that the action of the Bellview Grange, in opposing this important work, was ill-advised and, in its opinion, taken without due consideration. We believe future developments will establish the truth of this contention. CONDITIONS demand economy and retrenchment. But econ- omy and retrenchment in county health unit, is ONE thing; abolishing the unit entirely is quite ANOTHER. What applies to county health applies tq other departments of publio business, which are vital to the public welfare. Con ditions are not good, but they entire departments must be thrown on the scrap heap, under the guise of economy. The machinery of public private business, should be kept greater care and greater efficiency, but only as a last resort should it be scrapped. TZ FEEL confident that when all the facts are known, the V other granges of the valley will follow the leadership of Eagle Point, rather than Bellview. There is nothing more im portant to the people of Jackson County than health, and health in the rural communities is and always has been the chief concern of the county health unit. Jackson County took an active interest in county health work many years ago and, thanks to the generous support it has received from the people of Southern Oregon, it has attained an enviable position of leadership throughout the state. The good work should go on. granges of the county it "WILL go on. ' Roosevelt and Tammany Hall GOVERNOR ROOSEVELT'S break with Tammany Hall, over the graft investigation, has caused a great deal of politi cal oomment in the eastern press. Opinion appears to be pretty evenly divided between those who think this break will enhance Roosevelt's chances for the Democratic nomination and those who think it will not. ..... . We agree with the "pros' in this debate. True, Governor Roosevelt cannot secure the nomination without the support of the New York delegation, and heretofore Tammany has con trolled that delegation, . ..... But unless we are much mistaken a great change has come over New York state, the past few years. The graft revela tions, combined with the - recent racketeer outrages, have aroused publio opinion in that state to fever heat. Rightly or wrongly, Tammany Hall is blamed for such conditions. f ROOSEVELT'S break with Tammany therefore, which would have been fatal in a normal year, we don't believe will bo fatal this year. He may lose the go6d will of the 'New York city delegates, but he will certainly win the good will of all the delegates upstate, Even more important, he will win the com mendation of decent people everywhere. Tammany Hall is ruthlesa and powerful. But Tammany Hall is no fool. No political organization realizes more clearly what the people oan do when they become aroused. ' , - Today Tammany Hall realizes the people of New York city and New York state are aroused. Therefore, while Tammany velt at the convention, we don't believe it WILL. FOR Tammany really doesnt' give a hoot who occupies thu White House. All it cares about is the patronage of New York city and New York state. ' And while it could defeat Roosevelt, it undoubtedly realizes that such action would be so unpopular among the rank and file, that at the subsequent state and city elections, the Tiger would be beaten within an inch of its life. And Tammany doesn't want to be beaten. Therefore, instead of believing this break with Tammany is going to injure Roosevelt politically, we believe it is going to help him. Unless all signs fail Tammany will go through the motions of opposition, but eventually it will give its support to Roosevelt at the convention, in exchange for continued control in Greater New York. It may not gain such control. But with the publio temper in New, York state what it is, working with rather than against Roosevelt, represents, in our judgment, its only CHANCE. Sundown stories RABBIT CONTINUES TALKING By Mary Graham Bonner The children went right back to se the rabbit who had been talking to them the evening before. They - knew how to get to the place by themselves, and aa soon they ar rived bringing with them an other carrot the rabbit continued talking. "A friend of the Little Blsck Clock," said the rabbit, "wrote a letter to htm. This friend was a little girl, and she wrote about the cruelties of traps and aaked the Little Black Clock If he wouldn't do something about It. "So he told me to tell both of you, how we feel about them and to tell you. to vn your, friends "You'll do that for us, won't you?" the rabbit aakerK and her ears moved with excitement and hope. "W certainly will." Mid John'. " "We love rabbits oh, I adore them!" Peggy added. That waa certainly good news to the rabbit, and now she led them back to the brier patch, when the isT'WA 2 administering the affairs of the haven't reached a point where business, like the machinery of intact. It should be run with And with the support of the undoubtedly CAN defeat Roose little rabbits were waiting tor their mother. And then they showed her how they followed the white of her tiny tali when they wanted to go wtth her on marketing trips, It waa quite dark now, and they ooutd see the white of Mother Rab bit's tail even In the darkness. Then they gathered some more clo ver and left It In the rabbits' nest, and Mother Rabbit was just as happy as she could be, and so were the little rabbits. Never, Peggy told the Clock after ward, had alia been thanked In such a lovely way. Their noeea, she said, wiggled with delight such aa ahe had never seen. "And they know, too, that you will always be their friends." the Clock had added. Tomorrow "New Puddles" . Wine and Chickens lildnt Count BUFFALO, N. Y. (UP) Dr. Jamas Carr waa entitled to 900 chicken din ners, with wine. If he was successful in operating on Menor Demouploe, a cook, but was to forfeit tiooo if he failed, Demouploe clslmed In city court here. Dr. Oarr, who was suing the cook for medical fees, laughed at the etory and aald the bargain had to do with cash only. "Hey, Soldier: (let Your Beans" OKLAHOMA CITY (UP) Just how much Uncle Sera's doughboys depend upon beans for their vitality Is re vealed In the shopping list for the annua National Guard encampment at Fort S1U during. August. Included In the list of purchases are 9400 cans of pork and beans. 1000 pounds ot lima beans and 8000 pounds ot nary beans. ... Portland Libby! McNeil A Llbby employed about laoo workers to han dle about 8000 tons of peara from Yakima, Hood River and Wenatchee districts during next two month. Personal Health Service By William - Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease, diagnosis or trreatmrnt will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self addressed envelope Is enclosed Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady In oare the Mall Tribune. STOP! HAVE YOU FORGOTTEN YOUR EMERGENCY KIT? These feverish days when every body is loading tip the flivver for a grand outing remind me of my honeymoon with my first wife, the one I'm living with stll!. By the way. that's the secret of living with 'em long. We were heading eadly homeward with ttie roar of the falU In our three ears (one of mme sac rificed in stealing bird's eggs) and It waa a sizzling August day. I had wilted my last collar and rather than bravs the train In such a state I ran Into a little shop and hurriedly purchased six new collars which I estimated would last through the afternoon anyway. When I came to put one on, aboard the train, I dis covered that the obliging salesman had used his better Judgment and furnished me with size 14 Instead of IS and upwards, but the collar had to go on, for we were riding in the day coach, of course, and you can't get away with any parlor car atuff there. Well, Just as the train was about to depart, in rushed dear Aunt Banny, bless her loving soul, with no, not two birdcages, but something Just a shade more difficult ,for a blushing, choking bridegroom to man age with complete sang frold, item, a dainty little boudoir chair and item an odd or maybe they call It occasional table with a lot of curly cues and crinkles In bras, onyx or pewter and I estimate 11 sprawling legs, and altogether I believe that was one of the warmest afternoons of my life, not counting the sudden discovery that our cash had dwindled to a dollar eighty. . Don't let me detain you If you're all packed up and ready to go, but you know as well as I do that one should always be prepared for emerg encies. I often think that had I used my wife's dollar eighty to buy one chair In the parlor car, we might have taken turns In there, and maybe we could have left Aunt Banny out on the platform holding her Jlmcracks and looking In vain for the happy young couple. Pray do not be disturbed about this. If you have forgotten to pack your mergency kit, Just drop a little line to me and tell me what's biting you or what you think may bite you on this trip you're taking. Inclose a stamped envelope bearing. your ad dress and I'll rush to your aid with complete directions for equipping and using a pocket emergency kit. Even if you are older and wiser and there fore not tearing off somewhere for an alleged jlest or recuperation, you really should carry some such kit :n your car at all times, or if you have the good sense to enjoy your vacation In the bestiof all resorts, home, you should fit Out some such kit to use for the minor emergencies which hap pen to home folks. There are two recommendations I now offer which are not included In the Pocket First Aid Kit. One Is the use of common tincture of lodln (the same liquid you apply as disinfect ant for small cuts, scratches and bruises) for disinfecting questionable water for drinking. Put one drop (.parents CARING FOR CLOTHES, By Alloc Judson Peale, You would think that clothes grew on trees, the way Norma treats them What she doesn't succeed Id ruining she loses long before the season la over. Last year I had to buy three winter hats and no less than five pairs of gloves. ' She even lost a skirt and shoes In the gym lockers. "She's completely Irresponsible. I have talked and talked and talked, but nothing I can say seems to make the faintest impression." Norma's mother spoke with exas peration, and she wanted advice. How does one teaoh a careless ado lescent to take decent care of the clothes that cost good money? Here are a few suggestions. Be sure that she has a closet of her own. properly fitted with con venient hooks, rods, hangers, hat trees, and racks for holding shoes in orderly rows. Olve her plenty of room for the rest of her clothing In the drawer space assigned to her. Cultivate her pride in her ciotnea by letting her choose 1-hera herself. She will enjoy planning her outfit for the coming season. If on the shopping trip her tastes are consulted while mother sees to It that the selections are practical. she will take a new pleasure in her clothes and be more likely to take proper care of them. Decide, In family council if pos sible. Just how much the family budget can stand In clothes for each member. Wtth the knowledge of Just how much she has to spend, and the real I rat ion that It has been fairly allotted, a girl can be counted on to cooperate In getting the most for her money. Let her keep an account book for her clothing expenditures so that ahe may know Just where she stands. Mother need say very little: the account book will speak for itself. . ' 4 Mussolini recently was thrown by a horse. The law of compensation would have been served better u he had been thrown by a bull. Thomaston (Oa.) Tlmss. Before laughing too much at the United States navy for Us lack of men trained to sail "Old Ironsides," landlubbers should ask themselves whether they stilt know how to harness a horse. Christian Selene Monitor 4m Brady, M. D. (no harm If two drops) In one quart of the water, shake it up and let stand 20 minutes; then the water will be safe to drink. The other Is the us of Antlvenln for venomous snakebite. Antlvenln Is prepared by the Mulford biological department, at Olenolden, Pa., and any druggist can supply It. It comes In a special syringe package', with full directions so that any Intelligent person may administer it. It keeps well, and If you except to play around In snake country you should Include Antl venln In your pocket emergency out fit. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS A Good Voyage. I wish to thank you for your meth od bf preventing seasickness. I had suffered severely from seasickness over 30 years ago, only seeing the dining room the first day out. This winter I took the Mediterranean cruise and did not miss a meal nor suffer the slightest qualm . . . C. B. M. Answer. Shucks, the testimonial is not so good. So many other things that have happened to the lady in 80 years may have had a bearing on her present freedom from seasick ness. I do wish some current addict of mal de mer would try my method once and then send us In a whale of a testimonial for It. She Has Curves Now. I am a women Just past 30 and want to thank you for your excellent advice. J was extremely underweight and on your suggestion I took in sulin treatment, and have gained 30 pounds. Mrs. N. F. Answer. Besides It effects a sav ing in sheets, for naturally a man doesn't tear so many of them shaking them out. Tin Doctoring In School. ' Our seven-year-old daughter com plained of being unable to see the board from her seat In school. I wrote to the teacher in charge, who put her through an eye test and re ported that her eyes were perfect. Then I took her to an oculist. Me found her unable to focus with her left eye which has never developed normally. She has to wear a frosted lens over the right eye and a clear lens adjusted to force her to make use of the defectve left eye. Yet the school record showed "perfect eye sght." Mrs. H. C. F. Answer When teachers and nurses and janitors and social service workers understake to render medical service, you can't expect any great satisfac tion. The tin doctor racket Is good enough for the peasant class In the public schools. The politicians and school board grafters know what the public will stand for. Maternity. You are so modern In regard to tonsils, why not have some pity on us women looking into this thing i f childbirth, I had two children, the first the most painful experience I ever went through, the second was born under twilight sleep. Why do you deny a woman the help of an anaesthetic? Mrs. E. J. M. Answer . Keep your r hat on, ma'am. I believe every woman should have the help of an anesthetic In childbirth, but she should have a reasonably safe anesthetic. (Copyright John F. Dllle Co.) By W. F. Brooks. NEW YORK Civilisation has. kept our nose to the grindstone this week. Two somewhat weighty tome on the subject have constituted the ma jor part of this week's chore. "Man's Own Show: Civilization." by Dr. George A. Dorsey. and "Modern Civ ilisation on (Trial," by C. Dellsle Burns, ere the books. Dr. Dorsey's, written In the same Interesting style a his "Why We Be have Like Human Beluga," covers 977 psges and contains 380,000 words, Mr. Burns' Is somewhat leas lengthy, but 300 or so page added to 977 makes quit a tidy bit of spare time reading. Dr. Dorsey's book give a pano ramic view of man's struggle up from til apea, of hi life from the earliest times to the present. He aeea mod ern civilisation .in the throes of a crisis and he believes America has added complications because of Its gangs and racketeer. He takea issue wlih many of the accepted precepts. 'His statements on religion, marriage. President Hoover, prohibition, moral, and other con troverted subject doubtleaa will pro voke some to fury. He warn that civilisation today may be on the verge of going backward Instead of forward. Mr. Burn pictures modern clvlllm Uon aa a continuous proceee rather than a finished product, so he eaye "therefore th time ha not come for an esMmate of It value; but the analysle of the situation, attempted in thl book is Intended a a basis for action, both In publio policy and In personsl action." Both authors delve far back into past history to explain ' phase of modern life and both are thoughtful and Interesting. Welcome "Plainness" fter so much civilisation It was somewhat of a relief to turn to a sequel to Th Life oi An Ordinary Woman" by Anne Kills. It I called "Plain Ann Blla" and like the first book It Is a virile fulfillment of its title. Mr. Sills considers herself an or dinary woman, unadorned by special characteristics or unusual abilities. But ah stand aa an individual be cause of her pungent phlloeophy, and because ah has double the usual al lotment of will and determination. She la able to talk of life aa she has seen It, simply and clearly. Ann Kile tell of her lite In the west, In which the main thread are the rearing of a family ot children moonofDaiGHT SYNOPSIS! Kells BIo axd her orandaon. Kirk Slanard, ao cept Henorita Floret' explanation that she had found the necklace the return, to them, refusing a reward. They do not recognize her as Juanita Baeara, veiled cig arette girl in the gambling jtarlore run by Jaeon Dtvitt, who ihue had used the etolen necklace to get the girl into society. Divitt hiree the Marqueea Cabrera, an aatociate before he married Molly, to ehav erone Juanita while checking up the right people and homee to rob. Kirk takee them .to the Oomu. Zall. tcnere .a. dance, tcita Adrian Fouchi and other patrons of DMtfe. But the it glad Brio Ledbetter, who had intuited her at the parlors, it not there. Happily the contemplates a visit to the Belaiee tummer home. Chapter 19 -DON'T LOVE ANYBODY" IV IDE blue sky and a wind whip ping til blue waters ot Blloxl isound, fluttering the flag ot the Undine and the marquesa's orange scart where she sat on the forward deck, talking with the mate. Kirk was pointing out Ship Island to Juanita "That's where we would have gone today It Nelly had come." In his yachting cap and blue flan Inela, Kirk looked almost boyish. -Juanlta's eyes moved from Ship 'island to watch the gulls following ithe yacht. Juanita and, the marquesa had rbeen In Blloxl a fortnight Follow ing the carnival there had been a .(Irk gripped her hand as If to hold her. few small parties. Cerise DuBols, who had been Queen ot Comus, en tertained them with a morning coffee. Adrian Fouche and his mother had invited them to dinner. Rod Stevens gave Juanita a dance where all the favors were Spanish. The Stevens home, one ot the fine old places on St. Charles avenue, was filled with light and music. The March night was as warm and soft as June. Nelly had welcomed her guests as the desert-dweller welcomes the .caravan. Almost every evening there were guestB for dinner and bridge, or dancing on the verandah of "White Aloej," the great house iwlth the garden sloping down to the sea. 1 This waa Kirk's fourth visit since they had come. Already he could ob serve a change In Juanita, watching her as she watched the gulls, a slen- Ider, white-clad figure among those flying wings. Something had seemed to drop away from her, some 'veil, some feeling of remoteness. "What Is that?" she asked sud denly, looking ahead of them. "That," said Kirk, "la our destina tion the Isle ot Caprice." It was all white sand, narrow as a front yard, with dunes and tall, blowing grass. In its center was a rambling structure covered with vinos, and on Its farther side a surf Itore In under a driving wind. People 'looking pygmy-small, battled the waves at their height, langhing. running back again. Juanita stood watching the bath iers. The marquesa's eye roved to Ithe rambling, vino-clad house. "Like to go In the water?" Kirk asked them. The marquesa shook her head. "Why do anybody come to Monte jCarlo for a bath?" she asked. Kirk understood. The marquesa was thinking ot the roulette wheel. He led them up the steps of the ihouse. Inside, people were grouped about the toy race-horses, or sitting In the high chairs around the rou llette wheel. Juanita looked and turned away. The marquesa started In. "Not com ing?" she asked the other two. "Then meet me here In halt an 'hour." with no money for the process, and th eendeavor to find a vantage point in life from which to see out over surrounding responel bill ties. She sewed, cooked dinners for the women of the vicinity, schemed for her children's clothing and good times. Always she struggled for self improvement. Justification for the title fills every page. Anne Ellis lives without arti ficialities, and with straightforward naturalness. She writes as she lives. FRENCH WAVESET This amazing new French method makes it easy to have deep, natural looking finger rares a home. As easy sa using old-fashioned curlers. Wo greaslness. Mo fussing. Clean with no flaky deposit on the hair. Not affected by dampness or moisture. Lasts 7 full days. Ask for Jo-cur Waveset at any toilet counter. Costs only a few cents. ' Also Jo-cur Henna Alnse lor Wist lovely bronze glint. . Kirk promised. During his visits la Blloxl he had found Spanish cus toms trying. He was sure he had said little to Juanita that the marquesa had not beard. Juanita seemed not to mind this espionage. Well, he had her to himself fori an hour, anyway. "How about the surf, Juanita? i Want to go in?" He called her Juanita now. The, marquesa called her that some-: times. Sometimes she said "Ysabel."' Kirk liked "Juanita" better. Juanita hadn't objected to his calling hor that. She had smiled and called him' "Kirk." The quick, sharp syllable had been soft on her tongue. Juanita wanted to see the Island. They walked along together, Kirk; happy In this hour ot freedom, tak ing her by the hand, pointing outi the spot where the pirates bad ' buried their treasure. "There or there. No one has ever found It But an old chart said You know the story ot the chart La ritte left? La Fltte was the worst pirate of them all. The chart he left read, 'Between the oak tree and the rock, close to the sea, I have burled my treasure.' They dug, and found the skeleton of a girl." "Under his mask," Juanita said, "there was a dimple, alter all." Kirk looked at her as they stood still. ' A "You're thinking about that con founded Rod Stevens," he remarked. "I thought ot Um," smiled Juanita, "because you made me." "Was that It? He says I had no right to take you off here as soon as you'd met 'everybody. But wouldn't you say I had a little right, the right of discovery?" "That's a big right," said Juanita. "The right of discovery." "I think so, too," Kirk answered. "Rivers have sometimes belonged to the men who discovered them. They've taken their names, at any rate." Juanita seemed not to hear this. Kirk's hold on her hand tightened. "I want them to know you," he added. "But I don't want you to like somebody else better. Promise me you won't." Her eyes came back to him, smil ing. " 'Can we swear to be safe from the headache on Tuesday, and think It will hold?' Mrs. Browning said that," she told him. "Well, anyhow, promise. You like me a little don't you?" "Ot course I like ybu," her eyes grave. "Then don't like anybody else bet ter. Don't love anybody, Juanita at least for a while." ... She did not answer. He had a sense of Che Yell dropping again be tween them. It was she who began to walk on. They took the crescent's Inner curve, standing at length on Its point where the winds came tearing in, driving the spray about their feet Juanita took off her cap, the wind lifting the loose tendrllB of her hair, blowing her skirt against her. She stood white and slender, her eyes on, the far sea, on the gulls circling high. Kirk caught her hand again,; gripped It tight as It to hold her. She seemed like something winged, something that might fly away with the gulls. Her evasion was not playful woman-retreat, as he knew It. It was more than this. (Cttyritto. Doii, jW - Co.) A borrowed nsm. , , . and to morrow borrowed mon.y adds to Juanlta's humiliation. Adrian's mother g.ts surprising n.ws. The Macauley company Issues "F& mous Songs and Their Stories," by James J, Oeller. The words and music of each song are Included, along with a brief account of bow they came to be written. It makes a dsndy book. Watch for the Methodist ladies' cooked food sale Saturday at Peon's Meat Market. FREE DEVELOP FILMS WeBt Side Pharmacy Rebuilt Batteries $3.00 Batteries Charged 50c Service Electric Co- Phone 127" 111 s. Hnlly St. Flight o' Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the Files of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Yeai Ago.) TEN YEABS AGO TODAY September 4, 1921. (It was Sunday.) Ben Sheldon returns from Salem, nletued with prospects for paving of Crater Lake highway. Forty prizes offered by merchants for pear show at Chamber of Com merce. Jap Andrews tells Mall Tribune he famed his first dollar chopping wood a week for a neighbor, and made a pile as large as the depot. Mr. Andrews .. o'tsr Vis nivvi the dollar. he would not speak to anybody for i three aays. Dr. Brumfleld, Roseburg, awaiting trial for murder, develops signs of appendicitis and Insanity as trial near. Statewide interest in case. Elan organizer announces that "all the best people in Portland" belong to hooded order. One Ashland auto Is "smashed to smithereens" In highway crash, and brand new Nash is -stolen. Light snowfiall at Crater lake. , Wilbur'Aahpole is named stock in spector for Jackson county by Oov ernor Ben Olcott. TWENTY YEABS AGO TODAY September 4, 1011. (It was Monday.) Jesse P. Webb, Portland trunk mur derer, has sentence commuted to life term an hour before hour of execu tion, by Gov. West, due to appeals of his 17-year-old daughter. Webb collapses In death house when Jn. formed of action. French fleet ready for war, unless Germany rescinds Morocco attitude. . School opens, with high school crowded to overflowing. Great excitement In Front street cafe, when a workman hits a waiter over the head with a bottle of catsup during an altercation. - Los Angeles society girl kisses taxi driver for ride, when purse is left at home on the piano. "Alfred E." noted southern Oregon racehorse, pulls & tendon in fair races. French Road Bug Wins Petrol Test, 55 Miles to Gal. PARIS (AP) A gasoline consump tion of 65 miles to the gallon was achieved at a contest of French auto mobiles here recently. The cost of gasoline and high taxes still make small cars of low horse power the most popular types in France. Gasoline has decreased 30 per cent In two years, but the prtcefe is still 30 cents a gallon. ' In the test the competing cars was classed according to taxed horsepow er and each was given 10 litres, or a, 64 gallons of gasoline. A oar rated at 5 horsepower covered 145 miles on this meagre supply of fuel, showing about 55 miles to the gallon. The winner was driven slowly to get the maximum distance, but It was capable of making 60 miles an hour. " . . OLD ROMAN WELL IN -SANDS FLOWS AGAIN HAMMAMET, Tunis (AP) Water spouted in the dese here after 1500 years when workmen found and cleaned out an old Roman well. Nearby were ruins of what ap pears to have been a bathing estab lishment and archaeologists are try ing to decide what ancient city lies under the desert sands. Roseburg Chieftain, a new weekl f newspaper, published b the Douglas winters. 6-vlt. 13-plate Battery, 2-year guarantee . . . $8 Battery Recharging 50c Severin Battery Service 1522 No, Riverside 'rffllll'fi MRS. T.W.HAMLIN 722 No, Riverside You are Invited to present this copon at the Mall Tribune and receive two FREE tickets' TO A TALKING PICTURE - PROGRAM AT THE As a Guest Subscriber of the MAIL TRIBUNE WATCH THIS SPACE. If vou are a subscriber of the Mall Tribune your name may appear here tomorrow. Only subscribers' names v. Ill be pub lished arul, durlnt: the duration of this offer, all subscribers will be riven an npportunltv to enov FREE shows as r.l TSTS OF THIS PArER. NOW PLAYING This Modern Age'