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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 18, 1932)
PAGE FOUR JfEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNTI, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, 'APRIL 18, 1932. Uedford Mail Tribune run tM mil IrHiim" Oilll tietrt anorasi innrnvn printing CO. a.tr.it k in n ' S0BEII1 WJHL. UIUC K. L. KNAPP, Mahaibi as matwonssl mww fntand u Kami dm ataim at Uadfora Ofecoa, undo Act IIAree 1. ms. aiBscmrrioM iatm At UlJl IB AdfADE. Dili), ns I'00 SUOtS ' Hi rarrlM. In AdTanes Medford. AAblAfld, jKbonllM, Offlttl Point. Pbotnls. Taint, Oolo Bill And go Ulinnn fl.')i auMlth TO DU, am rev t.so All ItfBU. CAM) IB AtfTlDC. OrndAl paper of IM Clt of Msdford, OmeUl PIC! Of jACkJOB COUDtf. UEHUEH Of TUB A880CUTKU PRESS Bcfclrlra full USMd Wirt Berrlct tbt Ajjoelltcd Praa Is AteltsltAlr AntltUe (0 U). uh lot pubMnuon of All am auptiaiAi crrdllAd u II h oUxrwlM endued t UU padbt ado Also u tbt ImaI rt oublUlMd berela AU ruhu lo publlettlBo of toMlil dbpAldMi hulls Art tlM re Tied- MEUBBB Of UNITtD HtM bOHBEB Or AUDIT BUREAU Or CIRCULATION! Adrtrtlitni ReprcuoUUns IL C. M0)iEN8E.N A COMPAW? Omeo Id h'n Tort. Ifilojo. Detroit, bo- Lee Aocelee, Beettls, rortuna. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry Alia rear candidate in this lUlt. would mirk hlmaell down to 8c the week before the election. Be Anyway, the buying power of the community never got ao low. a few dimes could not be yenked out of boarding placea. to buy stock In a Bolivia, gold mine, or a phoney Home grown project, or any kind of a Oet P oar -Quick echeme. righting roosters are being Import ad to these parte. There la no lack of roosters, but a deficit of fighting and tighten. B Now la aa good a time as any to start a war on the '.931 straw hat. The womenfolks, aa the symbol of thrift and the depression, make their spouses wear last year's bird's nest but their own headgear la of recent vintage. You never see one of the Older Olrls with a permanent wave, that was waved in 1931. B NO SPOILS FOR VICTOR (Pendleton East Oregonlan) The postmssterahlp of Pendle ton pays a good salary, 13300 a year, and It la therefore natural that there should be many aspi rants. Some may be surprised to know thst the new men will hold office for four years even though the democrats carry the election this fall, but that seems to be the law at present. ABB All the honesty seems to be rammed Into one aspirant for office, and all the euseedneae evenly distributed among the other 40, who have been accused of everything but assisting the kidnapers of the Lindbergh baby. Already a few candidates have been robbed of votes, before they were cast. Some of the bova shinned hoea out of Clifford with the Farm Club Tues day. (Bucklln Herald.) Hard times make strange travelling companions. B B B Optimists have started sharpening lesd pencils, which mesne the con struction of IT railroads to the coast before the lesvee turn brown. B B B "The Wild Oats Boy Is Scheduled for April SO; Trees Planted" (Hdllna Baker Democrat-Herald.) Pate knocks things askew again. B B The (10 goldplece Is coming back, as something chlo and smart In the way of watch charms. They used to be quite frequent, but disappeared the past two years, In the manner of the buffalo and the noble redskin. There used to be a man bare, who gloried In Also stretched across his vest front. In denomlnstlons ranging from A3 .50 to ISO. He wandered down to Frisco, and a strawberry blonde twisted off A170 In an evening. Portland haa started fretting about what to call their ball team. L a, what to call the ball team and not run afoul of the postal regulations and city ordinances dealing with loud and profane language. B B A Corvallta youth haa won the honor of being the beat saxophone player In the slate. Ut all strive to find the worst saxophone player. B B B Rog. Bennett of Salem Saturdayed here on state but. Mr. Bennett haa personality, efficiency, acumen, com monsenae, business ability, and a C. Chaplin mustache of unique design. For many years be was one of our forward-looking and forward walking cltlrens. "Trenchant," Is getting to be a popular word among the Humdint.rs, Inc. It looks like there would be a trenchant crop of pears. B B B It now coats 94 per sent, leas to live. If you call this living. (Erie. Pr, Times.) Buy way of remarking. BBS "I think I will be defeated," aald a gent Sat. after a place at the public trough. "This la aa It ahould be. and will be a bleaalng tor all concerned. I will come out of Aahland without a alngle vote." BBS Dock Salade's dog nearly had a fight on Main St. rrt, with a canine the air of a yearling ateer. The Dxk Balede bound la J tut a comfortable handful, and was the aggressor, ae long aa he was firmly held. The country dogs ahould behave them selves when In town, and not create disgraceful disturbances In public. The rheumatism has been getting the bast cat 1, Kort Hall. The Same Old Story IX thig morning's mail were two communications. One urged this newspaper to wire the Oregon senators to vote for tariff protection on lumber. ' The other, from the Northwest Newspaper Association, urged us to wire the SAME senators to keep pulpwood on the free list, and strenuously oppose any attempt to GIVE it protection. e e e e e SO there you are! The first communication, of course, was from the lumbermen of the northwest, who want their pro duct protected from cheap foreign competition. The second was from newspapers who don't want pulpwood protected because , they use it in their business, and want to buy their newsprint at the lowest possible cost. e b e e e IT was ever thus. The tariff has been a political issue, in this country for a hundred years, and for 20 of them at least there has been a persistent effort to take the tariff out of politics via a non-partisan tariff commission. But the tariff remains today, essentially what it was half a century ago, not only a local issue, but a decidedly personal and selfish one. The same newspapers that oppose a tariff on a product they must buy, favor it on a product that notthey, but SOMEONE else, must buy. So tariff opinion in this country continues to depend entirely upon whose ox is gored. Can 't Keep a Good Man Down FOR at least a generation, international wiseacres have pre dicted the setting of the sun of the wideflung British j Empire. And every time the collapse of Albion seemed immi- nent, old John Bull has snapped out of his coma, and proceeded j to demonstrate there is a perfectly amazing life and vigor in j the old boy after all. I At the outbreak of the world war, Germany was convinced, Old John was all through. Prosperity had spoiled and softened : him, he cared too much about week-end parties, and tea-drinking ; during office hours, ever to compete with either the German I business or military machine. I England did get off to a poor start at Mons, but before the ' war ended her navy had Bwept the seas, and her army with its back to the wall, fought as gallantly and fiercely, and with as i little regHrd for sacrifices, as in the days of the "Six hundred." WHEN after a few feverish years of post war proserity, the bubble burst, England failed to balance her budget and was finally forced off the gold standard, the same old cry was raised, that the final collapse had come. But once more not only did Uncle Jonathan demonstrate he could still muddle through, but in a few short months, that budget was balanced, and today England is emerging from its economic cyclone cellar, sounder in wind and limb than any other world power. "P oourse someday the final fade out will come, England must suffer the fate that eventually overtakes all human organ isms in this mortal world. But as long as the English people, will stand patiently in long queues, for the privilege of paying the HIGHEST IN COME TAX IN THEIR COUNTRY'S HISTORY, as they have during the past few weeks, people of wisdom will agree that that day is still far distant. John Bull can declare like Mark Twain, that obituary notices at the least EXAGGERATED! Just Do it! SUBSCRIBER endorses a recent editorial urging the people of Jackson county to look up the records of the various primary candidates, before they vote on them, but somewhat pathetically inquires "how is one to go about it!" Going about it seems simple enough to us. We live in a small community. Not only here in Medford, but throughout the county, we resemble one large family. No one is unknown. There is none of that "pitiless anonymity" which is such a striking feature of the larger centers of population. The way to go about "finding out about the candidates is simply TO GO ABOUT IT. Each candidate has a name, a place and a record in this community. Let us assume our correspondent knows none of them personally, undoubtedly he has trustworthy friends who do. Let him inquire, nose around a bit, and if the candidate has had a public record find out what that has been . 'ilAT'S all. No elaborate program is needed, meely the same interest and curiosity regarding the quality of these applicants for r"blic office that the individual would have if they were applicants for private office, came to him or to her asking for a job. We have no difficulty doing that in our private affairs. With the same attitude of mind, there should be even less diffi culty in doing it in our publio affairs, for facts concerning applicants for publio office are by the nature of things even easier to obtain. PORTLAND, Ore, April IS (API Portland police detectives said today tbat three recent holdups here hsd been solved by the confessions of Clarence Ortego, 39, soldier at Vancouver, Wash, barracks, and Earl V. Whetaell, aa, ex-eoldier at the barracks. The detectives said Whetaell was arrested late Saturday after be had boarded a streetcar with the al leged Intention of robbing the mo torman. Police aald the two soldiers admitted holding up two taxi cab drivers snd one streetcar motorman. Ortego has been In the army for the past ia years. Coqullle Welghlil Bros, opened a milk depot In Shelley building. the present moment, are, to say E JAP MILITARISTS MOSCOW, April 18. (AP) The government organ Isveetla, today re Iterated a charge that Japanese mill- tarlate In Manchuria Inspired Rus sian -white guards' to antl-aovlet violence. "The Japanese militarists." the newspaper aald. "are seeking to en large the frame of the military con 11 let In Manchuria.". The orean arMed th a r- 1.1 k white guards on the office of M. rtusnekorr. soviet manager of the Chinese Eastern railway at Harbin recently, was Instigated by the Jap anese, who -bribed the white guard clique" ryae Oeorre R. swan completing modernising of his apartment house, i Today By Arthur Brisbane Cheerful Monday Note. Mr. Rockefeller's Service. M, B. Skagg's Short Story, Assorted Religions. Copyright King Features Sjnd, Inc. HODGE, Cal., April 16. There is a hopeful note, for Monday. President Hoover finds the outlook for business improving, and lists many signs of financial and other improve ments. Eugene Meyer, Jr., head of the Federal Reserve, is also optimistic and he is no dreamer. The solid fact that this nation, even now, with its high priced dollar, leads the world in ex ports should comfort you. And, anyhow, under normal condi tions we consume ninety per cent of all we produce. We could live and thrive, regard less of the outside world, if we had to, just as we thrive with out invading the markets of the planet Mars. The golf course at w.hlch he ha bltually plays In Florida being closed for the season, Mr, John D. Rocks' feller, In his 93rd year, takes long walks that are the equivalent In physical exercise of his usual golf game. He probably enjoys the walk as much as the game. When you walk you look at the aky, and say "Thank heaven for the beautiful earth." when you play golf, you look at a little white ball and say: "Fore." The news concerning Mr. Rockefel' ler reassures his friends, disturbed by the false rumor that he was seri ously 111, and the fact that he con tinued In his old age to enjoy good health Is gratifying to everybody, not merely because he has given to edu cation, science and combatting dls. ease more money than any other ten men have ever given, but also, and principally, because he has organized Industry and employment on a stable basis, demonstrating the folly of reckless competition. Success stories are Interesting, es- peclaUy now, when geese think the world Is ending. There Is one such story alive, with branches aU over the west, that the young and old might study, with advantage. His same la M. B. Sksggs. He started In Idaho alxteen years ago and Is Just put forty. It does not take long to suo- oeed In this country, It you have a good Idea and stick to It. Mr. Skaggs, living In American Falls, Idaho, decided that It would pay to run a store well, sell food at reasonable prices, AND ADVERTISE, to let people know. He tried It In American Falls, then In other Idaho placea, then In other states. Now he has three thousand seven hun dred stores, sells more then . two hundred and fifty million dollars worth of goods a year. Almost ss soon as his well-written advertising started he found hta American Falls store too smsll. He was selling food by the csrload, and sold directly from freight cars on the siding. Lacking hta ability, his competitors psssed an ordinance forbidding the sale of goods from freight cars. Skaggs built a wooden shed beside the siding and sold toere. -a-a- Mr. Sksggs bss Ideas for helping farmers that would interest ths Pres ident and any Intelligent form board. At this moment he la co-operating with California fruit growers, help ing them to market a twenty-five hundred car crop of desert grape fruit, No farmer can lire at present prices, says Mr. Sksggs, but co-operation among farmers and retailers could restore prosperity to farms, while giving food to housewives at reasonable prices. President Hoover ought to have a talk with this mer chant. Distribution Is our biggest problem. No crop In California Is more pros perous than the crop of various re ligions. In Sunday's Los Angeles Examiner church advertisements of fered a choice that would emar ths angels. Swarm Rama, of India, wUl convince you that aU the Ideas you hare been nourishing are wrong, and will fill you with, "astral science." The Rev. Rose Fisher, pastor of the Second Spiritual church, does not merely tell you, ahe shows jou. Be fore your eyes she wlU go Into a hyp notlo trance, by order of "the famous bynottat. Mink De Ronda," and she will be burled alive In sand. If that does not convince you of something or other, you are hard to convince. The United Lodge of Theceophlats Invite you to hear about "the psy chology of dreams," no collection gathered. Five occult churches ad vertise In a group, and tenor, the 19-year-old marvel, preaches and lec ture, always In a nance. Others of ua are In a bancs much of the time. Personal Health Service By William BigTuxl Utters pertaining to person aeeitta end brstane. not to dieeeee dUsgooeia or treatxnent, wlU m encwered by Or. Brady If a temp3d eeU-ed-dreeeed envelope U enclosed. Letter enotiid be brief end vritten to ink Owing to tne large number of letters recel red only a few can be answered bare. No reply can be made to queries not coniorraing to UutTucOona. Ad dress Dr. William Brady In care of The Mall Tribune. THIS BABY FEE A good many amateur mothers and sometimes I feel pessimistic about the mother business who write to me for consolation, s y m pathy or encour agement (can you Imagine It?) take up a page or so telling me Just how many ouncei, grams or grains of this and that they mix to make up the poor kid's food and Just what time of day they give him the mess, and Just how much they dole out at each sad seance. I never even notice what Ingredi ents or how much these quaint form ulas contain. I'd go nerts If I tried to puzzle my crude intellect over such nonsense. I'd rather serve time at auction or contract bridge, I think. These funny feeding formulas are old stuff, handed down by the bombas tic baby specialists of a bygone day. You know, the day of Holt and bis disciples. Dr. J. 3. Holt's textbook lies mouldering In the museum but his theories go marching on. In the innumerable guidebooks for dumb parents. Then the shrewd commer cial Interests have managed to con tribute several little things to the traditional science and art of care of the baby, and one of the little things Is a form of sugar. The name sounds so blamed scientific that even I almost hesitate to crack e. sickly grin at the mention of It, but never theless there Is no reason why any body should prefer this bifalutln and expensive kind of sugar to ordinary can. oeet or corn sugar (glucose. corn syrup) or even the less popular lactose (milk sugar). At any rate, if I ever have another baby and I find It necessary to feed my baby eugar, you may bet your goat against my burro that Just plain sugar will be what my baby gets. Every time I pick up a copy of our hallowed national medical organiza tion's official Journal and see the wickedly extravagant colored pictures printed ss advertisements of these big sugar daddies, J curse and swear under my breath and undoubtedly my teeth would be damaged If they were the teeth of some mollycoddle who believes brushing or somebody's glorified soap and chalk concoction Is what makes sound teeth. So this Is a frank warning to fond young mothers, maiden aunts or grandmas who take it into their heads to write me about their trou bles In compelling Toodles to take his spinach or his factory-made slops, that I decline to listen to a recital of the Imposing formula of "Poodle's diet. If you are asking me, I'll tell you what to feed the baby. If you're but do not know It All these at tractions are unable to discourage or Injure the regular churches, Pro testant and Catholic. They adver tise, and do well, for. of course, truth Is mighty. Clarence DarroV announces his plan In the Hawaiian case. Lieuten ant Massle will admit that he killed the young Hawaiian native, Kabaha wal. and plead Insanity, caused by the brutal attack on his young wife. The number of Caucasians on the Jury will help the defense. Many Orientals would refuse to admit that any woman could be Important enough to Justify killing a man. More rioting, lotting and general unemployment trouble In New Zea land home of ultra-radical govern ment. Two churches are said to have been burned. It is not clear how any church could be reepon slble for unemployment. Perhsps, as in Spain, the destruction of churches represents an effort to be "like Rus sia. If committees of the unem ployed could be sent to work in Rus sia, there might be less desire to es tablish Russian conditions here. Stalin, Russian ron man, and absolute bass, la said In reports which hare never been denied to have made peace with Trotsky and the latter will be permitted to return to Moscow, from his exile in Turkey. Some friend should read to Trotsky the equivalent of our old story about the spider and the fly. Trotsky has published what he thinks of Stalin, and that makes any place safer than Russia for Trotsky. Jenkins' Comment (Continued from Page One time formerly spent in getting close for a stroke with a spear or a club. That is to say, after the Invention of the bow and arrow FKWER HUNT ERS were required to feed the tribe. M- DID the bow and arrow ruin the world? Of course not! It HELPED the world. It made food more plentiful, saved msny people from starving, mad the world a pleasenter and more comfortable place to live. tt made It possible for people to have more of the things they wanted than they had ever been able to have before. j The bow and arrow was a tool, and : by the use of this tool men were ; able to get for themselves and for ! their families more meat for food j and more akin for clothing than Brady, M. D. DINO PROBLEM telling me what you feed the baby, save your paper and Ink, because I don't give a hoot, and besides, I'm mad enough already about the sorry deal the baby gets, thanks to the abyimal ignorance of most educated parents about human physiology and the attitude of our common schools In America. The Brady Batty Book you knew there would be a catch In this some-1 where t might be all crowded Into a longlsh letter, If we could write on four sides of the paper and write small but we made a booklet of It on purpose. You can use It as a bookmark when you're reading some of the ponderous volumes on baby care and Infant feeding. If you want a copy send a stamped ewelope bear ing your addrens, ask for the Brady Baby Book fjid Inclose a thin, but not too thin. dime. If you find the book Isn't worth It. all you have to do Is try and get back your dime. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Adenoids Worst Than Tonsils. It Is my experience that enlarged tonsils which are not obviously In fected do not require treatment, but the adenoids usually accompanying enlarged tonsils should be removed If the slightest symptoms are pres ent . . . K. E. M. V. In addition to palpitating the ton sils to learn their consistence in a proper examination, I find the use of a suction tube Ids in diagnosis It brings out submerged tonsils, pur ulent debris and sometimes free pus which might not otherwise be evi dent W. A., M. D. Answer. Thank you. Doctors. If the brethren would make a practice of revising or supplementing my ef forts. Instead of getting peeved and trying to Incite somebody to punish me, we'd be of more help to the public Prayer of Coincidence. I want to thank you for the alco hol and boric acid treatment for running ear. I am sure I can call my son's ear well now. I went through a great deal trying to help him. doctor after doctor, with no re sults, and then my prayers were an swered like this. It is Indeed won derful. . . . Mrs. B. L. A. Answer Dropping two or three drops of a solution of 10 grains of boric acid In one ounce of pure grain alcorol In the ear two or three times a day for a few weeks does seem to clear up many chronic running ears Dandruff. Quite a hit of dandruff and as my hair is dark It shows very plainly. I have tried . . . Mrs. D. J. B. Answer Send stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for In structions for control of dandruff and care of the hair (Copyright John P. Dllle Co.) they had been able to get before, and they were able to get these things With LESS EFFORT. So their standards of living Im proved. They ate more food and wore more clothing than before. milODERN machinery is merely a tool. By Its use, we are en abled to get for ourselves and for our families more of the things we want than we could get WITHOUT MACHINERY. So dont be afraid of machinery. It lent going to hurt us. Instead, It will HELP us, Just as the bow and arrow helped our remote ancestors. I REGULATION BY LC.C. ADVOCATED (Continued irom Page One) and that this competition is Increas ing. "That euoh competition is con ducted under conditions of Inequal ity, particularly In regard to regula tion. "That a contributing cause, aside from the general business conditions, of ths present unsatisfactory finan cial condition of the railroads Is the existence of unrestrained competition by rival transportation agencies. Excess Capacity. That there is today, and probably would be under normal conditions, an excess of carrying capacity of ex isting transportation facilities. "That uniwftralned competition Is an impossible solution of the present transportation problem and Is Incom patible with the alms of coordina tion under regulations. "That federal legislation relating to the regulation of motor vehicles operating upon the public highways and engaged In Interstate commerce Is desirable In the public Interest. The commission's decision brings to a close an investigation which bss been underwsy for the last five years IDAHO WELL SPOUTS PATETTE. Idaho. April 18 (AP) Om blew in at the Big Willow Creek well of the Boise Petroleum Corporation. 15 miles from here, last n'.aTht In quantities described by the officials as "commercial." Several wells have been drilled In the Payette section in the pst sev eral rears, each showing ess, but none has been put W commerc. T&lks TO parents PARENTS WHO TEASE. By Alice Judson Peale. RDI'b nrlrie In hta mUSCleS. SlSt.r'B crush on her English teacher. John ny's snub nose, little Marys trembl ing eagerness to xnow whether she mv e-n tn the nartv how easy It la to make fun of them and how defenselessa are the victims of the Joke. Children In groups know how to get even, as every teacher knows, but In the family circle they are helpless. If their elders choose to make fun of them they can only grow nm whlrh makes thlnirs all the I merrier, or they can shrink within themselves, learn to De secretive m.i until thev are old enough to employ a counter thrust. Parents who tease may ssy inav they are doing It Just for fun, that It doesn't really hurt or that. If It does. It will be a good Immunization against the far more cruel treatment their children will receive elsewhere. . Yet the real reason parents tease their children Is not any of these. Tt. 1. an nnrnnsctoUA desire to make someone else suffer for their own disappointments, for tne unnappi ness of their own childhood or per hapa for the Irritations of their dally lives. Being embittered themselves and vara Iflralv lanlnil. nf th.lr children's youth, they employ a sharp tongue to Inflict pain under tne cover tu play. No practice within the family circle Is more thoroughly destruc tive of confidence and good will than this. Children teasing each other are at least evenly matched. But U the iunnl. nn vhnm the child naturally depends most for security, sympathy ana unaersianaing turn agouisi. mm. he finds himself In a world that is hard and confusing Indeed. Ei (Continued from Page One.) by the senate in appropriation bills was advocated today by Speaker Gar ner in a statement to newspaper men. Garner said he would recognize Representative Taylor (D., Colo.) to move suspension of the house rules later in the day for the house to accept the 189 senate amendments to the Interior department supply bill, reducing It from 950,000.000 to $45, 000,000. Garner said: "No one can go too far for economy to suit me." The naval supply bill will be con sidered tomorrow by the house. Garner said the general sentiment of the economy committee favored reporting an omnibus bill calling for retrenchments in government expen ditures to aggregate about $200,000, 000. He said he favored including in the measure the Byms bill to con solidate the war and navy depart ments. It has been estimated the savings from this would be from $50, 000,000 to $100,000,000. District Gathering Royal Neighbors Is Held, Jacksonville JACKSONVILLE. Ore, April 18. (Spl) Royal neighbor district rally was held at the I. O. O. P. hall April 14. Ashland performed the initiatory work and each lodge put on a stunt. Initiation for Mrs. Alice Mae Ward was held for Jack sonville lodge. Other candidates were also Initiated. sirs. John R. Knight sang a solo. After the program, refreshments were served and dancing was en Joyed. Music was furnished by P. A. Hulse. violin, and accompanied by his son, Leonard, at the piano. There were 138 members present. IDAHO WOMAN, TIRED OF LIFE, IS SUICIDE LEWISTON. Idaho, April 18. (AP) The body of Mrs. Bertha Schwartz. 68. of Kooskla. who disappeared a month ago after saying she was "tired of living.' was found Sunday floating In swollen Clearwater river. Body Identified PORTLAND, Ore., Aplrl 18 (AP) A body found floating In the Wil lamette river here yesterday was Identified today as that of Nels Hldenberg. of the Evans hotel. Linn ton. The body was Identified by Mrs. Ray Evans, who said Hldenberg had been missing four days. Prominent Attornev Dies CORVALL1S, Ore., April 18. (AP) .kvithur Clark. 53, one of the most prominent attorneys In Benton coun ty, died today in a Portland hospital following a long Illness. The body was returned here. Real Estate or Insurance eLeavs it to Jones Phone 796 How German Treatment Stops Constipation Acting on BOTH upper and lowr bowel, the German remedy Adlerlks stops constipation. It brings out the poions which cause bas bloating and bsd sleep. Heath's Drug Store. Not Ire nf Annual 9tnrkhho1detV Meeting Crater Lake National Park Company. Notice Is hereby given that the Annual Meet'.n of ttockholders of Crater Lake National Park Company will be held at room 1125 Fa. line Bui'dina. In the City of Portland. Multnomah County. State of Oregon on Tuesday the 26".h day of ApriV 1932, at the hour of ten o'clock a. rr. for the purpo. of e'.ectlne a Board ,j( Directors snd the transaction of othr bu.mM at may properly corr.r bel-ve te mwtin;. Dated April ltn. 1932. &. W. PRICE; V.-Premu Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson Count) History from the Files of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Yean A(o.) TEN YEARS AOO TODAY April 18, 1922. (It was Tuesday) Geneva peace conference borrows ,3.500,000 from America. AMornev Don Newbury runs over to Klamath Falls to Judge' a school debate. Lighter frost than predicted hlta valley. Some smudging. County to spend $50,000 on Butte Falls road to aid residents to get work. Autolst fined 2 for knocking down tree In front of Adventlst church. Prince of Wales Invited to catch fish In Rogue river. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April 18, 1012. (It was Wednesday) Increase of 1500 voters over 1910 Is shown on registration books. Somebody endeavors to blow up the Ament dam again, contrary to court orders. Chances good for an appropria tion for Crater Lake park, due to the efforts of Will O. Steel. Sen. LaFollette scores the "power trust" In Portland speech and 10, 000 cheer. Death list of the "Titanic" grows hourly, with no details until rescue ships reach port. Dr. John Wesley Hall to address Republicans at the Nat. Pre-coollng of fruit to be tested In valley this season. VAN DUZER TO LEAD PORTLAND. April 18. (AP) H. B. Van Duzer, prominent lumber operator and former chairman of the state highway commission, will head the "Marshall Dana for TJ. S. Senator" committee. This announcement was made here today. Bert E. Haney . is vice-chairman of the committee; DUlard A. Elfclns "is treasurer, and George B. Alexander Is secretary. IS SWEPT BY BLAZE KLAMATH PALLS, April 18. (AP) Fire caused damage estimated at about $10,000 In the Star Drug store and rooming house here Sunday, The blaze Is believed to have started in the drug store near the prescrip tion room, and swept through the large stock of drugs. It was the first fire of major consequence this year. ) 1x6. 1x8 and xl2 select cedar flume lumber. See it at Woods Lum ber Co. When Rest Is Broken Act Promplly When Bladder Irregularities Disturb Sleep Are you bothered with blad der irregularities; burning, scanty or too frequent passage and getting up at night? Heed promptly these symptoms. They may warn of some dis ordered kidney or bladder con dition. Users everywhere rely on Doan's Pills. Recommended for 50 years. Sold everywhere. Doan's ills A DIURETIC roa THE WHEYS When You Are In KLAMATH FALLS 8top At The) WILLARD HOTEL Cheerful Service Modern Surroundings Central Location Al Dininfr Room We Invito Tour ratronage Kates fl.no I'p WILLARD HOTEL :i tad Matin K 1mm. m a Pall 4LIIKRT 4lTI. mr. MM a isv''r. j ilTIH III Tfflsl