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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1932)
rXGE TE5T ' MEDFORD M3iIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON", FRIDAY, 'APRIL 29, 1932. Medpord Mail Tribune emvom hi Southern Ortjos rudt tht Kill MbuiN" Daily BiMpt Sttunliy PublHtwd ttf HEuroiiD fKiNTiNU co. MUM H. Kli t I 80 BERT KUHL, BdlUK E. L KNAPP, MtM AD Indep-od-Bl Newtpaptf olsrad u coud clot aatur it Ortoo, uM Act of Uueb t. 18T. SUHSCUIrTlOi. BATES By Mill -Id Adiuct DUlT, fw IT-00 ptUj, Booth., i ' -To By Ctrrter, lo Adfines Hertford. AibUod, Jwtaoortlle. Ontri) Potot, PootoU. Talot. Gold BUI lod oo HIHimji. Dtllr, tuoLb .To Daily, oo rr Ta All tcnm, cub to tdrux. Omdtl ptpr of lb (Sly of Hertford. Official pi par of JarUco County. ' itfEMBEK OF THB ASSOCIATE!) PttKU BcIOn ITuU UuJ Win gcrrlea Itat AnocUtad freu It oielmltaly ntltJtfl to tba dm for publication of all om dlipatetiai aradltad to tt or othtrwlH erwllted lo liiti rwttr tad alio to lha local oet publlitj beralo. All rttbta for publlcaUoo of tpaelal dlpatd barflB art alio raaarrad. UEUBKU Of ONITEU PKRSB MIMBEW Of AUDI! BUItEAD OP CIUCULATIONA Adrfftlitnt ItrprcMotatlrai II & MOUKNHKN A COMPANY Offleaa to Hem fork, LDlcaco. Itatrolt. rnaelaeo, Los AnfilM, Baattla, Portland. umm Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry ' . The Portland Journal U valiantly . endeavoring to convince the metro- I polltnn plutocrats, they cannot take . their beloved dollars to h 1 or ( h n with them when thej die. j Thl ! a noble If (utile Journalistic aervlce, and will only goad the targete of the eaaay to greater efforta to get by the Pearly Oatee with an armload : of bond. . There la a lack of aalea efficiency among progressive investors, as too many Good Samaritans are getting t bit In the head by hitch-hikers, be fore they have a chance to buy stock In a' Bolivia gold mine. . j , . ' ' I Many of the Older Olrls are busy j getting busy trying to ssve the hoeth- j na ox foreign lanas, wis uvaw.nu ripply not being worth saving, see Tom Mooney. whose detention In San Quentln for a bomb plot, haa oa used considerable controversy, Is mentioned as a presidential candi date. Mr. Mooney la the leading mar tyr of the day. with Inclinations to dynamite anything that looks like orderly government, and has the moral backing of the two Jackson county residents who never permit a giddy political notion to escape them. QUESTIONS FOR CANDIDATES Dear Candidates: Now you answer the following questions, and none of ; your Hp. Try and answer "Yes" or "Ho," without msklng a speeoh. You are going to be weighed: I How are you, and how are all , your folks? j What qualifications. If any, handicap you for the Job you seek 8 Can you scare up a drink In a hurry? . . 4 Name the first S presidents? Did Oong. Hawley cheat your Uncle John out of a postmastershlp? a (For married candidates only) Who was that lean blonde you took to the movie? ft What la your position on pos session of 11,000.000, and would you rob ft bank if the sheriff waa not looking? - 7 Name Just one man, you have not promised to make a deputy? 8 Do you think towns should be set on fire, like forests, In hot weather? Do you expect to be defeated? 10 Are you for "Old Glory," the Constitution, the fireside, the babies, and the abolishment of poverty? II -Are you for a clean aheet? If so, how about the pillow-case? 13 Is everybody but yourself ft rascal? A FAIR AND HAPPY LAND (Greenleaf Hems) No newa Items have gone In from here for two weeks for the reason that nothing haa hap pened, not even accidents nor the unexpected, so far as we know, people already know about the ' weather changes and that so-and-so ate Sunday dinner with so-and-so. , e ' e . Our alleys are so small, a modern freight truck cant get Into them without the aid of a anna-horn, and endangering the eaves of business houses. e Let's be thankful for the depres sion. In another year all of the country's money would hare been loaned to lurope. (Kenosha, Wis., News.) The well-known sliver lining shows up for the panic. e . . The best bit of satire tint has ap peared In an Oregon paper so far this year, adorned the editorial page of the Albany Democrat-Herald Wed nesday, April 87, and It should be used as a model of plsln. but biting writing, by the schools f journal Ism. It waa captioned: "Tusko's Departure." The agony an elephant caused the Portland press, and the suffering that followed for subscrib ers la well depicted. Fishermen Repeat ' Wage Ultimatum ASTORIA, Ore., April 38 (API Demands for an openlug price of nine cents pound for Chinook salmon were repeated by Astoria fishermen here today, following an ultimatum delivered tc canners last night that unless this price Is paid fisherman's strike will be called In the lower river. Best Utah Coal, 113.60 per ton Medford Fuel Co. Tel. 3l. Beit Utah Ooal, (IS SO net ton Uediord Fuel Co. TJ. Ml, We Hope We're Wrong TT7E were greatly interested in a communication from H. J. " Merklee of Eagle Point, printed yesterday, in answer to a recent editorial entitled the "decline of good will." , Mr. Merklee cites his own experience as evidence that there has been no such decline. And we believe anyone in bis position, would hold the same view. For Mr. Merklee lost' practically everything when his home burned, but his neighbors banded to gether and built and furnished a new home. Nor is this the only instance in Jackson county. We recall two similar cases in the past, amply testifying that, in case of tragedy, there has been, and is now, no decline of good will in this section of Oregon. . : We would go even further than that, and maintain that at the present time no person in acute distress, could be more certain of immediate aid and care than right here in the Rogue River valley. We are a big-hearted and a kind-hearted com munity. . ' IT was for that very reason, however, that in the editorial in question we deplored the decline of normal goodwill of kindliness and tolerance which to our mind has been so marked since the depression started, not in the tragic or highly dra matic cases such as the case of Mr. Merklee, but in the every day, ordinary run of human intercourse. ' We are convinced there HAS BEEN such a marked decline in good will not, as we previously pointed out among true friends, or members of the family the depression has merely drawn them closer together, but outside, in the "wide open WE cited the present primary campaign as an example. And we again maintain that the rank and file, the people who a year or two ago would have laughed away or indignnntly repudiated charges, being passed about by office seekers are today, accepting them at their face value, and appar ently planning to act upon them. We can only acoount for that by the decline in our former spirit of friendliness, kindliness and good will a tendency to believe the worst rather than the best of our fellow men. Mr. Merklee explains it in another way. Ye editor he be lieves is too pessimistic, he sees only the hole in the doughnut, instead of the deep underlying human heart that beats for all. . Never was "Ye editor" more sincere than when he remarks, he hopes future events will prove ; . - -' Mr. Merklee is right. ' Ye Editor, wrong 1 " What Would You Do? I ET us suppose you were general manager of a large business. And your stockholders decided through the board of direc tors, to let out all exeoutive officers on May 20th and hire new ones. In other words they ordered a "clean sweep." What would you dot Having the interests of your business j at heart, you would oppose such would urge your stockholders after they had fired all the offi cers, to REHIRE those who had given good service, and in your opinion were needed to prevent complete demoralization. That would be the business-like thing to do, would it notf Every good business man realizes an experienced person is better than an inexperienced one, a person that has given satis faction better than a "shot in the dark"; a known quantity, better than an unknown one. TTTHERE your efforts were fruitless, and a new man HAD T to be seoured, or where you believed a new man should be seoured because the former incumbent had not made good, what would you dot i , , Having the welfare of your business at heart you would look over every new applicant with great care find out all you could about him or her try in every way to secure the one person in the fiold best fitted for the job. IITELIj Mr. Voters when you go to the election booth a few weeks hence remember this: You will be in precisely the same position as the general manager of the aforesaid business. If you have a similar in terest in the business of Jackson County your welfare as a stockholder, you will adopt the same course as that of . the general manager above. . " Just think it over between now and May 20th. That's all 1 Communications Forest Exchange Act Quoted. , To the Editor: I have read the Rankin letter in tlie Tribune of April as, and I wish to thank him tor It, as It gives an opportunity to publish the entire bill, eo all can read and Judge for themselvee. In my former letter I stated that McNary and Hawley had sponsored bllla to extend the boun daries of all forest reserves In Ore gon six miles outward to come under the forest exchange. exactly what thla bill does, Mr. Rankin says that ft large por tion of the lands within the six mile limit are now patented and not subject to non-tax legislation. Surely Mr. Rankin must know that patented lands are the lands that this exchange bill Is after, and when the exchange la made the lands are taken off the Us roll and go Into the forest reserve forever. If any tax payer or county official wlshea to know how the exchange works, let them go to the county records and look up the title to sec. I, eeo. 19 end the north half of see. IS. In twp. 40. south of range I, east Jarkson county. These lands have paid aula and county taxes for SO years, but Ihey never will again. They have gone In the reaerve to stay. Ranch and home owners will have to make It up. I have cruised limber for lumber men on many of these exchanges and know exactly how It worse. The people's reserve timber la used to psy for these pstented lends and then they go off from the tax roll forever and the tax payer losee. both coming and going. He losee hie re serve timber, and losee the lands for taxation. This grabbing of Oregon's Isnds should step: 47 per cent Is all the state can control now. Why should the bureau grab more. action. Failing in this, you I will attach the McNary bill, fresh from Washington that speake for Itself. Respectfully, . T. MERRILL. In the Senste of the United States, December t, 1931, Mr. McNary In troduced the following bill, which waa read twice and referred to the committee on agriculture and for estry. A bill to extend the pro visions of the forest exchsnge act to landa adjacent to the national forests In the state of Oregon. "Be It enacted by the senate and house of representatives of the United States of America In congress as sembled, that the provisions of the act of congress approved March 90, 1039 (49 Stat. 409: U. S. C. title It. sec. 485), be. and the aame are here by, extended and made applicable to any lands within six miles of the boundarlee of nstlonsl forests In the state of Oregon. Lands con veyed to the United States under this act anal!, upon acceptance of title, become parts of the national forest nesreftt to which they are situated." e CLOTHING STORE FINE PORTLAND, April 99. W) Ten thousand dollar dsmsge waa caused by a tire her last .light which broke out In ft Second street clothing (tore and spread to an electrical supply eompsny and a malt shop. Occu pants of a rooming house on the top floor of the two-story building were routed by heavy emoke. All fire was called out. was celled out. Auto glsss Installed while you wait. Prices tight. Brill Sheet Metal Works. Today By Arthur Brisbane Contracting, Expanding. Who Is' Minding Store? The Governor of Oregon. An Average Comet, Copyright King Features SytuL. Inc. Any good physicist will prove that no object can con tract and expand at the same time. That applies even to our magnificent government. Part of it is trying to con tract by reducing wages, dis--ch'arging men, choking off the public building programs. An other part is trying to expand by promoting employment, lending to banks, railroads and others,' hundred of millions of the people's dollars. ' The Siamese twins couldn't go, in two directions at once, and the government can't do it. Soon Washington will be come a sunny desert. Congress men that love to "sock the rich" will desire more strongly to go back and look after their fences before conventions start. . Then the country, left to Its own devices, will remind you of a story told by Harry Hershfleld in his new book of Jewish humor. A merohant on his ' deathbed was delighted to know that his wife sat near him, al though he could not see ber; that all hi children were gathered around hla, bedside. But suddenly came a dreadful thought, and with his last breath he exclaimed: "Vevald, who Is minding the store?" The old lsdy in the London four wheeler, long ago,- afraid she would miss her train, told the driver to hit the horse on the stomach. He replied: "I am saving his stomach for Ludgate hlU." Congress seems to have reached Ludgate hill In dealing with vanish ing American Incomes. Income tax waa Increased Wednesday from 9 to 3 per oent on the first $4000 to ft per cent on the second $4000 and 9 per cent on Incomes over 18000, and al most 50 per cent In the big Incomes. If there Is satisfaction In knowing that you an working lor your dear government, the rich will have it. Jullua L. Meier, 'governor of Ore gon, wires these facts: In the north west lumber represents 65 per oent of Industry. For every 19 carloads of lumber manufactured, manufacturers purchase and consume one carload of suppUes. On thousand board feet of lumber represent day's work In the sawmill and another In log ging. Lumber Industry In the northwest Is reduced to 98 per oent of normal capacity, thanks to high tariffs against American lumber, Britain buying everything from Canada, now off the gold basis and telling cheap er. And because of low exchange Canada la selling lumber to the United States. . Wilted States rail and water trans portation suffers, as does all busi ness life In the northwest. Governor Meier says: "Under pres ent conditions, with tariff barriers and trade within the Brltlah empire agreement, plus licensing systems and quota system and the abandon ment abroad of the gold standard, th United States Is practically on tree trad basis. "It has lost the major part of Its foreign commerce." That might Interest our "sock the rich" congress. Unci Sam, richest of the rich, seems also to be endur ing a good deal of "socking." Harvard observatory reports the ar rival of the Carranco comet, tells you where to look for It In th sky, and says It la "only of average size." Those words mesn little to us, but figures mean ft good deal. An "av erage else" comet will have a tall many million of miles long. A thou sand globes the ale of our could float along with that tall and not be noticed. All th comet are slave of the un and th law of gravitation. They gallop away from th aun. as a little calf gallops from It other, then they come back again. The comet travels far, Mmetlmesaa muoh at twenty- fir million of millions of miles. Be fore they understood comet human beings thought th devil sent them and prayed to have them taken away. They thought a comet might destroy the earth and that Is not altogether Impossible, although very improbable. There might be enough solid mstter stored in th heed of a comet ao damage real estate values eerloualy. ... , . , Michael Clemenceau, able engineer. son oi in. great ctemenceau, without j wiroe neip nance would nave lost th war. tell newspaper publishers' gathered In New York, expecting to .me, urpr and horrify them. 1 Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Signed latter pertmlnlng to personal nekftn and byglene. not to disease diagnosis or treatment, trll do answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-ad dressed envelope U enclosed. Letters should be brier and written in ink Owing to tne large number ol letters received only a few oao be answered bere. No reply can be m&de to queries not conforming to instruotlona. Ad dress Dr. William Brady in care of The Mali Tribune. IT IS NOT IN Our Michigan reader sends In a copy of a bsndsome bulletin on "Colds." published by the American Education asso ciation, it cites the opinion of Benjamin Frank lin as given in a letter be wrote to Dr. Rush: "I have long been a 1 1 s fled from observation that people ofttfn catch cold from one another, when sitting near and conversing so ss to breathe one another's transpirations. It Is the air which we breathe which Is con taminated by other persons suffer ing from colds, and not from cold and dampneess. Franklin was pretty warm, at that. But we know now It Isn't the air we breathe that carries the disease. It U the mouth spray given off when one with the disease coughs, sneezes or talks. The breath does not carry germs. The expired air of even a patient with diphtheria or other highly infectious disease is not dsngerous for another per son, unless the air contains ' the spray . of moisture droplets from coughing, sneezing or talking. Frank Ur was indeed very warm when he observed that people caught cold !from conversing with one another. This official bulletin of the edu cation association goes on to ex plain how the moisture spray Is given off when a person coughs or sneezes, but It is curiously silent about conversational spray. The only difference between open face cough, tng and sneezing and ordinary polite conversation .Is that the cough or sneeze spray carries farther, up to 10 or 12 feet whereas conversational spray carries less than five feet. I suggest that you keep this In mind when you are striving to avoid catch ing an alleged "cold" some friend or business associate offers to share with you. Often it Is quite possible to keep beyond the five foot conver sational spray range ' and avoid In fection, This same beautifully printed bul letin dwells on the observations of Franklin and other thinking men. that sailors, members of Arctic ex ploring parties, woodsmen, hunters, soldiers fighting in the trenches, etc.. have suffered severe exposure to cold and wet yet they have re mained notably 1 free from alleged "colds." And then the bulletin drags in the good old bag of horse feathers. It offers the hackneyea advice about keeping your "resist that he left in France 300,000 unem ployed. He did not know probably, that, according to Mr. Green, head of the American Federation of Labor, we have in this country , more than 7, 000,000 unemployed. i If there were seven millions, or half that- number, unemployed In France, there would also be a good many statesmen and office holders unemployed, within a short time. 4 His big victory In Massachusetts causes former Governor Alfred Smith to opine that some Lwmocrats ' will now drop the Idea that they must get on the Roosevelt band wagon be cause there will be no other wagon in the procession. In spite of Mr. Smith's victory In Massachusetts, and the heavy Smith vote in Pennsylvania, Mr, Farley, Governor Roosevelt's campaign man ager, says the governor will be nomi nated on the first ballot In Chicago. Many practical Democrats think not. Jenkins Comment (Continued from Page On ) advertisement, obviously ad dressed to the ladles, asks this pertinent question: "Are you difficult to please in a trimmed hat?" You can be plenty sure they are. The ladles have ALWAYS been dif ficult to please In trimmed hats or Princess Eugenles.. Trying to please the ladlea has kept the male of the species hustling tor the Isst thous and centuries or ao. Th girls of th nineties, you csn bet, were no exception to the general rule. ITS a great old paper, full of great doings, and w of th present day chuckle to ourselves in a highly su perior manner aa we read It. "The poor old fluffs." we tell our stuff. but they didn't know they were hot stuff, but they didn't know they I' ye re sltve." sllv. W think we're mrt and sophls I tlcated. But Just wait till our grand children dig up ft copy of ft newspsper ' of today and stsrt the kidding. How our ears will burn thenl Brawley Shaken By Sharp Quake BRAWLEY. Cftl, April JS.-WV-An earthquake of sharp and heavy In- nUtJ ihook tt), cltT , M m today. rltrrlllnu risttw sit Rtvn stlfc Ri. ilri,,y night. Admuslon Sic. TZg" " THE BREATH. ance" up, Tou know the old line fresh air, clean cold water, whole some food and well "regulated" bow els. All of which Is sheer hooey. To begin with, there Is no such thing or state as "resistance," other than Immunity and Immunity is a specific and measurable condi tion, not a general or vague one. Pure food, pure water, and keeping your bowels open has nothing what ever to do with any known Immu nity. Some things this "educational" bulletin doesn't mention at all, such as exposure of naked skin to sun light, and an adequate ration in vitamin A in medicine or food, may help to develop Immunity against some of the respiratory Infections. But the bulletin gives excellent advice. It urges one to drink plenty of cool, pure water. Should It not advise folks to breathe, too? QUESTIONS AND AN S WEBS. What Would You. What would you advise by way of relief for a congested condition of the frontal region of the head and nose? Would you say there Is any danger of It developing into sinus trouble? B. M. C. Answer Examination by your physician. f Iodln Ration. I sent to you for instructions for taking an lodln ration. I followed your Instructions. It has almost cured an abscess In tear duct under corner of eye. I had this for IVi years. I ara so thankful. A. Q. Answer The iodln ration Is bene ficial In most cases of general "stale ness," weariness and premature aging in persons of adult or mature age. But It Is not plausible to think it had any effect on the trouble you describe. That was merely coinci dence. , Reading In Bed. Please advise me whether it Is a strain on the eyes to read In bed. in moving cars, trolleys, etc, T. O. L. Answer It Is. Patients should ask thet physicians for permission to read In bed. Well folk should read Bitting up and go to bed when they are through reading.- The un steadiness of the page and the poor or unsteady light combine, to make reading In moving cars a strain on the eyes. In all reading strive to have sufficient light but no Intense glare, and sit ao that the source of light will be behind your field of vision. A spot light on the page with surrounding gloom or darkness is not so restful as dim lighting of the whole room and an adjustable reading lamp for the Illumination of the page. Copyright John F. Dille Co.) VANCOUVER, Wash.. April S9. (Pi John P. Klgglns, mayor of Vancouver, today stood charged with "malfeas ance, misfeasance and corruption In office." The complaint against Mayor Klg gins wss filed In superior 'court yes terday by Dale McMullen, prosecut ing sttorney, who said he was acting upon Information aupplled by Pred A. Puller, machine ahop proprietor. Mayor Klgglns Is accused In the complaint of signing Illegal warrants against the current expense funds for city supplies and equipment. The complslnt alleges members of the city council sold supplies to the city snd received warrants In payment thereof In alleged violation of the law. Buy now while available. Large double size load 18-ln. pine elabs. 14.50. Kindling free with 3-loed orders. Valley Fuel Co. Phone 78- They've Never THESE are no patent medicine children. Their nppelite needs no coaxing. Their tongues are never coaled, checks never pale. And their bowels move just like clockwork, because they have never been given a habit-forming laxative. You can have children like this and be as healthy yourself if you follow the advice of a famous family physician. Stimulate the vital organs. The Ktmnmst of them nred hpln at ,imf5, I( ,hpy don't get it, they grow sluggish. Ur. (.aldwell s svrup , mid Mfe stimulant. When a youngster doesn't do well at school, it mnv be the liver that's laiy. Often the bowels hold enough poisonous waste lo dull the senses! A spoonful of delicious syrup pepsin I! . ! v Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson Coont Hlitory from ths riles of The Mall Tribune of 'to and 10 Hear. Ago.) TEN YEARS AOO TODAY April 28, 1922. Epidemic of house burglaries hits city. Ku Klux Han of Grant Pass holds a parade and glvee ft street meeting of the Salvation Army lis. Grants Pass baseball team beats Medford, 13 to 8. Radio erase sweeps valley. Ashland business men back gran ite quarry. Packard car tor 1922 scores big hit here. Frost season la officially declared ended. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April 29, 1912. Prost danger for the year offloiaily declared ended. President Taft carries Massachu setts over Roosevelt. County court orders construction of 10,000 bridge over Bear creek at Main street. City will pay share of cost. Ashland . taxpayers protest ac tion. Single tax measure excites state. Rainfall In April totals 8.71 Inches, a record for valley. Medford military brldage for boys Is formed. Pishing very poor in Rogue river. Cause unknown. Orator favoring abolishment of all taxes addresses large audience at Nat. Meteorological Report AprU 29, 1932. Medford and vicinity: Increasing cloudiness, becoming unsettled Sat urday. Moderate temperature. Oregon: Pair east and Increasing cloudiness west portion tonight and Saturday. Unsettled west portion Saturday. Moderate temperature. Local Data. Lowest temperature this morning. 37 degrees. Temperature year ago today: Highest, SO: lowest, S3. Total precipitation since September 1, 1931, 112 Inches. Rel&tlve humidity at 5 p. m. yes terday, 23; S a. m. today, 92. Sunset today, 7:07 p.m.. Tomorrow Sunrise. 5:08 s.m.; sunset, 7:08 p.m. Observations Taken at 5 a. m., 120 Meridian Time. 1 J a FP J J ' 5 S 5a 58 S ' S rf S " City 13 S ,s r p Baker City . Boston . 60 32 68 50 . 64 40 66 62 . 66 34 63 60 . 74 48 . 42 34 , 63 60 . 71 39 . 62 56 . 76 50 , 62 46 , 64 38 . 68 40 , 48 42 62 50 54 60 62 44 . 68 44 Clear .... Clear T. Clear Boise Chicago . Denver ... Des Moines Fresno Helena Lc Angeles ... MEDFORD New York , Phoenix . Portland - Reno Roseburg Salt Lake San Francisco aSeattle . Spokane Washington, D.C .... Cloudy T. P. Cdy. .14 Cloudy .... Clear T.. Cloudy Clear clear Clear w Clear Clear Clear Clear .40 P. Cdy. Cloudy .... Cloudy .01 Cloudy Clear Picture frames made to order. The Peasleys, opp. Holly theater. See the nifty line of new dresses at 635 N. Central Ave. Tasted a Tonic! onee or twice i week will avoid all this. It contains fresh laxative herbs, active senna, and pure pepsin, and does a world of good to any system young or old. You can always get this fine prescriptional preparation al any drugstore. Just ask them for Dr. Caldwell's syrup pepsin. Get some syrup pepsin today, and Crotect your family from those ihous days, frequent sick spells and colds. Keep a bottle in the medicine chest instead of cathartics that so often bring on chronic constipation. Dr. Caldwell's syrup pepsin can always be employed to give clogged bowels thorough cleansing, with none of that painful griping, or burning feeling ater ward. it isn't expensive. 'i BOMBING OF JAP (Continued from Page One.) confession from ft Korean that h w. , Tnnn who threw the bomb. Six other men. ssld to be Chines. also were under Investigation. One May Lose iaa. The most seriously Injured Jap anese official was Mamoru onige- mltsu. the Japanese minister k nki.. .v- . a,, iam Ana of his legs. 1 . 1 . , 1 1, 1 yinv J - A minor operation waa performed Immediately after he reached th hospital.1 He wa expecteu j ir,,ram.tn Mural, the Japanese lesa x consul-general, also was badly hurt, his left leg shsttered by a frag ment of ft bomb. v,r niMa struck General Yo- shlnorl Shlrakawa, the Japanese com mander-in-chief, knocking ouv his teeth. Genersl Kenklchl Uyeda, who was In command at the begin ning of the Shangnai oaivie, three toes and received serious body wounds. Admiral Klchlsaburo no- mura, the naval commanaer-in-u:., lost an eye. Scores of foreign miinery Including a number of Americans, had left the reviewing stand ft few minutes before the bomb was thrown. Grenade Caused vtounm. It was a powerful nana grena Infmedlately after It landed In th atsnd. blowing the wooaen evru ture to bits and creating wild con fusion In the crowd, the military authorities threw a stnci nu"j fri uronnd Hongkew park for a radius of two miles. Hundred of persons, Japanese ana loraigu. alike, were searcnen. ........ nfi.-iala ynressed -th MUlta'? r - opinion that the Incident probabry. would result in a araoiw n6,.-o of Slno-Japanese relations here, al-V though they declined to predict what steps would be taken. Among the suspects arrested by the Japanese after the bombing was W. S. Hlbbard, an American employe of the government of the Interna tional settlement. Let Us Frame Your Favorite Pictures (Any size up to 8 by 10) 50c Wurts Gifts 1 11 LOVES y A GRAY HE Love And Gray Hairs Are As Far Apart As The Poles ONLY THE FAMILY IGNORES GRAY HAIR "I worship, adore and idolize my mother, no matter how old, gray or wrinkled, and Dad is the same way about the mother of his boys, but love real, true love such as ono feels for the opposite sex which thrills, enraptures and inspires a t fiassionate desire to possess and 4 ove you shrinks unconsciously, ' from gray hairs, crows-feet, deaf ness and other signs of old age," declares C. J. Mains, the nationally-known expert on gray hairs. "Stop sad think a minute and jooH sars with me. Love la a mliased word emrasilva of ths teallnt of delight, rep tars, jalooar or passion toward the op. posits sex not kin to ron. A man retains his mother on her lofty pedeatat She la anihrlned thare. No man divorces his mother, hot he leavea a sir! he loved oe mltht love If ahe falls, haa halitosis, bad habits or la ontldr and old for him. No mother needa to keep her figure, youth or winning ways to please her children, bat wifte or girl friend, who a man never wor ships but ontr loves, mast avoid gray hair, fat and wrinkles or love flies oat the win- e tow. "Women hapny srith family and do meitie life can alTord gray hair, be came It brlnti respect, adds dignity bat her days for love, a new Job or socially mingling with the younger set are oyer the aame aa with a man who is happy at homo, well fixed and head of his business. "Young married forks ebon the com pany of gray-haired men and women the same as children InsUnetirely ahun gray bain exc.pt in their parents. Love and all it meana avoids the company of gray L halra. They ilka you, admire you. repeet ' Sou. bat "Bosses give Jobs now snd then to gray hairs out of compassion, but they rightly feel they are hiring a liability Instead of an asset, vherees with youth they delight in giving 'Pep' first rhance. Men and women complacently living in the part on thetr past performance, serenely confident they are intrenched In their wife or ho bands love, their job or social strata, would be amased to find how easily a younger person could supplant them. May be in small towns your competition Isn't bothersome, hut try getting along with gray hairs along Broadway. New York, and sea how soon you Iom out. "Some stay gray because the family 0rV fc"1' don t B"' hw about you 7 Why not look your youngest and be spic-and-spaa from head to foot: Some times even metbeart save ha or ahe ooesn t mind gray hairs, but they'd pro pose or accept much sooner If the gray, haired old-age barrier wa.n't there. Women inrtlnctlvely hide their real an. yet some time, foolishly brag about gray hair. """v men and women m twe minutes now to art rid ol their gray halra IT?, "J!,?"? another. Without obit gallon I will gladly tell you how to look yeara yonnser make your hair youthful end beautiful. The Nationally known Lea Tonie 4.O.. Brentwonl. Mi.. ha-ks up every wr-rd and assure you Lea's Hair Tonic will delieht. amaze and satisfy voej oc money beck no Questions. A dollar bottle ol Lee a Hair Tonle starts yoo and not even your harbar or cloeest friend need know. If out of town, write me at J Brentwood. Md . or your druasist. iwnd i dollar for botile and direction., pnet.e ' I, .. U ,00d r" urta sell Less Hair aOnkjH