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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 1, 1933)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune - "CwyMt Ik SMtntf. OrieM cuds tnt Hill lilkao' tabUiat by UEUroBD POINTING CO. tsit-i, w. m 8t rtm it K0BKB1 H KUHL, CdlW v l. imnfp tuw 40 Indctxortcot Nwptpst duns u mswjC difet esiur it Utdfart Orefoa, mim sol of Mi I. 1818. SUBSCKUTlOr RATHB Br Mill Is Adruu Dtllr, rur Dllil, aaollt . ! rHi in uItum Uraford. ii.00 ou lutoooruli, Ciatril Point. Pbotali. Tilsrt. Uok) Bill lod e Hliowir. - DtlLj. BOOtS. .. Dtiir. n All terns, cub id idraacs. omciii pu i at cm hho. orruiii ouwr of Jieuon county. uzmm or thi sssnnsnu puts ttttimt roll UuH Wirt Sentel lbs snodst) PrM U uelmrtnly loUUaa to an on lot ouollctUon ol HI on dlnuUMt aimed to n or Mberwlu drilled In ink "V mo iIm to tin tool rn whtolM Mrtlo. All fU " nOlieiUoo ol WW" diipsub" swats in AIM rwnwt IIEMBEB OP ONITBDPBICBS UEMBEH 01 A0D11 BUBBAO OP CIKC0LAT10NS AihtrtUInt BwmmtiUm R C. MIMJEN8EN A COMPACT Omen lo Vr tori, anew, ""trait. " JSSmo. U am.I. until Mum Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry Investigation obowi It mi Men date (Mandy to you), and Not Pros perity, that wa reported Just around local corner. New Krau la coming up. All things considered, hereabouta, there la no reason why it should not be knee- high, w NO TAX IS A GOOD TAX (Oakland, Ore., Tribune) We nave been asked what we think of the sales tax. We are opposed to the salea tax. We are also opposed to the property ' tax. We are opposed to Increas ing the gasoline tax and we favor the reduction of the automobile-, license tax. "Owing to Ill-health, I am going to a warmer climate" (Want ad, Coast paper.) Coming events, etc., etc. Marvin Squirrel, 81, ran 8S0-yards down a rail fence yesterday In 3:11V4 Marv was feeling tine and springy. "LEGISLATURE TIMES" (Salem Serves 'em right. HAS PREROGA Capital-Journal.) O. Hoover of J"vlUe towned Tuea. Mr. Hoover aald he was alarmed about the situation In Germany. 'mere la nothing like going along from home to get scared. 5 An Oakland, Calif., co-ed was ar rested for driving a id with 13 girl passengers originally designed to tote eight. Probably 28 boys escaped when the auto stopped. There were more bridge parties yesterday, than If It had been elec tion day, and every vote needed to save the nation, county, state, and city. The fight between the governor and state treasurer baa ceased as quick aa It started If not quicker. Vio words can describe the contempt few such a lack on the part of our duly elected, quallfl'd, and acting officiate of combative endurance. One trouble with our duly elected, quail fled, and acting officials Is that they act too much, ' A Thurlngla dog arrived here last week, and people who had the honor of gawking at the dog, think he came from Lithuania. He eoems to wish he had remained In his native land. ECONOMY TEARS LOOSI (Cong. Record) The country demands economy. The newspspers and -the people of the nation demand In sten torian tones that we balance the budget. Day In and day out we (tear nothing but this hue and cry, and see nothing but the headlines asserting that we are falling down In our pledges and promises to balance the budget. Every time the chairman of this committee, the gentleman from Mississippi (Mr. Collins) or any other gentleman tries to elimi nate unnecessary expenditures, gentlemen on the left, on the republican side, come forward with amendments seeking to in crease the expenditures, not only by small amounts but by thou sands and thousands of dollars. Yesterday alone we voted an ad ditional appropriation of more than ei.000,000. netoh Fish, the boom day Beau Brummel and tenor, has arrived at the stage where he makes fun of his own mustache. This la the lowest form of wise-cracking, and worse than the target. s Considerable fretting Is going on bout the situation, and the orator ical cavity, like the old fashioned saloon, has been kept open 34 hours per day, disci -sing the situation. If all the talk and wind released on the situation could be bunched up, there would be a monsoon, ripping and roaring across the fair face of the valley. The talk about the situation has ranged from the soft whisper in the moonlight, to the dramatic squeal before a favorable audience. The plentiful oratory has not helped the aforesaid situation a whit, or a whittle. To date nobody has been put to work as the result of a speech. Some think there would be no situa tion, if there were no speeches. The abolishment of speech might not do the situation any good, but It cer tainly would not da the situation any harm. Look! A regular five dollar vaiue In new spring wool dresses, very spec til at The Band Box and Shoe Box. Editorial Correspondence PASADENA, Caltfornia, Jan. 30. Back to onr old stamping ground Pasadena where there is less destitution and more digitalis, than anywhere else in More rain in the valley and motorists to Arrowhead Lake Met many of them coming back over the Foothills boulevard yesterday toboggans and snow shoes strapped on top, glimpses of mittens and woolen caps within, snow packed along the run ning board, carefully preserved to show the old folks at home. People in the East and Middlewest would laugh at that. Pack ing snow a hundred miles as nurse and treasure. Our stay in Hollywood, wasn't much of a lark, but it hotel where we stayed. E. J. manager, seems to take a personal interest in all his guests, he certainly did in the Medford party, which was still pursued by germs anfl forced to spend many days shut-up, indoors. He and Mrs. Matheson were continually bustling about trying to contribute to the party's pleasure and comfort. They belong to the old school of hotel people take their roles of host and hostess LITERALLY, treat them as guests rather than mere customers, very heart-warming boiled age. One feature of their hotel deserves a word of praise namely their breakfast system. No service charge for breakfasts served in the rooms, and excellent breakfasts they are, prices so low they knock your eye out. For example bacon and eggs, coffee, toast and marmalade, for twenty-five cents, and quality of the highest. We don't believe there can equal that. ' . Unless Medford and Jackson of humor entirely which Heaven forbid this latest "sensa tion", the formation of a Good Government League, must have tickled the risibilities of the entire valley. A good government league, designed for the purpose of disregarding all decisions of the courts of law, until further notice, and demanding the resignation of important officials of the government, because some self appointed dictator SATS so. If that is a GOOD gov ernment league, what would a BAD government league be called I . Those who still wonder about Technocracy, may find the last word in a recent analysis by Walter Lippman, who declares Technocracy bears the same relation to the depression, that Erugerisra and Insullism did to the late and lamented reign of synthetio prosperity. The Kruger match swindle had values behind it; so did the Instill wildcat exploitation. But the meth ods of both were doomed to bring disaster. There are values behind Technocracy. But the methods of the leading Techno crats, doom it to disaster and disillusion for those who fail to see the fallacies of their fundamental assumptions. Incidentally Columbia university has divorced itself from Scott and his fellow "quackers" who, Lippman says, are now devoting them selves to magazine articles and lectures to oash in on some easy money, before Technooraoy joins the Pewee golf course, and mahjong in the limbo of forgotten fads. We were interested in Victor Bursell's reasons for favoring an expensive audit Of the county records. No longer a watch, dog of the county treasury, and convinced a majority of the people want an audit, he urges the county court to order it. Such an audit he is convinced years and years, our various county courts have been honest and publio spirited, have not been above mistakes of course, but have made no serious ones and have certainly been guilty of no irregularities in spito of the constant political hullabaloo about corruption and graft, That is and has been our idea exaotly, -We believe such an audit would be a waste of the tax payers' money, as far as any revelations are concerned, BUT as long as a majority of them want it and they have to pay the bills, by all means let thorn have it. The result can only demonstrate once more, that this mud slinging has' had but one purpose in mind, to put the 'mud slingers IN office, and put the victims of it OUT. In our tour of the Hollywood movie lots we neglected to state that we narrowly missed a real live African lion, too. While we were browsing about No 8 stage, a hurry call for visitors and idle extras to come to the restaurant was issued, they were to be "background" for His Nibs the King" of Beasts. They put a napkin around his nock, sat him up in a chair, and he was waited on by the only waitress who would take suoh . dangerous and unremuner ative job. She fed him ohops, at the end of an ordinary table fork, and the lion presented her with a dollar tip. We saw the waitress afterward, and while we hate to spoil a good press agent s story, the truth must be JjICAIU ol that lion" said he ain t 60 years old then I'm Pola Negri. Why he wouldn't hurt a flea. He purred just like a house cat, and had no more 'git up and git' than a Teddy bear full of sawdust. He took the meat as though jt bored him stiff, and just swallowed oause that saved work was the easiest way. All he wanted was to have his back scratched. Don't these lions on the lot. I'd rather feed Leo than Luby'a chow dog any day I" Nevertheless animal pictures now and then some aotor gets inis lion takes a part in the we recall correctly, is called King Kong. Buster Orabbe takes the lead, and the waitress in question is authority for the state ment the lions are scared to death of him. "I don't cars what they say about the King of Beasts, I tell' you lions are most awful cowards. They may be fierce in the jungle, but they are just scared stiff in a movie studio. All the lights and noise and people running about just terrifies 'em. All they want is to get back where they are safe in a oage." Whoever gets the 1933 prize no question about who the movie people themselves would vote for TODAY. None other than Mae West the tough girl from ssevr i or city, a sort or cross and Texas Guinan. Everyone in movieland is simply "crazy about her." They repeat her wise cracks, speculate on what she will be doing the world. more snow in the hills, with 2000 snowed in, over the week end, a great curiosity something to except for the last day or two wasn t the fault of the Christie Matheson, the proprietor and and refreshing in this hard- is a hotel in the country that county have lost their sense will show the people, that for eating luncheon with a lion a told. . , , she "your grandmotherl If believe what you hear about are all the rage, and evory mauled for the morning papers. latest animal feature, which if as leading movie star, there is between the late Lillian Russell next, and follow her around the lot. We think we know why at least one of the reasons, and we imagine the chief one. She is entirely NEW. She represents the complete antithesis of what hag been all the rage the Garbo-Dietricb, and the Norma Shearer-Joan Crawford types the exotic, flat chested, inarticulate importations the vital, collegiate, ultra modern typical There is notfiing flat chested about Mae, nothing inarticu late, and she is as old fashioned physically as mid-Victorian-as Delia Fox. and her sweet caporal playmates. She has hips and she doesn't care who know3 it. She has a bust and doesn't care who knows that. In fact she doesn't care who knows ANYTHING aa far She is just herself to all it is true, but an honest sort chain lightning. She wrote those two lines in "Night After Night," which saved the piece from being just another night club film. A bit naughty perhaps, but good. "Gracious goodness, Mae, bracelet 1" "Gracious goodness yourself, to do with it I" "Do you believe in love at first sightt" "Well, it saves a lot of time!" So don't be surprised if the next big success in the movie world is Mae West. (And we didn't get a dime for this press notice either!) Personal Health Service By William Brady. M. D. BMed letters oertalnlnt to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be aruwered by Dr. Brady If a stamped, self addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief end written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only e few cap be answered nere. No reply can oe made to queries not ron'ormlni to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady In care of ASSISTANT PROFESSOR HAS BLIND SPOT This part of the narrative of level-headed young woman who Bought to have her toslls removed jn the modern way: , . decided call upon Da. (an assistant In structor In a me d l c a 1 school and one of a huddle of a m b 1 1 1 ous doctors who seek business under the name of a "clinic". He told me that he had undoubtedly removed more tonsils by the diathermy method than any physician In , and he put the whole thing down as a huge advertising scheme by the manufacturers of the machine. He warned me that I was In constant danger of hemorrhage If I chose that meth od and that I would be the vic tim of foul breath, etc., etc., .and urged me that the only thing to do was to enter his department In the hospital and let him cut them out which I did not do. The young woman goes on to tell how she found a physician who made no bones about giving her the dia thermy treatment and how grateful she feels toward me for having brought this modern method to the attention of the public. She adds that In the past winter she sent sev eral young persona who were under her tutelage to the physician who so successfully removed her tonsils and they have found the method uni form? satisfactory. Now, let's see about the assistant professor's blind spot. In the first pleace he Is connected with a medical school that sanctions almost any cheap trick the ambitious young doc tor on the teaching staff may find necessary to get some business. The "clinic" racket Is only one of the tricks. The assistant professor, with true quackery Instincts, boasts to the pa tient that he has removed more ton sils by the diathermy method than any other physician In the state. Yet he asserts that the method Is merely a big advertising scheme and that the victim Is In constant danger of hemorhage. No doubt he learned these sad things by sad experience. But being an assistant professor he had to carry on with the worth less, dangerous method until he could boast he had employed In in many cases. .Struggling young medical school in-I Communications Tariff No Remedy To the Editor: Protection Is no friend of the plain people of the United States, and yet It is the plain people, who, by their support, keep protection In force as a national policy. For decades they have been fed on propaganda in sup port of protection. They have done thinking on the subject, they have read nothing except political buncombe. Have you ever tried to argue with the average protectionist. Mr. Editor? It reminds one of Huckleberry Finn's complaint: "I see It warnt no use wasting words you cant learn a nigger to argue. So I quit." Mr. Editor, you cant learn a protectionist to argue. If you push a protectionist into a corner, he Invariably falls back on the (to him) unanswerable argu ment: Protection Is necessary If the American standard of living Is to be maintained. It Is worth while, in these tragic times, aggravated as they are by the most selfish and stupid tariff rivalries, to examine Into this argument. Let me quote the most disinterested and the most able American tariff authority. Prof. F. W. Taussig: "For years and years It has been dinned into the ears of the American people that high wages are the result of protection, or at least dependent on protection; that the maintenance of a high atandard of living depends on the barrier against competing laborers of lower price, and that the rv in droves when she appears on AMERICAN girls. as she is concerned. people and all the time. Tough. of toughness, and brighter than where did you get that diamond girlie goodness had nothing R. W. R. The Mall Tribune. structors and hangers-on at clinics have to resort to every expedient to get enough paying practice to live on. In many cases the privation and want such doctors are compelled to endure for years and years are pa thetic, and even then they are never sure that they will gain a substan tial practice as "eminent specialists' in the end. Once more It Is necessary to state that In qualified hands the diathermy method of tonsil extirpation is the SAFEST method we have. The dan ger of hemorrhage la Infinitely great er with the standard guillotine and snare tonsillectomy than It Is with diathermy In fact hemorrhage Is almost unknown when the diathermy method Is used by a competent phy sician. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Maybe We Can Do Something, Topic for debate by our class: Is time on earth predetermined so that that Is nothing we can do about It? I maintain that premature death Is a result of accident or carelessness, from disease which some day will be prevented . . . T. E. K. Answer Good thing some phy sicians are not believers In such a doctrine the victims of shock, as phyxia, carbon monoxide gassing, poisoning, submersion, or hemorrhage would be out of luck. Keeps the Doctor Away. Kindly tell me what medicinal qualities garlic has. It has been rec ommended, to me for asthma . Mrs. L. Mot. Answer So far as I know It has no medicinal qualities. Like onion It tends to stimulate Increased secre tion of acid In the stomach. Tularemia. Can tularemia be caught from rab bits if there Is no break In the skin of the person? Will ordinary disin fectants such as kill the germ? Is there any danger of catching the disease from hunting clothes or from Implements several days after hunt? What precautions are best? a. h. r. Answer Tularemia is usually con tracted by Infection entering through some cut, scratch or puncture of the skin of the person skinning, dressing or preparing the rabbit for cookm. Domestlo rabbits are not Infected, only wild rabbits. Any rabbit that falls to try to get away may be re garded with suspicion. The liver of the Infected animal shows many lit tle whitish spots. Handlers of such game should wear heavy rubber gloves. Hot water and soap Is best disinfectant. Any abrasion or wound of skin should be Immediately dis infected with lodln. Thorough cook ing kills the germ of the disease. (Copyright, John r. xmie Co.) worklngman has a special and pecu liar interest In the system of high duties." "The general range of wages In the United States was not created by protection and Is not dependent on protection. The common talk about the sacredness of protection as a means of uplifting the worklngman Is mere claptrap." ''The fundamental cause of high wages Is large productiveness of labor. The higher, range of wages In the United States Is due to the coun try's rich natural resources, and to the energy and Intelligence with which these have been utilized. High tarlffa as a remedy for falling prices were tried by the principal European states In 1878-1868. The remedy only aggravated the malady, and that la the case with us today. TOM BLOUNT. Editorial Comment They Still Pretend. Some are saying that a state sales tax. If enacted, will be defeated un der referendum. They threaten. They pretend, m the face of an actual ma jority of farmer-members In the house who voted for a sales tax In the special session, that every person on every farm in Oregon will vote against It. They try to intimidate members into voting against a sales tax by pretending that the back country is unanimously against ft. Ho such thing. Members who voted for the sales tax have received many letters from tanners, seme from. grangers, approving the votes of those members and declaring that the Orange leadership against the sales tax does not represent the sentiments of farmers generally. The pretense that farmers are united against the sales tax Is political buncombe. Some farmers are against It. Others are for It. So with people of all classes. It Is a controverted question. Why pretend that sentiment Is all one way? They talk now of perpetuating the state property tax, In full or in part. But the property taxpayers are groan ing already. Property tax delinquency runs up to 70 per cent In some coun ties. Owners of property cannot pay more, and many of them do not In tend to pay more, state tax or no state tax. We have In effect a tax payers' strike. Let the legislature. If It can, find ways to economy that will render un necessary any new revenues from taxes. If it cannot do that and every economy It proposes Is hotly opposed by somebody there la practicable source to which It can turn other than the general sales tax, which would exempt the staple necessities of the poor, bear heavily on no individual and be readily and certainly collectible. Oregonlan. A SEAT C inthe C BINETi. FRANC F2S PERKINS Women, who urge scholarly, prac tical Frances Perkins as "first woman In the -cabinet," argue she would be the logical person for the labor sec retary 'a post even If she were a man I Appointed industrial commissioner of New York state and city in Jan uary, 1929, by Franklin D. Roosevelt, she administers affairs of the largest labor market m the nation. Her brown eyes carry, and kindle, enthusiasm, her well-groomed fig ure moves with, and Inspires, energy as she directs a department dealing with 1.S00 to. 3, pOO callers dally; pub lishing statistics second only in vol ume to the federal labor department, and administering welfare laws. 'Advanced social and labor legis lation has been the making of the democrat! o party in New York," Miss Perkins recently said. In private life she Is Mrs, Paul C. Wilson. Her husband Is a sociologist and statistician. 4 Your Income Tax A series of dally articles based on revenue act of 1932 and designed to aid those required to file In come tax returns for year 1032 Who Must File Returns Returns are required of every sin gle person who for the year 1933 had a gross Income of (5000 or more or a net Income of 61000 or more and of every husband and wife living to gether who for the year 1032 had an aggregate gross Income of C5000 or more or an aggregate net Income of $2500 or more. Widowers, widows, divorcees, and married persons sep arated by mutual consent are classed as single persons. The personal ex emptions are 91000 for single persons and 92500 for married persons living together and for heads of families. Husband and wife living together each may make a separate return of the income of each, or their income may be Included In a single joint re turn. If separate returns are filed, one may not report income which belongs to the other, but must report only the income which actually be longs to him. If a Joint return Is filed, such return la treated as a tax able unit, and the Income disclosed Is subject to both the normal tax and the surtax. Husband and wife may elect each year whether to file a Joint return or separate returns. Where, however, joint or separate returns have been filed for a particular year, neither husband nor wife may after the due date of the return file an amended return or returns on a different basis for that year. KM ED Broadcast Schedule Thursday. 8:00 Breakfast News, Mall Tribune. 8:05 Musical Clock. 8:15 A Peerless Parade. 8:30 Shopping Guide. 9:00 Friendship Circle. 9 :30 Today. 9:45 The Pet Program. 10:00 U. 8. Weather Forecast, 10:00 Fashion Parade. 10:15 Morning Melody. 10 :30 Morning Comments. 10:45 Popular Vocalists. 11:00 Quartettes Parade. 11 :15 Martial Music. 11:30 Song and Comedy. 12:00 Mid-day Review. 12:15 Popularttia. 13:30 News Plashes. Mall Tribune. 12:30 In the Garden of Melody. 1:00 Dreaming the Walt Away. 1 :45 Victor Symphony Orchestra. 3.-00 Dance Matinee. 8:00 Songs for Everyday. 8:30 KMED Program Review. 8:35 Music from Yesteryear. 4:00 Judge Rutherford, Lecturer. 4:18 Across the Seas to Hawaii. 4 :30 Masterworka 8:00 Popular Parade. 3:44 News pigest. Hall Tribune. Mm r 8:O0 Dinner Dance Music. e:30 Vlgnettea. 8 AS Cnandu the Magician. 7 :00 Memories. 7:16 Labor Exchange Program. 730 8even Discards. 8:00 to 8:30 Eventide. F WAR DEBT STUNT TO MOVEFRANCE (Continued from Page One) who had been following the thing closely. That same policy had- been announced unofficially some weeks before. Nothing was proposed to be done before March 4. The French were so flabbergasted they did not even go near the state department for days. They burned up the long distance telephone be tween Paris and London. But they could not get much Information from the British capital. It was nearly a week after the announcement that confidential word came from Paris promising the French would pay. The French are very poor poser players. What nearly ruined the play was the British also failed to appreciate that they were In a poker game. There were strong Indications they were In sufficiently advised all along. The British ambassador. 81r Ronald Lind say, held a heated' session with an under secretary of state, complaining that he had been scooped continu ously on these American announce ments. The British were embar rassed because they have an agree ment with the French that neither will accept the Lausanne reparations agreement until a satisfactory war debt settlement has been made with us. . In the execution of the scheme Mr. Sttmson was magnificent. There are some near the Democratic throne who hint that Mr. Roosevelt had a hand In devising the thing. But no one save an Inventor could have carried It out with the zest that Sttmson showed. He gleefully denied for days that a memorandum had been hand ed to the British. The Londonera kept Insisting that they had a memo and that It was handed to Sir Ronald by Stlmson the night of the White Bouse meeting. Finally Stlmson confessed, but with no proper display of humility, simi larly he kept It quiet for several days that similar memos had been given to other governments which paid News of that leaked out from Rome. The night he made his final con fesslon. Assistant Secretary of State Castle delivered a speech In Phila delphia. Castle bragged touchlngly about the frankness of the state de partment In dealing with the public and the preus. Continued failures of Interior banks still arouse no apprehension In New York except Insofar as they may lead to renewed hoarding. The failures are explained in high quarters as partly due to a new Joint policy of the R. P. O. and the federal reserve to let nature take Its course, instead of trying to save everything In sight. The harder-boiled banking element here Is strongly In favor of weak sis ter elimination. It la Ironic that several of the more recent victims had their port- folios packed with defaulted foreign bonds especially South Americans, These bonds were unloaded on their present holders by the large -New York correspondents. New York Itself h&s relatively few of them. . Several large trust companies are paying undiminished dividends in spite of srunken earnings because of future prospects. These companies have estate trusts lined up which they are counting on as a definite source of Income within the next five or ten years. Life expectancy tables bear them out. Quite a few estates are still worth plenty to administrators, even after the last three years. 17. 8. Steel directors are concerned that a large amount of the corpora tion's preferred stock Is held by chari table and other Institutions. Discon tinuance of the dividend would bring unhappy repercussions. The split in technocratic ranks which threw Howard Scott out of the Columbia group has been brewing for some time. Scott's personality has grated on his collaborators. Matters came to a head when Scott was billed for a nation-wide radio hookup and converted a swell opportunity into a terrible flop. The two most respected advocates of technocracy Bassett Jones and P. L. Ackerman wore among the seceders. Their findings, under s new name, will get attention in high quarters. There may be a big row as to who owns the energy survey charts already completed. Scott has small chance of carrying his point. TWELVE MILLIONS OF RELIEF FUNDS LOANED WASHINOTON. Feb. 1. (AP) The reconstruction corporation tday made available 913,524.870 of emergency re lief funds of which Montana received 929.970; New York received 96.100.000, IlllsnolS 98.000250 and Ohio 9413.700. A senate committee investigating the corporation's loans to railroads learned today that 11.8 per cent of the banks which have borrowed from the R. F. C, since have been closed. 4 At ETHEIjWYN B. HOFFMANN'S all winter coats now H price and less. Guaranteed Income For Life! GEO. HENSELMAN Etna Lire Insurance Co. . Medford Bid. Flight 'o Time IMedfora sod Jecssan Count; Blstorv from the rues ol Itu Mall Tribune of v and 10 irear Ago.) TEX TEARS AflO TODAY February 2, 1923. (It was Friday) . Nab trio for violation of prohibi tion laws. Arrests held vital to sup pression of liquor traffic. Giant Jailer In county Jail, knocks out prisoner, who hit him over head with a window weight. In effort to escape. Company formed here to make in cubators for entire Pacific coast. Rogue River anglers aroused, and 'demand Justice from the legislature." Retail merchants and farmers con fer. Backbone of the cold spell broken. - Colored slide to be shown at the theaters, so people will know what the new Armory will look like. West Main street residents com plain of epeedera. W. O. T. V. of nation objects to calling C. O. Dawes, "Hell Maria." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY February 2, 1913. (It was Sunday) The Rogue River fish bill forced Into a committee. The ground hog falls to see his shadow. State legislature Introduces bills to curb demon rum. Local politics -aflame over naming of a market master. Jsckson county socialist party adopts resolution condemning high rents and taxes. Ed M. White of Climax writes a letter to the editor regarding school supervision. RED CROSS LISTS BY RELIEF HEADS At a meeting of the county court, Hamilton Patton. general maneger of relief work, and Red Cross directors, held Monday afternoon. It was di rected that the relief lists of the county commissary, and the Red Cross lists, be checked against each other, to determine If there were any dupli cations. The Red Cross list has been seven years in the making, and covers the entire country. It was also agreed that the Red Cross would have a share in the county relief fund of 98000, and that hereafter no Red Cross requisitions would be questioned. County Judge Fehl assured the Red Cross directors, that as soon as the present relief and unemployment abandoned, and that efforts were now underway to provide county employ ment. He said he had taken personal notes from many, to pay back their commissary supplies, when they were sble financially to do so. It was admitted there might oe some abuses, but that this was bound to happen, and that the many should not be punished for the acts of the few. It also developed at the meeting, that all government supplies and funds would be under the direct su pervision of the Red Cross, as the r ganlzatlon has been designated to have charge of all federal relief work, In the various counties, and that all Refinance Corporation money would be likewise controlled. -It was further agreed that the Red Cross and county agency would co operate. Directors of the Red Cross present were C. 8. Butterfleld. C. M. Eldd, J. O. Mann and J. C. Thomp son, and Miss Lillian Roberts, Red Cross aide. COCHRATLEADS njr. inn V&K . nt.ii Cochran of 18.3 bslkllna fame, led the field In the stretch run of the 1933 world's three-cushion billiard championship today, but Johnny Lay ton, the flaming red head from Se dalla. Mo., was Just starting one of his great dashes. Layton, all but out of the race with two early defeats, rushed back Into title contending position l&st night by defeating young Jay Bow man of Vallejo, Cal., In one of the most dramatic duels of the tourna ment, 50 to 49 In 64 Innings. Have to Get Up at Night? Deal Promptly with Bladder uTvguianaes Are you bothered with blad der irregularities; burning, scanty or too frequent passage and getting up at night? Heed promptly these symptoms. They may warn of some dis ordered kidnev or bladder con dition. Users everywhere rely on Doom's Pills. Recommended for 50 years. Sold everywhere. ills