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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1932)
PAGE FOTTlt MEDFOBD llAJL TRIBUNE, JfEDFOIiD, OREGON, MONDAY, TTNE 13, 1932. Wedford Mail Tribune "gmrsaa latan Oral run Um Hill Mkm- ihii tunt utarasr MinrOKD P1INTI.V0 CO. IHt ll H. til it nam u I'lBEin kuhu una (. I. KNAP, Maura A IsetemSMt Knvif Ennrtrl if Mcand elsss mium at Usdr Ontoa. t st tor I, lilt. A Good Judge! SUBSCRIPTION iATES t MtU li AdtuM duu, rtw IT. 00 full?, 30(b T5 Bi Cvrltt. Is AiJtinc Medford. UU iirtooorlli, CtntiJ Point, PbotaU. TtUtoL Gold Kill and m Hii&iftn, Dtllt. swotb .T Dl.y. tw sm r.80 Ail Urn, cufe t adruci. OffkU) piper af Um cm Htfor4 Officii) paper af Jautoo Couolj. MEMHE OP THE ASSUClATKb PUBS Racaltloft ruU UamU Win Btrrlc Tba Ajocild PreM il aiclwHell amitlM UM um for publlcattoo af all own dlspaletw credited U It or olbtrvtM eradlted to Uit p. ud alM I Uw Ideal oft Mbliihcd ftartla AU rtffcU far publteatloe af coeciil dUpaldMi kartu ara aue raatnacL MBMBKB Or UNITED PHE88 UttlBP.il OP AUDIT BUUUD or C1BCUUTI0NS AdrtrtUlnt HrprtMoutltaa it & MOtiKHSBN CO i! PANT Orrieaa Id Nc Tort LUleaco, Dauotl. lu rraaeluo, laa Ancatea, Seatll. PortJaad. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Ferry IT IS heartening and refreshing in these disturbed" tlme, to find a man going the even tenor of his way, hewing straight to the line, of public duty, regardless of the noise and fury all about him. Such men are rare. They are even rare on the judicial bench, for good judges, even more than good poets, are BORN not made. There is some exceptional quality, inherent in their character, from birth, which givea them, regardless of outside stress and strain, that selflessness and detachment, which allows them always to choose between what is right and just, and what ISN'T. XE believe we are merely voicing the opinion of the people ' of Jackson county, when we say this community is in deed fortunate in having such a man as judge in this district, Mr. H. D. Norton. Judge Norton's decision in the Tollefson case is a fair example of his wisdom, his fairness, hia courage. It was a difficult position for the court. On one side were those claiming that if Tollefson wasn't given "the limit," it would show there is one justice for the rich and another for the poor. They were clamoring for as severe a term, as another young bank robber, without friends or money behind him, suffered. On the other side were many citizens of the highest standing in Jackson county, influential friends of the young man and his family who urged that an exception be made in his case, and no PRISON sentence be imposed, at all. IHB HI IC J uvn umm ... , moth, which roost on th tlnk I Weed. I UDGE NORTON refused to follow oither course. Expressing the GREATEST sympathy for the parents, and only good will toward the unfortunate young man, he held that family connections or social position should have nothing to do with such a case, that in hia view there were no extenuating ciroum- stances, and he sentenced the defendant to prison for two years. Now we maintain that action took courage, and a fine sense piienc Jim not tun exhausted , 0f justice both dualities are rare, and both qualities particu- ln these part, but It li getting very , . . . ,. . .. . tired. The current tat of near- larly needed, in this community, and every other, at the present anarchy. U lmot a bad u th time. Klan nellralelng of 1922. The 1832 ..... , j bates of maannea. u not incorporat. AVe also maintain that when public officers do something d undar the lawi of oeorgia. and ' t that, something really "BIG," whether they hold high doea not run around nlghta In Ita ,1.1 , , 3 j hirt-un. or aet fire to the flank ! positions or low, they should be publicly commended, instead of Boxy Ann. Now aa then, it u ! 0 being regularly greeted by silence when they do right, and queatlon whether to call out the . , . , ; miutia. or the lunacy communion. ; being greeted by brick bats and cat calls, when in the opinion or both, to aoothe the lnnammatlon ; 0 gome faction, they do wrong, caused by magnifying of pereonal . frievaneel, and capitalisation or , prejudice. Half-trutha are the me dium of exchange. The mean law Today By Artbtur Brisbane Must We Decline and Fall? Your Electric Brain. Our Gold Helps Europe, Artificial Lightning- PerSOnal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. ftlgnad lettera pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to dlaeaae. diagnosis or treatment, wUl be answered by Or. Brady If a itampad self-ad-dreaaed envelope la endoaed. Letters should be brief and written In ink Owing to the large number of letters recalled only a few can be answered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Ad dress Dr. WllUam Brady In care of The Mall Tribune. TALE Or THE LEKT-HANDED OIBL WHO HAD TO BE BIGHT. school. My summering reached a mor tifying stage when I. entered high High school was torture. but I don't know how I erer had the courage to go to college. Col lege was not so bad, aa they love to let student alt and listen. But teaculng ruined me . . . Bo I took refuge In an office. Mother always c o m p 1 a 1 ned I stood on the wrong side of the Ironing board and I sewed the wrong way. Tet I never knew I was left- handed until my physical examina tion In college showed the left SO WE congratulate Judge Norton on th justice and wisdom nf hia ripmainn an1 onnpratiilRt nuraelvea and the Deonle punches holes In the bottom of the j , .... , t u t.- family wash boiler, and then makes of Jackson county in having such a man on the bench of tnis district at the present time. One might appropriately repeat the words addressed to Cromwell in Henry the VIII: "Be Just and fear not: let all the ends thou almest at be thy country's, thy Ood'a and truth's; then If thou fallest O Cromwell, thou tallest a blessed martyr." It a trampled mass of tin. This Is listed aa an atrocity, second only to those committed In Belgium and Armenia, and Algh-handed kicking of Justice in the shins. Then It de velops that the wash boiler was not Innocent. It was not mentioned, thst before the maltreatment, It was fuU of corn-mash, and had a copper coll attached to the lid. This pro duces a horse of another color, and la quite disconcerting to the noble and righteous one-man revolution. Ben. Brookhart of Iowa, the emi nent demagogue, who was defeated In the primary last week, can now 1 more out to Los Angeles, Csllf. The gent has been unable to work for IS years, owing to physical dis ability, and la a walking and talking example of how deceiving appear ancea can be. However, despite hli Incapacity, he haa been able to fish, hunt, and cuss the government, e e If proponents of beer-for-taxatlon want the feminine support, they'll nave to raise their plea to a per cent, and then cut It to 3 80. (Oklahoma City Oklahoman.) Just another un called for Jab at the fair aex. Bungling the Lindbergh Case PIE suicide of Miss Sharp, the Morrow maid, only adds another count, in the indictment against the New Jersey 1 police, for their bungling of the Lindbergh case. I T. is now generally admitted it was not a sense of guilt that led tl is overwrought girl to take her life, but a sense of fear. Eveiince the crime she had been on the rack, and when third degree methods were applied, she broke under the strain, and sought escape in death. Of course the polico vehemently deny this, but the fact that Mrs. Morrow, the adoring grandmother of the murdered baby, and a woman of rare judgment and strength of character, con firms this view, places the burden of proof and a heavy one upon the shoulders of Colonel Schwartzkopf and his men. Trouble alwaya comes, four front seat and three In the rumb!' eat. MORE TO WORRV AllOl T (Kansas City Star) It's too bad, but science nae a way of disillusioning us. Here comes this chap from New Haven, Conn., and tell a the avid American Eugenic society and the Eugenic Research associa tion that the trick of throwing the thumbs out of Joint Is not a trick at all. not the coveted ac complishment of a few envied boy, but an Inherited "gift." "PRESIDENT GETS BLACK EYE: W1U, TAKE NEW TACK" (Siskiyou New.) Make It a nail, and get re sults. The per capita wealth of the na tion increased nine 19) cents during the month of Msy. According to the treasury department every man. woman and oh lid has 143 RV A man was Interviewed this morning, who was willing to make an affidavit that the secretary of the treasury was a liar, because neither he, his woman, or his boy has asses. He further was willing to aver, that to the bast of his belief and Informa tion, there was not MJ8J loose In the nation. see Another mother "Is unable to understand how my daughter did ; wrong," aa her name adorna the ; headlines of the nation. Mothers have alwaya been that way, about! their girls and their boys. It's one I of the things that keeps mothers crying In homes and courtrooms, e The first member of the class of . to grab the world by the tail, made a miscalculation, and seised a gas silo pumphandle. Maidens continue to blossom forth In the wind-blown bob. Thte en ables them to comb their hair, by shaking their head, and then look like Amelia Earhart. upon completion Of a flight across the Atlsntlc. It begins to look like the state and national leaders had finally come to the conclusion that nothing will help the Jobless so much as Job, and nothing will provide work any faster than work. This action la due to one of two things: An Injection of commonsense, or running out of wind, and being no longer able to make erteKhee on the glories of rigid economy. in the "yHIRD degree methods are questionable enough when meu urnb , and hardened criminals are concerned; but when women and girls, particularly' girls like Miss Sharp, with no record of crime in their past, are subjected to the terrors of the police inquisition, such action ia indefensible. The most likely explanation is that the New Jersey police, in their real to pin this atrooious crime upon SOMEONE, and atone for their poor judgment and incompetency in the past, lost their heads. They went too far, and before the bar of publio opinion, they face a charge of involuntary homicide as a result. A SIMILAR explanation alone, can explain the fact, that the police were so lax in their combing of the ground near the Lindbergh estate, that two months passed before the baby 'a body was found, only a few milea from where it was taken. And a third count is the faiture of the police to keep the dis covery of the body secret, so that negotiations then going on with the alleged kidnapers could have been carried on, to a successful conclusion. Under such circumstances, the capture of the kidnapers, or the oriminals trying to profit by the kid naping, would have been certain. From first to last it ii a bad record for the New Jersey police, and the sooner the direction of the search is taken from their hand, the better for all concerned. Copyright King Features Sjnd, Inc. By seventy-two to eight, the senate votes 300,000,000 to help the states to help their unemployed. Some of our best minds are agitated, and asking "whither are we driftingl" Senator Reed, of Pennsyl vania, knows whither and says "the historian of the future, writing on the decline and fall of the American republic, will point to today as one mile stone in the disintegration of government." Mr. Reed think, the lid has ! ,h.n. ,h' .'""Jl. "IS! been lifted off Pandora's box. i more sktmui. rBAi, t , . ,1 I wu unable to learn to awim (Look up Pandora m the untiI T lMtructor .U(nrMted ... we have i I try tt on the left side, and away I swam without further difficulty. Since I've been away from my par ent home and have had a chance to do thtnga without comment, X have sewed a great deal and I believe ii sew left-handed, but I'm not sure. As soon as I gave up teaching and began my present work I took a course In vocal exercises, such as you recQmmerd. I don't think It helped much. Then I began being psychoanalyzed ... It is a long drawn out process. I think it took over four years, and I'm not sure I'd recommend it unless you have a most honorable analyst, for I can see how a patient might get more injury than benefit out of it . . . but finally I got rid of a lot or silly Ideas as well as my stammer ing. I think now I must have loved my trouble too much to part with It easily. Both my mother and my grand mother always Insisted that I use my right hand. Then later when I began stuttering I think my grand mother's constant reminder to speak slowly tended to nuke me more conscious of the abnormality In my speech. I don't want any of my family i or mends to know that X was ever so abnormal as to require psycho analysis to restore me to ordinary life. T. H. A.' Maybe It l only colncldlnce that this girl was naturally left-handed and began stuttertr- when her mis guided parents and teachers com pelled her to prefer the right band for skilled work. Maybe it Is only coincidence that there are so many such coincidences. Even so. what sound reason can anybody give for forbidding a child to use the left hand for writing. drawing, and other skilled move ments if that Is the hand nature ordains for such use? Because the majority of us (ap proximately 96 per cent) are natu rally right-handed should we mulish. encyclopedia) and taken the first step toward making mendicants of our people and our sovereign states." Senator Johnson, not worried about the republic's fall, thanks Ood that the administration nas come to know that tt has an obligation to men. women and children." Senator Borah does not think help from the nation will weaken the fi bre of the American people, and. Judging by big corporations. It will not. The big corporations In need, railroads, banks, etc.. get government assistance to the tune of tens nd hundreds of millions and come back for more, their "fibre" in perfect con dition, not the slightest sign of weakening. , General Harbord, experienced sol dier, now head of the big Radio Cor poratlon, sees trouble ahead, and tells West Point graduates they may soon see active service. "Many signs Indicate heavy weather ahead for the army and navy for an indefinite time to come," says General Harbord. who thinks little of disarmament confer ences and pacifist conventions. If the West Pointers must fight. let us hope they will all take up fly ing. When the next war comes, the man on the ground, like the ship on the surface, will .have about as much chance aa a rabbit, with an eagle flying overhead. Oregon Indians' Condition Today Written by Mrs. H. C. Van Valtah ana read before Crater Lake Chap ter, P. A. . (Note 4ll nee this article was writ ten there hare been before congress several bills relating to Indian af fairs In Oregon. w.alch when passed and put Into effect win change many of the condition mentioned 1. reservations. They hare good msrket roads covering most of the reserva tion. Warm Springe reservation Ilea on the east slope or t Cascade moun tains in Washington and Jefferson counties. It Includes 400,000 acres valued at 10.000.000. One thousand Indians live there. The Warm Springe agency haa under Its purls diction the public domsln allotments along the Columbia river between Hood River and Arlington, the John Day river In Qllllam and Sherman counuee and the allotments In Har ney county near Burns. There are allotted OB nuhlle rtniruln uhlt ui thta juriadlcilon. approsimately ISO j m,a h,n- Tn,t 10- woultl B'e Indians. Berlin scientists show that the op erations of the brain are a sort of electric activity, and the brain cur rent travels only In the "architec tonic areas of cerebral corteg." That cortex la a dark coating that covers the inner brain aubatance as bark covers a tree. Cortex means bark. In Latin. Materialists will dis cover In this further proof that man Is a machine, needing for his func tltnlng neither a soul nor a Ood. confirming the statement of the Prenoh scientists concerning Ood: "I have no need of that hypothesis." That same materialist, observing an electric light plant, would admit that It required, In the beginning, a Thomas A. Edison. The whole ma chine that ws call the cosmos re quires a super Intelligence bsck of it, although not one of the Oreeks, Jews or Asiatics that have supplied us with our leading religions may have described that Intelligence or lu works with sbsolule accuracy. More Important than materialistic discussion for all of us. Is the Job of deepening our cerebral convolutions, all lined with that dark cortex In which the thinking la done. The deeper they alnk into the cold gray brain matter, the greater our "think ing surface" and our chance of suc cess. We can, If we choose, make those convolutions sink deeper by thinking, as a farmer can alnk deeper the furrows In his field. On rrlday this county lost about twenty millions more of Its gold. Since May first Burope haa Uken from us three hundred and eighty. nve millions in gold. But you find comfort In the federal reserve board's announcement published yesterday. that our gold exports "have eased condition. In the International money markets, and Increased the volume of loanable funds In foreign countries." Isn't that nice? How delightful to know that, thanks to our gold, for eign borrowers csn get money more easily. Perhaps the federal reserve will arrange somehow to make bor rowing a tittle easier for business ly decline to decognlw the 4 per cent who are naturally left-handed? The brain camera for fine move ments of the fingers and hands are In the right cerebrum of a left banded person. In the left cerebrum of a right-handed person. The brain centers for muscles of speech are very close to those controlling skilled finger movements. Interference with nature's scheme of development may confuse or disturb the fine nerve communlcsttons between these con trol centers, snd thst, in my opinion, Is the explsnatlon for the apparent tendency to bring on atutterlng If you force the left-handed child to prefer his right hand against na ture. FOR I, HOOVER (Continued from Page One) i QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Ten Cents a Dance. Express my sincere appreciation for your advice on constipation habit. When I had conned your Uttle 10 -cent booklet I gave up all laxatives, etc., stopped worrying, and now I am cured I I believe freedom from worry and the elimination of the torn my rot about "auto in toxica tlon" Is a big factor In the cure. Answer It Is not a cure. Just correction of a bad habit. Send a stamped envelope bearing your ad dress, for advice on the manage ment of constipation. Inclose a dime If you want the booklet. "The Constipation Habit." Wrong Shop. I should like to know some of the symptoms of gallstones or gallblad der infection, also what treatment you would give . . . M. B. Answer That may be, but I beg to be excused from equipping you with such symptoms. This Is a health service. , Protective Skin Cream for Mschlntsts I have tried out the formula you published for a protective skin cream and find it very satisfactory to lacquer workers and others engaged in dirty work. As you gave it the formula calls for 4 pounds gum Arabic. 19 pounds soap chips. 74 pounds water, a pounds hydrous wool fat. 4 ounces acid red and 4 ounces oil of lemongrass. Many who have used it request more. Is there any reason why I should not make and distribute this at a small nroflt? I cannot afford to give It away. W. J. G. Answer No objection that I know of, provided you make no unauthor ised use of any personal nam. Cryptorchidism. Son 13H years old has displaced testacle. Please send me the name of a, good hospital, If an operation! la necessary. H, 8. I Answer You should be guided by the advise of your own physician who has examined the boy. If the gland Is in the Inguinal canal an operation Is advisable now. If It Is In the abdomen, ordinarily it Is best to wait until some complica tion calls for relief. That may never come to pass. Copyright John P. Dllle Co. dissension over prohibition complete' ly engulfed the chosen represents- ttves of the party today on the eve of their national convention. To t.ie general and rear-rank pri vate alike, what to do about the dry law became the one big question. Not only were they ready to renom inate President Hoover, but sentl ment was turning definitely to Vice- President Curtis for his running mate and all of the ltcer disputes over platform and procedure seemed head ed for harmonious decision. No Harmony Expected No one any longer expected har mony on prohibition. The prediction of a plank "acceptable to all of us1 had gone up in Vie smoke of the most furious platform battle any Re publican convention has seen since the League of Nations row in ivw. Haggard snd plainly discouraged after many hours of conference, the high commanders of the party con tinued their efforts at a compromise while Indignant drys and Insistent wets hammered at their doors. A much-revised version of the plank brought from Washington after long consultation with President Hoover remained the testing block of their labors. It declares for re submission of the question to the people, but recommends neither re peal, retention nor modification. Drys Denounce Proposal Organized dry, in a continuous succession of rallies yesterday and today, denounced the proposal aa in sipid and Insidious. Some spoke bitterly of betrayal at the hands of the president they trust ed. Dr. P. Scott Mc Bride declared Mr. Hoover could never hope to be elected on such a platform. The wets were quite as critical, and they gave tangible evidence of an impressive strength smong the dele gates. Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, whose home state of New York voted last night to throw its strength for a plauk declaring for resubmission of repeal amendment, denounced the Washington creation as hypocritical and childish. It win be Wednesday before any sort of plank comes out of the com mittee. Tomorrow's opening session will be short, devoted to first formal ities and to the keynote of Senator h. J. Dickinson of Iowa. Wednesday is platform day, and Thursday is to see the nominations completed, If all goes smoothly, and final adjournment. lightning outside your window means a power of one hundred million volts, but man haa made a tart, and In lightning, as In other things, will eclipse nature In time. Jenkins' Comment (Continued from Page One I their vacations with us, snd the plasanter we make their stay while they are with ua the more apt they will be to return and also to tell their friends about Southern Oregon. That will help In future years. IN THE past. vV have spoken of writer, for one, doesn't like the word. It doesn't seem 'courteous and friendly, and we must ' remember that if we are to keep people coming from other states to see the beauties and the wond'ra of our great South era Oregon country we must provide a warm and courteous and kindly reception for them. We must make them feel wholly at home. We shall get farther In that direc tion If we regard them as guests, to whom we owe all the traditional du ties of hospitality. Southern Oregon people are natur ally hospitable, and If we regard our visitors as guests. Instead of "tour ists." we shall hsve no trouble at all In making them feel quite at home among us. We have In Oregon three Indian reservations and what la lletsd as a subagency. There are the Klamath. Umatilla and Warm Springs reserva tion d and the Stleta subagency. The Umatilla reservation of 1ST.. Ig acre at located In Umatilla county, along the Umatilla river, In eastern Oregon. There are 1101 In dians located there. They have no government schools. The children attend the public achoola of the county and they have catholic mis- wmw a lew attend gov Crjstalglow Kodak gits supreme i arnment boarding achoola aa nth, ft., - ., . m - I . - w. ...-j vyj. oy sasaies. The government maintains a board ing school at Warm Springs with a capacity of 133 pupils and a day school at Burns with a capacity of 34 pupils. (Continued next Sunday) The beet clear Cedar Shingle. M 00 per 1000. Regular .too shingles Medio rd Lumber Co. The Oeneral Electric laboratory at Plttafleld haa developed artificial lightning, of ten million volts, twice as powerful aa any artificially cre ated hitherto. It took a fifty million kilowatt generate to do tt, and you admire your fellow man for the pro gress he has made, since Franklin brought the current down, witfi the aid of a key and kite It is true that the cracking of Communications The Dry 9tde Presented To the Bditor: I am reluctant to write this letter "To the Editor" bceu of the fact that I do NOT wish to get my name Into print. However, necessity seems to demsnd. Hsrdly a dsy passes that w do not read In the dally press on, or more article on the "wet" side of the prohibition quewtlon. whereas oompsratlvely seldom Is It thst w read anything supporting the "dry" aid. I have some very strong support for what I would like to get before the people at this time thru the me dium of your columns, and if you wlh I will be (ltd to give you per sonally my authority for the etaie menls 1 make. The statement Is msda that "Pro hibition enforcement cost the coun try billions of dollars" It la a:so stated that "the dry lawa have made many moonshiners and bootlegger 1 and put Into their hand huge sums of money." We mleht Just as well say I Oold ihst the laws enacted to overcome . oetweei robbers snd put Into their hands large sums of money from the bank. If you win get right down to bed rock in the case, you will find that pro hibition has enriched very few viola tors of the law. Every rule almost has It exception. Some "wets" hsve man aged to get on the prohibition pay roll In order that they mlgt betray the "dry" cause. When It becomes necessary for them to resign, they made some money by making false statement that prohibition "cannot bs enforced." 'The total cost of enforcement, 1.30 to 1931. was .3B4.lS6.s34. Collec tion from fines and penalties and revenue from lawful (medical and sacramental) distilled and fermented llquore during the same period were 518.588.884. Thue the government had a net profit of .364.4?:,3B0. This Indicates that there Is a good eco nomic argument on the dry aide of the debate." When Al Capons was on his way to Atlanta to begin serving his sentence, he made one statement that ahould carry weight, even tho most of his statements have not. It was this: "Anybody that aaya I'm for prohibi tion la all wet. It would be better if j prohibition was out of the way and w could handle beer legitimately. There would be more profits, no pay offs, no less of trucks and a cheaper price for the atuff." This, coming from the "king pin of the gsngsters," ought to tet at rest the argument that "prohibition has opened up a safe and comfortable living for those who make a business of violstlng it" It shows thst besting prohibition !s a hard and dangerous game, that it must be played under cover and that those who carry It on must be con stantly on the qui vlve. WALTER PRAZER BROWN. Medford. June 13. 4 Garner Recovering F rom Grippe Attack FEDERAL REPORT (Continued from rage One.) WASHIWOTOSC. June IS (API Speaker Oemer was reported im proved today although hi physician ordered that he stay In bed. The Texan'a office wa notified that hi temperature was about nor mal but that Dr. Oeorge Calvtr, house physician, fearing a poaatble setback from bronchitis thought the speak er should not plan to return to work until after the middle of the week. year which Included considerable which were not harvested because of unfavorable market conditions. The chief reason for present poor peach prospects Is the severe cold experienc ed earlier In the southern peach pro ducing area. Fair Peach Prospect Oregon peaches show up with fair to good prospects, generally, but very spotted and uneven. This Is true of both early and late varieties. Some leaf curl and blight Is reported from several sections. The cold weather has been unfavorable to the crop but the June first estimated production of 310000 bushels Is considerably more than has been harvested any season since 1828. Apples Promising tne uretton apple crop shows tip very promising at this early date. cold rainy weather has not been harmful from present Indications. The unprecedented worm damage of last season haa stimulated careful at tention to current spray programs. Moisture supply Is plentiful and June first condition Is reported at 77 per cent compared with 68 per cent a year ago and a 10-year average of 81 ine cnerry crop prosoect are ex. tremely variable, but the June first condition is slightly higher than In either of the put two years, due to some extent to very favorable outlook In Wasco county, one of the moat Im portant commercial districts. Present condition Is estlmsted st 63 per cent. Dried prunes are a complete fail ure In many orchards and prospects generally are poor. The June first condition of only 40 per cent Is ten per cent lower than last year, flood Apricot Crop Oregon apricots promise a very good crop. Prospects for sll berry crops In the stste are good to very good, but warmer weather Is needed. The seston is considerably behind. Strawberrv harvest is on at the present time i with a normal crop generally and the ; ( ........ m.rKvl condition j in years and growers sre very dis courager,, k asp serry condition of 87 per cent compares with 83 a year ago. : Blackcaps, however are below last year. ! Flight o Time (Medford snd Jackson Count) History from tba Pile, of The Mall Tribune of 4 and 10 Vear Ago.) TEN YEARS AOO TODAY June J J. 1022 (It was Wednesday) Minneapolis tourist first trf reach Crater Lake rim on June 13. Legion erect tall flagpole on Es. pee lawn. Pole I bequeathed to city. Mayor Gates to lead Farm Horn, week. Chester Pitch buys a canoe for use In Diamond Lake this summer. Mike Hanley of Lake Creek comet to town In search of hay hands, who refuse 16 per day and board. Local attorney fllea ault against the Klan for 435,000 damages at retult of article In local weekly. . Oregon Cave to open June 36, TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY June 13, 1912 (It was Friday) Fishermen Indignant when an Item taya Rogue river Is muddy, when it la clear. Work at Southern Oregon experi ment atatlon gets under way. "Laura White," local woman found in a Chinese laundry, escapes from Portland hospital, where she was sent to be cured of opium smoking. Hot weather returns after a short cool spell. Work resumed on Bear creek bridge as Ashlsnd Tidings charges "court bouse gang Is plundering the coun. ty." Road to Crater Lake in poor shape following rains. parents PLAYING HOl'SE By AUce Judson Peale The classic game of childhood, "playing house" what does It reslly mesn to the children? They sweep snd cook, go to bed, bring up a family of dolls with all sorts of disciplinary measures, call the doctor, prescribe medicines, give parties, and dramatize the family dinner table. Educators have Interpreted this sort of play aa being atmply a pleas ure In mlmlcy. In Imitating and re. peatlng the activities of that part of the adult world of which children know most. Many an adult, watching, haa had the uncomfortable feeling that the children have sized up the weak nesses of their elders and are mak ing fun of them In their own way. Yet probably the children are really doing something quite differ ent. The game of playing house Is the best means of working out other wise suppressed feelings about va rious things. In playing the roles of father and mother, children Identify them selves with them, assume their pow er and privileges. The heavy punishments from time to time begalllng various dolls are the expression of cruel and re vengeful wishes which they may feel toward brothers and sisters or to ward some oppressive grownup. or sgam a doll 1 much loved and pampered, Just as they wish they were. It Is allowed unheard of privileges and leads a life which Is a round of pleasure Just as they wish they themselves could do. Probably the real worth of playing house lies less In the opportunity It offers for the correlation and clarify ing of the children's observations of the world about them than In the direct outlet It offers for a number of their most compelling wishes. TAFT. Ore.. .Tun. ts I t-o Governor A. W. Norblad was re-elect, ed president of the Oregon Coast Highway association at lu annual meeting here yesterday. Other offlcera are: o. I. Krieger. Msrshfield, vice-president: John Schroeder, Tlllsmook. secretary: Joe F. Wtlllama, Marshfleld. treasurer. Planst were outlined fn. .n .nu.t Oregon Coast paetant, to be held about June 1, when Schotch broom, rhododendrons, skuiim inn .... tlve flora ara In bloom. Oood grades ol mmber at mill prices. Medford Lumber Co. Broken winnow, o ' . h wmv. bridge Cabinet Works. Order Report On National Income WASHINGTON. June IS (API The senate today ordered the rom. mere department to prepare a report on the total natolnai Income for the year 1039. 18S0 and 1M1. A reeolu- ; Salve, and cutting fail because onlv The federal estimate of crop con ditions does not Include lost through '.art Friday's hail and wind storm In Jackson county. Piles AUonrj Without Salves or Cnttlng Itching, bleeding, protruding pu go qiucxiy and dont come back, if you remove the cause. Bad blood "Ir--culttton in the hemmorrhoda) veint causes pile, by making the affected puri. wts. naooy. almoet dead tlon Introduced by Senator La Pol len 1 W ) asking tor the In formation was adopted without de- Beach Rogu Riv.r bridge bank robbene ban mad many bask ' dedicated recently. an jnT.rnai medicine can actuary correct t.ifw conditions. Dr. j s Leonnerdt discovered a real Internal Pile remedy. A'ter prescribing it for l.OOO patients with success in 890 case, e named It HEM-Rom Jar-1 weddsburn and this cit, ,, ...w., iii.u, tiki your FU rn.Mii or money bscfc. WILLARD HOTEL KLAMATH FALLS OREGON lit MODERN AIRY ROOMS BATH-SHOWER OR COM BINATIOM. CENTRALLY LOCATED. FIREPROOF CONSTRUCTION. GRILLE IN CONIfECTION. We Invite Your Patrrmace Rate li.no rp WILLARD HOTEL and MslK. Ktaasatk Pans ai BFRT ariTiM, st..