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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1932)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD, OREGON", SUNDAY, 1IARCH .20. 1932. paqe STX Medpord Mail Tribune "EwyMt In Southirn OrtQN nidi ths Mail Tribuna" Dillj Except fcaturdar Publishes b KEDKOltD PBINTINU CO. IS-ST-39 N. fit 6U PhOM M ftOBEftl VV HIIHL, Ml tot' B. L KNAl'P. Manager Ad indejwndent Nnpapr Entarad u second class mattar at Medford Ortfoo, nndar Act of March 8, 1819. 8UB8CHIPT10N BATES B Will In Adtaoea Daily, rear IT. 00 Dally, diobU) T6 By Carrtar, la AdraoeaMtdford, Aiblaod, Jaccaonrllla, Central Point, Piwsnli, Taleot, Gold mil im Qo uigntrajt. Dally, month $ .Tft Dally, om ytu .... f.&O All larnta, cub lo adraoea. OrridaJ papar of tba Civ of Medford, Officii! papar of Jackson Couott, MEMBER Of THE ASSOCIATED PKE8S Bacclrint full Uued Wlra Stnlw Tba Associated Press tl eietusltelj entitled lo tba use lot publlratloa of all new dlipaUM eradlteo to It or otherwise credited la tbla papar tad alio to the local news puhllihed herein. All rlfbta for puhheatloD of special dispatches bareln axe also reaened. HEUBEH OP UNITED PRESS IIEUBKH OK AUDIT BUREAU OK CIRCULATIONS Adrertlilnt Krpresentatttea M. C MOUKNBKN A COMPANY Offices lo N York, tftieaio, Detroit, Sao frudsco, toa Ancaleo, Seattle, Portland. (Medford and Jackson County History from the Flies of The Mall Tribune, of 80 and 10 Year , ao.) TEN VEARS AGO TODAY March 19, 1920. (it was Sunday) Local Klan kleagles deny order had a hand In the Hale hanging, claiming the local branch haa no nightgowns. Claim Klan geta blame for every crime "committed In a heat." Department of Justice to Investigate local outrages. Local stars, hold spring opening,. Brpee i ratal is huge turntable in Ashland yards. anlr.r.uta'r'.m'rl"' hlghw,,y' Japan signs peace treaty. County ready to start road work. Stata Income tax proposed. Sams plowing, Valley farmers all busy More rain needed. TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY March in, t12. (It was Tuesday) Shortage of labor In valley felt. Fire department boys threaten to end their charter back to the atate. unleaa council glvea them wages. Good looking blonde lady cashes 300 worth of bogus checks on locsl tores and can not be found. La Follett carries primary. North Dakota Woodvllle officially becomes Rogue River, and la now so designated on the mapa. Jim Jeffrlee plan, to stage "come back." Progressive valley. movement hits the Communications Wants More Golden Rule, To the Editor: I would like to have room In your paper to mention the seeming In crease In damage cases, where money la the thing striven for. Not so much here, but all over the country. From all parts or the country these ulU. or clnlms, seem to spring up, mushroom like. One Is almost tempt ed to ask the question: Have we come to a pass where there Is an unrestricted open season on any one who might be a good prospect!1 ; We have a good set of laws, pos sibly a few too many. But theee laws were enacted with the Intent that every man should have access to honest and Justified redress. How ever, the various court and the people In general, should see to It that these statutes are not abused. In mass there may be at reni th. but in abuse there might be danger. We have all sympathy for the pet son who has Just claim for trdre or damage; If It can be proven, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that such a claim la Justified and de serving; then such person should ' have adequate redress to cover actual loss, but not, necessarily, redress Set 1 Imaginary damages. Aa we see It. the burden of proof should test squarely with the plain tiff. It would seem that here Is a place that the fine point of a tech nicality should not enter, aa a wed Re, to force a verdict either way. That old platitude, "Do unto other as you would have them do unto you," probably has become archaic, but It seems to be ft wonderful pana cea for moral Hla, when lived up to; plain as day and easy as pie to do. UNO DEL PUEBLO, tName on File) a- Duncan New Pro La Grande Links LA RANK. Ore.. March 19 AP Bob Duncan, with the Overtake club a Seattle last year and for five years with the noted St. Andrews club In Scotland, hi accepted a position as profeaslonual for the La Orande Country Oolf club, effective April 1. Crystal d low Rod as gloss v.pretn The Peaaleys opp Hoity theater Fay Hoople', Barber Shop now pen. Ne,t to City Hall. Brot.n winouai ieed Dj Trow Psol Wov. Flight o Time Doc Spears Versus Dean Allen FT SEEMS the University of Oregon CAN afford to retain Head Coach Spears, but CAN'T afford to retain the School of Journalism. Dean Allen must stop turning out good newspaper men; but Doc Spears can go on turning out bigger and better football teams. At this point no doubt our readers are expecting a vigorous protest against a policy that places brawn above brains, and consigns our cherished "Fourth Estate" to the ash can. IF SO they are due for a big surprise. We make no protest for we realize it would do no good. We live in a Democracy, and the people rule. We admit, that if this issue were left to a vote of the people, they would endorse by an overwhelming majority, precisely what the powers-that-be have decreed. In the popular mind manufacturing football players, at the state factory of higher learning is f.' more important than manufacturing good editors and news-hounds. FOR GOOD football players are rare, and require the most expert selection, training and preparation. Good news paper men particularly editors on the other hand are not rare at all, in fact they are scattered all over the state. If a star quarter-back is needed it's a hard job to get one. The supply is slight, the demand tremendous. It takes some clever and fast work to keep the potential gridiron hero from Berkeley and Falo Alto; it takes the combined genius of a Napoleon and Andy Mellon to get him safely within the sacred coi Mnes of the leading fraternity at Eugene. OUT a newspaper editor FIE AND ALSO FAUGH! You can pick a second "Brisbane" up along the highway any where. Oregon editors are pretty good, they compare favor- ably with editors in Washington and California but no one will 'deny, that OUTSIDE of the newspapers, scattered over the I landscape thicker than wild mustard, there are BETTER ONES. In fact, it is doubtful if there is a three-room house in the ; state, that doesn't contain at least able of running the local daily, to be trying to do so. You doubt jtt Just ask the aforesaid individual. HE 'Lh tell you ! AS THE late Lord Northcliffe remarked, running a news naner is as easv as Dokincr a fire anyone can do it. Not 0niv that, but anvone can do it who happens to be trying to.' a house-to-house canvass of the OUT A really CRACK football player, what a They are rarer than Florida not only extremely difficult to find thorn, hut unlike poets they are MADE, not born. And it takes an experienced and high priced specialist liko Doc Spears to MAKE them. So while we have a warm spot in the editorial heart for Dean Allen and the university School of Journalism, could give con crete evidence of the value of both the institution and its lender to this state, we refuse to waste our energy and time, in back ing up its hopeless struggle, with the strong muscled doctor and the high-powered football machine. Far better become press agent for Senator Smoot of Utah, or join some modern Dame Partington in sweeping back the Atlantic ocean! Wanted A Wiseman WE VTISH some Wiseman would arise and explain to us what tbis sex madness that has swept this country and is threatening to destroy our literature REALLY MEANS. "We can't figure it out. The most frequent explanation is it isn't a madness at all, but merely a FRANKNESS. Our pre occupation with sex hasn't changed, merely our attitude toward it. In fact many claim, the prevailing attitude toward sex is far more wholesome, because move honest, than it was during the prudish mid-Viotorian days. These same defenders main tain, the young people of today, are all in all, behaving better or at least just as well as their grandmothers and grandfathers did. MEHBE so. But up to date, we haven't been able to see it. Sex is important. And honesty toward it, is even more important. But to our limited vision the present fashions of thought and action, have appeared not so much honest as loose; not so much a matter of lower moral standards, as no MORAL STANDARDS AT ALL. Is this the time-honored complaint of an older generation against a younger; the inability of old age to adjust itself to change, to understand youth! A GAIN mebbe so. But we who REALLY KNOWS tell us all about it. Frankly, a and popular magazine reading, TAKE this last novel, "The End of Desire" by Robert Her rick. Now Herrick is regarded as one of our better novel- ists mature, serious, a professor Yet apparently even he has become of sex, that this book in our opinion, is no more creative litera ture, than the latest stenographic report of the annual meeting of the Gynecological congress. Utterly devoid either of humor or charm, it is little more than a sex pamphlet, in fiction form. In other words it is sex PROPAGANDA, and where PROPA GANDA begins literature ENDS. As for the cheaper novels, and more trashy magazines. where frank pruieucy and plain dirt begin literature ALSO ends. lflIAT lire we coming to, not only in literature but all down the line? Is it merely a passing hnse, as the Restoration period in England was a passing phase; or is it a new era, a step i forward in our evolution, the aex equalityl We hope it is the former. But we would welcome the won! of i.omeone who really knowa, to remove all doubt about it. The office of Florey Insurant-, serv ice and Chauncey riorey. U S Com mlMiLnnr, now located oa hb 4tr ONE individual, far more cap than the senile sap who happens better than the mental deficient You may doubt that, too. Make state and you won't. difference grapefruit in California. It's would like to have some one some acknowledged Wiseman- period of rather extensive novel leaves us completely bewildered. of English in his own ngnt. so obsessed with the business by-product of aohieviug a genuine SMUDOK OIL Any kind you wanl Ixiw rate, and quick servl . Phone MS now. T. B. SAMSON COMPANY, U North. ftlrr!d Today By Arthur Brisbane . Pennsy's First Billion, 500,000 and 50 to 1, The Core of the Earth, Happy Lung Fish, - Copyright King Features Synd., Inc. We have a valuable, profit able country, if we could only persuade it to start up and "get going" again. A report of the Pennsylvania railroad, for in stance, shows that the institu tion, managed by General At terbury, has paid during the past year more than forty-two million dollars in dividends, and since its incorporation in 1846, has paid ONE THOUS AND AND THIRTY-ONE MIL LION DOLLARS TO STOCK HOLDERS. This is interesting because the Pennsylvania is the first railroad to pass the billion dollar mark in dividend pay ments. Five hundred thousand Fri day watching the running of the Grand National steeple chase at Aintree, saw Forbra, win with 50 to 1 bet against him. That victory will make the more foolish dream about "easy money" only to realize later that there is no such thing. m Those Interested In horses will note that Forbra Is seven years old, old enough to have bones and muscles weU developed. The usual ayatera that seta horses to galloping at high speed before they are two yeara old burns them up quickly. But that la the way to make racing financially profitable. Harvard University, helped by a generous gift of the Rockefeller Foundation, will Investigate the "core" of this earth, attempting to reproduce the heat and terrific pres sure that exist at that central spot, toward which, as Dante said, long be fore Newton was born, to formulate ; the law of gravitation, all things In the universe tend. The Harvard professors possess ap paratua which haa "squeezed water Into five different solid forms, and pressed air Into a substance aa dense as water." It Is hard to believe that any experiments on the surface could produce conditions created by the pressure of four thousand miles of earth bearing down on the "core." But It la hoped that discoveries will help geologists to locate precious metala. It la known that the earth Is ap proximately heavy aa though made of solid ateel. Imagine the pressure at the lower end of a steel column four thousand mtles high. In the Interior of the sun heat rises to fifty million degrees cent! grade, according to Jeans, Impossible for us to conceive. If an ordinary rifle bullet could be raised to that temperature and you came within five thousand miles of It, you would shrivel up and disappear. At New York University. Dr. Homer 8m!h studies metabolism, with the aid of a fish that haa been asleep for three and a half years and Is expected to sleep eighteen months longer. The creature la called a "lung fish," becsuse It can breathe through gills In the water and through rudi mentary lungs on land, an Interest ing step In evolution. Some of the unemployed might wish to possess the fish's versatility. How comfortable to go to sleep, leav ing a call for ll33. 1934. 193S. or whenever time get better." Those with large incomes that do not like Income tax, prepare to shed large tears or find a lawyer that can show you how to avoid doing what you donl want to do. The house ways and meana com- p ,""'ulU!n m" com, aurtaxe, to 65 per cent by a vote of 1SS to ST. If you hare an Income above five million dollars a year you must pay Tj per cent, but that, of course, does not worry the majority of us. It probably doea pot worry those with more tban five million a year much, because they have lawyers clever enotigh to take care of auch emergencies, and It la always a com fort to know that jrou can buy ae curltle, entirely free from Income tax and keep all your Income. In Brooklyn. N. T .Friday morning, three men In an automobile, picking out five solitary cltlrens. on, after th other, beat and maimed them "for fun," th police My. Two of tb vic tim had their leg, broken, ,kull, wr fractured, two will probably die All wen, knocked down and kicked without provocation, merely becaua th thre men In the car were In March of amusement. Th polk sag aoouUiisg oi, th. Personal Health Service By William Signed lettsn pertaining to personal neaitb ana hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a lumped eelf-ad-dreesed envelope u enclosed. Letter, ebould be brief and written in Ink O-J-lng to the large number ol letter, received only a Jew can be anawered here. No reply can be made to querlea not conforming to Instruction. Ad dreai Dr. William Brady In care of Tb Mall Tribune. HIOH TIME TO DEFINE THE COMMON CO!,D OR BECOUMZE THE CHI. Probably no other bureau or de partment contribute more consist ently to the maintenance of the def icit In the federal budget than that headed by Sur geon General Cummlna. Snugly ensron ed In hta bureau In the treasury department 0 1 e Doc Cummin, evidently apenda most of hla of ficial time get ting up articles and etorlea to print In the various government publication, and in the secular press. Doesn't cost him a cent to circulate his stuff to any corner of the universe. Uncle Sam totea It free of posthge. I estimate that 97.4 per cent of It and It amounts to tons and tons la not given so much as a cursory glance by the thousands of physicians, health officers, editors, writers, teacn ers. nurses, floorwalkers and cow boys on the bureau's deadhead list. The other 8.6 per cent tear off the wrapper and give the atuff a quick once over, but usually it is deadly statistics and ker-plunk It goes Into the waste box. At least one a year, maybe twice, the Indefatigable Surgeon General touches up and reissues hla famous piece about the common cold, and by Jingo, almost Invariably some editor up In Vermont or out In Utah Rives It a run, maybe with a neat Washington, D. C, date line on It and even a heading, so the cus tomers will feel they're getting live news from the nation's capital, I always watch eagerly for this mvself. I think Ole Doctor Cum- I m!n must be a droU humorist. But this year I see he has put the soft pedal on the Intimation that the sudden changes, wet feet, drafts and all that sort of thing must be borne In mind when one la praying one will not get caught in a bad sneeze or cough bombardment. According to the version I have before me a column of material quoted In a mag azine as from the official orga n of the public health service this year the Burgeon General contents himself with warning folks to be ware of uncovered coughs or sneezes, and advising them to keep their hands scrupulously clean. No, there Is nothing In the an nual hokum from the government health bureau about the risk one runs of contracting respiratory In fection In the spray of ordinary conversation. I suppose It would never do for Ole Doctor Cummins to recognize that hazard, for that would be tantamount to recognizing my teachings, and that would be Just too bad. Anyway I am encouraged to note that the federal health bureau is not so strong for wet feet and drafts and the like as she was last spring. kind happened eight months ago and believe that the three "were operat ing after a drinking bout." The five victims probably consider prohibition NOT a success. , Chauncey Olcott, born in Buffalo, N. Y.. 72 yeara ago, died Friday at Monte Carlo. This will be sad news for many that during the past fifty yeara have heard his Irish songs, and ballads. The most popular of all, perhaps, waa "My Wild Irish Rose." On April 5 thehardy citizens of Finland will resume the use of alco holic spirits. They have had enough of prohibition. The government has ordered 875.000 bottles of liquor, Including 75,000 bottles of Scotch whiskey, 150,000 bot tlea of French brandy. Because of ex treme cold, wines can't come In until summer. Low in alcoholic content, the bottles would burst. Bight hundred and seventy-five bottles of liquor would not go far In this country under prohibition. 9urrv A ftpanlfth castle! That I what I rail the tltht of HgM! To live there would become for me the acme of delight. I'd like to lt ItuMe." rr.e Puft. "and think of olden knight.." Who dined on r.t nung P..." Ms Whit, "to celebrate their flthta." PERMANENTS tovely Ateam mm push Wares 3)J np Mnnda;. Toeida?. nednetdat Shampoo and Finger ot Marcel SI- Work cuaranteed. BOWMAVaV-rbon 67. Brady, M. D. In another ten yeara or so, who knows? Surgeon General Cummlna may go so far aa to define what he means when he alludes to "the com mon cold," or If he can't do that and I dare aay he can't then, by Jimmy, he may take the wind out of my sails altogether by explain ing that he meana any one of the Common Respiratory Infections, In short the Crt. only of course a men In hla eminent position must not get too far ahead of the' traditional notlona of the profession snd beliefs of the people. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Exercise for Rupture. Please give the directions for the exercise you recommend for the pre vention and cure of rupture. C. B Answer Lie on your back, sup port the point of protrusion with middle fingers of one hand, while you raise one leg to vertical and lower it again, slowly, from eight to 20 times. Then the other leg the same. After you have done this each night and morning for a week, raise both legs together, from three to 20 times as you become accus tomed. Always keep the hernial re gion supported with your hand while doing these or any other exercises Such exercise develops and strength ens the natural muscle wall aud so prevents hernia (rupture, breach) In some cases and cures small re cent hernias In some cases. Lady With Phobia. I am a mother of six healthy chil dren and in perfect health. As a child I had Jaundice, and ever since I can't bear the sight of tea leaves. I always leave considerable tea in my cup to make sure I shall cot see any leaves. Recently at a party one of the ladles started telling for tunes. I tried to avoid looking, until one lady came and showed me the wonderful pattern she had . . . I became ill and had to leave hur riedly and come home. My husband laughs at me . . , 1S. B. Answer Some of us laugh to con ceal our ignorance and some of us laugh and show our Ignorance. I can sympathize with you. but i don't know how to cure your phobia. I'm that way myself about mashed potatoes. When I was about 6 years old I was compelled to eat a huge mountain of mashed potato before I could have my turkey at gram's Thanksgiving dinner, and I still want to murder anybody who exhibits mashed potato to me, even when ! I'm hungry. The Bends. Working on an Idea to help deep ' sea divers ... If a moderate amount of water vapor were forced Into the air In the diver's suit would it help or hinder the physical reac-1 tlon? I am assuming water vapor would not enter the tissues as read ily as air does. J. A. F. Answer I refer you to Prof. Yan- delt Henderson of Yale. Copyright John F. Dille Co.) VICARIOI'S ROMANCE. By Alice Judson Penle. When Thea was 13 her older sister became engaged. Thea's interest in the affair was Intense. She watched her sister and followed her about as never before. When the postman came. It was she who ran Into the hall to see it there waa a letter from the young man. She gloated over every atten tion, every gift her slater received. All at once she had become to Thea an entirely new person, a gla morous and mysterious being. Always she tried to penetrate the mystery. What did It feel like to be engaged, she asked. When would they be married? What sort of bridal dres would she wear? Who would be maid of honor? Of course Thea knew she was young for that, but who else should be If not the bride's only sister? The thirst of the adolescent girl for vicarious romance is insatiable. Aware that she herself cannot hope for such experience In her own right for some time yet, she takes out parents The Preferred American More than ever before, men and women are putting their money in savings accounts. Uncle Sam recommends sound banks as the safest place for your money. No investment is more American: no investment yields more reliable return. MEDFORD NATIONAL BANK Medford s First School On So. Central Avenue (Ed. Note: Medford hlatory com piled by members of Crater Lake Chapter, D. A. R., continued from last Sunday). Chapter 4 The Medford school district, No. 19, was a part taken from school district No. 2. This district embraced "all tbe territory commencing at the northeast corner of district No. 1, about one mile east of Clinton's But tea, running east to Stuart a creek, thence up said creek to the" northeast corner of Gates' claim, thence In a southerly di rection to the mountains, Including Heron, Hamlin, Frlck and Whltworth, thence west to the east line of district No. 1, Including Orlffln's; thence narth to the place of beginning. Given under my hand this September, 1854. T. F. Royal, county school superin tendent, Jackson county. Oregon ter ritory." Medford'a school district. No. 49, waa created from a division of No. a made February 20, 1884. and reads as follows: ' Beginning at a point on Bear Creek in Sec. 32, T. 37 8.. R. 1 W.. and running thence west to the southeast corner of the George For dyce place, thence west to the south west corner of the Wilson place, thence north to the northwest cor ward on the line of the county road ner of the WiUon place, thence west ward on the line of the county road to the southwest corner of John R. Tiee's place, thence westward to the east line of school district No. 1, thence north to the south boundary ol the Central Point district, thence east to Bear Creek, thence southeast erly along the west shore of Bear Creek to the place of beginning. " Signed, William M. Colvlg, county su perintendent of schools." The first school was held In a one room school building on South Cen tral, now part of the home of E. D. El wood. A Mr. WlUlamson waa the first teacher and it was a subscrip tion school, each pupil paying 98. During the summer of 1884 a frame school house waa built on West Main street between South Oakdale and L streets on land sold to the district by C. C. Beekman. In 1891 this build ing was moved to West Tenth street and 1 a now the home of M. L. Alford. waiter Gore waa the first orincirjal In 1884-5-6. and Miss Mai Craine, now Mrs. John Cox, taught the nrimarv! classes. MJas Belle Merrlman Stronk and Miss 'Sophia Wilson were also primary teachers during these earlv days. Mr. Morris waa hired for 1886-7 but was asked to resign in January and w. h, core, who had graduated from tne state university In June. 1886, in the class with W. I. Vawter. George Dunn and W. J. Roberta, waa asked to take charge of the school. It was then a three-year high school offer ing three courses and the full eight grades. Miss Kate VanDyke, Miss Sar gent and Miss Carrie Baker taught the grades. W. H. Gore wa nrin- clpal for two and one-half years. Then a man oy tne name of Crawford was principal until the fall of 1891. when N. L. Narregan beean his eievn-vMr her yearnings by Identifying herself with someone who la momentarily a romantic heroine. The fact that her excitement must ! appear a little ludicrous to the un sympathetic bystander does not oc cur to her. If no actual heroine Is at hand she Identifies herself with the hero ines in books. It Is because of thta that the novel la her favorite read ing. In each book she lives through a fresh adventure. In each she is the beautiful, the desired, th n. chan tress. Since all this plays its part in growing up It is to be endured with all possible patience. Only there should he care that she has real interest, real friends, real satisfac tions in the here and now to com pete with the claims of her fantasies Jenkins' Comment (Continued from Page una ) can't be built, Just as automobile, are built, out of stsndard, factory rrade part,, assembled by skilled crews Just as automobiles are assem bled? , ORAINS made the automobile busi ness the wonder of the world. Brains of equal quality can make the building of houea ANOTHER won der of the world. Comfortable, leasant homes are OS OSST period of service In the Medford school. A larger building was built on the same site In 1891 and burned In 1896. Complete with furniture this building cost 13900. Arbor Day. April 14, 1893. N. L. Nar regan, who waa principal of the school, was Instrumental In securing 40 trees from different citizens and with appropriate exercises these were planted on the school grounds. After the fire a brick building known aa the Washington school, waa built and formally opened March 3. 1896, Attorney L. A. Estel delivering the address. . In 1906 the Lincoln school on North Bartlett street waa built and In 1909 a high school waa erected on North Bartlett at the cor ner of Fifth street. This waa used as a high school until 192S when an other high school building was built on North Holly street and the old building became the Junior high. It waa torn down in 1931 when the pres ent high school building waa erected on South Oakdale and the Junior high moved Into the building on North Holly. The district sold the old Washing ton building the same year and built a new Washington grade school on South Peach street. The county bought the block on West Main street and tore down the brick school build ing to make room for the new county court house. The Roosevelt and the Jackson school buildings were erected In 1911. The city schools have been, in charge of the following well known men since then: N. L. Narregan from 1891 to September. 1895, and G. A. Gregory, principal for three years. Mr. Narregan returned then and contin ued in charge of the school until M J. Signs waa elected in Septem ber, 1905. During his three yeara of office the Lincoln school waa open ed. V. G. Smith followed as superin tendent for two years, and In Sep tember, 1910. V. 8. Collins was elect ed and served for five years. He waa followed by V. Meldo Hlllls, who waa here for three years, and Wm. Da venport for two years. Aubrey Smith became superintendent In September, 1920, and remained four yean, and E H. Hedrlck haa been superintend ent since September, 1925. The Valley school was started with three pupils In 1918 by Miss Louise Burke in her room at the Hotel Med ford. After she left to emtaeo In war work. Miss Helen Bullla contin ued the school in her own home. Patrons of the school in 1920 Incor porated, bought property on West Tenth street and fitted it up for school purposes. With the Misses Lll lards and other competent teachers in charge the school has had a splen did record. In the fall of 1928 the school opened in the new and modern building In East Medford, where it haa continued to grow. St. Mary's academy was built in 1908 on West Twelfth street and its record, too, has been a splendid one. There have been several different business colleges. The first was open ed in September, 1893, and a building erected the same year. (Continued next Sunday) certainly Just as fundamental In hu man life as automobiles. IT IS because the two little Item here cited prove that BRAINS ar beginning to tackle the Job of mod ern merchandising of lumber that they are so tremendously significant here in a lumber country. For Sale Pordson tractor steel wheel farm wagon. Med. Fuel Co. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY TWO ROOM, new, clean, completely furnished modern house and gar aw. 17.50. We pay water. 1018 West 11th. FOR RENT Desirable furn. apt. All hotel accommodation,. Hole! Grand OOOD until the 26th, Stark famous family orchard. 21 trees: 125 00 val ue. Twelve dollars dellve-ed. W. B. Crause, 528 South Fir St. BARGAINS Nothing else but. 21 u,ed car, to pick from Coupe,, roadsters, sedans. Easy term,, your car in trade. Buy now. GATES AUTO CO. Used Car Dept. John R. Knight Teacher of Violin Phone 154 Jacksonville Investment