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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1932)
f PA'GE TOT JIedford Mail Tribune "Ewryent in Southern Oregoa mds Iki Mail Tfihunt" fulls Eseepi Bsturdsf PuMHhed by MCDP01IP PRINTI.NU CO. SB-tr-39 N. Hr 8t E0BEB1 KL'HL, Editor E. L KNACP, Hww As lodrpendtnl Newspspar Enured u ifcond clus matte, at Uttford Orefon. u el HicD 8. IT. BUBUCHIPTION HATE8 Br Mill In Auanot D..tr, r. BOOtO J Bj Cirrltr, in Adianet Medford. Aiblind, JscisomllU, Cental Point, Pboenii. Talaot, Oold tllll awl oe ll!h. Dall. raoDtii lilljr. ou year All terms, cash In adnata. OrricUl pst of tbs City of Medford. Official pspef of JekoD Counts. MEM It EH Ot THE ASWUCIATKU PUfc88 IteceMfif tfull Leased Wirt Benire TU AssotlaUd Press It eluhlj entitled to UM nil lor publication of !l ww dlst-itenej credit U II or otherwise credited In this Dpf and also to U local rv-vn published herein. All nthu for puMlratiofl of eclal dUottcbcs bereio m also ttsenfd. MEMBKH'Or UNITED PUKM MEMBER OP AUDIT HUKEAO 09 CIBCUUTI0N3 AdrartUlm He trrestnlat Ires H. C, MOUE.NBKN COMPANY Offices In N York. LMearo. Detroit, Sao francisco, Los Angiles. Bcsttit. Portland. MtUttJI 1 i oftAiWIXVioaXoN Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry Oregon U ripe again tor a ''Progres siva Movement." that will never get any place. Mlu Lenore Coatea. "young weat- ern home V'aK.nmi, tax won and the sales tax Baker Democrat-neriua, i - aurest way to lose husband, u tojtecting t10 little fellow was as let mm eat me inmg o him eat the thlnga he dlsimas." Thla ) aounde logical, and highly plaualble. j No doubt Miss Coatea knows aa much. If not more, about tnranta, and their j care and feeding. j A college profeaaor aaye the price nt civilization la inaanity. ii n 'ra!!dtyofIfit ui thlnka the present worth going inaane over he'a crazy. , . .m. na TtmM.) Sad. bUt i (Thomaaton, Da.; Tlmea.) Sad, true. "Any man who retalna a aenae of humor In these daya, la worth a mil lion dollara." (Toronto Olobe.) The above la a glaring Inaccuracy that glares like the lelt-hand light of a one-eyed Ford. Aa one aupposed and alleged to have "a aense of humor." and has been laboring under that delusion for a number of vrari. we can give expert testimony that the financial appraisal Is too hih bv approximately I9B9.099. not mentioning the cents. There Is no doubt but what gl.000.000 would Improve the humor of the nation. 'excVuciaUngrnn. turn would h no atavlna In the same township with him. Humor, like virtue, la Its own reward and non-negotiable. GREEN 0B0W8 THE GRASS. (Ilea Moines Hrglter Tort Dodge, la. Trlpleta born ' to the Rev. and Mra. Frank Belby last week are the first In Fort Dodge in a decade. They have been named Donald James. Darr old Franklin, and Delorla Martha, and have twin aunts, twin great uncles and twin great-grand-uncles. The Rev. Mr. Belby, an evangelist, la a aalearran for duplicating machlnea. If there la going to be "a burning lsaue" In the primary campaign, the eandldatea better be committing their araon. Kvrv time France avera she can't pay America her war debt, and Presi dent Hoover "placea credence In the statement of the alater nation," many valley Republlcana get mad enough to grow a beard. There is a huge deficit In faith hereabouta, and tha lack thereof U not fax from being a drouth. Ed. R. White, the eminent trombonlat. Thursday ahowed algna of retaining faith, but under cross-examtnatlon admitted his faith waa "In the ulti mate." "Ultimate" la a good word, and means about aa much aa "func- tlon," and "dynamic," which were sprouted extenalvely and flambouy antly tha last year of tha Coolldge administration. The "ultlmaW la very Indefinite and hard to catch. ... Commissioner Walker ordered Poet Rudolph freed from the all, where he had been held on charges of boot, legging (Eugene News.) Tor the lesser offense. Not all tha red autoea you sea on the hogweye. are driven by auto aaleamen. Borne of our most down trodden have the mierldla. . THK KinNArlMNO A baby atolen from lie crib snatched by roueh hands. Terrified by a atrange touch. Coarse, evil farea; Clutched to an alien breast And carried through the chilly night And foreboding darknesa To be held for ransom I . . . And through the country Droning voices of propsgandista , Fellow clt Irene . . . America la The safest, hspplest country On the face of the earth . , , The Noble Experiment haa Made us a Isw-abldlng. Ood-fearlng, upright people I . , (New York Bun) Salem Girl Named D. A. R. Miss Oregon SALEM, April 1. (API Miss Frsn ces Field, Id. senior in the 8lem high school, has been chosen Miss Oregon to represent the chapters ol this state at tha nstlonsl convention of Dis abled American Veterans In Ban Dlego, June ia-as. It waa announced here today. Bha was named over can didatea from other chaptcra ia Oregon, There s a Reason j IT IS to laugh! The Democrats killed the sales tax a week ago because it "hit the little fellow." j On Wednesday they passed a stamp tax which presumably ; doesn't. At least we heard no champion of the common people ' get up and oppose it on such grounds. WONDER why! The VV little fellow" only when an imperative purchase either, for food, clothing and medicines had been eliminated from the measure before the vote was taken. In other words the sales tax would only have hit the little fellow who enjoyed a cash surplus above mere subsistence. The little man only able to decently clothe and properly nourish himself and family, would have escaped the tax entirely. But the champions of the little fellow won. The sales tax was killed. Whereupon less than a week later the stamp tax was passed. We can imagine no tax. that will hit the little fellow harder. Not every one buys. much these days, outside of food, clothing and medicine. But everyone writes letters and mails them. HY then did no one rise in W fellow. We think we know is always a chance EVEN OF A NEWSPAPER EDITOR being mistaken. But here is OUR explanation: There was no well-organized and highly-paid lobby fighting against it. There WAS such a lobby fighting against the sales tax and it was financed by an extraordinary combination department stores, chain stores, and the American Federation of Labor. The. National Grange also joined the opposition but according to our information, contributed no money toward it. Here is a description of that lobby by one of the best in formed newspaper men in Washington: "It was one of the moat powerful Intangible battering rama that ever hit a congreaaman on the head." When the stamp tax was proposed there was no battering to hit any congressman on I rani Complete Moral Bankruptcy! SPEAKING of taxes Aynnrdinir to the Associated printing 2,400,000,000 in full jju,,., to pasg )0th the House - ' Everyone demands that the t XT -I - i- 1 41.- .1 ...-..Inn (10 tu enu me iiuiuc-an"". v , well informed person, that the first and absolutely essential step in that process, is to balance the federal budget. Until that is done there can be no end to the depression. Until that is done, even the credit of this country, the richest and strongest in the world, will be threatened. REALIZING this, and under the lash of Speaker Garner's snalce-whip, members of the House working night and day, have just succeeded in doing this on paper. And yet we are told, that majority of them-intend to voting a new burden of over 2 payers of this country I SUCH action seems insane, utterly incredible. ' Such action is both insane and incredible, except to those who under stand this nauseating game of practical polities. Ve don't believe there is a Congressman or Senator, who honestly believes the passage of this tremendous bonus, AT THE PRESENT TIME, is either the right thing or the patriotic thing to do. But if this A. P. report is correct, only a minority of them, have the courage and the manhood, to stand by their convictions, and run the risk of incurring the political dis pleasure of an organized minority. We can't believe that even a majority of ex-service men, favor such action. Put no doubt an ACTIVE minority does, and it is this minority that our tives in Washington, intend to A more striking example moral fibre and true statesmanship . in the Congress, coulfl scarcely be imagined. But that, dear reader, is the game of professional politics, as it ia every important election! Talks ID parents MOTHER'S 1NFLVENCE By Alice Jlldon Ifnle. At home Betty alwaya ate poorly Unless her mother sat wllh her through every meal and urged every mouthful, ahe at virtually nothing. When Betty went to apend a few weeks with her aunt, her mother waa afraid that without her supervision she would surely alarve. For this reason she ordered sent for her use seversl boxes of figs, dstes and raisins food which Betty usually consented to eat with a minimum of coaxing. But at her aunt's house, surround ed by hungry ltttle cousins, Betty ate everything that was set before her. Only when she waa given a dish of dates with the ststement thst moth er sent Oiem epeclelly for her did she refuse to eat. It required only the mention ot mother In connection with the eat Ing situation to csll up In Betty all the negative sttltudes which had long been habitual with her. Mother had alwaya tried to force her to eat and always she hsd resisted. The fact that mother had aent the dates re minded Betty that aha must not est them. Thst thla reslly waa the basis of her refusal mas made clear by the fact that when. few days later, ihey were sgstn served to her, and this time without comment of any aort. aha at them promptly and with evi dent enjoyment. The Incident demonstrstea how completely conditioned the eating habits of children may be by their parents' attttudea toward the eating altuatlon. It suggests once more how nece. aary It la to set the child's food be. tor him in a matter of fact way, to JEEDFORD MAIL sales tax would have hit the : he made a purchase and not j the House and defend the little why, although of course there the head. That was wny u.e lost. All tnis tain aooui pr"- . . , , i v.Art,. usual, just so much noocy. Press, the Patman bill appro- payment of the soldiers bonus, and Senate. , . , government do cverjunng it VvdCVniia lIIHU'R fll leflST. fiVCl V these same members at least undo their work completely by billion dollars, upon the tax spineless and servile representa truckle to. of the complete bankruptcy of played, in this country before refrain from coaxing, and to remove what he does not eat without com' ment. 1 Jenkins' Comment (Continued from Page One ) ECONOMICS used to be called the " "dismal science." T.ila waa be csuse the early economists taught thst when wagea reached a point above the level necessary for bare existence the coat of the products of labor and management waa forced up to a point higher than people could afford to pay and so the whole structtire of business came crashing down. That waa certainly a dismal pros pect an outlook of utter hopeless ness. ODERN economists are beginning " to hold the brighter and more hopeful theory that the way to make bustneaa good and provide employ ment for everybody la to keep wigee high enough that people will be able not only to keep body and soul to gether but to BUY AND PAY FOR the products of labor and manage ment In large volume. We don't know exactly how to do thst yet, but we are beginning to hope Uiat we may find V way. Oreson Weather. Clowly tonight ana Saturday, but rain tats tonight or Saturday In west. Moderate temperature: mierat changeable wlrxts, becoming fresh southerly offshore. Ctystaigio Kodat ka supreme Hie Peaalejra, opp. Hoils Iheatat, TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, Today By Arthur Brisbane In Rainy Washington, Buy Your New Car, Ocean Flying Soon, Three Death Stories. Copyright King Feature Synd.. Inc. WASHINGTON. March 31. Here, the heart of the nation is beating as well as can be ex pected. It is raining, a long slow all-day rain that reminds you of a business depression. Taxicab drivers welcome the rain, which helps business. Their charge has been cut down to twenty cents a. ride, "almost anywhere in Washington," says a colored driver, adding that unemployment has doubled the number of taxi drivers because "anybody can drive a taxi." Then he laughs heartily. A white man would tell you the same thing, with a sour look reminding you of Leu in and Karl Marx rolled into one. , President Hoover, working late as usual, when the writer called at the Whlto House this afternoon, was about to prepare a statement that will be pleasing to the automobile Industry. The President believes that buy ing a new automobile Is an excellent ' way to help employment In one of the greatest Industries. 'and. at the same time, contribute to general cheerfulness. Now that the new models are ready and on view, select your 1032 car. To possess, drive and exhibit a new automobile, guttering In the glory of chromium plating, Is to prove that you are net hoarding your money, and that you are contributing prac tically to the problem of employ ment and the happiness of your fam ily." Tha house hopes to get a tax bill ready for tomorrow. It wilt Include a tax on stock sales of one-quarter of one per cent. Uncle Sam is In Wall Street with a vengeance, taking from the market twice what the brokers get. If all goes well, representatives ex pect to raise one billion dollars with this bill. There are some "lis" and several "buts" In the program. Mr. Alvln Macauley, head of the Packard company, Is here to say that the proposed tax on automobiles will wreck the Industry. Mr. Common Sense Is here to tell the "sock the rich" brigade that the tax that would take away three quarters of really big Incomes will not yield the desired golden milk. The big Incomes will not material ize. The best newa in town has to do with ocean flying. Private enterprise and capital proposes to build a line of super-dlrlglbles, bigger than the Akron, to carry passengers and malls across the Atlantic and Pacific, Nothing is asked of the government but a chance to carry the malls as other craft enjoy. That the bill In troduced by Congressman Crosser of Ohio will pau, there Is no doubt, f Speed Is everything In modern commerce. Gernany already haa a huge Zeppelin running from Berlin to Buenos Aires 1 n four days, as against 18 daya by surface ships. The American dirigibles will cross the Atlantic In two and one-half days, msklng the round trip once a week with time for overhauling. The establishment of this line, across both oceans, will be Invalu able in sending samples, salesmen and mall. The pity Is that It will take three years to get the first giant ship ready. Germany la already build ing a ship bigger then the Akron, but America's monopoly of helium gas will give us also a monopoly of safe dirigible travel. If we care to have It. More about this Important news later. It is a pleasure to state positively that general business and financial news is better. Under the heading of "Small Blessings Thankfully Re ceived," comes the newt that in March bank closings fell to a low ebb and were more than made up for by the opening of banks bigger than those that closed. On the other hand, no Canadian bank has closed. In this country you wonder whether Canada has a better bank plan or better bankers than we have. Eugeue Meyer, Jr.. hesd of the Fed eral Reserve, whose specialty is gtv ing a bus!nss-lika Imitation ol tha' Sphinx, radiatea a little sunshine, al though ha would not admit It. It la eiear that he thinks we are climbing over the brow of the hill. He waa at work In (he reconstruc tion corporation today, Oenera.! Dawes beside htm. too busy to pro duce his historical pipe. OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 1. 1932. Personal Health Service By William J Signed letter pertaining to personal neaitb and bygiene. not to disease dlagnocu or treatment, will be answered t; Or Brady li a stamped sell -addressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink Owing to the large number of iettera received only a few can be answered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instruction. Ad dress Dr. William Brady in care of The Mall Tribune. YELLOW FOODS From animal experimentation we infer that an adequate quantity of vitamin A may help to keep us im mune to Infections in general and re spiratory infections In particular. We may be wrong about this. It will take many years' patient observation ; of persons subsist- i ihg on various diets to determine whether the Infer ence is applicable to man. Meanwhile, no harm in seeing to It that everybody, particularly the chll- dren. gets enough vitamin A. I Yellow foods seem to be the best sources of this vitamin. It was first found In butterfat. then in egg yolk and then In cod liver oil. Of course whole milk and cream contain it, but butter Is the richest of the three. Ripe banana, orange, orange Juice, contain it Sweet potatoes and carrots con tain vitamin A, while white potatoes and red white tubers or roots con tain little or none. Yellow corn or yellow corn meal contains It; white corn meal does not. Vitamin A Is abundant In liver, kidney, sweetbread, but only sparingly found in lean meats or In the body fats of animals. It Is not found In appreciable quan tity in olive oil, cottonseed oil. cocoa- I nut oil, peanut oil or other vegetable oil. The green relishes splnacn, watercress,' lettuce, beet tops, turnip tops, celery leaves, rsdlsh tops and raw cabbage are all excellent soroes of vitamin A. So are the green onion tops. This vitamin is destroyed by oxida tion. Therefore, you cannot get enough of it In a diet made up largely of preserved, dried, canned or salted foods. Storage permits slow oxidiza tion. Prolonged heating In a vessel which gives access to the air destroys the vitamin A in the food, but In or dinary cooking the vitamin A is not entirely destroyed, and In canning by vacuum process it is not destroyed. Formerly vitamin A was confused with vitamin D. The nutrition ex perts concluded that two separate substances were concerned, and they therefore postulated two where only one had previously purported to exist. It is all very confusing, this vitamin business. Some of. the experts have insisted that there are six or seven vitamins demanding recognition, Senator Hiram Johnson was work ing in committee with Senator Wag ner on the lat ter's unemployment bill, and Miss Perkins. New York la bor commissioner, appointed by Gov ernor Smith, retained by Governor Roosevelt, was proving that women have clear minds, and can make facts plain. Senator Cope land of New York and other wise ones were there. Miss Katherlne Dayton, with one possible exception the most bril liant young woman writer in the country, was taking notes on human nature. At the bottom of a newspaper page, ten lines tell you that Forrest Malllck, one of the courageous air mall pilots, was found dead today strapped to his plane. Seated In an open cockpit, he might have saved himself by para chute but preferred to stick to his ship and the mail entrusted to his ahlp, and the mall entrusted to him. A few lines and the world hears no more of him. But If war should come, he and other pilots as brave, would be this country's chief reliance. Another, different, story of death comes from Niagara. Hundreds of wild swans, lighting on the river above the falls, to rest, were trapped In the swift current, which would not let them rise, many killed. How many tragedies that cataract has seen; Indians In their canoes, struggling against the current; white men and women, seeking death, and often changing their minds, shriek ing for help, too late. And now the giant power that roared so long. In solitude, Is harnessed and meekly earning dividends for the wise. Third and last death story Is that of a fierce water buffalo that had long lorded It over all the Inhabi tants of a swamp on northern Luzon Island. In the Philippine Islands Little did the buffalo dream that death was approaching In the form of a slender, relentless governor gen eral named Theodore Roosevelt. Jr. There stood the buffalo, pawing savagely. Governor Roosevfit let one piercing eye run along the rifle bar rel, over the sight, straight between the buffalo's eyes. One shot, and the buffalo bit the dust, or whatever , the floor of the swamp may have open. "Single Shot Teddy." his friends call him now. The shot was fired at IN yards, - "Single Speech" Hamilton has long been famous, not only for tha speech but the eubM-quent taciturnity. Some think That Samuel Johnson wrote j that speech for him. J "Single Shot Teddy" 111 lne to : do msny more remarkable thl.igv He ' mlg,M even run for vlce-preslder.: i:rct fall. What an embarrass e rUhrv as i Brady, M. D. FOR VITAMIN A. whereas It Is all we ordinary doctors can do to conceive three or four. Besides keeping one more or letts Immune against respiratory infec tions, vitamin A apparently serves to prevent opthalmla, dry sore eyes and night-blindness, and some nutrition experts suspect it may help to- pre vent stone in the kidney or bladder. There Is a great deal more hokum than truth propagated concerning the vitamins, and one must be on guard against the gross misinformation so cheerfully provided for the public. For example, the claim made by some about the vitamin value of milk Is absurd In any case and false If the milk is pasteurized. The very purest fresh milk to be had anywhere Is on'y a mediocre or an inadequate source of any of the known vitamins, even for an Infant. Ql'ESTIONS ANI ANSWERS Necrosis. Kindly let me know whether ne crosls Is contagious. K. M. F, Answer No. Necrosis Is sny dls ease condition- In which there is death of tissue. Ordinary soap and water cleanliness in handling is ample pro tection against Infection by the foul discharges. Flaxseeds. Want to thank you for great bene fit I have received from the flaxseed treatment ... I had taken physics for 25 years . . . B. T. Answer The correspondent refers to Instructions for breaking the con stipation or physic habit. Glad to mall Instructions fiee to any corre spondent who tells me he or she has the habit (this Is not a treatment or cure for anything I and Incloses stamped envelope bearing the return address. Diathermy Extirpation of Tonsils. Do you recommend the electrical method for removing a child's ton sils? Our son. aged 6 . . . Mrs. N. H. W. Answer The diathermy method (electro-coagulation) U preferable in any case. I think, though few phy sicians are able to apply it in fhe cases of children so young. If the child Is tractable and the physician skilled in the managing of children, the method may prove a great success. Teaching a Child. Is it time to begin teaching my 3 -year-old daughter reading, writ ing 'or other subjects? If not now, when? I. M. Answer Yes, at home. (Copyright John F. Dille Co.) Slnbad said in the Valley of Dia monds, if two Rooevelts ran on two tickets. And what striking things would be said by one Roosevelt about the other. Guess which one would say them. Know Our Birds! To the Editor: I have read with amusement the communications, one expressing sur prise at seeing poldflnches, and the other asserting that the birds seen were not Goldfinches but Bobolinks. It is difficult to understand how bird lover and nature student would fall to distinguish between Goldfinch and Bobolink. The Gold finch Is common here, but the Bobo link is not native In Oregon. For confirmation, refer "Color Key to North American Birds." by Chapman ic Reed. Doubled ay -Page & Co., or any other authentic work. If the lady can confirm her statement that birds are Bobolink, she should so In a scientific manner and take some specimens, for it would be a valuable contribution to onn- thology. However, the real purpose of this communication is not to enter an argument, but to encourage every- Communications A World's R ecord Jo. UN rnnr iUn Dim ti,n,,.nn births without a single loss of cither mother or chilil! Thai is the oHU'liI Pi;itt C.ounlv record of Ilr. V. B. Caldwell, in fifty years' family practise in Illinois. No worrier mothers have sueh entire conmlence in civina little ; ones Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin! If you hac n baby, you have constant need" of this wonderful preparation of pure pepsin, active senna, and frrh herbs. A child who pets this gentle stimulant f'T the stomach, liver and bowels is always healthier. It keeps children's delicate systems from clccoril. It will overcome the most stubborn one to know our blrda and to ob aerve them accurately. If I might be of assistants m Identifying the blrda In question I .a'niiifi h hunnv to dO 0. WALTER Jvc. Medford, March 31. Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson Countj History from the Files of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Year Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY April 1. (It was Saturday) 'Fear armed uprising in Ireland Develop trade with Klamath county, via truck Chamber of Com merce plan. Auto cam da filled with tourists who have wintered in the soutn. Trigonia well to resume drilling ,-hen weather clears. Shall Medford have a ball team, backed by merchants, to be settled soon. County court to assist family who lost everything in fire that destroyed home. Fish biting in water too muddy. the Rogue, but TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April 1, 1912. (It was Monday) March an Ideal month with plenty of rain and $1,000,000 fruit crop pre dicted for valley. Editorial urges citizens "to wake up and register." The Oakdale Tennis club elects Earl S. Tumy president. Rush of people to pay taxes. Congress votes" $350,000 for relief of Mississippi flood sufferers. Movement to build railroad to Blue Ledge launched. Applegate APPLEGATE, Ore., April 1. (Spe cial) Rollin, baby son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Crump, who has Deen very 111 for the past week with In testinal flu. Is much Improved. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. West and fam ily entertained a number of friends with an Easter dinner Sunday. From Medford were Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Chadwlck and family. Mr. and Mrs. Roy West and family. Archie West and Miss Mildred Mclntlre. Mr. and Mrs. A. 8. Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Taylor and C. U. Thomas made a business trip lo Butte Falls Wednesday. Clayton Smith and Ernest Arm priest returned home near Ruch Fri day after several weeks in California. Miss Frances Weisner of Medford called on Mr. and Mrs. A. 8. Klein hammer Wednesday to visit Mrs. Doris Worthlngton of San Francisco, who Is spending some time here. Mr. and Mrs. Al Dunford and fam ily of Medford moved to the Little Applegate last week to make their home with Walter Zeldler. While playing ball with the school children. Miss Ethel Houston, teacher of the Little Applegate school, suf fered a badly sprained foot Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Claud Medley of Med ford were Sunday guests of Mrs. Med ley's mother, Mrs. Mary Pursel, on Yale creek. Rudy Zimmerman of Medford is spending several days this week with Walter Zeldler. Mrs. Jim West, who underwent an operation at the Community hos pital, returned home on Little Apple gate Thursday. Several of the Applegate schools had an Easter egg hunt Friday. Little Applegate school children sang a number of songs for the few visitors that day. Mrs. A. S. Klein ham mer, son, Claus and daughter. Mrs. Mariam Woith- inpton, spent Easter Sunday with Mrs. Clyde Young and family at Ash land. Mrs. H. P. Sellers of Elk creek is spending this week with her mother. Mrs. Mary Hughes, who Is recovering from the flu. r. i- n 1 condition of constipation. It builds them up, and is nothing like the strong cathartics that sap their strength and energy. A coated tongue or bad breath is the signal for a spoonful of Svrup Pepsin. Children take it readilv, for it Is really delicious in flavor. Taste it! Take Syrup Pepsin yourself, when sluggish or bilious," or you are troubled with sick headaches and no appetite. Take som; for several days when run-down, and see how it picks you up. It is a prescription preparation which every drug store has readv; in big bottles, just ask anywhere fur Dr. Caldwell's Svrup Persm. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Kinsman f Thompson creek attended the funeral of Dr. R. W. roeiiniw i aieaioF Monday. A lsrge number irom nere. Jack sonville and Medford met at Ruoii Monday to have a general Improve, ment at the Log Town cemetery. Posts were reset, fences built, flow, ers planted and the cemetery cleaned In general. A csmpflre dinner was served at noon. For several months a few conscientious workers have been crying to obtain a title to the land, part of which belongs to Miss Issle McCully of Jacksonville, and the rest beonglng to Walter Bell of California, who bought the adjoining property a year ago. Plotting of tht lots are being completed. Markers will be placed at the graves after the plotting. Applegate home extension unit has good ideas of home product. Mrs. L. C. Port won third place In the Oregon label contest recently held among country club ladles sponsored by Mrs. Mack. Mrs. Port had a col lection of 106 Oregon labels. I A hydro-thermograph has been in- . stalled at the Star ranger station the forest service. It records thf temperature and humidity 34 hours a day and runs by clockwork. Ran ger L. C. Port of the ranger station starsts It today. Sunday guests of Mr. and Mra. W. A. Chllders Included Mrs. Charles Vogel. Mrs. Alma Garvin and t,hre children, Mrs. Tut Combe and Mrs. Jones, sister of Mrs. Combs, of Med ford. Al Zohn and Mariam Worthlngtoa returned to San Francisco after vis iting Mr. and Mrs. A. 8., Klelnham mer. if you use MINERAL OIL' ' ask for The Original and Best i RUSSIAN MINERAL OIL! OI CONSTIPATION 1 Highly refined, free from all impuritie l Headadu An K) NATURE'S REMEDY J Tablet will promptly start the i Deeded bowel action, clear waste and poison from your a.sr.e.FV. mr,A hrle no1Mns. J relief t once. Tha mild. IfrNIGHl safe, all-vegetable laxa- 10MOfiRpn tive. Tryit-25c 9 ALRIGHT, 7ie All Vegetable Laxative I MAK LOVES A GRAY HE Love And Gray Hairs Are As Far Apart As The Poles ONLY THE FAMILY IGNORES GRAY HAIR "I worship, adore and idolize my mother, no matter how old, gray ot wrinkled, and Dad is the same way about the mother of his boys, but love real, true love such as one feels for the opposite sex which thrills, enraptures and inspires a fiassionate desire to possess andJ ove you shrinks unconsciously" from gray hairs, crows-feet, deaf ness and other signs of ojd age." declares C. J. Mains, the nationally-known expert on gray hairs, "Stop and think a minute and you'll agree with me. Love is a mltused word xpreulve ot the feeling of delight, rap ture, jeslouiy or passion toward" the op posite sex not kin to you. A man retains his mcther on her lofty pedestal. She U enshrined there. No msn divorces hii mother, but he leaves a girl he loved or might love If she fails, has halitosis, bad habits or is untidy and old for him. No mother needs to keep her figure, youth or winning ways to please her children, but wlfie or girl friend, who a man never wor ships but only loves, must avoid gray hair, fat and wrinkles or love flies out tho win dow. "Women happy with family and d-v mestic life ran afford gray hair be cause It brings respect, adds dignity bat her days for love, a new job or social y mingling with the younger st are oer the same as with a man who is nappy at home, well fixed and head of bis bu.;ne(. "Young married folks (hun the com pany ol gray-haired men and women the same as children instinctively ihun grar MclCESSON f(C0 All DRuo j PRODUCT STORES ; all It meana avoids the company of trarv hairs. They like you, admire, you, repeetT you, but "Boims give jobs now and then to gray hairs out of compassion, but they rightly feel thy are hiring a liability Instead of an at. whereas with youth they delight in giving 'Pep' first chance. Men and women complacently living In the part en their past performances, serenely confident they are intrenched in their wife or hus band's love, their job or social strata, would be amaicd to find how easilr a younger person could supplant them. May be In small towns your competition isn't : bothersome, but try getting a Wig with gray hairs along Broariway, New York, and ae how soon you lose out. "Soma stay gray because the family urges it they don't care. But how about ymjT Why not look yur youngest and he pic-and-ran from head to foot? Some times even a sweetheart says h or ahe doesn't mind grav hair, but they'd pro jvae or arcept much inoner if th gray haired old-ape barrier wasn't there. Women Instinctively hid their real ae, yet some times fcoli-hly brag about gray hair. "I ran show men and women in minutes hew to get rid of their tray hir and never have another. Without obli gation I will gladly tell you how to I'-1 years yrunavr make year hair youthful and beautiful. The Nationally kr.own Ui Tonic Co.. Brentwood, Md., backs up every word and assure you Lea's Hr Tonic will delicht. amar.e and satisfy .w or money hack no 'iwwtions. A dollar bottle of Lea's Hair Tunic starts you ail n" even your brbrr or cVrsest friend need fer kniw. If out of town, write me t Prrnt.tod. Ml. or yur d-urcirt War frr bottle and direct ;-ms. j---" ir-.'ff. lro Mil k"