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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1931)
Uedford Mail Tribune "Imyont In Southtm OwM rudi Um Mill Trlbuiw" Drily und ftrodiy Publlihed by MEDFORD I'msTisa CO. 1B-3T-10 N. rif BL Hnt T5 ROBERT W. Rl'HL. Editor E. U KNAPP, MMger An Independent Hewptpef Entered u imnd rltst mitter at Medord. Oreton, under Act af Much 8, 18Tt. 8CBSCBIPT10N BATES Br Mill In AdTn: Diily, Willi Bundif, rear... ti.50 Dilly, with 8iindr, month T5 Dilj, without 8iuvly, month .5 Dally, without Sunday, jiar Sunday, one year J J A Br Carrier, to Adranee Medford, Aihland. Jkm1Ue, CTitral Point, Pboenli, Talent. Gold BUI and on Hlihwayi. Dally, rlth Sunday. Booth 9 -J5 Dally, without Sunday, month . Dally, without Sunday, ont year T.00 Dally, with Sunday, one year 8.00 All terw. caih la thane. Official paper of tha City of Medford. Official paper of Jackton County. HEMBEB OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Beceirlnf Full Leutd Wire 8eni Tbt Aasoelated Prm ii exelwlly tntltlM to the me Tor publication of all newi dlipatrbea credited to It or othenrita credited in Uili paper, nd also to tha local newi publlihrd herein. All riant for publication of ipecUl dUpatcbea berelD va alto rtttntA. MEMBEK OP UNITED PRESS UEMBFR OP AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Adrertlilnf RepreaontatlTef M. C MOORN8EN COMPANY OfTlcea to New York. Oilriao, Detroit. Sao PraneUeo, Lot AnfrtM. Seattle, Portland. - stS Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. 13,000 Oregontans, with grim and determined tardiness, have failed to pay their state Income tax. ThU la 6000 leaa than the attendance at the Jack Dempsey appearance In Port land, and 4000 more than passed the ticket window at a similar event In Eugene. Now Is the time to sneak into Washington or California, pur chase a cheap auto license, and hurry off to a tax reduction meeting. "Business," says Mr. Schwab, "la full of poetry" (Oakland, California, Tribune.) And still they don't know what alls It. Sehoolma'ams should understand, onoe and tor all, that they are not the fathers of the children they teach. They have no right to bruise and batter a boy. That Is the fath er's Job. (Hopewell Journal.) Why teachers hide their desks, aa well they may. The "penny-pinching" throughout the nation continues unabated. Also, the dollars are getting caught In the washing machine wringer. It was refreshing to once more see clouds In the sky where they be long. 'The homeliest woman Is often beautiful . . . ." This sounds like Henry Ford, but it la Calvin Coolldge who la piping up. To subscribe to this beautiful theory will be quite a strain on the Imagination of the orchard run of human beings, who bold that a homely woman (sad to state), Is homely and, what of It? The more dlplomatlo males, with an eye for the wholeness of their hides, get around such prob lems of social propriety by alleging, "no woman la homely if she does not think so." This la the gllbest lie of them all. FUTURE EVENTS , . . SHADOWS (llepnraer. Ore., News) Dwlght Mlsner waa transacting business In town Wednesday from the ranch near lone. He says there la a good deal of In terest around Vie egg city about the coming performance. Something to worry about, la the presence In tha state penitentiary of one of Portland's leading Commun ists, who, when he gets through serv ing 10 years for bank robbery, will be returned, at federal expense, to Rus sia, the thought of which Is more anguishing than the clanking of steel doors. Ford Vandscar was a Baker busi ness visitor on Thursday. (Baker Democrat-Herald.) Whittle out your own retort. The old friend, "titanic struggle, Is now raging between the trucks and ths railroads. In due course of time, the railroads will be running way mights up the county roads. There Is considerable Isolated yap ping throughout the state about the "kept press." The "kept press" Is ths favorite subject of a Portland poli tician at a Orange meeting, and full of fried chicken. In 1033, during the Ku Klux Klan, It waa "the Roman press." W.hen nothing mattered but the alleged enforcement of Prohibi tion, a candidate waa always besieged by the "whiskey press." Of late. It has been the "Wall street press." The only "kept press," Is that portion of the press that has 'kept crazy." THE MAYOR SPEAKS UP (Mitchell, Ida., Times) We don't Just know why horses, chickens, h gs, cows and men some times care to wander from their own teed yard, but they do. They dont aeem to realise that It makes folks cuss who never cussed before. We dont know how a horse knows that there's something planted Just where he plants his hoof. We dont know why folks come to the mayor about -hlcken troubles; It's lota closer to the owner of the chickens many, many times man It Is to the mayor, but most people refrain from men tioning the matter to the chlckenee. The mayor, of course, gets SH OO (fourteen) per year and many lemons but It always does seem to us that If you can't keep your chickens, hogs, horses, husbands from running loose It Is better to get nd of them. B. CAR80N. Eugene Farmers of Lane county plan construction of cheese factory to be operated on Triangle lake aa unit of Eugene farmers' creamery. Editorial Correspondence SEATTLE, Sept. 6. Does the sun ever shine in Seattle! Are the skies ever clear enough to see Mt. RanierT This is our first visit in six or seven years, but the weather is precisely as it always has been as far as we are concern ed, raining great guns with the visibility about three below zero. As we figure it, this is the tenth visit since 1905 and we have yet to see Seattle except in gum shoes and a raincoat. Friends here insist this is the first real rain in two or three months but it doesn't look like the last. Dark grey clouds hang a few feet above the high build ings and cars dash through pools of water. Perhaps It U mining In Medford hope so. The weather changed vb niptly when the Cascade, five min utes ahead of schedule, turned onto the railroad bridge crossing the Wil lamette In Portland. All the way from Eugene It had been stifling, with all the male passengers coat less and the women getting as close to the electrlo fan as possible. But a fresh north wind swept through the windows when the train crossed the bridge, and the mercury must have dropped ten degrees In as many minutes. After an hours' wait, it started to rain, and tha windows of the cars were splattered with rain drops all the way to Seattle. After a night's ride In the Lark last winter we predicted that eventu ally the Pullmans would be solid compartment cars and the open sleeper would be entirely abandoned. A new stunt on the Cascade sug gests progress In this direction. Half of our Pullman was taken up by 'section compartments." Instead of compartments with doors taking up the entire car except for tha narrow aisle on one side, tha center aisle I retained and what were uppers and lowers In a section are made Into section compartments. Instead of a door there are full length curtains. but each section has Its own wash room, etc. The coat of such a section compartment Is considerably less than the present compartment. Looks to us Ilka the beginning of tha end for tha old fashioned Pullman car. It Is always Interesting on a train trip to observe one's fellow passen gers and speculate as to who and what they are. Usually they appear to be "just plain folks" with nothing to distinguish them from millions of Sundown STORIES KAR-UP TRIP By Mary Graham Bonner. It was always like a new experi ence for John and Peggy to go on a "far-up" trip. Somehow It seemed more remarkable to them than If they took a far- off trip. "I'm sure the time has been turned ahead for us," Jo ton told Peggy, aa their own familiar plana cama for them. The pilot told them that they were to take a trip alone with him to a sky farm, and that the time had been turned forward for this adventure. "What In tha world, or In the air. Is a sky farm?" Peggy asked. "You'll see In Just a few moments" the pilot answered. "We've been to air hotels when the time has been turned forward." John remarked. "We remember them; and we've been to an air circus." "This Is something different," said tha pilot of tha plane. "This la a regular farm." They were traveling along very rap Idly now through the air, and they passed by huge landing places and enormous dirigibles with landing places attached where people stayed In hotels or houses or went to school. But now they were stopping along one of the strangest looking places they had ever seen. There waa a very large landing platform here, and from It waa an airship which looked larger and long- , er than tha largest and longest dtrlg- I lble they had ever seen. I "Of course you know how they manage to keep these places up in the air," the pilot said, "as you've lilted air hotels. "Just aa they used to have Diane that could stay up in the air for ever so long, now with tha time turned forward they have actual places built upon dirigible platforms that can stay up so much longer and bet ter tfmn those old endurance planes could do. "But now you must wander around 1" Tomorrow "Lofty Cows Salem L. H. Hoffman of Portlana. low bidder for general construction work of Oregon 8t.t tuberculosis ! Hospital with proposal of HSs. others. But now and then something unusual comes along. This was true on the Cascade diner yesterday when the steward ushered In a party of four to tha table opposite. Not be ing very well posted on Oriental types we couldn't tell whether they were Japanese or Chinese, but finally decided on tha latter. The father looked like Warner Oland, smartly dressed In English homespun with a large Jada ring on his fat little fin ger. The mother waa extremely smart looking, modlshly gowned, while the two boys, obviously sons, In their late teens, were unusually well dressed, and had an unmlstakeable "air" about them. That they were people of some 4anportance, was simply in escapable, they all had that subtle end elusive air of boredom, which somehow can't be faked, although many people on the outer fringe at tempt It. We decided the man was a Chinese merchant prince on a tour of the world with his family, the boys probably going to school at Eton, and let It go at that. In the station at Portland, there was a welcoming party headed by beetle browed Mayor Baker, Mrs. Baker holding a bouquet of Portland roses, and that mirror of fashion and mold of form, James A. Carmody, of the S. P., attending to the traffic details. The "Chinese" family, now with a third son, were officially wel comed, posed for tneir photographs and were speeded off In rather seedy looking limousines. It seems our peo ple of importance were neither Chi nese nor Japanese, but Siamese, none other than Prince and Princess 8vastl of Slam, parents of the queen of Slam, and their three sons, Non dlyavat, Arpuna and Arvela. They have been with the "Kink" and Queen at Providence, N. Y., where the former had a cataract re moved, and are now touring the coun try. They will be here in a few days and we won't be. No doubt the sun will then be shining. Prom tha window of a taxi and a hotel room, we would say that Seattle has changed more In the past few years than any other city on the coast, and for the better. Our mem ory was only of the Butler hotel and tha Smith building. No doubt both are here but we haven't seen them. This Olympic hotel Is unusually at tractive and comfortable, and a new Seattle appears to be grouped about It. The shops look smart and snap py, and the electric signs decidedly ornamental. The Blllte Burke com pany part of It came up on the train, and Ethel Barry more Is to be here tha 14th. Incldenally this hotel Is crowded and there are no evidences superficially at least, of hard times. R. W. R. Talks TO parents IMPUDENCE By Alice Judson Tenia Children, wa hear, are "fresh," they "answer back," they show no defer ence for tha opinions or their elders, they speak pertly to visitors. All this means but one thing tha parents of such children have failed to earn that kind of respect which Is tha natural accompaniment of love and confidence. It Is perhaps a little discouraging to suggest the ways In which this may happen, but It should be help ful. Every child, sooner or later, ceases to respect tha person who has not been honest with him, fair, consis tent, or who has too frequently shown poor Judgment. While children are little It Is pos sible for parents to bluff their way. They have a great advantage, of course, for they represent to their children tha sum total of everything that la wonderful, Important and powerful. Children really hate to find fault with their parents, for they need very much to love them, and to accept whatever they do or think or say In order to get along In the otherwise alarming confusion of a kaleidoscopic world. The odds are all In favor of the parents keeping his child's respect. When he loses it it Is his own fault. But what can he do when once he has lost It, even In part for the pic ture Is seldom clenr-cut? He cannot command respect, nor can he punish It Into existence; al though of course a child cannot be permitted to be deliberately in perti nent, for thla sort of thing will only confirm his attitude. But summary punishment Is not enoufih. Tha parent must be willing to sd mlt his past mistskes quite frankly, then sef out to earn his child's re spect by his own reformed behavior. 4 Communications Kavnrs Tin for Kellef. Tho Kdltor: The writer agreea with your recom menrtatlon or suggestion that the community cheat of the war period should have been continue;!, but even this measure does not go far enough during thu period of stress and want. What we need Is a spe cific tax to meet the emergency. Now, do not for a moment consider that any Increase of taxation la im plied In thla recommendation. Cut out aome of the fads and rrllia. If the county health depart ment expanded nearly 1000 perl CO II1UUII by McvujxuvaBjdJL Ho uAtiytt. BYN0PS18: Kirk Stanard piw MUs over .senorUa Flore1 aloofness when he- becomes sentimental, not :noicing that the fa tn reality Juanita Basara, cigarette girl in Itivilt's resort. The marquesa, her chaperone. revel, in gambling at the Isle of Caprice, near Bilori, where they are visiting Kirk's grandmother, Nelly Bclalse. But Juanita 13 unaware that the chap erone (, doing the inside icork in Jtivitt'e plan to rob their new friends. Theoneste Fouche and her son, Adrian, an admirer whom Juanita seems to avoid, come to visit Kelly before Juanita, the marquesa and Kirk return from ths island. Kirk meanwhile plane an earlu breakfast iclta Juanita. But Selly is telling Theoneste that Bcnarita Flares is engaged al ready, and is therefore for neither Adrian nor Kirk. Chapter 31 THE BULBUL BUSH NELLY BELA1SES abrupt nouncement caused Madame Fouche to suspend her tanning. "Engage" . . . Sefiorita Flores en cage'? . . . When bare sbe tell you?" "The marquesa told me last night. Juanlta's fiance Is a noble man in Spain. They are much In love." "Well! I am gon' have trobble ,brekklng this to Adrian. . . . You inave tell Kirk?" "No, I've hardly seen Kirk. He got in late yesterday, and he and Juanita were singing all evening." "He ought to know." "Juanita will tell him at the prop er time," Nelly answered. "The marquesa said Juanita was not to know she had told me, so if you say anything to Adrian " "Adrian 1 discreet," Madame re plied. "But she should have tell ever'body at de first. My Adrian Bay to me, 'ilaman, for de first time 1 mit a girl what I can give my heart to.' It is a sin, what Befiorlta Flores have do." "That's absurd," snapped Nelly. "She may not love the man at all. Who knows but she may have come to America to forget" "Aha!" Madame opened her fan abruptly. "You thank she will fall in love and brek her troth! You do not know betrothals in Spain. But I shall tell no one but Adrian. He will be keeriul. Kirk meb&e can not love so bard as my Adrian, but" "Wlfy should you disparage Kirk's powers of affection?" asked Nelly stiffly. "Do not be hurt, Nelly. I moan Kirk's eyes are so blue, and his hair so light brown." , "Kirk's father was a New Eng ender of English descent. He can't help being a blond," said Nelly. "Egzackly. Adrian's hair black and his eyes flash. Such men love much. Kirk, he joke and smllo, even wid Sefiorita Flores. My Adrian " "Your Adrian can certainly love moro frequently," said Nelly, try. log to remember that It was her aun parlor. "In any case, why toll a thing that concerns Juanita first of all, and that she apparently doesn't want told? The worst that can happen to any man In love with hor Is that he may propose and be refused. Adrian will be better off It yon will let him take the knocks thnt come his way." They both turned, hearing Adrian go down the steps. Voices came from the pier. "They've come," said Nelly. "Now, poor Theoneste, you shall have dinner." The bulbul bush had blossomed. Kirk sat beside it In the dark gar den, thinking perhaps Juanita would come to him there. He re cnllcd how, on Adrian's last visit she had come to him, how they had walked under the magnolins. But she was not avoiding Adrian tonight Kirk could see her through the windows, laughing with Adrian, guitar on her knee. Her voice came to him, mingling with the perfume of the bulbul bush, with the glow of the moon, Just shouldorlng Its way above the trees. Kirk and Junnlta had watched tor (he moon from the Isle of Caprice. They had forgotten how lata It would be tonight. How close she had come to him then. Words were not needed. Then the mar quesa had come running, waving her gains, crashing a stone Into their pool of silence. "Look!" the marquesa had cried. "Now we will go home." Sho had sat with them on their trip back, had prattled of her luck, of how hungry she was. Kirk and Juanita bad both been very still, and now since dinner Juanita had seemed farther away than ever. Now It was Kirk she was avoiding, singing to Adrian. Kirk .knew what the Spanish words meant It was the song she had taught him the night before. Adrian was listening with all his month In 1030. why not divert at least a portion of thla In behalf of municipal relief agenclea. A very amMI tax would effect thla. The county court la too far removed, by virtue of Its general activities, to Investigate the merits of municipal relief measures. Let the towns re spectively attend to these matters. Voluntary donatlona are all right aa tar aa they go, but a small tax paid by everyone would go fsr to equallre matters, and this project could be accomplished without ad ding to the sum total of the levy. We do this In behalf of educational measures, and If the traditional three iVa, as applying to 'Ueadtn' 'Rltln' and "Rlthmetle are to be de sired, then certaliUy by all the rules of analogy, the three '"B'a" as repre sented by Bread. Butter and Bacon, demand urgent attention. Under prevailing clrcustances. vol untary donations are not going to fill the Mil and It la unfair to ex pect thu. All should contribute a share, and thla can only be done by a tax. With the tail hare and or IXrLIOH I gift of passionate Intensity, as it the song were a declaration of Juanlta's love. Madame Foucb6 sat watching them, fanning with what looked to Kirk like disap proval. Nelly, he knew, was In the sun parlor, the marquesa probably beside her. There was another song Kirk wanted her to teach him. She had sung Its sobbing melody with such fire and pathos that he had loved it best of all. Kirk hoped she would not sing those words tonight, even in Spanish. Kirk started. She was singing them. "Xot because- I ting It my heart ioyfut. But like the evan, in dying, I sing, 'I love you.' " Kirk could not watch her singing that song, Adrian beside her. He walked deeper Into the garden. Madame Fouche, In the house, wished to talk with the marquesa. The marquesa was coming to sit with her presently, but first she must telephone the Hotel Tijon in New Orleans. She had broken her lorgnettes, she explained, and they must send the other pair. Madame liked the marquesa. The marquesa had appreciated her old silver and the" soli-' gold punch bowl which Monsieur Foucha had bought after a coup In the market when Adrian was born. Madame could see that the marquesa had been touched by the inscription on the bowl which was that of an enthusiastic father. The marquesa had also admired Madame Fouche's pearls. Many women were jealous of Madame's pearls, but not the marquesa. Madame felt that so sympathetic a lady would appreciate her mater nal solicitude for Adrian. Madame would draw the marquesa on the subject of Juanlta's , prospective husband. Nelly might have mis understood the marquesa's state ments, or might have exaggerated them to get Adrian out of the way. Madame adroitly opened the con versation from another angle. "Nelly Is very careless," said Madame In French, when the mar quesa had finished telephoning, and they were sipping their coffee to gether, "Careless?" repeated the mar quesa. "In every way," asserted Ma dame. "Not only does she leave her jewelry, which she affects to love, lying all about, but " "Surely you are wrong, Madame. I have not seen" . "You have not visited her In town," asserted Madame. "In town," murmured the mar quesa. "I thought you meant here." "I do not know," Madame had not designed to tarry so long on the subject of Nelly's carelessness with pearls. "In New Orleans she keeps her valuables in a simple drawer with a simple lock. The servants know where they are. 1 myself have seen them there." "They are probably very close to her hand," surmised the mar quesa. "Oh, yes!" with a Bhrug. "In her bedroom. She says no burg lar would ever look there." "Then it Is not carelessness," smiled the loyal marquesa. Madame sipped her coffee. "To me It la taking chances," she per sisted. "And Nelly is careless in the things she says. For Instance, sho told me that Setiorlta Flores " Ah, that was very different The marquesa draw closer to Madame, who lowered her voice, for Adrian and Juanita sat only a short dis tance away. But Nelly had not been careless even In regard to that The mar quesa felt that Madame should know It Juanita had wished It kept a secret, but she Carlota knew the feelings of a mother. Nelly had not exaggerated. On the contrary, the marquesa told Madame of certain complications connected with Juanlta's betrothal, complications she had not men tioned to Mrs. Belalse. Madame fanned agitatedly. Oscar went out Into the garden with coffee for Mister Kirk. Kirk saw him coming, went toward him. He had decided to send Juanita a message. "Say to Sefiorita Flores that the bulbul bush is In bloom." "Mus' I say you tol' me so, suh?" "No. Just say that." Oscar went off doubtfully. Kirk, watching him through the window, saw him approach Juanlta's chair, saw Juanita look up at him. "De bulbul bush In bloom, ma'am.' Kirk know how Oscar would sav It But Juanita did not come. (Cofyritkl, DM. Used - Cs.) Afrild of Kirk? If net, why ha. h. failed him and will she kcr her 'ire.kf.st d.te tor-orrow? winter months approaching, we can't salve our consciences by subscribing to half a dozen Red Cross seals dur ing the Christmas season. Of course, some will raise the cry that the proposition augtrested would be unconstitutional. However, let us try the plan, unless a better one la suggested, and not only sug gested, but adopted In ample season to meet emergencies. ' BILL DAY. Ashland. Oregon. To the Editor Praises Medford Churches In my travels through the north west I have heard your city given many compliments In regard to her progressive methods. At this time I should like to say that the people of Medford and Its vicinity should be con-.pllnienteo: upon the progressive spirit of their churches. Whereas In aome cities the church es close for the summer, your churches combine I n sponsoring union services and keep on do!n their good work during the summer. Personal Health Service By .William Signed letters pertaining to personal neann ana " ,, ' ; dlngiuls or lrr-!itmrnt UI be angered by Dr. Brady If a "raP'u addmsni envelope Is entlcsed Utters should be brief and urltten In Ink Owing in the larse number oi letters received only a few can be araa here. So replv can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr villl.im Bradv In care the Mall Tribune. SOME OF THE OLD ESTABLISHED METHOD ARE NOT BO GOOD. To my Innocent mind it Is a puz-' el Kh, iiDnmnhlla n.annfahir,rn strive to make their cars as char acteristic tn tie public eye as a trademark, and then after the public has become familiar wlph the distin guishing feature of the particular car. the- manufacturers suddenly change the appearance of the car so that one can scarcely recog- niw th mHkA. The only answer I can find for this conundrum Is that perhaps these manufacturers are shrewd enough to know tbat old things are not so good when they begin to be obsolete. I am truly sorry that I feel In duty bound to bring to the atten tion of the public In this way the ambulant treatment Qf hernia. I mean I am sorry about the annoy ance this will aause many good doctors. You see. an honest doctor who gives his heart, his soul, his life to his practice . . . and there are plenty of such doctors serving the publlo today . . . simply can not keep posted on the more recent developments In his profesalon and also take good care of bis practice. Even if he can find time to read current medical literature and attend regular meetings of the medical so cieties, he can't get the latest de velopments because they are excluded from the current medical magazines and carefully barred fror the pro grams of the medical societies, until the medical editors and censors . . . Just such men as those that criticized me so severely for my promotion of diathermy extirpation of the tonsils as an alternative for surgical tonsillectomy . . . frown down these "radtcal" .Innovations until the new Ideas compel respect ful consideration from sheer merit. Now a man In my sinecure has nothing much to do but scout around and Investigate these new methods, and if he has no great re spect for "medical authority" some times he can learn something months or years before the honest practitioners beglr to get wind of It. On this account I feel It my duty to bring the ambulant treatment of hernia to the attention of the pub lic at this early stage. I can't teach doctors the technic, but I can sug gest a few spots on the map where they may get Instruction from a colleague. If they want It. I feel that my advocacy of the method hero will help to give It deserved popularity. Just as my promotion of the chemical obliteration of varicose veins enabled thousands of sufferers to get relief which they could not have had otherwise. I'm not boast ing .. . this Is my business. I ought to be fired from this Job It I were content to wait till the last man In the last rank adopted and approved the new method. I am no dllettant In medicine; I hod 18 yeara of active hospital and private practice before I ventured to oppose my Judgment of these matters to that of other doctors or the holty toltv members of the profession. I Yes. Medford Is surely a great city and her churches are doing their best to make It even greater. . Adolph Fascett, San Francisco. Cal. Summons for publication. Suit to Quiet Title No. 4897-E. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon In and for the County of . Jackson. Portland Properties. Inc., an Oregon Corporation, Plaintiff, vs. M. M. Bowers. John Doe Bowers, hus band of M. M. Bowers: the un known helra of M. M. Bowers; E. a Potter, Receiver of Stewart Fruit Companv, a California Corporation; also all other persons or parties un known claiming any right, title, estate, lien or Interest In the real estate described In the Complaint herein. Defendants. To M. M. Bowers. John Doe Bowers, husband of M. M. Bowers: the un Xnown heirs of M. M. Bowers: also all other persons or parties unknown claiming anv right, title, estate, lien or interest In the real estate de scribed In the complaint, of the above named defendants: In the name of the State of Oregon, you. and each of you. are hereby re quired to appear and answer the com plaint filed against you in the above entitled suit on or before the 15th day of September. 1931, ss'.d date being the last day of four weeks from the date of the first publication of thla summons, and said period of four weeks being the time p escribed for publication hereof; and If you fall so to appear and answer said complaint, for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded In Its complaint, to-wlt: That a decree be entered adjudicat ing any and all right, title, estate. Hen or claim, which you. or any of you. have or claim to have In. to. v upon the real property situated In the County of Jackson. State of Oregon, described as follows' Government Lots Five (5 and Six (fll. and the East one-hal- tE3) of the Northeast quarter (NE'i), and th East one-half tE'i) of the South, east quarter (SE!4 of Section Twelve ' (121 In Township Thirty-eight (381 South, of Ranee Two (3) West of the Willamette Meridian; and Govern ment Lots Two (3) and Three (3i snd the West one-hslf (W'4) of the i Southwest qusrter SWi,t of Section Sever (71 In Township Thlrty-e:ght j (381 South of Range One (lj West of the Willamette Meridian. I Save and except therefrom, the fol- j lowing desrrlbed parcel thereof, con tslnlng 4 43 acres, more or less, to wn: Beginning at the Northwest ; corner of Government Lot 7 In S,-c- tion 7. Townh.p 38 South, of Ranee 1 West of the Wllamette Meridian; thenoe South on the We.-, line ot ! said Lot. 404 9 feet; thence West 380 1 feet: thence North 603 1 feet to the center lln of the County Koao: : thence South 63 Oeg. East 240 9 feet.j along s.vld center line of said County Road, and thence South 81 dec. 13: mln. East. 170.3 feet along said ccn-! ter line of said County Road to the point of beg.nn.ng: ail beln in J..-x-soa Count)-, Oregon, and declaring I Brady, M. D. . . . i . . w.,.t tn HUMS. have my little foibles and fancies about minor things, but on a great fundamental question I don't shoot till I have satisfied myself that I am Justified . . . and the medical brethren who don't like my ways have not yet caught me on poor ground. The ambulant treatment of hernia will come along through the chan nels of current medical' literature and medical society programs In a few years. Meanwhile, by getting people talking about it, we can hasten the adoption of the method by the thinking Independent doc tors who wish to give patients the best possible service. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Be Yourself. This la a tardy expression of ap preciation for your remedy for cal lus on the sole. I have used It with great satisfaction and several friends have. too. I should be grateful for the directions for belly breathing, also on the use of flaxseed for con stipation. Mrs. C. H. P. Answer Send a stampea enveiop bearing your address and say you wish to practice belly breathing. If you have the constipation habit, say so. and I'll send you instruc tions for overcoming your habit. I do not send Impersonal treatises about diseases or ailments. Scetanlltil Habit. What Injury would be caused by taking 15 5-graln acetanma powue.o or headache powders dally for five years? Miss W. Answer Acetanlllde is a sensory nerve sedative and a circulatory de pressant. It diminishes the oxygen carrying capacity of the blood and reduces the hemo-globln. Such a h,h, n cm rnxes brines grave impairment of health, sometimes mental deterioration. n.inii Hit Tnsulln. I wish to report the wonderful success I had with tne insulin irenv ment you recommended. I weighed 101 when I started and went up to 120 pounds In about four weeks, although I ate little. If any more, than before. I'm very grateful to you for this suggestion. Miss. M. McN. . a int ftf fftrls who were quite sad and skinny are wearing curves and smiles now. thanks to In sulin treatment and the progressive spirit of the better Doctors. Whoo-ey Says So. I should like to know what a great doctor thinks of prepared breakfast foods, such as and and . J. B. Answer Well, why don't you ask one some time? Personally. I con sider so-called breakfast foods as equivalent to toast, rolls or pan ... .h., h,w von. If vou pre fer the packaged product, It Is Just . ,i.,il nrAlcrht as wholesome ana nctn. .. o--- for weight. Trench Mouth. I have been doctoring for trench mouth for the past 14 weeks but little relief. Mrs. R. E. Answer Send stamped envelope bearing your address ana repeal yur comolalnt. (Copvrlght John P. PWe Co.) any and all such claims to be null and void, and decreeing that said plaintiff Is the owner In fee simple of satd premises and of the whole thereof, free and cleat of any and all right, title, estate, lien or interest tn - Id real estate of the said defend ants, and that each and all of the defendant herein, and each and all of their servants, agents and em ployes, 'and each and all persons i.imlns or to claim by, through or under them, or any of them, and all: other persons or parties unxnown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or Interest in said real estate be for ever enjoined, restrained and barred from asserting, attempting to estab lish or claiming any right, title, es tate, lien or Interest In or to said property, or any portion thereof, and that plaintiff's title to said real prop erty be forever quieted and set at rest, and for such other and further relief as tb the Court may seem Just and equitable in the premises. This summons Is published by order of the Honorable Alex Sparrow. County Judge of Jackson County. Oregon, made and entered In said Court and cause on the 17th day of August, 1931, prescribing that said summons be served by publication thereof once each week for Tour con secutive weeks In the Medford Mall Tribune, a dally newspaper of general circulation published In Jackson County. Oregon. August 18th. 1931, Is the date of the first publication of this sum mons, and September 15th. 1931, Is the date of the last publication of this summons. T. W. MILES. Attorney for Plaintiff. Residence and Post Office Address: Medford. Oregon. When You Are In KLAMATH FALLS Stop At The WILLARD HOTEL Cheerful Sen-ice Modern Surroundings Central Location Al Dininir Room We Inviu Your Patronage Rates Sl.ftO Ip WILLARD HOTEL Jnrf an Mala. Klamath Fa U ALBF.RT At'TI1. Flight o' Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the Files of The .Mall Tribune of 20 and IB Yea-'s Ago.) TEN' YEARS AGO TODAY September 8, 1921 (It wa Thursday) Forest patrol planes prohibited ,i.,in inw nvpr business and residential districts of city, as there have been several narrow escapes. Rain Is badly needed to Improve the hunting and fishing. Landowners of the Medford irriga tion district to hold mass meeting. War declared by mysterious order on "vice spots of Jackson county, to Improve moral tone of Medford." George Latdley hauls truck load of ore from Blue Moose mine, which brings Siaoo net In San Francisco. pep organization formed for a "re vival of the Medford spirit." Name tc be selected later. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY September 8. 1911 (It waa Friday) A Joyrlde to Grants Pass by two looal oouplea ends with a double wedding. Editorial topic: "Portland's Ignor ance." There was a large ciowd of men st the depot today to greet the chorus of "Miss Nobody From Starland." Dr. R. W. Stearns narrowly escapes death, when BUto In which he Is rid ing Is hit by No. 15 at the Jackson street crossing. Dr. Stearns was thrown clear, but his auto was de molished. Work of setting stakes for Pacific highway starts. Willamette valley farmers threaten injunction. John Jacob .Astor, multl-milllonalre. weds Madeline Force, a school girl, despite "objections of a nation." Henry Clay Beattle. Jr.. is found guilty of the murder of his wife, ending another national sensation. Gresham Carr-McRobert Co., the Foard dealers, completed extensive al terations at expens of $2000, to add complete service department for all makes of cars. So Nervous Sbe Could Scream -'j Mali These Hysterica1 Yomenfol CRYI NG . . . sobbing . . . laugh ing. Nerves strung to the breakiogpoint.Whatastatetobein! Constant headache, bearing down pains, dizzy spells are rob bing her of health and beauty. If she would only give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a chance to help her. 98 out of every 100 re port benefit. Watch your own troubles yield to its tonic action. Try a bottle of either the liquid or the convenient new tablets. Let it help you as it has helped so many thousands of suffering women. VEGETABLE COMPOUND TWO MAJESTIC B-Eliminators - $5-00 Each Service Electric Co. Ill South Holly $1500 $Q.75 Monthly creates end delivers you $1500 caih on the exact date tchtduled. $1,000 to $100,000 from proportionately tmsll psy meets. 37year record. Free book Itt "Multiplying Money" explains plan, psymtnts, maturity dates, certain results. Use coupon. ?..0.'.0.0.? i p.y 5. T.?.tj? 5ltoHH"MUl.Tll,LyiNGMONEy" Investors Syndicate FOUNIED'189 1 r? a 1 ff Have An Extra VI (i PORTLAND OREGON Jj jjrltlMO - lOSANGOI 2fTJ. MtNNEAPOllS fSiFi