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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 19, 1932)
profE STX SrEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1932. Medford Mail Tribune "CmyoiM In Southern OrtgM rtadi th. Hiil TrltW Dallr EiCTpt Siturday Kubilirwd to MFDPUKD PHJNTIMJ CO. tSl7-2 N. Vti Oi T5 8UBEBT Hi: HI.. EdltOf I U KNAI'P, Utnucr Ad Indtpendtat Ncniuptf Entertd u Ktwod clui milter il Uwlford . Oregon, iroder Act of Mires 8, 187V, BUbttCUlPTION RATES Br Mail Id Adiinc Dally, rear $7.00 Dally, moatb Tb B Carrier. In Adianc Medford. Aibland, Jickmnrllle, Cenual Point, Pboenli, Taltat (told Uill and od UlKlmaya. . Dally, monU) t .TO Dally, otn year f.SO All Urffli, cub ID adraou. Official paper of tbt City of Medford. Official paper of Jacinon County. , MEMBRB OK THE AH.HIH;. ATLLi CIIUU Itecelrlrw full Leaied Wire Bertie. Tbt Aawelated Preti t eielusttely endued to Um on for liublleatluD of all oawa dlipatcriea credited U it ir oiherviw credited Id urn oapet tod alio to the local new. purillihed nerela All risbu for publication of (pedal dlftpatcbei twretD are auo rwerted. IIKMHKH OK UNITED PIIK8B MEM UK II OK AUDIT HUHBAO UK CIHCULAT10N8 Adrert taint Kepratentatlfea M. & MUUEN8KN COMPANY Office In New tori. Lftieaco, Ifctrolt, Bap rranciaeo, Ua Ancalee, Seattle, Portland. MIMUI DTORAl.J TO I A SiOCI ATI ON Smudge Pot By Arthur Ferry Housed ean Ing Is nil tfie rage and j It is bustling l;he womenfolks to get It done before they have to do It all I over again. ' 1 As the campaign narrows down to the finish. It develops there Is a woe ful lack of honest men In Jackson county, though every county is en- titled to one such. A stern hunt for an honest man will be organized and all are urged to put a new wick In their lanterns. Don't let the repro brates and Vie rascals steal your lantern. Th. voun.t ..t w .Mr.Miv,iv active over the week-end. Meiji T.TtruTh.r.'n Sot nice for a lady to tell her age. aitzo Bwimoda, 7, was a guest at her party and would not set with the fair sex. Donald Casebolt alammed out a home run, enabling "Old Jackson" to defeat "Old Washington," 32 to 28. Master Casebolt waa complimented by Coach Henderson for his mighty effort, but a certain little blonde would not look at him. An East Side kid, age 11, Is sprouting a pair of self-inflicted sheik sideburns, and nobody knows what; his parents are thinking about, if anything. The frequency of lifelong Republi can, who have always been Demo crats, Is appalling and atemwlndlng, and getting more so. . General disgust with the weather and the Hoover administration con tinues. . . O. Von der Hellen, a prominent bsyseed of Wellen towned Monday at 7:30 am., and must have left home before the muley cow waa milked. ... The Older Olrls have started dread ing the hot weather of late July and August. By that time, they will be in good shape to atart fretting about th usual hard winter. Thla la what la called braiding the forelock of Time, ahead of time. ... The more one reads, the more con vinced one becomes, that a lively 8-pea game concluded on a high powered business basis In a quiet spot, would be a paying venture among the Oet-Poor-qulck of the state. ... Judge Colvlg, who crossed the plains In 1BB2, behind some lacy bulla, ha gone to Portland to see the base ball season open. He hss not missed seeing Mayor Baker throw out Vie first ball In 30 yeara. The chains of habit are welded atrongly. We don't believe the argument ad vanced by a Portland crusader and politician, that the restrictions on power development In this fair com monwealth, "ha hurt the power barons more than the workingman." The power barons have eomsthlng to chew on besides their plck-handlea. Ou Woodpecker of Griffin creek flew In yesterday and reporta many In hi country are getting ready to whet their beaka and using the first rock they come too for a whetstone. Qua honed up on a Main Stem lamp poet. Last month Ivar Krueircr, the Swedish match king, committed sui cide "from worry over the economic condition of the world." Hts death shivered great bank and atocka went down. It now develops that the Swedish match king waa worrying more about the prison cell awaiting him, than the financial condition of the world. He turns out to be a crude, but stupendous forger, and nothing much for fie "llnanclal structure of civilisation" to ahake about. Considerable chngrln waa manifested In this country when the SatKvePoat. published an Interview three weeks alter hie death. It waa held Indelicate. It seem the world ha been worshiping anot'ier false but golden god, "Spring baa arrived with It out door activities and society la so busy It does not know whether It Is afoot or horseback," says a society page Item. Thla statement la open to argument. We hv talked to eer eral valley equestrians who had been horseback, and they were well aware they had been horseback, and (eel sternly about the reflection on their lack of knowledge. They hold that nobody socially or otherwise, can get o busy that they do not know when they are horseback. Some admitted that the horse might not have known he had a rider, but Hie rider knew be had a horse. JWtASiOCIAYlON V Ye Even LaFollette Suffers T70R yeai'g tlie La Follctte machine has liad absolute political control in Wisconsin. But last week, three of the La Follette candidates were defeated by Hoover supporters, and there was great rejoicing in administration circles. Such rejoicing is natural, but a realistic analysis, we fear, will provide little comfort for the Republican leaders in Wash ington. For the Wisconsin upset, instead of demonstrating the strength of the Hoover administration merely demonstrated the strength of the time honored battle cry of "turn the rascals out." ' These La Follette candidates were beaten, not because they refused to endorse the President, but because they DID, endorse the status quo in that state. They represented the party in power. And even the most ruthless and effective political ma chine in the country, was unable to overcome this popular demand for a CLEAN SWEEP. . . . N other words the economic tornado which has been devastat- ing this country for so many months, has created a political tornado, which we fear is going to be just as unreasonable and destructive in its effects. Toward the latter as toward the former, it is the duty of sensible and reasonable people, to do all they can to check this unthinking and irrational stampede. But in the latter as in the former, we fear the future will dem- onstrate. that such efforts are vain that all that can be done is practically to wait for the storm to play out. WHEN the storm HAS played out as all storms, sooner or later DO, these voters in Wisconsin, who kicked out La Follctte men, and replaced them with Hoover men, will undoubtedly admit their mistake, and wonder how they could have been so blind to their own self interest, such a short time before. , ' But it will be too late then. The "ins" will be out and the "outs" will be in. The victims will only have the headache to console them on the morning after. On With the Dance! WHAT is true iu Wisconsin is true in thin state, and every other. Business has been rotten, conditions inBtead of improving have been getting worse pervades the rank and file, - well opportunity to give vent ' much for a Mones to lead them to pin it on; they are not looking so much for a head to elevate as for 8 head to smash. In short the rank and file don't know just what they want, but they DO know they want government," any government, represents that change. So the "ins" willy nilly are to be the "goats" and the heads of the office holders, right or wrong, are to be the heads to bash ! e SENSING this goldon opportunity every unemployed politi cian, eager to get his "snout" again at the public trough, is doing nothing but echo the time-honored wheeze of "turn the rascals out." And mouth, he watches the dear people fall for it I Not a bnd catch word in any election, it's suro fire this year. When the battle is over, when the storm has passed, many victims of this mad hysterical scramble will wonder how it happened, will hold their aching heads, and try to figure out how they could have thrown out an honest, experienced and efficient public official, for example, and replaced him with a dishonest, inexperienced and inefficient one. But it Will be too late then. The "ins" will be out; and the "outs" will be in. For relief the long suffering rank and file will have to wait for the next election. iH, it's a great game brethren, and we the people are peculiar creatures! From one crazy extreme, we dash like stampeded sheep to another. And when it's all over, we are forced to admit too lute that for the resulting disaster we had ONLY OURSELVES TO BLAME, that we, not the candi dates were the real victims. 'T'HE sane and sensible thing to do in this election, is what 1 wo should do in EVERY ELECTION, not lose our heads but. USE them; not full for this oatch-word or that but go about the business of selecting our public employees in a rational and discriminating way, placing the individual's character and fitness for tho job, as of greater importance than anything else. But unless all signs fail, that is precisely what wo are NOT going to do. So down with the old, up with the new, on with the dance, lot joy be unconfined, Whack whack I bang bang ! down they go "Oil, AIN'T WE GOT FUN! Tomorrow! Who cares about tomorrow. Sufficient unto the day is the folly thereof I Communications "randle" the randldalra. To the Editor: I have been reading with much interest your editorials of late on the questions of the times, and In the Issue of April 15th, your advice to Mr. and Mrs. Voter Is sound and well founded. It may be old advice, but nevertheleaa It la much needed at this time. Some of us may think somethings are not right and that other are corrupt, within our gov ernment offices, but who Is respon slble for these things, If true? No one but -e voters, and your advice for all to Investigate all candidate at th coming primaries la advice that cannot be at reused to much. If any candidate cannot stand the egg candling process: ' that Is. If he cannot stand up under the x-ray of tru Investigation, he should be dis carded as a bad egg, reitardlea of party or creed. More advlc could be given regarding political dema gogues; warnings against "Thine ad versary, the political demagoaue, with a roaring vole, who sulks about seeking whom he may devour or be. ruddle. An adversary la on who alwaye oppose, denies, disputes; not one ho construct and sustain reality and truth. A demagogue Is one who acquires Influence with the wonle by pandering to their prejudice or As a result a blind anger and election day offers them a to it. They are not looking so out of the mess, as for a goat, a change. A vote "agin the with venial, eye and watering playing on their Ignorance. So you see. no party or community la free from their tempest. You can hear the voices of the country's "blggeat" moat any night over th radio, and you can read or hear the babblings of the lesser one most any time and any place. But then Is still another voice to be heard, a vole that can have what It wants: a vole that can and will nairai inia crime wav and gang ster wars snd what not and make thla land, including Jackson county, a safe place not only for democracy but for decent people aa well, and that voice I the voice of the people But the problem I to get th peo ple Interested enough to Investigate snd act. I think the varlout Orange organlnitiona of the county are do ing a fine thing In trying to arouse the people to think and look things over. When th peopi ,nt things clesned up they will be cleaned, and they am do It In a safe and sane way. because, aa Abraham Lincoln haa aald. "With public sentiment, nothing csn rail; without It nothing can succeed." C. A. THOMAS. 115 Shermsn St.. Ashland. Or. April IS All aires of screen door at Wood Lumber Co. "The FVmette," sponsored by the Royal Neighbors, will be given at th I. O. O P. hall. Thursday. April 31, at t p. m. Adult 35c, children 10c. Today By Arthur Brisbane Puzzling The Angel, News, Fast and Slow, Fly and Live Longer, Cheer For Publishers, . Copyright King Features Synd, Ino . HODGE, Cal., April 18. The radio news man calls through the ether, "The Bambino hits a homer," and passes on, like Dante's angel that came, and immediately flew away. That angel would not kuow the meaning of "Bambino hits a homer," but millions of Amer icans know, that never heard of Dante's angel messenger. "Bambino", is the pet name of Mr. Ruth who hits a baseball so hard that he has time to run all around the bases, before the ball can be returned to the home plate. Would the world really be better off, if fewer of us knew about the Bambino, and more had read Dante. Probably not. The president of our country "throws the ball," and is ap plauded. If, instead, he arose in the grandstand and recited NEL MEZZO DEL CAMIN DI NOSTRA VITA, ETC. the "fans" would ask "What's the matter with him." Here a 'man makes a home run, a child 1 kidnaped, a few citizens are murdered In our bootleg crime wave. a few mllllona are banded out to aave some financier that has a horror of the dole, when applied to working people, or some other monotonous happening Is recorded, and Instantly, everyone hears of It. Telegraph and telephone carry It, the radio telle It, newspapers print It, neighbor dis cus it. In China, a dreadful earth quake haa occurred, killing tens of thousands, according to reports, and those reporta trickle In slowly, car. rled over rough roads, almost lm psaslble, translated from one Chinese dialect to another. The earthquake and its Inconceivable horrors will have lost their Interest before the full facta are known. Such Is China. tfews that may interest u a long aa we live, and Interest the world aa long aa history la written, comes from Manchuria, where Russia's powerful soviet government la massing troops snd wsr materials. The peace gentle men of the League of Nations are worried, knowing well that the league would be the first scrap of paper, In any war. Japanese atatesmen are worried, believing that attack by Russia Is probable. Those Intelligent Orientals know that fighting Stalin's Russia would be unlike fighting Russia under the czars. That waa a pleasant excuraton. Thla would mean fighting mllllona of trained men, fanatlo In their patrio tism, filled with the fervor of revo lution that haa always proved power fill In war. It may b Russia's destiny to plsy the pert of overlord In Asia, and lead aa ahe choose the hordes that once overran western Europe. The possi bility need not worry us for, If Rus sian become so powerful, they will become very rich. And if they be come rich, their Idea and plana will change. es A pleasant day at Hodge on thla Mohave desert, temperature eighty four In the shade, kept down by cool winds that blow over snow-covered mountains between here and the Pa cific New York's temperature, ac cording to a Loa Angelea telephone report, la thirty-three. Rancher here are hoping for really warm weather, to heat the earth and make their alfalfa grow at night. With good hot sun. you grow a crop of alfalfa In three weeks. Th desert I alive with mllllona of lltarda, horned toada, enormou dea rt turtle that carry a supply of water with them. Jack rabblta, coyote that follow th rabblta and lynxes powerful enough to eat the coyote, w.hen hunger drive. It 1 never lonely on thla plateau, two thousand feet abov the ocean. Automobiles roll by on th hard road that leads east and weat, alwaya more westbound than eaatbound. On Sun day morning, as clearly as though his orchestra stood In the room, you hear Walter Damroach admirable Gen eral Ilectrlc concert, that Included th prelud to Llast's symphonic poem and Mendelssohn's Scotch symphony. Such music makes th desert flowers and aunahln brighter, th grass greener, and th tky more beautiful. At on o'clock a shiny red Waco biplane, number 11330. circled above th ranch, picked out a amooth, ready made field and lands. Just outside th fence protecting alfalfa from I Personal Health Service By William Signed letter peruuilng to personal neaitb and nygieuo. not to disease dlegnoels or treatment, will be answered &y Or. Brad; If i tamped eell-ad-dreaaed envelop la enclosed. Letter ahould be oriel and written to Ink Owing to the large number of tetter 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 Mali Tribune. j. WHAT AILS THE VICTIM We finished off our talk about Autointoxication and Acidosis the other day In what 60 per cent of our readera call our e h a r a c t eristic fashion, 35 per cent call intrigu ing, and the rest call annoying. We said, need-we re peat, that there la no such thing aa autointoxica tion, save aa a minor or second ary feature of certain grave IU ness. Come to think of It we didn't even mention acidosis In the body of t,he argument, but maybe It la Just a well, for It would be re grettable If all our friends with acid emia should stop the paper at this stage of the battle for better health. Now that that'e settled and out of the way, ho, hum, let'a cast about for a good pithy subject for today'a argu ment. Ob, yes. there wlU be quite a few former victims of the autoin toxication obsession dangling about out there without a diagnosis to hang to. Be of good cheer, children, lor here comes Old Doctor Brady to the rescue. I know what alia a whole lot of you. and I'm going to tell the truth no matter whom It hurts er-heh, I'll bet some of you thought that because I don't brush my teet.h I wouldn't know enough to say whom In such a sentence, didn't you? For give me If I misjudge you. I am afraid It will not be possible to tell you more than the essential nature and cause of the . complaints commonly aacrlbed to autointoxica tion in this -harangue today. Ex perience haa taught me that It la un wise to attempt to tell the laity more than one thing, one simple little fact, at a time. If you try to crowd In any more, even aupposlng there la room, you merely get readera con fused or frightened and they shy off and refuse to follow you further, be cause they think you're a bit crazy, and the sad part of It la that If ypur medical colleagues see your lay read ers are at aU doubtful about your sanity, they, particularly the old fos sils, take aweet revenge by acquiesc ing In the suspicion, snd thst tears everything. 8o, then, let us Aave It over with. The real trouble with most folk who Imagine they have autointoxication or even acidosis (which latter Is a kind of modem revamping of the old autointoxication theory, especially calculated to give free play to freak diets), the real trouble In most cases rabblta. Three men climb out, strip off Uielr parachutes, talk about auto mobllea and airplanes for an hour, then fly back to the Pacific. A round- trip of six hours by automobile,, two hours by plane. Marion McKeen,' who pilots the plane, haa flown 5500 paid hours and many other hours unpaid, for amusement. He has taught 161 men to fly and they are all alive. Much depends on how you are taught. Hundreds of perfect pilot know notning about teaching. Ask your teacher how many student he baa LIVING. Both his companions are flyers taught by McKeen. And both. William Packer and James L. Dixon. are General Motora automobile men. Packer, head of General Motors, Chevrolet department, throughout all thla region from Seattle down the coast to San Diego, could not attend to his business If he did not fly. The airplane Is really used out here. For Instance, Packer leaves his head quarters at Oakland at noon, reaches Portland, Ore., 650 air miles distant at 4:30, transacts business, files to Seattle, 135 miles, in an hour, then back to Oakland, 765 miles In five and a half hours. He flew from Oak land down to Los Angeles last Sat urday. 333 air miles, In one hour and fifty-eight minutes. The trip by fsst train tako thirteen hour and quarter. Flying, saving time, will add many yeara to the working life of energetle men. "Nobody," says Mr. Pscker, "csn attend to hie work prop erly without flying. If he Is not mere ly IN his Job, but actually ON his Job." Important newa for publlshera and the public generally comes by wire from W. J. Dally, of the electric re frigerating department of General Electric Cleveland. Ohio. The com pany begins today a special dally newspaper advertising campaign that will cost five hundred thousand dol lars, making advertising for that de partment this year total more than seven million dollars. General Elec trics competitor are carrying on similarly energetle campaigns, which smooths th path of the deserving publisher. Many a young msn might find suc cess, and th start that he seek. In the production of good advertlsm.: Ideas, ao Important In fighting de preaslon, and building buslnesa. H. J Kllngler of General Motora starts a campaign based on tb alcgan "Heir otrtera by helping yourself" addressed to automobile agent. The sales cam paign emphaslrea the fact that one moderate priced automobile re pre sent a. In ita making, eventy-one days of labor, o that th buyer of a car Brady, M. D. OF AUTOINTOXICATION of alleged autointoxication la sub- oxidation. Dam It all, there we are at the climax of what I earnestly believed was going to be a most effective health lesson, and now I see we have merely arrived at an antl-cllmax. So dumb are lay readera about matters of human physiology or human an atomy, that you Just can't speak to them Intelligibly In words of more than one syllable. All right. By aub oxidation I mean diminished oxida tion, lowered combustion In the body. slow burning of fuel (food and body tissue) to produce heat or muscular or organic energy. In other and more expensive words, low metabolism. Even thla la probably all Greek to most of you dumb laymen. Well, I'll state It In j'our own language: Wfiat the victim of Vie autointoxication obsession needs la more oxygen. How to get It Is another story, and It la not what you think at all. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Dare Not Try It oir the Doctor Akron physician writes to paper to protest against my oft-repeated asser tion that unbroken skin cannot ab sorb any food, nutrient, liquid, gas, medicine, poison. He cites mercury, lead, benzol and nltro-zenzol com pounds used In shoe dye. He asks whether the reliability of my teach ings should not be carefully Investi gated before permitting me to give the public Information or advice about medical or health matters. Answer Neither this Akron physic ian nor any other physician, health authority or medical authority darea to put the matter to a test, using my body, my skin, for the purpose, In private or before a proper com mittee of medical society members. I repeat that the old time medical authorities w.ho Imagined such pois ons were absorbed thru the skin were In error. There la not one lota of act ual scientific experimental evidence to support the old notion. The benzol or nltro-benzol which poisons persona who have shoes dyed on the feet Is INHALED, and If Inhalation of the volatilized benzol or nltro-benzol la carefully prevented, aa It would be In any experiment I ahould submit to, of course it doesn't matter bow much shoe dye or other euch poison may be applied to the skin or for how loog. All Jake When I first get out of bed morn ings the soles of my feet prickle like plus and needles as If I had been In bed for weeks . . . (M. H.)- Answer I get a vague suggestion of alcoholic neuritis or possibly "Jake" (Jamaica ginger) poisoning. gives work for seventy-one day to a man that needs work, in addition to giving pleasure to his family, and helping business recovery. Such ideas are valuable. They stimulate Imagination, and a Napo leon aald "Imagination rules the world." Talks ID parents CAPHICIOl'S AFFECTION By Alice Jurison Peale Today Tony's mother comes home, catches him up In her arms, kisses and embraces him and sits down to chat and play. But tomorrow and th next day she forgets to greet him. She talks over his head. She doesn't see htm. Hla effort to get her attention are Ignored at first and then met with Irritation and annoyance "Run along, mother Is busy. Don't be a nuisance." One day she fusses over a cut fin ger, bandages It tenderly and con soles him. But for a whole week when Tony must stay In bed with a bad cold ahe gives him only the briefest notice. And how does Tony react to his capricious mamma? He Is capricious too. It gives him pleasure to refuse to kiss her when she asks him to. He Is punishing her for the evenings she forgot to say good night. He throws a temper tantrum in the middle of the living room floor before his mother's guests and says afterwards, unrepentant. "I don't care if I spoiled her party. She and her friends, they make me tired." He Is expressing his Jealousy and tak- i ing his revenge. ' Mother comes Into the nursery In a mellow mood and he turns his back upon her to talk only to the COMING SUNDAY Championship SPEED BOAT RAGES EMIGRANT DAM 5 Miles So. Ashland On The Pacific Highway Guaranteed Drivers From All Over The Pacific Coast Admission 50c1 f.y'V housekeeper and put hU arms about her neck. He la trying to make mother Jealous too. Jealousy, revengefulnesa, violent, over-emotlonal behavior these are not good responses to awaken, es pecially in connection with the per son to whom the child Is most deep ly attached. For as surely as they are woven Into the pattern of childish attachments, Just as surely will they appear again, disguised, modified, but still essen tially the same In adult relationships. Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson Count) History from the Flies of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 ear Ago.) ,TEN YEARS AGO TODAY April 19, 1922. (It was Wednesday.) City buys free auto camp site tot 16000, for use of tourists. New parking regulation abandon ed as Impractical. Autoists warned not to stop in middle of Main street for visits. Phoenix W. C. T. U. votes endorse ment of Geneva peace conference. Work starts on new county fair grounds. Horse racing to be big at traction In fall. Golfers course. unable to pick site for Ordinance creating planning com mission passed by council. Klan lecturer declares "We are do ing no hanging just trying to catch a new vision." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April 19, 1912. (It was Thursday.) "I have three enemies the drunk ard, the heavy drinker, and the man who craves Btrong, rough, high-proof Whiskey." (Cyrus Noble od In Mall Tribune.) Gardeners discover that cauliflower can be grown here. Newtown street ordered paved, de spite protest of North Riverside resi dents. Roosevelt-for-Presldent club form ed here. Among the "Teddyltes" are A. 8. B 11 ton. Col. A. C. Abrams and Carl Y. Tengwald. "an up and com ing young Republican worker." City Is incensed and then some by following editorial In the Ashland Tidings: "Who said Medford. Med ford Medford, let'a se-. Locking on the map we find such a name at tached to a burg, the other side of Phoenix. It la a little place with big pretensions. The only really big thing about It la Its gall. Like a pig. ever squealing for .more. It keeps Its throat sore, ever blustering, booming. blustering for more. After while butcher comes along and with one swipe of his knife a trick la turned silence and pathetic dust. ' The but cher man Is abroad." CrystaJglow Kodak gloss supreme fbe Pesaleys opp Holly theatet CHILD need REGULATING? CASTORIA WILL . DO ITI When your child needs regulating femember this: the organs of babiei and children are delicate. Little bowels must be gently urged never forced. That's why Castoria is used by so many doctors and mothers. It is specially made for children's ail ments; contains no harsh, harmful drugs, no narcotics. You can safely give it to young infants for colic pains. Yet it is an equally effective regulator for older children. The ncx1 time your child has a little cold o fever, or a digestive upset, give bin the help of Castoria, the children' own remedy. Genuine Castoria al ways has the name: CASTORIA h in mm tan r.u ar J$ War Horse Will Mark Birthday LONDON Warrior, a war horse, la going to have a birthday party Thursday. He rate 31 candles. War rior carried MaJ. Oen. J. E. B. Seeley all through the World war without a scratch. He's used to luxury, Once, on the western front, his master stabled him In the drawing room of a French villa and he ate corn off an Ormolu table. C. A. Thomas for JUDGE !t.'C'fl. Bii Viiimif tii iv if Voters of Jackson County are ask ing questions regarding this candi date C. A. Thomas, more want to know Just w.ho he is, where he--haa lived, and what his qualifications' for County Judge are. Mr. Thomas bam been a resident of the valley since, 1920. Politically he Is unknown; around the northern part of the County and Grants Pass he Is re membered as a saw mill owner and. operator. Later he was well known as the out-side superintendent at the Owen-Oregon plant, Medford, where he made many friends among his co workers and his employees. He was later engaged to look after the opera tions at Lincoln on the Green springs for the Henry Lbr. Co., but economic conditions made It Impossible for them to operate the past two yeara. Mr. Thomas Is now a resident of Ashland. Before coming to Jackson County he was Inspector and claim, ad J us tor for the Western Pine Mfg. Assn. j Saw milling and logging has always put Mr. Thomas more or less In con tact with the County offices, and ha feels the County Judge and his office .has the opportunity of being of Real service to the people. .-i. He would like to see the re-class Ill cation of all county lands finished so we can have at least a more equit able value for tax purposes, and Is seeking the nomination on the Re publican ticket. His slogan Is, "To fulfil my duties In a spirit of Justice and generosity to all ' aa deserved nd to hit the middle road between prodigal waste and penny pinching." "Governments are tested at last by their attitudes to the welfare of men and women." (Pres. Hoover). (Paid Adv.) A His Own Children Like Him But He's Old To, Everyone Else WIFE TOLERATES HIM FOR OLD TIMES' SAKB His children idolize, worship and respect him but the neighbors don't. He's that old gray haired man to everybody except his family. Nobody loves a gray hair ed man not even his wife she, of course, gets along with him de pending in large measure on how much he earns and provides but real love died with old age. She won't admit it, of course, and like most egotistical men he won't face the facts, declared C. J. Mains, the nationally known expert on gray hairs. Imagine a parade of gray haired men down the main street here not a soul would attend ex cept the families such a pathetia sight. Unless their wires In.t.i . enen who could eullr ct rid of their erar their hsir uncut, their .hn. ,,n.t.t t - Mdeeted, teeth stained, eollsrs soiled an ...n.s or ion nealscted. Employers know it and don't hire or give raise ta erar.halrad mn. . j hj ami, apur ax presses it. Bsnkiri nn. i ... hold his m because he's sllppln. Th w pnon anu the same of lit, the saroa "sr. Check and double-check hla gray haired friends and It is no wondar th world initinetlv.lv ., ' --.-unjwi nxa, Ther Bock tottUnr misery lovs. company. j ' . m"B raon.r and keD 122,'', '."" " a ch.nc retain thrir youthful looj and take pride In UDM.r- th. money but men aoem lo fall li . rot Jhen, on' ni" '" S!."'-,. ' "'. some women liv. up h.' roll ." ""I"1" hat prove! n.?..' ,JhM "" old , not tho man you want around th in 111 "' 2n? h ""! ntherina. k. ! n.' ld '''J?'' rou ""d ' your JT'"" 1 "" " ' teeth but Tool? Bi'f b",U' " U" Hair -Tonic. Rub into scalp and stlmul- ' nature to reneired vigor. am. as you tan a tonic, a laxative to etlmulat. slue-ch synem. You can t rub a tonle on your sums and grow new lrh. but you sure can kep your hair younj looking, fre. of gray and your hair la about th. tint thm a person look! at when your Ball, off. Jun a few drop, at nlKht on the K,,?"Jh,.w.rf- SM " htr or elosei! friend need ever know Away foci grsy hair, dandrufl and Itchy scalp H.,r, becom. he.vr and good looklnr. Take, ten year. IT yr ,. Ca right back to youthful colnr n nu ter what .hade of hair you oririnally had Doetnt change th. eihtr hair. doe.ni tain or .how at all f lt tw.nTTy?.". and It dncin't grow darker, or vary at all Fimrle Ingredient, knoan acd rrewribed for lot.rn.1 and j.:rn.l u by dortora fop a hundred year.. erwnlirV.llr blended lo make it an ea-y Job to banih g.-ay hair and ttcvar he gray .!. A ,, rttrts yoa Wialr.c yun.-er. Srrucing. on 'T-r V.d to.. Wnie T.-nl' Co Htmmxi. M4. for fre booklet. ' Good jT"'"'- -.!. sen Us'. H.lr look. jLKUi aula every. sou, i fa i