Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 24, 1932, Page 6, Image 6

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    P'Afflg SIX
3VIEDFUKP MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFUTUJ, OREGON, BU57DAT, SPRIL 24, 1932.
Medford Mail Tribune
"EwytiH In Southirn Ortftoa
nadt Iht Mall Tribum"
Dally KiMpt Saturdw
publlttwd bf
urnmun printing CO.
Bt)BEK1 W KUBL, ErflUf
L L KNAl'P, Uuuftr
Ad IndependeM Newtpp
Entered u Mond elan nattar it Utdfonl
Arecoa, under Act of Haicn 8, Ultf.
BUBHCKIPT10N BATES
i M1Ln Adianu
pillj. reai If. 00
Pali), month '6
Hi farrier. Is Adtww Medford. Alttlind,
Juksotnlllt, Central Polot, Pbotols, TalaoL Uold
Uiu and on ininwap.
Dall. month I ,T5
Dally, om jui f.60
All Urma, cub lo idtinea.
Official paper at uw City of Medord
Official papav of Jaekaoo County.
UEMBKH OF Till ASSOCIATED PKJS88
KecelTtm full Luted Wirt Scrrtct
It Anoclatcd Pren tl uelulrtlr antltlad to
tot om for publlratloo of
credited U It or otbenrlat ertdiud Ut trita Dtptr
tod auo I ttm loeal net publlihM berain.
All riftitt rot puttlleatloo of tpedal dUpaicbai
berelo art alio rtacntd.
HKMBEB Of UNITED PME88
MEMBEH OF AUDIT BUHJSAU
OK C1KCUUT10N9
Adrertltlng (teprettatatlfti
H. C. MUI.KN8KN A COMPANY
Office to tin York. Lftleifo. Detroit, Ban
rrattcUeo, Lot AnftlH, Seattle, Portland.
HIHUt
1 . . BOfifcownrt sjte'
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry
; The campaign la rapidly degenerat
ing Into a bragging contest, aa the
candidate save the farmer, from 23
to 84 tlmea dally.
h. newner. the demon baker, haa
rtd from 8F. and LA. in his nytng
machine. . , .
It Is feared that there will be no
.uTth. bountiful Vain.. wu ieaveicost the people more, than the
nothing to cuss and howl about but
Hoover.
Tomua Swem Is drilling a bunch of
Eplscopaleans to present an amateur
play.
Many of the Intelligent Voters have
torn out their- wiring for free elec
tricity again and declare they will not
be fooled again until the next time.
F. Sybee, the J'vlV serf, haa
greased up his mowing equipment for
the alfalfa having, come next June.
A Chicago singer gave local music
lovers an eye and ear full Thursday
site at the ha.
As many atenogs have been pro
mised Jobs, after the vote Is counted,
as men have been promised deputy
ships. notch Pish, the boom day tenor, Is
In the throes of housecleanlng, and
slaps a mean broomhandle lip against
the parlor rug.
The peak of the agony will be
reached next week, when the straw
bat hoarders forget where they hid
last season's sun and wind tanned
headgear.
t
There la some talk of reviving the
Sanity League, which was organized
Here in the spring of 1913.
Tender pigs are running across the
country roads, in front of city auto
Ista, and. some have met the fate of
milk fed turkey the latter part of
November.
The Danublan Union, which Is tret.
ting Europe, Is causing no excitement
among the Main Stem statesmen.
e f
J. Kort Hall M. reported some
peculiarities he haa noticed about the
local weather. Several times Mr. Hall
has got up at 3 am. to smudge, and
a nock of clouds from Crtr. Lk. fooled
him. He should have a better view
of the northeast' end of the county
from his boudoir.
This year the people will try and
have an election, without anything on
the ballot for or against the sacred
fish of the Rogue.
Money, which was formerly plenti
ful with everybody, continues scarce
and elusive.
The courthouse la beginning to
look like aomethlng. Many builders,
who never built anything, feel It will
fall down, and think It would have
been more economical to have pur
chased a second-hand olrcua side
show tent, for the county officials to
loaf In.
Radishes are on the msrket. mostly
the red msrble type, as the long
white onea are late again this year,
t
A large representation of hayseeds
were in town Sat.
People have started to catch poison
ivy. and It Is very disgusting particu
larly to the fair sex, aa It will not
associate with rouge and other popu
lar cosmetics.
Bulldogs are on the Increase around
here. They are French, English, Bos
ton, and screw-tall,
It now develops that the Hawaii
honor murder case, is a good example
of what gossip can do to a commu
nity. e
TO new houses were built within
our borders Isat yr which Is a fair
ahowing considering the bum condi
tions, and the general groaning.
Three blg-buga of the Kspee, were
here last wk. All displayed a dignified
and effete despondency, and aaw no
hope worth mentioning,
The weather haa been rather frigid
for pear blossoms and the bare-legged
weaker sex,
The heir and awlgn of William
Heath haa been ni.med WUllam.
The Lesson
llEDFORD is lucky. Had
' windy, instead of still and wet, probably nothing could
have saved the city's entire shipping section
As it is the $200,000 fire loss, regrettable as it is, can only
be viewed as a blessing in disguise. The destroyed buildings,
will certainly not be replaced by wooden structures of similar
barn-like proportions, and the industrial section will conse
quently never again be as serious a fire menace as it has been
for so many years.
"piIE .disaster emphasizes the necessity of strictly enforcing
the fire ordinance regulations in the congested down-town
business district. Far better to tear down a few of the tinder
shacks, than run the risk of a conflagration of even more
serious proportions than suffered early Saturday morning. A
few hundred dollars sacrifice in this direction, may mean the
saving of hundreds of thousands dollars later on.
QATUBDAY morning's experience also brings, into sharp re
lief, the wisdom of those who last fall, opposed the hysteria
for economy that would have crippled the efficiency of Med
ford 's fire and police departments.
As the Mail Tribune stated at that time :
"Conditions demand the utmost economy In all public ex
penditure. But the same condlttona demand, maintenance of
adequate police and fire protection, with the crime wave stead
ily Increasing, with the numbera of unemployed and desperate
growing here and everywhere else by leaps and bounds, this la
no time to give way to a penny wise and pound foolish policy.
Instead of needing less fire and police protection, we are going
to need more. We have an efficient police department, we
have auch a well organized fire department, that for five years
we have enjoyed a steadily decreasing Insurance rate. Whatever
we do. let's not seriously Impair the effectiveness of these two
departments. Such action would be false economy. It would
not be properly protecting the property and lives of our people,
but would be subjecting them to risks, which this community
can't afford, particularly at this time."
What was true then, is even more true now. The appropri-
j ations for these departments
, U advised demand to cut them
, fortunately was denied.
j Police and fire departments
insurance protection. One major
through a long period of years,
What "Are " We Going to Do
About It?
A CCUSED of robbing the city of New York of a million dol
lars, Boss Tweed, shifted his cigar from one side of his
mouth to the other and inquired:
"Well, what are you going to do about itt"
The people of New York as the saying goes "did plenty."
They put the Boss in prison where he died penniless and dis
graced. Boss Crocker, in a similar role, asked the same question- The
people of New York forced him into exile in Ireland.
A CCOREUNG to the report of
people of New York have
ONE YEAR than in the days of Tweed and Crocker, they were
robbed in TEN. More than that, where Tweed and Crocker
represented a small minority a ward gang so to speak the
present plunderbund operating there, represent a large section
of the city's population. They not only have their stations in
the underworld, but in exclusive Park Avenue; they have not
only invaded police hcadqunrtors, they have invaded the courts.
Mayor Walkor is the nominal ruler of Now York. But in reality
the greatest city in the lnnd is rulod by the underworld by
organized crime.
And tho attitude of this underworld is precisely the attitude
of Bosses Tweed and Crocker, an attitude of contempt and
insolent defiance.
"What are you going to do about it!"
XlTEI.iL what are we going to dol"
That, in this newspaper's opinion, is the most impor
tant question in this country today. Far more important than
whether Mr. Tweoille-Dee or Mr. Dweedle-Dum is to sit in the
White House Even more important than just WHEN tho de
pression is to end.
For this question strikes at the very heart of our national
existence. It is a question of whether this is to remain a coun
try "of the people, by tho people for the people"; or a country
of the criminals, by the criminals and for the criminals
It can't bo both. It must be all one thing or all the other.
And in our opinion tho time has come for the people of this
country to decide which it is to be.
e e e e e
IF a foreign foe were knocking at our gates, we wouldn't sit
about speculating about who is going to be the next Presi
dent or dog catcher, wondering when business will pick up,
if it ever will, and all that sort of thing. We would be busy,
each one of us, doing what we could do to protect our homos
and repel the invader. Those
helping those who could. We
common cause.
That is the war habit. Unfortunately we have no similar
peace habit. And yet the danger
crime, is as great as if the "barbarians" WERE at our gates.
In one sense the danger is GREATER, For the army of organ
ised crime, is within our gates,
shotguns, their automatics and
length and breadth of the fond,
firesides and homes.
"TfO the leaders of this army,
teurs mere pikers. For they only robbed the people
these up-to-date professionals not only rob but kill them,
kidnap them ravish them- Neither our homes, our law-abiding
citizens, our girls or our babies
"What are YOU going to do about itt"
WELL WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO ABOUT IT!
e e e e
LET things slidct Keep on
fi-ftnlrlt, fi.ltnit aa u.j. I....
"- "
bergh kidnapping ease, that we
the police are powerless, that
of the Fire
yesterday morning been dry and
were slightly reduced, but the
below the margin of safety,
merely represent necessary
crime, or one serious fire, may
premiums on such insurance
the Seabury investigation, the
been robbed of more money in
who couldn't fight would be
would all be doing our bit in a
to this country from organized
scattered with their sawed-off
their Maxims, throughout the
within a stone's throw of our
Tweed and Crocker were ama
are safe. But .
glorifying our Al Capones,
..I - ,. ...ll.. - I ' . .
villtniuy HlllIUUOU in IMS 1,111(1-
the people are powerless that
if we want the law cuforccd, if
we want our stolen children returned we must first bargain
with the uncrowned King of the underworld f
Or are we going to do, AS A NATION, what the people of
New York did as a city, half a century ago- Serve notice on
our present day Tweeds and Crockers, our Capones and
"Caesars" that whether or not the outside world is ever to be
made safe for democracy, this country is going to be made safe
for decent men and women,
AND THE DECENT MEN AND WOMEN OF THIS
COUNTRY ARE GOING TO DO IT.
That sort of spirit, not what is going to win the election,
or what will end the depression is the supreme need of the
nation 1
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed tetters pertaining to personal oeaitb and hygiene, not to disease
diagnosis or treatment, will be answered bj Or. Brad; U a stamped self-ad-dressed
envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written to Ink
Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered
here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Ad
dress Dr. WUllam Brady In care of The Mall Tribune.
WHO NEEDS A PERODIC
Examination?
Now and again a fellow gets a bit
balled up In this job of Instructing
and ..advising all and sundry about
health, happiness and the pursuit of
what have you. Say there are seven
hundred, er, clients, followers, suck
ers waiting In the ante-room. Well,
by the time you finish off correspond
ent No. 230 you begin to grow a trifle
bored and your thoughts wander
over onto the bowling green and first
thing you know you are answering
some fool question with consideration
only for the correspondent's happi
ness and none at all for the general
welfare. That won't do at all. z
this Job the general welfare must al
ways be kept In mind. For Instance,
I answered a query one day by say
ing In my opinion It Is fine for i
girl's health to go In swimming when
ever and wherever she can enjoy i
swim. A little later X came In for a
severe censure because I failed to
warn the general public about the
danger of swimming In polluted
water.
Recently I have made a similar er
ror In giving advice about routine
medical, health or physical examin
ations for school children. In vari
ous communities the health authori
ties are endeavoring to carry on i
general examination of all school
children for evidences of tuberculo
sis. The method Is to give each child
first the skin tuberculin test, and
then to make careful physical ex
aminations and also X-ray examina
tions of all the children who show a
positive reaction to the skin tuber
culin teat. A small proportion of the
children who show such a positive
reaction are found to have incipient
or early lung tuberculosis. By thus
recognizing the existence of the ac
tual lung Involvement before the
child's health Is much Impaired, the
health authorities are In a position
to institute proper treatment or gen
eral hyglenlo measures to Insure re
covery or to prevent the child from
becoming a chronic Invalid. Obviously
this means a great saving of money
for the child's parents, and for the
state, too.
I have been urging parents to co
operate with this endeavor of the
health authorities and to believe the
child who is so examined ts fortunate.
But alter all, the method Is too
costly to carry on In this universal
fashion. It costs real money to make
X-ray negatives of the chest and to
Interpret them. It coats too much to
Communications
Prohibition Is Favored.
To the Editor:
I have not been asked to act aa
press agent for Mrs. La Mance who
has made several fine talka to va
rious organisations In our valley this
week, but I was so Impressed by
some tninRs she said I wish all could
have heard her.
I am asking you for a bit of space
to toll your readora of a few state
ments that interested all who heard
her talk.
First -Let me say her description
of the Holy Land where she has been
was a revelation to me. although I
have read much and heard other
travelers tell their Impressions of
this unique and Incomparable Pal
estine. Her principal lecture brought some
statements on prohibition that were
also a revelation to most of us who
have acceAs to surface conditions
only, and have been more or less
forming our conclusions from the
average news channels.
Many friends of constitutional pro
hibition today bellero the measure
was merely a wartime act and per
haps should be repealed.
Not knowing that Miss Wlllsrd had
said many yeara ago that by 1030
prohibition would be written In the
constitution of the United States:
that prohibition forces for years had
been working with that object and
time In their mind, senatora and rep
resentatives had been pledged to sup
port the measure If It came up dur
inb their tenure In office. War con
ditions brought It about aooner than
expected by most ardent supporters,
tioes It not seem that If found ben
eficial In time of war it would be
also beneficial nowt
Aa for the plea for legalised liquor
for economical ressons. It Is a delu
sion and a mirage and would bring
more harm than benefit. The eco
nomical benefit la In the hands of
every person who uses liquor aa a
beverace. stop using It thus and
the bootleggers and rum runners,
killings and such will be over with
In a short time. Government and
.i.ir numry yrs, alio private money
could then be put to constructive
uses.
Has anything been accomplished
In enforcement Much. Here are a
few statements that can be verified'
On a coast line of some 30,000
miles to be defended from importa
tions at a three-mile limit, haa been
raised to twelve miles, and the num
ber of rum ships In sight any day
from a plane has been cut from as
high as 2S3 to the very few of three
or four or live at a time. SaiUHUu-
Brady, M. D.
HEALTH EXAMINATION?
apply the skin test to all the chil
dren In a given school or class, when
perhaps only two or three out of sev
eral hundred have any active tuber
culosis. So I now apologize to the public
for my attitude In reference to tnese
tuberculin tests. I believe such exam
inations should be reserved for chil
dren who are evidently below stand
ard for their age and class In physical
development and riustness. The
cost of the examinations should be
borne by the child's parents, not by
the community.
Likewise I think all so called pe
riodic health examinations are silly
and extravagant. I myself would not
pay out good money for any such ex
amination unless I believed or feared
my health was not quite up to par.
As long as you are perferctly con
fident your health Is absolutely sound
never mind a periodic examination,
unless your's anxious to show the
doctor what fine shape you have.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
The Constant Wheeze.
You say that a person with true
asthma has attacks, with complete re
lief between attacks. But where a per.
son has It every night and never any
Interval of relief at all, how would
you . . . H. W. J.
Answer That Is not asthma.
Empyema.
Girl operated on at age of 10 yeara,
and part of a rib removed, for pus In
the chest. She got entirely over It,
and she la now 21 and seriously In
love. But there is still some pus left
In the chest near the heart, which
causes it to race when she gets hur
ried. . . M. j. E.
Answer If the operation wound
healed these csn't be sny pus left. If
there ts, then I don't understand the
case at all and am unable to offer
any advice.
The Oas Bill.
We tried out plain farmer's wheat
ss a breafast cereal, on your sugges
tion, and ws liked It, but oh, boy.
when the gas bill came In at the
end of the month we quit buying It.
You have to cook It about three
hours. So we now buy coarse crack'
ed wheat Instead. M. a.
Answer And you pay somebody for
coarsely cracking It. Why not have
your own coffee mill and crack your
wneat it you prefer It so? Or let
the morning's supply of wheat soak
over night In cold water, and then
cook It 40 minutes, In the water It
has soaked in.
(Copyright John P. Dille Co.)
In the dark via small Islands and such
Is hard to handle, but even that has
been largely reduced.
Fifteen treaties with foreign coun
tries have beeea a great help In con-
trolling Importations all along our
borders. One more la In the making.
Fifty-eight appeals to the supreme
court In effort to break down the
prohibition law have resulted In fell,
ure.
Of 105 attempts In various states
only three succeeded. These few and
much more haa beeen accomplished
Yet we know we have a large per
cent of subsidized publications, three
of which one conducting a poll,
were especially commended for their
efforts by an organization from 40
roreign countrlea awoi to break
down the prohibition law In the
United States and boasting of fab
ulous sums being used for this pur
pose. MRS. DORA A. PRICE.
Medford, April 22.
Ye Poet's Cornei
THE CARELESS WORD
Many a word la said In Jest
That causes a lot of pain;
Careless, of course, but so uncalled
Where there la naught to gain.
Consider the feelings of other folks
Aa you would wish them to
If they might cause by a spoken word
Orlef that would come to you.
W. U Huffman.
BIGS PRISON TERM
PORTLAND, April 23. (AP) Acy
Duster, who has a passion for lawn
mowers, must spend - all months'
Jsii sentence and pay a fine of 1500
because of his addition. He pleaded
to a charge of larceny by bailee after
several omers had testified that ie
had borrowed their lawnmowers and
htld fstled to return them. He serv
ed a sentence for a similar offense
last year, police said.
Music Firm Head
Dies In Portland
PORTLAND, April S3. (AP) Fred
A. Selberllng. 64. president of the
Sriberllug-Lucaa Mualc company
here, died In a hospital today. He
had been In business in Portland
40 yeara.
Today
By Arthur Brisbane
Going. Through Ohio,
David S, Ingalls' Story.
Our Lovely D, A, R,
Financial Fairy Tale,
Copyright King Features 8ynd Ino.
This is written on the Penn
sylvania "Broadway Limited,"
going through Ohio, past Crest
line, Mansfield, Wooster, and
on through Salem to Pittsburgh
where they say it is a bad sign
when you can see the sun at
noon, or the moon at night.
Many years ago, at Wooster,
this writer thought he would
became a great railroad man.
But his handwriting left much
to be desired, and he was invit
ed to start handling things in
a freight office. A cousin,
Walter Mullins, had tried news.
paper work on the Philadelphia
Press, and liked it, so this indi
vidual went into Charles A
Dana's New York Sun office,
and glad of it, and grateful to
Wooster, having done in news
paper offices better than he
could probably have done in
freight offices.
You observe big barns In Ohio,
standing beside small farm houses,
with elaborate lightning rods on the
bams, none on some of the adjoining
houses.
In the fields then Is comfort for
WaU Street brokers whose exchange
seats have fallen low. Sheep, well
ahorn. are accompanied by little white
spots, each a new born lamb.
As the lambs come back to Ohio
grass each spring, so the two-legged
lamba will return to the stock ticker,
In due time,
Ohio Is to be congratulated on hav
ing a man worth while to vote for,
in the May primaries.
David S. Ingalls, assistant secretary
of the navy, In charge of aeronautics.
Is candidate for governor on the Re
publican ticket, and this is part of
his story.
Hla father told him about Darius
Green, who tried to fly, and fell.
Young David, not yet ten years old,
believed his father's statement that
men would fly some day and decided
to try It.
He made wings. Jumped from a tall
apple tree to fly, as ha had seen
young robins do, and Injured his
spine. When the big war came, that
injury made It Impossible for him to
take the ordinary soldier's Job,
marching up and down, riding on a
horse or looking after a cannon.
But the Injured spine did not keep
young Mr. Ingalls from sitting down
and operating the controls and ma
chine gun of an airplane. He went
Into the American service, flew well,
and fought hard. The only American
naval ace In the world war, official
reports show that he brought down
five enemy planea and was awarded
the distinguished service medal.
Mr. Ingalls la a rich young man,
but that did not cause him to look
for "a soft Job" In the war. He picked
out the hardest, moat dangerous.
He ts picking out a hard, dangerous
Job now in politics, and this writer
wishes he could vote for him. Any
American that trlea to fly before he
Is ten years old, and then files for his
country well, and fights well. Is the
right kind of American. There are
many such In Ohio, and doubtless
they will vote for him.
Daughtera of the American Revolu
tion often surprise you. Recently
they said It wss a great ahame for
American' children to be "rubbing
elbows with the children of Immi
grants." Those esteemed "daughters"
must be descendsnts of Immigrants,
or red Indians.
Now the daughtera ask that all
foreign born out of a Job be deported.
'through a presidential decree of
emergency."
44
The Daughters' ancestors, when
they first arrived, were out of a Job
and It might have been helpful If
some of them had been deported.
But honest aliens, men and women,
now in this country under guarantee
of decent treatment, will not be de
ported untesa this has become a dis
honest government.
For a fsaclnating financlsl fslry-
tale, read the history of Ivsr Kreuger.
Swedish genius of financial legerde
main. Kreuger had "actually received
nearly one thoussnt' million dollara."
Also "one can aum up the activities
of Kreuger in recent yeara by saying
that he transferred from the United
States to Europe 1500.000.000."
-
He lent 100.000.000 to various
European countries, "he always car
ried one million crowns In his
pocket." and, very interesting touch,
"he had no vices except the compeny
of pretty women and champagne with
every meal.'
BUSTER AFTER
t
'4
Endeavoring to convince reporters and photographers that his air
plane "retreat" with his two sons after an argument with his wife,
Natalie Talmadge, was all In fun, Buster Keaton of the films struck thi
"dead pan" Napoleonic pose when grounded at San Diego, Cat. The boya
are Joseph, 11 (left), and Robert, 10. "I Just wanted to see who's boss'
said Keaton.
The comparatively small loss of
Swedish Investors, some sixty mil
lions, will be felt keenly. Americans
are so used to being swindled by their
own "high finance," through foreign
bonds, watered stocks, and otherwise,
that a few hundred millions more or
less will hardly be noticed.
1
Mr. Stimson, secretary of state, is
In Geneva, the Lord knows why, talk
ing to other nations about what they
should do about the size of their
armies, etc. What business 1 that of
ours?
The negro In the woodpile appears
when the French say they cannot ac
cept Mr. Sttmson's suggestions, be
cause he makes no provision, if you
please, FOR THE UNITED STATES
TO JOIN WITH FRANCE, IN CASE
FRANCE EVER GETS INTO a WAR.
Would you want a better Joke than
that? President Hoover might tell
France and the rest of the world that
we are going to attend to OUR busi
ness, protect OUR country, let them
do as they like, and try to make them
sorry If they interfere with us.
V4
New York City had a little riot, on
Thursday. So-called "reds" .nted
to talk to the mayor about unemploy
ment. They met a reception commit
tee of policemen, mounted and on
foot. Fifteen of the unemployed will
be busy for some time, attending
their wounds.
We should be forceful In the sup
pressing of wicked anarchy, but care
ful about sending mounted police to
"trample and beat men and women".
as the New York Times heading de
scribes It. Little Incidents sometimes
grow into big events, as New York
authorities may learn from reading
an unexpurgated history of the
French Revolution.
-
New York courts have Just sen
tenced four bandits to long terms in
Sing Sing prison. Three of them
were eighteen to nineteen years old,
the fourth twenty-two. One will
meet two brothers In Sing Sing.
The new bootleg-crime Industry
gets Its recruits very young.
parents
SETTI-1NO QIWRRKI.S.
By Alice Jiidfton Penle.
Most of the difficulties which chil
dren encounter in their play with
one another are best left for them
to settle.
Even if the settlement is roueh
and none tod fair. It la better for
them than one more Just but Im
posed from without by ft higher au
thority. Only when a real Impasse has
been reached, when advantage Is be
ing taken of one too young and weak
to defend himself or when there is
danier of physical hurt should an
adult take upon himself the role of
arbiter and Judge.
And then he must be scrupulously
fair, scrupulously Impartial. Each
child must be permitted to tell his
side of the story fully, without in
terruption. The decision should be given with
a minimum of lecturing, moralizing
and blaming. Only when children
feel that the adult has bwn fair
will they carry over a better spirit
into their plsy.
Most Important it Is to appreciate
the undercurrents which He below
the Immediate quarrel.
With brothers and sisters one al
most can be sure that there are lit
tle Jealousies, long standing grudse,
old rivalries, which from time to
time will break out In quarreling un-
til the children have outgrown them,
mirte new adjustments and left
them behind with other impediment
of childhood.
For this reason quarrels between
brothers and sisters are seldom real
ly settled; they are weathered, rath
er. The same difficulty in another
form will crop up a:aln and again.
net week, next month and next year.
For parent such quarrels, their
frequency, their causes may be a
barometer by means of which they
msy read what progress their chll-
.. waiiig sjj me uuciiimi 01
growl rig up.
HIS 'WATERLOO'
F
A tut
i'i ' V tl
Associated Press Photo
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson County
History from the Files of The
Mall Tribune of 20 and .10 Vearf
Aro)
TEN YEAKS AGO TODAY
April 24, 1922.
(It was Monday.)
Ku KIux Klan raid on home In
Ingleside, Calif., home results in gun
play, and three wounded.
Ashland to give auto tourists fre
shower baths and fuel.
Barnes circus here May 3.
Three1 candidates for governor visit
city. v
Salvation Army
splendid.
record for year
Joe Gagnon talks of building rail
road to coast..
Citizens warned to trim limbs of
trees over sidewalks.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
April 34, 1912.
(It Was Tuesday.)
Editorial says: "There Is mourn
lng in the ranks of the standpat Re
publicans, as the returns show that
Its favorite son, Dr. J. M. Keene has
again been defeated for the vice pres
idency." William H. Gore is elected chair
man of the committee to build ft
railroad to the Blue Ledge mine.
Evidence at Titanic hearing shows
life boats and life savers in poor con
dition, and near panic prevailed
when liner hit Iceberg.
April rainfall to date 3.85 inches-
. record for the month.
Fight raging in Jackson county
Democratic ranks, and many threat
en to vote the Republican ticket in
fall.
Frost danger for year held at end.
TRADER DENIES
RAIDS BY BEARS
WASHINGTON, Aplrl 23 (API
A veteran Wall street trader, Mat
thew O. Brual, testified to the sen
ate banking committee today that
under certain conditions short sell
ing could depress the stock market,
but he denied there had been any
bear raids in recent months.
Committee members leaned for
ward over tho long table to hear
every word, as the gray-haired oper
ator gave an Inside story of playing
the market and told of being as much
ss 125,000 shares on both sides of
the mnrket at .arlous times.
Brush said short sales could de
press the market by creating a sup
ply In excess of demand, and drew
a laugh when he added he expected
to "get shot" when he returned to
New York for that admission.
Optimistic
I MsJ. Granv.Me R. Fortescue who
. Is convalescing In flew York after
; a long battle sgalnit pneumonia. e.
pressed confidence th.it his wife and
.waning trial in
Hone-
m
, s
IS
!
i
r j - '
;l 1
turn lor xne Kllhng of
t would be acquitted.
a native,
?4 'V