PAGE TWELVE MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY JUNE 17, 1932. Medford JIail Tribune "ttryi la Southtnl Oma tail till Hill TrlhlM" Dill; eicftrt HUluAts PuMliM) U MtDfOKD fWNTI.NU 00. JB-JMS H, Ml SU ftaot ' BOBEKt W. KliHU, CdlUC E. L. K-NAfP, Minim AO lodtp.od.nl HmiMPW KaUrid u Meood fUsi mtl at ktotford Cngoo, scd Act of Hurt , Ut. RliR-tTHlPTlON RATE! MUl IB AditflCt D&ilr. " '2 Ptilr, BMOtll 16 Bj Carrier, lo Adfucs Medford, itblind, JlcktooTlllt, Central Point, Fboanis, TaleoU uold Ulii and OD fJIgbvan. Dill J, BWDlii 9 TC Dailj, ocm jtu . f.fiO All Uron, cub lo idraoM. Winn piper o( the CIU of Medford OMelil ptper of Jaeksoa Count j MEMHKH OV THE A8S0CUTKD KUCSS HKilrlrn full Uued Wire Berries Tbo AnuclaUd Freu la eluilftr entlUed U Um um for pubUcatfoo of til oewi dlipaWw credited to it or olhervlw credited to tble imp ud tiro U tbe local oewi pubUihed berela All rlfbU for publlnUoo of epedtl dUpatetw bwela V tlN reeened. UIMBEU Of UNITED PKE8B UEMDKH Or AUDIT BUUBAO Or C1BCUUTI0N8 AdrertUlrn KepreHOUtlTW M. C. MUUKNSEN COMPANI Office, la Nee Yorfc. utteico, Detroit, 80 fraodtco, Lm Angelee, Buttle, PortUod. Ye Smudge Pot Br arthui Perry ' A plna knot bu been successfully , oroaaed with peacock, and the re- . cult la bla own fault. i The halo beotowed on Bliss Martyr U a size too email. While out In the timber day before yesterday. It drop ped off Into the maah barrel. ' Oakland. Calif- hu a murder for . love and S40.000 insurance meetly the latter. j Prosperity managed to get around , the corner long enouRh Wed. evng., to attend a prlte fight Contributing to the delinquency of the taxea can be stopped by putting boxing glovei on the tax 'receipts. ... The O. Pabrlck boy haa returned from Chicago, where he went to laundry school and learned how to reduce the potency of the aoap-auds, used In the bsptlsm of ahlrla. Chem-, Istry has done watiders for the laun- dries and at the present rate by 1039 will be able to waah sins away. Prof. Yarborough; of Harvard de clares that "civilization la in He In- tancy. inia ia veiy a"- We wonder what the Depression Is doing to the guy who rolled a peanut up Pike's Peck with his nose, when Prosperity was at its height? a. man called this am. who was smoking, a 60 cabbage, which the country got when It yelled for a nickel cigar. There should be a law against a wife attempting to cut her husband's tetr, ulth additional and adequate punlahment, for the husband sub mitting to the atrocity. . . . . THE COMPLETE SIZE-IT-(Scrlbner's Magazine - Whst the people obviously want is a hero. We are. In both parties ' and all factions, completely bereft of heroes. Not In a long time , were the people so ready to listen . to a ringing voice. There Isn't a voice with a ring In it to be heard not even a misleading one. There lan't really a party, or part of a party with a promise . in It. . "It appears that the action was taken without due process of Jaw." (Roaeburg News-Review) Whatl No . writ for an argument on the re-1 argument of the argument? Oaston B. Means, whose mesnness In the Lindbergh kidnaping hoax, satted him 15 years in prison, la an interesting and outstanding cuss. He talked a millionairess out of H04. 000, In Itself no mean feat. If Oas ton tries to sell the warden the prison during his Incarceration, he will close the deal. Ha posaeases a positive genius for mesnness and if I his ability had been directed Into legitimate lines, he would have made a fins politician. A miner has come In from the hills dlagulated as he could only psn 18 per day. Ha Is convinced there Is no Klondike concealed In yonder hills. "I may be forced to buy a new auto," said a citizen yesterday with sham sadness and weakenlngly. Sociologists are fretting because "of the widespread decline of mar riages and fears are felt for the fu ture." The way to stop this is to start a rumor there ' is going to be another war. e . - The three Oregon delegates to the Republican convention who voted for J. I. Prance for president, probably had one eye on the Portland post office. . t . IT'S COME TO THIS The drums of trad, are muts, the stars Look down upon a stagnant land. Our fires are banked, and empty cars Upon the sidings stand While man, with heavy heart and sad, Walks among ruins, bstfled, lost. As some devouring angel had Decreed a holocaust; Nor seee the ever-widening sky. The arch where hope and distance meet. Nor teele the earless company Of earth beneath his feet. Lift -up your eyes, O haunted onel The rain of heaven descendeth still; BUM flings his challenge to the sun The lone tret on the hill. (Poetry) Mrf So THE general reaction of the renomination of Hoover and Curtis among the political wiseacres is "good night!" The American people have had four years of Hoover and Curtis, in many ways the hardest and most . disheartening years in this generation, and at the present moment it is in conceivable that any considerable number of them, will vote for FOUR YEARS MORE. NEVERTHELESS in politics, more than in any other human activity, it is folly to count one's eggs before they are hatched. The Chicago convention didn't improve the Republi can chances in any way, but the Democratic convention may succeed, where the G. 0. P. failed. If, for example, the Democrats should nominate Governor Roosevelt, and stage as bitter a fight over the wet-dry issue, as now seems probable, Democratic harmony and morale will be seriously shattered. The radical Dry bloc throughout the coun try, represents a steadily declining minority, but it is a militant and resourceful minority, which will have to be reckoned with in the presidential campaign. IF" Governor Roosevelt should try to straddle this issue, as he has the Tammany issue, the Republican party will profit materially, not because the Republican prohibition stand was clear cut, (for it was not) but because the radical' Wets have pinned their hopes on the Democrats, and if their hopes are dashed, their resentment against the Democrats will far exceed their resentment against the G. 0. P. THERE is another important factor. The business depression is now at the lowest ebb. If economio conditions should grow worse, nothing could save Hoover and Curtis, but if they should as seems likely grow no worse, and perhaps grow better, then there would be a transformation in popular feeling, that the Republicans would quickly profit from. In fact, if general conditions SHOULD grow materially better, the campaign cry that this improvement was the result of President Hoover's prompt action, and changing horses in the middle of the stream, would plunge the country back in the slough of despond, might well prove irresistible. SO our advice to those who with the renomination of Hoover and Curtis, are already celebrating a Democratic victory, is to hold their horses for a time. Not only is everything fair in love, war and politics, but nothing in them is certain. The only safe time to celebrate a presidential victory (as Chief Justice Hughes will agree) is about three days after the first Tuesday in November! Not the Local Postoffice THE touchy state of the popular mind is clearly shown, by the reaction of yesterday's editorial condemning the Fed eral Employees League for opposing President Hoover's econ omy program. ' ' ' ' Although no mention was made in that editorial of tbe local postoffice boys, the aforesaid boys not only took it to refer to tfiem, but so did many of our readers. We are reliably informed that many irate oitizeng have panned the post office force for fighting a rednotion in their pay; and wo don't need to be informed that the lads at the post office have panned the Mail Tribune, for what it said. ' e 'e e e ' WE regret this mjaunderstauding and hasten to point out that we .were condemning the leaders of the Federal Employees League and NO ONE ELSE! The communication came from' Washington, and we supposed the organization was made up of employees in the various federal bureaus and de partments. ' In that supposition, no doubt, we were correct. ' For the post office employees do not belong to this organization, and there is no disposition among them to oppose the Hoover economy meas ure, which gives them an 8 percent cut in pay. They expect to take it and like it. T1THAT we said about this league, however, STANDS. Any " organization, official or unofficial, that is fighting the President's effort to reduce expenses, this paper uncompromis ingly condemns. There is no more reason why any individual, or group of individuals, should refuse to assume their share of the financial burden the depression has imposed than to refuse to assume their share of the fighting burden that war imposes. We are all in the same boat ! It is up to each of us to do his share. We have no patience and we believe the people have no patience with any oranization that asks everyone else in the country to take a rap In the pocket book, but because of the political strength of that organization REFUSES TO TAKE A RAP THEMSELVES. We are glad this is not the nttitude of the local postal force, we are glad they don't belong to the above mentioned organi zation, and we truBt that with a misunderstanding thus re moved, our mnil will continue to be delivered with the OLD TIME SMILE I Law Versus Lawlessness " ENTLEMEN, it is difficult to climb up, but it Is easy to fall. For thousands of years, the human race has strug gled upward toward greater liberty and a finer justice, for the common man. Once destroy the WILLINGNESS AS A PEOPLE, TO PEACEFULLY ABIDE BY THE DECISIONS of those courts, and civilization ends. In a thrice, gentlemen, we fall, hack to the muck and slime and slaughter of the jungle, from which it has taken us countless centuries to climb. Far more dangerous to our institutions, gentlemen, than the hardened criminal, is the citizen who re sentful because a ruling has gone against him, appeals NOT TO A HIGHER COURT, for final adjudication, but to the prejudices and passions of the mob." (The capitals are ours.) This is an extract from a speech given before the state bar association of Illinois by Judge W. B. Carpenter, nearly 30 years ago! And that statement, so true then, Is true today and will re main true as long as this government of ours endures 1 Fast! faith in our courts of law, our Today By Arthur Brisbane The Shouting Is Over, No Issues) Only Offices, The Wringer Problem, No Mortgage Moratorium- Copyright King Features Synd, Inc. CHICAGO, 111., June 16. The shouting and voting, nom inating and indorsing, parad ing and singing, demonstrat ing, real and pretended, are over until 1936. As for the Republicans, it is Hoover and Curtis, nobody else had the faintest chance at the head or tail of the ticket. A week from next Monday tbe Democrats begin their nominating and demonstrating, and later the fight will be on. Next January nobody will remember much about it, Henry Ford who says con vention issues did not amount to much, is right. There were really not any issues. There was a prohibition' fog, much carefully ignoring in speeches of everything that men discuss in private, depression, crime, racketeering. Luckily, as Mr. Ford says, "Con ventions can't give the people any thing and they can't take anything away from the people." Everything deneuda on what the people them selves are. not on the particular Indi viduals chosen to hold of floe. There Is a problem In this coming election, that Republicans perhaps have not sufficiently considered. It Is the problem created by those that "have been to the cleaners" or, as others express It, that have been put through the wringer." The writer talked this morning to one, fresh out of the wrtrfger Just bsck from the cleaners, as thorough ly wrung out and dry cleaned as any man In the whole depression. . He is Justice of the peace, has been mayor and la leading citizen of a small town twelve miles southeast of Chicago. He said: "I have Just turned back my last seventeen lots to the original owners, after paying all I had left on them. There are thousands of people around here who are going to lose their homes, to say nothing of their Investments. If the government had worried half as much about ua as It has worried about Eu rope, we should be much better off. "They gave Germany and other Europeans a moratorium on their debts of billions. Why don't they give ua a moratorium on small mort gages" It does no good to tell such a man, fresh from the cleaners, that for Eu rope to go bankrupt would be des perately dangerous for the United States. ' " He Is not Interested In Europe, but In the seventeen lots, sst of his property, Just taken from him, and In banks that failed "taking my savings of a lifetime." Six or eight million men out of work are not the only Americans that should make Republicans thoughtful. The army sent to the cleaners pre sents a problem. . Congratulations to the publisher of Christian Science Monitor, on the de votion of news agents thst sell his psper In Chicago. In front of the Black stone hotel the lady selling the Monitor la dressed In the height of fashion. 811k stockings, skirt not too short or too long, fine complexion. pleasant smile if you buy a paper. Just as pleasant If you don't. In front of the union railroad ta ttoo, a young man Is selling the Monitor. He, like the lady near the hotel, has "made his demonstration." Well dressed, efficient, polite, a fine salesman. You are tempted to ac quire importance In their eyes by telling them, "I was one of Mrs. Eddy's pallbearers. But, while it Is true, any sugges tion of death la "unsclelntUlc. Ramsay UacDonald, at Lausanne, lets it be known that "the United States has encouraged us to believe that it will co-operate' He does not say In what. The United Statea la expected to "cancel Its share of the war debts. If that doesn't happen, Europe will probably cancel them for us. Crime here writes Its usual dally chapter. Gangsters raided Sam Hare's road house called "The Delia.' In a gun fight one man is killed, two others and a woman wounded, and a Rambling annex In "The Dells" is re vealed out tn the country. Three hundred customers were dis turbed by the killing. The gangsters wen attracted by a fifteen thousand dollar "bankroll. Fathers day is approaching, and on a neatly printed pamphlet, the West ern Union Telegraph company oilers selection of telegram Viat you Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease, diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady it a stamped self-ad-dressed envelope ts enclosed. Letters should do brief and written In ink Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered i here. No reply can be made to queries dress Or. William Brady in care of The HONEST FOLK SWEAT BUT Why don't you write a book and title it "No Such Thing?" a corres pondent inquires. Such a book by you would make entertaining reading. And honestly I don't know whether the correspond ent Is serious or Just sarcastic. It does seem as tho I am forever asserting there is no such thing as cold, rhtumi tism, nervous breakdown, indigestion, etc., etc., but if so, I believe It ts necessary, ,for we must remember that the most preva lent aliment In this country Is Bill ings complaint people knowing so many things about health and path ology which ain't so. The correspondent was prompted to make the suggestion when he read an article In which I said that no one ever perspires. Of course, I meant that no one breathes thru the skin. Sometimes a charlatan finds It con venient or necessary to have his dupes Imagine the skin breathes, as this lends color 'to his explanation of illness or the way his method of treatment "purifies the system" or some such hocus-pocus. But physi ologists have never discovered any evidence that the skin can absorb air or anything else, unless It is punc tured or broken. A lady whose credulity is amazing, In view of her evident general intelli gence, cited a number of proofs that the skin absorbs things, among them a notorious nostrum which she in formed me has been uaed for many years as a salve applied on the sur face for the cure of vhatever the victim might happen to have. The lady might as logically say that a horse chestnut In the pocket has been used for many years as a cure for rheumatism. If I should write a book entitled. "No Such Thing" I shall Include In It a chapter eneumeratlng things which do not account for Illness, and among these things I shall include overwork, run down condition, ner vouaness. Indigestion, biliousness night air, dampness, drafts, change of weather, climate, season, your age, tomatoes, acid fruits, wrong combina tions of foods (whatever they may be), teething, open winter, hard wat er, red or dark meat, ptomalns, verdi gris, rust, green apples, cucumbers, proximity to putrefying animal or vegetable matter, autointoxication, vague "Impurities retained in the system and high blood pressure. Tmife are still extant a few pftysl clans who perpetrate a diagnosis of "ptomaln poisoning from time to may send to your father on a special fathers' day blank. A sign Invites you to examine the fathers' day messages, choose and send the one you like best. Everything Is made easy for us in America. The florist every year will remind you In advance of your wife's birthday, and your own wedding day, that you may order flowers and avoid trouble. Fortunate Is the son who can send to his father this message, not In cluded In the telegraph company's list: "I thank you for the good ex ample you have always set before your children and wish that I had proved more worthy of It." Make your preparations to attend the Chicago fair next spring and bring your children. The fair will be ready and its record of scientific achievement tn the past hundred year will supply a valuable educa tion. The great courage and civic pride of Chicago's citizens to raise the money, to finance the fair at this time and the ablest men and women here devoting time and concentrated hard work to It, deserve recognition. You should not fall to see it. Jenkins' Comment (Continued from Page One ) freely that It is a wild and reckless lot. Here Is a prediction: This younger generation, which we have eyed with suspicion, will pull us out of the morass of gloom and doubt in which we are now mired. That has been true ALWAYS in the past, and It wUl be true again. Communications Sick of MudMlnglngt To the Editor: WUl you allow me a little space In your paper in which to call atten tion to some very Important matters which have been of serious concern to many of the ctttcens of Jackson county during the past several months? As you know, there has i been so much bickering, backbiting, I fault finding, slandering, villtfying, 'charging and counter charging, deny ing and counter denying, murtsllnn )ng. wrangling, reviling, traducing, defaming, and other calumlnoua and yowling, both in our newspapers and among "professional" politicians, ; that it seems like someone should I call a halt, and ask that for a little while, at least, we might have a stay .of that kind of venomous spew. Of what use Is It all. anyway? Who ; la made better or wiser by any such 1 harangues, mouVilngs and scurrilous not conforming to Instructions. Ad Mall Tribune. NOBODY EVER PERSPIRES time which serves as well as a "heavy cold" does to -toot te tbe anxi ety of the public ud'.'I the real na ture of the .lines becomea evident. I did not -nclu.le acidosis In the list because acld'Mls can happen In the course of certain Illness, tho only as a consequence of disease and nevr as the cause of it. Unquestionably a large number of people who complacently feel they know something about these health or medical matters would debate one or another of these questions with me or any other doctor or expert who might agree with me. Proverbially It is only the ignorant who dispute edu- catlo ' This applies with special force (0 popular Ignorance of physi ology and hygiene. It Is chiefly be cause of universal popular Ignorance of human anatomy and physiology that belief In absorption thru the skin Is so common. ---- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Fish skin. A cream or ointment you recom mended for one of our girls has com pletely relieved her of "flshskln." I have lt too, and I write to ask If you will please give me the formula. (T. C.) Answer That's where I made my beefsteak, calling it "flshskln" when I might have called it ltchyosls and charged $10 1 for the prescription. Many young women have the rough scaly sallow dry patches of skin es pecially over the elbows and knees. The less soap and. water the better for such trouble. Only oil for cleans ing the skin. This recipe is beneficial: Salicylic acid 10 grains Gylcerln ; 1 dram Lanolin . p-2 drams Benzolnated lard, enough to make one ounce. If the benzolnated lard la fresh and a good grade of lanolin ts used, the druggist will turn out a fine cream. It Is most economically dispensed In a collapsible tube. Apply to the af fected patches of skin a pea-size quantity of the cream once a day. Save Your Fuel and Enjoy Your Cereal. Maybe this suggestion will help to save fuel. We learned thia In the hard times we had in Germsny. Put your cereal on with less water or milk than usual. Let It boll 5 or 10 minutes but keep cover on tight so all the steam stays In the pot. Any small pot with a tight fitting cover will do. Then wrap the pot In 10 or 15 sheets of newspaper and cover with a heavy towel or small blsnket. Let stand on wooden surface over night. In the morning the cereal will be well cooked and still warm. (Mrs. F. F.) Answer Thank you.. Good sense and good economy. (Copyright John F. Dllle Co.) writings? Who among us, of all our splendid people. Is so clean and cir cumspect that he has the right, though he may have the ability, to denounce othent? Can the pot accuse the kettle of having a black bottom? Can the jackass bray, with scorn, at the mule? Hear what the wisest Teacher once said to Just such a crowd of critics: "Let him that is without sin among you cast the first stone." Surely there Is enough of con structive end necessary labor, even in this time of depression, to engage the thought and effort of all worth' while people. Certainly this Is no lime to vent spleen, cast Invectives and suggest evil Innuendo. All need help, not .hindrance: light, not shadow; encouragement, not asper sion. Any biped Is tn a deplorable condi tion who thinks his success depends upon the debasing of the character of another upon the blasting of the hopes of a fellowman upon the fall ing of the business of some other atruggler (even though that other business be f-dntlng) w.ho thinks that his succe as an office seeker depends upon the besmirching of the official life of those holding office, and In the charging of malfeasance. No real man will take such a posi tion; nor will a clean-lived American seek promotion In any such way. No one who has real constructive ability will use It In any such way, nor to such ends. Therefore, let us have a respite. Let us try to call off the hounds for a w.hlle. "There la so much 111 in the best of us; And so much good in the worst of us; That it 111 becomes any of us. To find fault with the rest of us." There Is an eternal truth that ought to be known to each and every one of us who Is disposed to find fault with others. It. lsGod's own findings in the matter, and there is no appeal from Vie decision of the Jurtee: "Therefore thou are Inexcusable, O man, whosoever thou art that judg es!; for wherein thou Judgeat an other, thou condemnest thyself; for thou that Judgest doest the same things." Romans 3:1. JOS. M. JOHNSON. Central Point. June 16. Savs Feill Cant Win To the Editor: I was in Medford yesterday and was surprised at the talk I heard about this Fehl having the county Judge ship in the bag. I don't claim to be much of a politician, but I will bet any man right now that this man Fehl never steps In the new court house to draw down a fat salary for a fl year term. Look at the result of the Tidings. Mayor Lamkln nearly beat him tn the primary, and with no nemspaper or organization supporting him What will Phlpps do to him tn the ejection and a democratic year! Fehl won t know he was running. F-r Ashland won't go to Fehl no matter who runs against him. Ash land wiu never forget what Fehl said after Ssm Prescott was shot down in cold bjood, or what Fehl's lawyers d:d to try to free that rat that did i one of the best boys in this town in. Wills His Brain A ssoes Ud Pftss Photo Harlow Gale. 70 (above), retired teacher of psychology at the Uni versity of Minnesota, haa specified In hie will that hi Drain be given to Dr. K. D. Lasley of the Univer sity of Chicago, an old friend, for experimental our poses. No, sir. And If Fehl should get In he won't stay there long. Some of us boys here will start a recall on him the next morning. Perhaps Medford can forget what Fehl did in the past, and falls for his sob stories about be ing for the pooT laboring man when his chief backer is one of the richest men in Jackson county, but Ashland won't. No. sir. We are going to show that bozo up If Its the last thing we do. And I ain't a relative of Frescott, either. B. R. H. (Name on file.) Ashland, R. F. D. Patronize Htme Printers To the 7dltor: The business men of Medford are being solicited today by another out-of-town representative of a printing firm for business that la being done by local printers at the same prices and of time lower. Business men are again asked by local printers not to order from any representative, who has the work done out of the city and to tell the solicitors they can get what they want a home, hereby maintaining home payrolls. . HOME PRINTERS. Wanted Men of Honor To the Editor: This la such & fine poem and so appropriate at the present time, thought you might like to print it. AN OLD SUBSCRIBER. . t Medford, June 16. WANTED . God give us menl A time like this demands Strong minds, great hearts, true faith, and willing hands. Men whom the lust of office does not kill; Men whom the spoils of office cannot buy; Men who possess opinions and a Will: Men who have honor, men who will not He; Men who can stand before a dema gogue. And damn his treacherous flatter ies without wlnktngl Tall men, sun-crowned, who live above the fog In public duty and In private thinking: For while the rabble, with their thumb-worn creeds. Their large professions and their little deeds, Mingle in selfish strife lol Freedom weeps. Wrong rules the land, and waiting Justice sleeps! Josiah Gilbert Holland THE SCAPEGOAT By Alice Jiidson Penle A 4-year-old boy climbed on a chair to reach the mantel ahelf and fell, hurting his knee. Furiously he turned to his grand father: "You mao me fall, you mean old thing. Why did you do that?" This type of mental reaction Is common enough and by no means confined to children. It tends to be characteristic of all of us at any age. Psychologist call that mech anism by which we blame the envir onment for those things which dis please us In ourselves, projection. The little boy had fallen and hurt himself. The thought that he was responsible for his own pain was unpleasant. Immediately therefore he substituted another thought that his grandfather sitting 10 feet away had caused him to fall. With this Idea he could nurse his bruise and continue to hold himself In un impaired regard. A Jealous little boy will aay that his playmate hates the cousin wlu haa come to visit when in reality It la he himself who hatea him. He will say "wasn't that cruel' upon seeing someone pull the kit ten's tail when he himself waa Itch ing to do so. This mental mecha nism frequently makes the child say things obviously not true. But he Is not then deliberately lying, he la only using unconscious ly a psychological device which en ables him to avoid responsibility for his own actions. Where this it clearly so the "lult must help him to accept his respon sibility by making him see that his mistake Is not overwhelmingly se rious. Boy Drowns In Fall From Log PORTLAND. Ore., June 17 API Clayton Emerson, 6, of Portland, slipped from a log boom and fell into the Willamette river and drown ed here last night. The body was recovered 20 mini.:i later, by the jharbor patrol. While is turning from the scene of the drowning the har jbor patrol found the body of an j unidentified man floating In the I river. Flight o Time1 (Medford and Jackson Count) History from the Files of The Mall Tribune of and 10 Year Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY JUNE 17, 1922 (It Was Sunday) The Southern pacific and the Cen tral Pacific railroada are divorced by a decree of the supreme court. School election warms up. Men needed for night work lit sawmills. f Texas cantaloupe crop ruined by flood waters of Rio Grande. "Yellow Men and Gold" at the Rial to. Heavy auto tourist travel on Pa cific highway. 200 a day license proposed fo 4 ' street carnivals. li 1. TWNTY YEARS AGO TODAY JUNE 17, 1912 (It Was Monday) Nash Hotel corner astounded by the sight of a man in golf pants. The Mall-Tribune irreverently calls the garb "tight-fitting knee britches." Bud Anderson, "Pride of Medford," to fight Abe Labell of San Francisco, June 24. Ralph Burgess pitches Medford to an 8 to 3 victory over Ashland. "Bur gess Is Improving, aB he is doing what the older heads tell him." The older heads were Pug Isaacs, Court Hall, Jack Gill and Shorty Miles. Earl Tumy "played third base like a big leaguer, and la over his stage fright." Editorial peels the hide off the "beef trust," and asks the farmer, "How long will you be bunked and bamboozled." (No answer, aa yet). Elks lodge to present "The Mas cot" with W. F. Qutsenberry In a top role. The "fishing bug" bites A. S. V. and Leonard Carpenter and they have oecome "angling enthusiasts. PORTLAND, Ore., June 17. (APJ Two Callforniaru won the first events of the northern division of the pacific International Trapshoot ing association's tournament here yesterday. Carl Vlnlng of Sacramento, shat tered 98 out of 100 In the 16-yard event and G. N. Zentgraf, also of Sacramento, hit two 25's for a per fect score In the handicap event. He was set at 32 feet. C, D. Ray. of Empire, Ore., won the Roy At Molln. trophy In the doubles. He cracked 22-24 for a V 48 total In 60 attempts. . H. Crolsant of Grants Pass shot 94 In the 16-yard event and 40 In the handicap; Chester Wood of Medford shot 88 in the 16 yar' event and 46 In the handicap. Modern Cinderella Amriated Prut Phot Dorothy Wilson, 18, waa just a typist In a Hollywood studio until she carried a manuscript to an exe cutive. Shortly afterward she was assianed a part as an actress. Perfect Cuts BECK'S BUTTERNUT Every housewife who has sliced our bread remwr.' that it cuts so evenly and leaves very few crumbs. That's why it makes such delightful sandwiches. Buy it fresh daily at your grocer or BECK'S BAKERY IK v 1 i , ' i -""" -rr ! i niL 1