Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 21, 1932, Page 4, Image 4

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKl), OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 21, 1932.
PAGE FOUR
Medford Mail Tribune
"efenrone be Southern 4tM '
- ' rem Ibl Mill IrlkuM"
Dalll Kieept Solurda,
Publlthtd be
MUtifONn niNTiNU ca.
ii-if-it h. t'n at. Wwm
HOBtiUT BUM, Editor
IS, U KWAPP, Manner -
An Independent Neoapepcr
Entered u eeeoo claee aottar it Medford
Oreton, under let el Helen I, lilt.
BUhWIUIKIION HATE
Bb M.I o Adianea
Dnir. reei ,. ...ii.oo
. Daily, nunui. , 'o
By Carrier, Is Adranee Medlord, Aebland.
Jacieomllle, Central Point, raoeell, latent, UM
mil and on maiiwaie,
" Dallj, moDUl. ,11
r 'Daily, one real ,.,..., J80
. All terioa, eeio In adranee.
Offldal pel ol the Cite el Modfore,
Official pacer of Jaekiuo Count,..
UEMBEK Of TUB ASBUCIAIKU FUE8
BeeeMr mill Leued Wire Smite
Toe AJioeUted Creel to ilcluelrelr etrtlUad to
toe um for publication of ell newi dliuelchee
credited to It ir otlwroln credited In thil papor
od iIm to to loeal area punllined herein.
All riihtt far pulilleatioo of epcelll dkpnefcoa
serein ire ilio reaerred.
HKMIIEH OH UNITtl) PIKB
MEMBKH or AUDIT UUUijAU
or C1KCIIUTNJNI '
Adrertlilng KepreMOtitlrc,
U, C MOIJKNBKN k COMPANY '
Offleee hi Kern Yori. inleaco, Detroit, sen
yianeleeo, Loo Ancalee, Seattle, Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
Oy Arthur perry.'-,
i Saturday afternoon your corr.
scooted homeward from the basket
ball tournament and . found the
"beautiful and lazy Willamette," a
like demagoguery in a primary cam -
paig-n. The water waa up to many , one , ,t but because such an attitude is absolutely justified
farmhouse back door. II li a eery. ,.,.,,,.
indolent nood. nita no damnation. by the cirflumstanceg.'i Medford- Is basically sound, and so is
eemingiy. it Juat ooied into au every financial institution in it. There is absolutely no real
the low placet wearily, and there , , . . ... . ..
decided to locate, it waa neoeaaary cause for alarm. All wa need is to keep our foot sutiityently on
to take a circuitoui route and at tj)9 ground. imd our heads sufficiently clear to see It,
one time the Paclflo ocean waa I , .' , . ,, , . , ,. , '
. within a atone1 throw. But people No bank however Btrong can stand an mdufiiiittf run. kvery
who ar hub-deep In river water ' one knowg thnt If tne cry of fire stllrts a ,)ani0 the best fire
ahould not throw atonea at the ' . . . , . , , . , .
ocean. department in the world is helpless. No outside force can pre
:,i '.- '.
The econorale altuatlon unmLnt
1 The econorale altuatlon upataU
, peema to be batter than here. . Bu
;ene, Salem. Albany and Oorvalln
and way polnta, all poueoaad a SUhf
atantlal air of buslneae. There were
bo nM meetlnga on the banlc core
in of Indignant taxpayer, and Juii
04 mad candidate, They ara old
laahloned folka, and every other man
la not a black raaoal, whoae great
great - great great grandfather waa
Captain Kldd, and whoaa oldest boy
la probably one of tin Lindbergh
baby kldnapera. Met at leaat 30
former reeldente, who wanted to
know what the leading rumpua of
the Rogue River valley waa at prci,
nt. , Anothar gentleman, pralaed fie
baaketball aquad, "aa the team wttl
the moat light, but they, came by
It naturally." In two daya in Balem,
not a elngle hungry aoul hopped out
of a doorway to ask for a dime, and,
neither the writer nor hla accomp
lice countered with a plea for a
quarter. Thla section, on the other
hand, haa leaa rain, auto buasea, and
freight trucks, catapulting up and
down the highways, chiefly at night.
0 e o
Tour oorr. and Lea (tiubb) Wat
ton visited the penitentiary apd due
V Improvements tending to aafaty
and efficiency, now looks like one.
Through the effort of the warden
od Oovernor Meier a new adminis
tration building and cell block have
been constructed, and all the wood
removed from the Interior. The
danger of the people waking up some
jnornlng to read that a number of
convicts have been roasted alive In
their cells, la nil, with the elimina
tion or scores at pioneer fixe haa
arda. The chances of half the prison
population moving out some night
and hiding In the timber north of
Calem, la also reduced. ,
While strolling about the Institu
tion, your corr. slipped on a wet
ptatrway and all but knocked a 960-
found deputy warden, Into his lap.
he mishap amused, an Inmate, who
waa monkeying with a potato-peeling
machine. w.hq confidentially In
formed us, It would have been much
funnier If the deputy warden had
tumbled Instead.
o v
Saw a number of Jackson county
prisoners, In durance vile, Including
Jlay DeAutremont. head barber, who
was trying to make a clgaretta mak
ing contraption work. He waa hav
ing difficulty In the doing, but de
clared off-hand, to aome of hla oua
tomers. "It will take time, but I've
gat It." Incidentally, Ray la the
rnoat contented appearing man the
writer haa aeen alnoe the Wall street
crash. Hugh De Autremont la em
ployed in the laundry. The third
member of the Siskiyou tunnel mur
der squad Ray, also a barber, was
taking hla ease In hla own chair.
Albert W. Reed of Denver, sentenced
to life tor nil alleged part In the
murder of Victor Knott, Ashland
policeman, la detailed to the machine
(hop. He waved cheery greeting,
gmlled, and resumed nla hentmertun
on a piece of iron. Reed, acoordlng
to the deputy warden ' haa high
fhopea of a new trial. The aame of
ficial, eald "The De Autremonfa
liev never broken a single rule, aa
far aa X know."
0 0 0
There waa a fair representation of
Itledford folks at the basketball tour
nament. Attorney Rawlea Moor
wa among the lot. Attorney Moore
aid that Inaamuch aa h had buel
lieas before the supreme court, he
thought he would mil a little baa
kotbaU with It. Attorney Moor
further alleged that be expected no
one to believe this testimony. In
thl he waa right. Even John M,nn
Viewed It askance, and with doubt.
e e
The Burghermelatera cam out of
the meet with their ehaie of the
glqry. The designation of Maurice
IRrdl Bheel, as all-etate guard, waa
happily appropriate. Hera la a fine
youni gentleman of 16 yean, who
. won bla plaot by ahaer ablllt on
No Cause for
Battle Is
'HE report of difficulty in
re in a crowded thrcatre.
is not from the fire, but the way the people react to it. So the
real danger from the report of bank trouble is not from that
trouble, but the way the people react to IT.
'. If the people in the theatre keep their heads, and file out
in an orderly fashion, the damage is reduced to a minimum.
If they don't, if they lose thejr heads and rush for t)is exits,
nothing can prevent a major' catastrophe, : ' , ; ,: 1 .;.
e 0 0
THEJ coolness, calm judgment and good natur displayed by
thedepositors of the Jackson County bank yesterday, when
the news of its troubles were broadcast, demonstrates once and
for all, that the old Medford spirit, not pnly still lives, but can
be depended upon to-meet the-present crisis,' with the-same
eourage, fighting spirit, and will to win, that it has met similar
crises in the past.
.With, the continuation of this splendid spirit, this readjust
ment in thfj affairs of; the local bank,--regrettable as' it is
will be effected in the minimum time and at the minimum loss,
and in a short timfS the net damage as far as the community is
Concerned, will be completely absorbed and forgotten.
QO IT is time for everyone to
M r der, face front, and show
"WILL BE; Some will lose their heads of qourse, -In such a
situation that is inevitable.' . There are always some who at the
first hote of danger, crumblethrow dowii their guns and flee.
'But that demonstration yesterday proved that Medford has
few of them, that the rank and file are "steel true and blade
straight?,", and are going to see
finish. i 'h:'S'r;
CO THE only thing to do now
' we have.' Not 'only 'because, it is th? right thing to do,
' t'le loyal thing to do for the sake of this oommunity and every
vent disaster, only the -PEOPLE THEMSELVES. ' '" '
I . ..... , . " ,
We have assuranes on Mia highest autnonty mat tne jacKson
County bank wa( essentially sound. Had the depositors pnly
drawn money as they needed it, gone on about their business
as usual, wis ciitncinty wouiu.noi nave oociirreu,uuu vuc
qountry wide depression created an atmosphere of fear, bank
irouble .in a nearby tjlty, accentuated it, a few started rushing
for the exits, and the present liquidation resulted.
THAT, however, ih now water ovor the mill. It is only of
Vflllla in tllA Inoa.-tn if eanilmo nampltr flint alluli fl fnollHll
way of trying to prevent trouble is the one way qf INVITING
it. The way to prevent it, js to stand by the guiis, and Instead
of yielding to the most dangerous Hingle clement in our civiliza
tion, the mob spirit, show' the character and good sense, and
enlightened self interest to resist it.
As this is written the final outcome of the readjustment is
not known.'-' But whatever that outcome Is, we know that the
good old Medford spirit is going to be equal to it, :
WE KNOW this because of the fine spirit shown yesterday,
and equally fine spirit which s being shown throughout
the city today, . , - - . ;
' It is going to take more than a minor banking difficulty,
and this difficulty compared to difficulties elsewhere, is incon
sequential, to make, the people of Medford lose their heads,
throw away their puns and beat it for the rear. , '
Wo are goiiig over the top to victory in this crisis, as wo have
in evory crisis of the past. .; -
We have the leadership, wo have the citizenship, and we
have oil that is needed at such a time good horse sense, faith
in ourselves and in our conimuityi - ...:-. ". '
the floor. He la a natural athlete,
aa modest aa a violet about hla own
aohlevementa. Sheel la the type that
does pot toot It own born. The
young man will never tell anybody
he la an All-State guard.
The best team at the tournament
waa Banaon Teoh of Portland. Med
ford and Astorta were next, wV an
edge to Aatorla. . Decani or exper
ience at state meej. Salem. If It
received lta rightful rating would be
In fourth place. They do not pos
sess the olaae, color, and teamwork
of the other three, who could have
conquered them the first game. The
only edge they had, waa In th
schedul. -i
o a o
A a returning traveler, w now
emit the claaalo comment: W would
not trad th Rogu R!vr valley,
for any other aectlon. because the
other section la too smart for auoh
real estate deal. . . . . .
Jacksonville
JACKSONVILLE Mftixh 31. (Spl.t
Qtorttc fichumpf tnd Frank Wooten
r both quit l At th Jewkioa
vlll Sftnitarlum.
Elmer nd Ion Robereon of Phoe
nix vara CuncUy vuiton of Walter
Rn barton, , , , , . , ,
Mr. Bargtnt, who haa baan 111 at
har horn hata, la now much tm
provatt, 1 ,
Tiny Oombact of Klamath Fail
la hara vliltlng hu mother. Three
frlnta accompanied him.
John darter of the JackaonTllta
Ruch hlrhwty, but well known here,
haa been a patient at (he Sacred
Heart hotpttal In Medford for aevtual
weeke, had hi leg amputated lt
week.
Mr. and Mra. A. A. Tylee of Gold
Hill have moved Into a houe on
North Third atreet.
Social meeting of the Roval Nei
ghbor waa held at tha hall In the
U. 8. Hotel Tueeday, with 18 mem
bera present. At the rloee refreeh
menu were aerved,
Mr. and Mra. Carrol Datcheider and
children ct Portland arrived bar
Alarm The
All Over
a bank, is like the report of a
The real danger in the theatre
get together, shoulder to shoul
what should be flone, CAN AND
this thing through to a successful
,
is to keep the splendid morale
Saturday to vlalt relative here and
In Medford, returnlug home Monday.
Mrs, Nn Batcheldor, who htu spent
aevera, months with ralatlvaa In thla
district, accompanied them home.
B. A. Caddy waa a Sunday guest
of p. O, Sarraon on Applegate. u.
Mra. Polly Watklna of Copper Is
spending aeveral daya vUltlng rela
tives here.
Gene Cantrall of Medford waa a
recent visitor of Grandmother Can
trull. The third and fourth grades are
planting a flower garden at the
school.
Miss Jessie Gaddy waa absent from
school one day this week because
of 1 tineas.
Paul Pierce la now operating the
old Sterling mine.
Mra. Luella Pick lea of Pulton, Ky..
was a recent visitor of Frank ZeU's
antique li op.
Mrs. Miles Cantrall and Mra. Har
lan Cantrall of Rush were In Jack
aonvlHa and Medford Tuesday.
W. A. Chlldere of Big Applegate
waa a Jacksonville caller Tuesday,
Miss Louise English. Instructor at
tha Behnke-Walker business college.
Portland, gave a typing demonstra
tion t he local high school Thura
t1iTs she waa acoompanied by I. M
VYa'ke. president of tha college, nd
hu wife.
Mr. and Mra. A. V. Wyatt, recant
oo pitr, are making their home In
Kast Jscksonvllla near the achcoi.
Mr. Wyatt la an employee of the
Pacific Telephone company In Med-1
fcro, , - , . f
Mr. and Mra. Fred Clagtton have
aa gueU at , their home thla week
Mr. and Mra. Ore Wyant and son.
Don, of Klamath Fall. . i
Past Noble Grand club of tha Re-1
bekah lodge . will hold their next
meeting u tha afternoon of March i
DO. Instead nl Mrch 83 aa formerly1
planned. The place la to ba an-1
nounced. j
Mr. and Mra William Nicholas left
for Portland Thursday to visit rela-1
Uvea for aeeral daya. They also '
spent a few daya last week visiting
reUtlvea in Weed. Calif.
Be correctly reled
by miRLWYN B HOFFMANN
Sixth and Holly Strew
Today
By Arthur Brisbane .
In Florida,
A Canal Needed,
One Happy Man.
Come and See.
Copyright King features Synd.. Jo!
..-'WEST PALM BEACH, Flo.,
This is written on the train
from New York to Miami to be
dropped off at West Palm
Beauh telegraph office. It Is
comfortable, easy, interesting
trip, 1 to WashinKton on the
Pennsylvania line, then to Rioh
mond on the Fredericksburg
and Potomac railroad, then all
the way' south through Vir
ginia, both the Carolinas, Geor
gia and Florida via the Sea
board Air Line. 1
The late President WarfielJ
of tiie Seaboard, who forced his
railroad through down the west
coast and across Florida to Mi
ami, rendered public service,
and i Florida should build :a
Vou enter a heavy ateel Pullman car
In the Pennaylvanla'a New York terr
mtnal, at 0:30 a. m. and leave It In
Miami at 6:55 p. m., the next eve
ning. Only one night on the train.:
Thla Florida U a wonderful coun
try, a greAt natural aun parlor, room
for millions on a peninsula, stretch
ing down Into the tropica, holding
back the waters of the gulf that ab
sorb the aun'a heat and travel east
ward to warm our British cousins.
What all American shipping inter
est need, la a canal across Florida,
connecting the Atlantic ocean with
the Gulf of Mexico, making It un
necessary for snips from eastern
porU bound for the gulf states to
travel all around the end of Florida.,
more than a thousand miles of Bail
ing wasted on each trip. '
' J. I. Daniels, energetic young presi
dent of the Jacksonville chamber Of
commerce, board the train early, to
talk about that,
It la disgrace to this country,
proof of aluggUhness, that tha canal
from the Atlantic to the gulf has been
so long delayed.
- The project Interests and would
benefit the nation. .
Such a canal would be used almost
entirely by American coastwise ship
ping. . -. .
Senator Long,' who haa recently
moved from hla borne on the gulf to
Washington, might use some of the
beginner's" enthusiasm and puah
thla canal project through. The ship
ping which It would serve, according
to Mr. Daniels, of Jacksonville, would
exceed by oua third the shipping that
now . paaaes through the Panama
canal. Construction of the canal
would ha eery cheap, a trifle, aa com
pared with Panama, and It would pay
for Itself tha first few years.
-4e ' "
Juat now, the aeaboard train la
cutting across the heart of Florida,
the brilliant aun la hot. Flowera, red,
scarlet, purple, blaee In all dlrecttone.
Men on tha train b&ve taken off coat
and waistcoat.
Off to the left stands a high tower
to the public by the late Edward Bok
It contains a chime of belle, and a
park around It. a refuge for birds.
Birds do not like the chimes, not
understanding that kind of music
But they like chimes bettter than
shotguns.
Dozen of snow white birds flap
their way alowly across the level land
and float on atagnant waters. They
used to be slaughtered for the feath
trs that grow on the tops of their
heads. They are protected now.
The fertile land U dotted with
Infinite numbers of lakes, the biggest
of them, Okeechobee Just ahead, li
the largest freeh water lake entirely ,
within the United Stales borders.
Mysterious swamps are many, with
gray moss hanging from the trees,
and below Alligators that doze thru
a century and more, active only when
hungry, or when a rifle bullet dis
turbs their peace for the sake of an
alligator -kln bg.
Great groves of orange and grape
fruit trees, are everywhere. Soma.
very old at Indlantown on the edge I
of Lake Okeechobee, aa Ull aa big'
elm,. V i.-i I
The grapefruit grow In unbelievable
abundance, half a dor en at the and '
of ou thin branch, and you may tee
from twenty to fifty large, yellow and
ripe, lying on the ground, under one
tree, going to waste. The health of
the nation needa all tha cttrua fruit
that thla country could produce In
Florida, the gulf atatea and California
But distance and middlemen separate
the consumer from the fruit. In our
day of Imperfect distribution.
What marvels human Industry,
modern agricultural methods and
capital could work In this state. That
will come In time, not everything oa.t
be accomplished In one hundred
yeara. Flint must come the boom,
and the exploded boom, then tha
people and tha finished product.
Personal Health Service
By William
tilgne rt letter pertaining to personal neatth and hygiene, not to disease
dlagnoaia or treatment, wllj pa answered by Dr. Brady it a etampad aeli-ad.
dressed envelope la encloaed. Letters should ba brief and written in ink
Owing to tha Urge number ox lettera received only a few can be answered
here. No reply can ba made to querlea not conforming to Infraction. Ad
dress Dr. WllliAm Brady in care of Tha Mall Tribune. ......
MILK 18 FINE FOB CHILDRBN IF THEY LIKE IT
We know your opinion of paateur
lzed milk, writes a Connecticut ear
respondent, but we have 'two boys
aged B and 4 , . .
Our Connecticut
respondent pays 16
cent a quart for
milk from a tuber
culin tested hard.
and It doesn't pur
port to be very
rich milk. She get
two quarts of this
dally for the two
children. Then
lately ahe haa been
buying pue quart
or pasteunzea mux lor cepts, and
thla milk, she thinks, la richer In
cream or fat. She wants to know
whether the pasteurised milk would
not be Juat aa good for the children
aa la the milk from tuberculin tested
cows. She reminds ua that each
child receives besides hla quart of
milk dally two teaspoonfuls of cod
liver oil and two tablespoon fula of
tomato juice.
. The poor kids.
I think pasteurized milk would be
all right for any chlUJ oyer three yeara
of age,
, It Is unnecessary to feed cod liver
oil to a child over a year. of nge, un
leaa It la especially prescribed by the
physician in the treatment ;'"( aome
disease.-
Ip my opinion banana la better
source of vitamins than, tomato juice
for infant or older child. I believe It
la good practice to begin feeding every
baby a small dally ration, ol , well
ripened banana at the age of four
months, and to Increase ihe dally
ration from half a spoonful at first
to half a banana dally by tne. time
the baby la eight or nip mvAtha old.
and a whole banana or more after the
baby la a year old. .Beside provid
ing the essential vitamin, bwana Is
nature's own regulator of Intestinal
digestion and peevish, alokly, coatlve
Infants thrive op it,,, - .
pasteurizing means merely heatlpg
tha milk hot enough to kill disease
geims in It., Heating to a tempera
ture of 145 degrees F. la sufficient
to kill tubercle bacilli, dtptuerla bac
cllU, typhoid bacilli, trptoooocl of
scarlet fever or septic sore throat, the
germs of undulant fever and all other
known disease germs which may be
carried In ordinary milk. Usually . the
146 degree temperature must be main
tained 20 to 30 minutes, . then the
milk allowed to crfl again. - - - !
. If tha pasteurizing process were
controlled by tha public health au
thorities, not by commercial or pri
vate Interests, tha oompulaory pas-
teurlzatlon of all milk except, of
Everything In - abundance , here,
fish, game, fruit, vegetables, sunshine,
everything that human happiness re
quires. : i; . ',!. 1 r. ( - i T
When the lata W. J. Connera of
Buffalo, presented thla writer one
of hi lota fronting on Lake Okeeoho
bee, he aald truly; - . .
"You can catch fish from your
front yard and shoot wild ducks In
tha backyard". i
A few mnr yeara, a great deal more
hard work, a few mora men like nag
let,, and Car) Fisher, a little mora
common sense on tha subject of emi
gration, and thla magnlfloent state
will have lt twenty million Inhabi
tant, with auch wealth and values aa
tha wildest real estate boomer would
never have dared auggest.
How beautiful if happiness with no
anxiety about tomorrow. Tha train
stops, and a young colored man roara
up In a powerful runabout of uncer
tain age. - Tha train blocks hla way,
but hat ha not a powerful engine?
la ho not out to enjoy hlmaeU?
Driving at high spaed, ha cuts
across an empty lot with deep holes
that bounce him and hla delighted,
companion to tha top of tha car. To
avoid an early modal T driven by a
white lady, - tha runabout driver
steps on it." climbs over the railroad
tracks, goes down a bank and la off
to continue enjoyment of speed and
power.
Vincent Astor In hi big Chrysler,
Albert Laskar, In hla sixteen cylinder
Cadillac, "Flo E I eg f eld In hla Dusen
berg, all put together, do not know
the automobile Joya of that Florida
driver. In hla 191 aomethln'-or-other.
Come to Florida If you can, wheth
er rich or not rich. There are accom
modations here for all that have
enough to support themaelves.
You may not ba as happy as the
man In the old runabout, but you
will be glad you cams.
Jenkins Comment
(OonUMatd Irom Page One )
HSRV la ft question you might pon
der a little. If you haven t any.
thing else to oi
Jut how many wholly auoeaaafui
bachalora have you personally known
la tha course of you? lifer
darneas and built aha greatest nation
tha world he w known.
Hera as ft vaa at your answer:
Not many,
IF A LOT of men who might not be
wUIlnf to admit tt would tell the
exact truth, they would havw to
admit that they owo a lot of their
success to their wives.
Pray, M. D.
course, certified milk, would ba an
excellent health measure. .
.. Certified milk I the .only griule of
raw. milk- that la aafe and desirable
for tha feeding of Infanta. Certified
milk coats much more than ordinary
milk and la worth price. If It lahidl
milk and Is worth the price. If it la
available at all.
, But for children over three years
of age I believe ordinary pasteurized
milk la perfectly wholesome food, and
I doubt If I ahould be willing to pay
more than the market price of pas
teurized, milk for any other grade
except -oer tilled If I could hive that.
I. think a pint of milk la plenty
for any kid to take each dev. If his
diet otherwise Is not unreoeonabl y
restricted.
QUESTION'S AND ANSWERS
Quaint Health Board Antics.
. A child cornea down with, scarlet
fever, . The child has been attending
school. The health officer oea to
the school, burns soma formaldehyde
candlea in the. schoolroom In the
night, and pronounces the schoolroom
safe for the other pupils next mornr
Ing, Vet within the week four other
children In the same schoolroom came
down with scarlet fever . , tr-M. A.
. . Anawer--And probably the people
of tha community pay taxes to sup
port auch antics by the health au
thorities. The rite of burning forma
lin In the schoolroom haa no bearing
on the apread of scarlet fever. The
children, who came down with the
disease a few daya later wt1 prob
ably Infected by the first c&ld be
fore the benighted health officer
came and offered his Incense The
incubation period of ecarlet fever Is
from 24 hours to six days.
... . Filling the Baby Teeth.
Is It safe or advisable to have cav
ities filled In the teeth of children
four or five years of age? Mra. J. C.
. Answer- Yes. If the prlmiry milk
or baby teeth are allowed to decay,
the secondary, permanent vset, the
first of which Is the "six-yeir molar"
will probably become carious.-.
., . t'leer Patient Must Diet
If I could live wlthou breaking
any of your 10 rules I am confident
I'd get along nicely. But It la not so
easy for a traveling man to stick to
the diet. But from my frequent con
sul tat lone with specialists I'm aure
you have the right dope . . . P. L.
Answers-Many aufferera from gas
trio or duodenal ulcer have found
considerable help In tha Menu for
Fl rat Week and the booklet, "Guide
to Right Eating.". The former la-free.
The latter sets you back 10 cents!
(coin) and stamped addressed enve
lope.
(Copyright John T. Dllle Co.)
f ETTINO back: to thla Dr. WhtUng.
ha afents to be one of these per-
son who aay something good and
than get impressed with their own
wisdom and go on and spoil It.
For example, he continues: "The
Ideal age for happy marriage is
around 31 to 23 yeara. At that time
physical maturity haa been reached,
but MENTAL. MATURITY has not
been entirely developed." i
THAT Is to aay, it hi language
apeaka hla thought. In order to
get along well In the difficult first
yeara of . marriage . people must be
mentally Immature enough not to
be able to reason very clearly as to
what It la all about.
Doctor! Doctor! How could you?
' 4
pROM marriage to lamb chops Isn't
4 a very long Jump, as all brides
of more than a few weeks can tes
tify. So let'a take It.
You read In this column the other
day that . as an experiment lamb
chops are now being merchandised
In the modern manner, cut wltn ex
act oara and wrapped In palra in
transparent cellophane.
In San Francisco the other day.
they ran clear out of these appetlz
Ingly packaged lamb chops and bad
to send back to Omaha for more,
being unable to obtain an Immediate
supply on the Pacific Coast.
Merchandising la the big factor in
modern business..-.
S PC AKIN Q of experiments, there is
a sawmill here on the Pacific
Coast that aa a laboratory by
product la turning out rayon under
garments.
Rayon, you know, cornea from cel
lulose, and cellulose cornea from
wood, aa well as from cotton and
other vegetable fibres.
Who knowa what the future will
bring forth?
Carnival Planned
for Wagner Creek
WAQNER CREEK, March 31
8pl) Wagner Creek Parent-Teach-era
association met March 11th and
decided to present another aprlng
carnival during th first of May.
They alao decided to glva a play
the aame night. .
A committee was named for tha
purpose of appointing off lour for
tha new year.
Officers for tha past year ware
Mr. Br yon Keith, president; Mra. ;
T. H. Slagle, vice president; Cecil
A. Poole, secretary, and Miss Eunice 1
Hager, treasurer. :
E. B. DATcANDIDACY
' IS OFFICIALLY FILED
SALEM, March 31. ( AP Earl B.
Pay of Gold Hill has tiled tor tne j
Republican nomination for reprt- j
tentative In the state legislature fori
the 10th district, Jackson couuty. '
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson County
history from the t-'llea of The
Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Years
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
March 81, int.
(It was Tuesday )
Life termer at Salem prison Is shot
through heart when he refuse) to
stop throwing rocks at guard
Secretary of State Hughes denies J
any secret agreement 'With England
Ashland high school wins state bas
ketball championship. ... -, ...
Porter J. Neff and party motor to
Portland to hear grand open.
Farmers protest state fund for O.
A. C. extension work.
- Twenty-eight auto tourists spend
night at auto camp; complain of iack
of wood. C. of C. to make amends
for auch lack of hospitality.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
rv March 21, 1812. ,.
(It was Wednesday.)
O, A. Knight la having conorete
foundations placed under two bunga
lows on Geneva atreet..
The grand Jury probes the county
court. . .......
Northwest favors Wilson for presi
dent, survey and straw vote shows,
' Council decides to pay city fire
men. Plan to beautify vacant luta gets
under way.
Three bartenders arrested for sell
ing liquor to Ashland minor,
John H. Carkln to run for legis
lature. Cattle rustlers busy on Applegate
again.
Candidate for county office charges
"graft," and claims he la abused by
the "oourthouse gang." .
Talks ID
.. . PRAIHB AND CRITICISM. -
fly Alice Judson Peale.
Probably the moat crushing thing
that can happen to a talented child
(a to have hla creative efforts sub
jected to harsh criticism from those
he loves.
Especially Is thla true during the
earliest yeara before admiration for
some teacher, tha Influence of read
ing and experience have weaned
him at all from hla dependence upon
parental approval as the measure of
his worth and success.
Ridicule, criticism and Indifference
during this period may cause him
to lock up for always the prompt
ings of his Imagination and to con
ceal their existence even from him
self. Another destructive Influence la
praise of the sort that makes the
child feel more pleased with him
self than with his work. Later in
school and afterwards when he must
stand the test of an unbiased evalu
ation of his work he finds himself
unable to profit by even the most
constructive criticism.
So used Is he to undiluted praise
that he regards anything else a a
personal affront. He cannot learn
from his mistakes or aea hi own
shortcomings.
Much praise of any sort la likely
to make him over dependent upon
it and self -conscious and insincere
in his work. He work then not to
please himself or to express some
Inner vision but to win approval.
It la. not easy for the parent to
strike Just the right note in his
attitude toward his child's creative
efforts. Praise from father and
mother the child must have, but It
must be In the form of not too ag
gressive appreciation.
It. muat not . be authoritative In
spirit. It should leave the child free
to work and please himself. . Ad
verse criticism comes best from
others, from whom the child can ac
cept 4t most easily.
Neighbor Women
of Wagner Creek
Tender Skower
WAGNER CREEK, March 21.
(Spl) There was a shower at the
home of Mrs. Frank Kerby in honor
of Mrs. Alice Arthur, a new neighbor
on Yank gulch, last Tuesday after
noon. Those present were Mra. H.
L. Sommer and daughter Marie, Mra.
Ella Abbott and daughters O oldie
and Eudell. Mrs. Bryon Keith and
small son, Mrs. Sawyer, Mrs. H. 8.
Lynch. Mrs. Eleanor Perkins, Mia.
I. E. Bradley, Mra. J. D. Slagle. Mrs.
H. T. Slagle, Mra. Charlea Cowans.
Mrs. Oeorge A. Kerby. Mia Rachel
Williams, Mrs. Amos Williams and
baby, Mrs. Emma Kerby. Mra. E. O.
Taylor and young daughter. Mra
Frank Smith, Mrs. Henry Kerby. Mrs. '
Elton Kerby, and Mra. Arthur. After
the wonderful gift were given out
refreshments of sandwiches, coffee 1
and cake were aerved. A fine time
was enjoyed by all nrosent.
Miners Stone Car
Ohio Guardsmen
ATHENS. O.. March 21 rAPlAn
automobile bearing Ohio National
Ouant officers to mine No. a nt rh
Sunday Creek Coal company, where
a strike of minors Is In progress, was
stoned by crowd of men today
Th windshields, window and h4
ltAll of th machine were imuh
but the officer sacaped Injury.
Crystalglow Kodai glue supreme
Hi PeMleys opp Hnilj theater.
COUGHS
Don't let tbem gat a strangle hold
Fipht germs quickly. Creomulaion com
bine th 7 best helps known to mod
ern science. Powerful but harmteaa,
Pleasant to tka No narcotic. Money
refunded if any cough no matter of
bow long Handing la not relieved. Ask
your dnijifUt for Cromukion. (adv.)
L
WASHINGTON, March 21. (AP)
A bill to permit four per cent beer
wa reported iJTcrably by a senate
sub -commit tee today with a ma-sub-committee
Saturday with a ma
temperance and decrease crime,"
While a minority held it would "add
to enforcement difficulties."
The action laid the issue before
the full manufacturer committee,
which Is expected soon to' decide
whether to report it to the senate.
The measure, sponsored by Senator
Bingham (R.. Conn.), would amend
the Volstead act to legalize the
manufacture of beer containing not
more than four per cent alcohol by
volume. It provides for sale only
by brewers and dealers In the origi
nal package or case, except that the
beer might be served la bottles by
"legitimate hotels and restaurants."
A majority report favoring the bill
was signed by two of the three
members of the sub-committee which
conducted extensive hearings. . They
were Senators Me tea If (R.. R. I.),
chairman and Bulkley (D., Ohio).
Senator Hatfield (R., W. Va.) dis
sented. FOREST ME
ROSEBURG, Ore., March 21. (AP)
Warm rains during the past three
days have melted more than 18
Inches of snow from the ground tn
the vicinity of the big Camas ranger
station In the Umpqua national for
est, according to a telephone mes
sage received at headquarters here
today.
The rangers said there had been
more than six inches of rain In the
past three days, and In some open
spots the snow has left the ground.
More than two feet of snow fell be
fore the rain.
Rains and melting snow brought
tha north and .south forks og the
Umpqua river to the flood stage, but
the streams receded slightly this aft
ernoon. No rlgh water damage has been re
ported. OFF PL
POINT BARROW. Alaska, March 31
(AP)-The gbost-shlp Baychlmo
had roappeared today, .
The Canadian fur trading vessel
which disappeared twice since last
fall when ahe waa caught In the
Ice pack between Point Barrow and
Nome along the Alaskan coast, waa
discovered about 10 miles oft Point
Barrow Thursday when the Ice broke
and leads appeared.
Natives, fishing about five mtlea
off shore, said ther6 waa a crackling
and crunching of the Ice aa the leada
opened and suddenly the Baychlmo
loomed up like a ghost from on.
of the de.jp gullies.
Royal Kidnaping
" Threat Is Denied
LONDON. Eng., Mnrch 81. (API
Police ofllctala at Scotland Yard aald
today they knew nothing of any
threat to kidnap the Princess Eliza
beth and her sister, Margaret Rose,
Infant daughter of the Duke and
Duchess of York. Report published
In the United States said such a
threat had been received.
Stayton Student
Killed in Crash
STAYTON, Ore., Mirch 21. (AP)
Celma Palmer, 16. Stayton high school
student, waa killed m an automobile
accident need here late Friday when
the car In which ahe waa riding skid
ded on the wet pavement and waa
hurled Into the ditch. She died a half
hour after the accident.
Rail Engine Crew
Dies 'Neath Train
SPOKANE. Wash., March 21. (API
Th bodies of Patrick Oallagher
and Maurice Stookey, the engine
orew on the Northern Pacific' North
Coast limited, which was wrecked
near Eddy, Mont, Saturday night,
were brought here today. Both men
were crushed and burned under t,he
engine.
Desirable houses alwsvi In first
class condition for rent, lease or sale.
Call 105
WILLARU
HOTEL
KLAMATH FALLS
OREGON
134 MODERN AIRY ROOMS
HATH-SHOWER OR COM
BINATION. CENTRALLY
LOCATED. FIREPROOF
CONSTRUCTION. ORILLK
IN CONNECTION.
We Inviic tour I'utronase
Rates I.J lp
W1LLARD HOTEL
T Mafn. Klawatk FalL
ai.Mr.RT uraTin. Mr.