PAGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MAIL. TRIBUlSrE, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1933.
Medford Mail Tribune
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Airnrtlflnt KepmaoUUTM
ITtUVJiOD KB nm"
e Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
-. in tMaIawI DRV. DUfc
Tomorrow is u , w,v" '
torn, ar. looled .very day. and Xar
Into the night.
, X contraption baa bn
wbweby an auto can b driven by
dl" TbU wlU enable people o
. tbelr auto out Into the country
on Sunday, wblle they go to church.
x".rV day now aom.body that b. r.
predion amacked aquare between
horna .how. up with a guilty loot.
,nd a .orrel colored auto with re
ceding chin.
FIONEBB SPEED IDIOT,
j (Pendleton East, Oregonlan)
Alllaon. the city grocery man,
m tlned 10 and coet. last wee
for violation of the city ordinance
in that he drove through the
.treet. at a gait ajt.r than .U
mile, in an hour. We teel rry
lor him. but then he U obliged
to do .uoh dtareputable act. In
order to Keep up hi. custom and
to get around to ht ourtomer.
while daylight l"t.
50 YI. Ago 001.)
' The old age penrton law pawed by
the last leglalature eliminate, the
poorhouM. and being humane and
talrly wnslble U ure to meet with
determined oppoeltlon. It U i framed
to protect the worthy poor after they
have reached the age of 70. The
worthy poor need protection, at any
we, from the horde of charity rack
eteer., event, of the pat three year,
have demorutrated. An indigent auto
tramp can alway. gyp ; the worthy
poor, through the artlrtlo uee of un
limited and brawn galL At any and
,U rumpuH. the type la alway.
noltler than a country 4d.
( It begin, to look like there would
only be 8s beer garden, for everybody
With a nickel and a yearning for a
glau of beer.
e
' The preeldent aaya: "Th. depre.
.lon agony would have been trebled,
but for the deep loyalty and biave
nd X)Othlng mlnlrtratlon. of the
American women." The president,
h a, good politician, mut keep an eye
out for the 1038 female vote.. In
' many lnitancee, "the brave and aooth
tag mlnUtratlon." conlted often of
handling the prop, to put under the
hell, after the men had ralaed it.
' young Bdd Kelly ha. regained hU
composure, and Is once more aeen on
our streets, after serving a term IB
th. legislature.
BAlf FRANCISCO, March 38 A
dead man, a. represented by bis
executor, was made defendant In a
IO.O0O breach of promise suit yester
day in the local courts) (Pres. DU
patch) Gold digging In the ceme
tery. IBT THE PEOPLE RUM.
(Cong. Record)
You will note that the were
tary of war say. that thut horse
, was IS year, old and was not
! worth over and that "th.
' filthy .table and the want of
proper care and feed waa much
responsible for the .nlmal. con
dition." I do not think th. gov
ernment ought to pay eight time,
as much as a horse Is worth, Just
b.cau.e the government Is
charged with killing It.
There will never be a war between
Japan and America, a. feared, by
genu who are alway. fearing some
thing. General Mitchell who Is more
or less given to being sensational, on
short notice predict.. Ten or 13 years
ago the general made wild charges
.gainst aviation practice, by the gov
ernment. As remembered, the gene
ral was found guilty of talking
through his h.t, In a gsy and semi
ldlotlo manner. Re la a high type
Df scatter-braln, who 1. liable to say
anything that sounds like It might
result In a headline. He 1. also devil
ishly windy, and full or self-admitted
patriotism. Scrambled minds, tlrs
less lungs, and egotism can wreck the
peace of a nation, the same a. they
wreck the harmony of a county. Steps
abould be taken to close the general',
trap, before a '.warm of Imitator, pop
up.
The opening horror, of war have
already reached the Pacific. The
Ohlco Enterprise announces the same
AS follows:
, IMPERIAL JAPAN'S CRIME IN
JEHOL expl.lned by two Chi- .
nese from S. P. at th. Worker.
. A Farmer. Center Thura. Mar.
go, 7 -SO p. m. Publlo invited.
Iterating lecture, .very Thur.
Kve,
1 tp'ow i
Present Your Evidence, Mr.Fehl
COUNTY JUDGE EARL FEHL is still publishing his scandal
oli opt anil erill trvinc his rnse in its columns.
He repeats his claim in the current issue that his indictment
on a charge of complicity in the theft and destruction of the
ballots is a political frame-up, an effort of the Medford gang
to railroad an innocent man to the penitentiary, etc, eto.
ONCE MORE WE ASK JUDGE FEHL TO NAME THE
TvrRAfRERS OF TIITS GANG. ONCE MORE "WE ASK HIM
TO PRESENT HIS EVIDENCE
As long as he insists upon trying his case in his own news
paper, why doesn't he put all his cards on the table, present his
evidence of such charges, so his readers may judge for them
selves!
That', onlv fair, isn't itf If
he must have facts to support that truth. LET'S HAVE THEM.
IF THE members of the grand jury who returned the indict
ment against Fehl, are guilty of "framing him"; if the state
and city police who gathered the evidence are also guilty of
framing him; if there is a Medford gang, or any other gang
"trying to railroad" him or any other "innocent man" to
state's nrison. then we would like to know it. We believe the
people of Jaokson county would
WHAT possible excuse can our county judge have for mak
inir mich criminal charees. and then refusing to present
a single word of evidence to support theml
He can't maintain the place to present such charges is before
a grand jury. For he has refused to present his charges before
a grand jury. He can't claim the place to establish his inno
cence is before a proper court for he is and has been, doing
everything in his power to delay and postpone his day in court.
He started this business of trying criminal cases in the
newspapers. He persists in trying his own case in his own
newspaper now.
But in the face of repeated demands, he refuses to present
one single item of evidence. He refuses to support by a single
hi. nhnrc-ps mrainst the law enforcement agencies of this
community; or to support by a
that he was NOT, directly or indirectly involved, in these ballot
thefts the most heinous crime, against law and order, the most
fatal blow against all good government, ever struck, in- the
oriminal or political history of Southern Oregon.
WE WONDER WHY f Does he want the people of this com
mnnir.v to believe that he has such evidence, but refuses
to present it t
rir. rlnp. ha want them to believe he has no such evidence,
never has had such evidence,
what he has done for 15 years and over, raising a smoKe screen
of falsehoods, libels and lies, behind which he hopes to hide and
somehow escape the just fate that awaits him!
One or the other conclusion must be true.
Come on, Mr. Fehl. You claim to be a great lover of justice,
a passionate advocate of the square deal.
You have STARTED to try your case in your own, news
paper. , Haven't you the courage to FINISH IT! Tell the
people of this oomrhunity, which conclusion is true I Give them
the facts. '
The Freedom of the Press
WHAT do you think of a county judge, in HIS OFFICIAL
CAPACITY, passing the hat for cash contributions,
Not to help the idle and suffering.
Not to assist some worthy COMMUNITY effort.
BUT FOR HIMSELF.
That is what County Judge Fehl is doing.
He wants money a dollar or more from each one who reads
his newspaper until he has a total of $1500. With this money
he claims he will purchase machinery and equipment,
So a free press oan be maintained in Jackson county.
.
A FREE PRESS I There are three daily newspapers in Jaok
son county. There are three or four weekly newspapers.
They are all as free as the air. They are all as independent as
so many hogs on ice.
But unless the oounty judgs's OWN newspaper, is showered
with dollars and dimes, he deolares, the free press in Jackson
county will be silenced I
WE SOMETIMES wonder how many more years the long
suffering people of Jackson dounty will allow this idiotio
farce to go on.
The free press INDEED I
Judge Fehl doesn't want a free press. He wants a blackmail
and a slander press. He wants a press that can oontinue to do
in the future what it has done for years in the past, villify,
traduce and malign others, advertise and falsely glorify
itself, do everything to disrupt and disorganize the commu
nity, and NOTHING TO BUILD IT UP.
,00
IUDGE FEHL has no more conception of what a "free press"
MEANS than he has of what "justice" and "the orderly
processes of a demaoratio form of government" mean. Using
these glib phrases as a smoke screen behind which he has hidden
his real purposes, he has done more to destroy the principles
they represent, than any other individual in Jackson county.
XMIE people of this community and this country DO believe
in a free press; they believe in maintaining a free press.
But they DON'T believe a free press means an unscrupulous
and licentious press j any more than they beliove, freedom means
license.
They believe a free press involves not only a privilege, but
a responsibility; not only an opportunity, but a sacred trust.
They believe that a newspaper has no more right to indulge
in falsehoods and slander, than an individual; that one should
be held to as strict an accountability as the other.
They beliove a newspaper PROPERLY conducted can be a
force for great good; they also believe, a newspaper IMPRO
PERLY conducted can be a force for great EVIL.
Just how far reaching and tragio this force can be, the
people of Jackson county through the past few years, have
recently had a most FORCEFUL example.
DUT Judge Fehl wants this sort of tiling to go on. So in his
OFFICIAL capacity as "your duly elected county judgo"
OF SUCH A FRAME-UP.
Judge Fehl is telling the truth,
like to know it.
scintilla of evidence his claim,
that he is merely doing now,
he calls on the people of this community, to shower him with
gold, make financial sacrifices themselves at this critical time
to finance his own private business, and all under the guise of
maintaining the FREEDOM OF THE PRESS.
Can it be that after the recent startling revelations, there
are enough dupes and easy marks in Jackson county to fall for
this sort of thing 1
If so then Judge Fehl can cash in, even more extensively.
He can sell his "sucker list" at a neat little figure, to various
Get-Rich-Quick Wallingfords who are eagerly awaiting their
chance. They would like nothing better than to get THEERS
while the "getting" is good I
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 If a stamped, self
addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink.
Giving to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered
here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions.
Address Dr. William Brady In care of The Mall Tribune.
WHAT AILMENT I S SELF EVIDENT
Another fallacy we reluct to relin
quish is that certain aliments aro so
self evident they require no physi
cian's dl&gnoeis.
This belief Is
very common
among even the
more Intelligent
portion of the
population In re
spect to a puta
tive malady
which In my
opinion doesn't
exist, namely, the
"common cold."
It Is a familiar
dodge of our fed
eral, state or pro
vincial and municipal health author
ities to Issue bulletins warning the
publlo or advising how to deal with
"the common cold," but to leave It
to the victim of the Illness to decide
for himself whether he has It. Never,
to my knowledge, haa any public
health authority anywhere In Amer
ica told the public how to know when
one If dealing with the "common
cold " or how to tell it isn't really .a
serious Illness which demands med
ical attention at once These prolific
publishers of pamphlets, bulletins,
and "news" about "the common cold"
would hardly know what to say about
It If anybody knew what "the com
mon cold la." You see, as long as
nobody knows whether or what It is
the boys can turn out stuff about it
by tee ream and say what they like,
and who can question It, as long as
taxpayers are willing to stand the
expenee?
On the next lower grade of Intel
ligence are a great many persons who
regard "piles" as a self evident con
dition which requires no proper diag
nosis. This fallacy haa led to an
enormous amount of needless suffer
ing and not a few premature deaths.
Besides, there Is a large factor of
waste Involved waste of money paid
out for nostrums or treatments which,
even if they were good for hemor
rhoids, are of no benefit for what
really alls the sufferer; and waste of
time on such bungling treatment.
No one can reaeonbly or safely as
sume a rectal trouble Is "piles" until
a physician has made a proper ex
amination and determined precisely
what the trouble la. Even if there
is obviously an external hemorrhoidal
mass, still tt is unsafe to assume that
Is the whole extent of the trouble.
But people of all degrees of Intelli
gence rather resent being told such
truth as this. One Individual took
alarm . at something I said In this
column about this very thing, rushed
off to a physician for examination,
learred that his trouble was a minor
Gc!d Hiil
OOLD HHjL, Mar. 31. (Spl.) Mrs.
MUllo Walker and daughtsr Sybil lett
Sunday for Portland to visit several
days-
Miss Dorothy Cook of Dunsmulr,
Cal.. Is visiting her parents, Mr. and
Mr. Tom Cook and family.
Mrs O. W. Martin returned Tues
day from Portland, where she visited
her mother. Mm. Hattle Beeman, for
two weeks,
Mr and Mrs. Ivan Kesterson and
children. Dorothy Elaine and Wilbur
Leon, of Klamath Falls, spent the
week-end with Mrs. Kesterson's par
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Puhl.
John Palmer of Evan, valley visited
hi. vncle, Ed Bolt, Tuesday.
Mrs. Tom Smith and children,
Harry and Harriet, spent Saturday
with Mrs. A. E. Kellogg In Medford.
3. A. element was a business caller
In Oranta Pass Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Oarman and
children, Deane, Lavonne and Audrey,
of Palo Alto, Cal., were here to at
tend the funeral of Mr.. German's
mother, Mrs. J. W. Clark.
Mrs. Madeleine Pendleton and eon
Billy were In Ashland Tuesday to at
tend the play. 'Tom Thumb's Wed
dlns." in Which her daughter Jessa
mine took part.
The Skeele-Oraham placer mine on
Sardine creek shut down Monday for
an Indefinite time.
Mrs Etta Carter. Mrs. Uly Carter.
Miss Maude Sutton, Mrs. Art Mullln
and daughter Roberta were among
Medford shopper. Saturday.
Mix. Ruth Johnson of Black-well
hill la In the Community hospital,
111 with double pneumonia.
Mr. and Mrs. Oergas and niece.
Poll June Hoffman, were the guests
of Mrs. Glrgus' sister, Mrs. John Cook,
over the week-end.
Mrs. O. P. Beck and dsughter Ellen
returned home to Grants Pssa Mon
day, after spending tho week-end with
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Drake.
Shorty MoReynolds of Rogue River
waa calling here Sunday.
- Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Hayes and
daughter Kathryn apent Sunday In
Treka.
M's. Olive Turner went to Ashland
Wednesday, where she will .tay for
some time.
Mvc. Evelyn Johnson and son re
turned to their home In Ashland Sun
day after a visit with her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cameron and fam
ily. Mrs. R. E. Blankenberg. Tony Ross
and H. D. Reed were among business
oaler. In Medford Tuesday.
one and not the very serious condi
tion he feared, and promptly took
step to punish me for the scare I
had given him. Another asks me
what my rakeoff Is, when he heeds
my suggestion, goes for examination,
finds the trouble la Just plain old
piles, as he had always believed, and
gets nicked $15 by the specialist.
Certainly I didn't advise him to go to
a specialist. If any. plain, ordinary
family doctor lsnt competent to make
such an examination and diagnosis,
then the doctor Isn't worth having
as your medical' adviser. On cold
chap did thank me for having
prompted him to seek an examina
tion, as his "piles" proved to be a
far more serious condition and by
this chance the man's condition was
diagnosed before irreparable damage
had been done.
Perhaps the fear of surgery keeps
some victims of rectal trouble from
consulting the physician for the
necessary examination and advice.
This Is unwarranted, for nowadays
progressive doctors in every commun
ity are treating hemorrhoids and
other rectal troubles with perfect
success by methods which neither de
tain from ordinary occupation nor
give the patient more discomfort than
the ailment itself does.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Belly Band.
i expect my baby In mid-summer.
I hate to think the baby will have
to wear a hot belly band all summer
. . (Mrs. I.
Answer No belly band or band
age or binder should be kept on the
babv after the navel dressing la no
longer required. Two weeks Is long
enough In any case. Send a dime and
a stamped envelope bearing your ad
dress, for a copy of the "Brady Baby
Book."
Oh, Any Quack Will Do.
Please Inform me of some doctor
that gives Colonic Irrigations. L, R.
Answer Most of the charlatans will
oblige, but I know of no reputable
physicians who practice that mis
chievous mistreatment. ,
Snake Bite,
X remember seeing something in
your column about an antidote for
snake bite. I expect to spend some
months In snake country and would
appreciate the Information. E. C. S.
Answer carry In your emergency
kit a dose of anti-venom. Anyone
can administer the Injection In an
emergency by following the direc
tions on the package. Any drug
gist can supply or procure the anti
venom. Some druggists loan It out
for a few days at a small fee, If the
outfit la returned unopened.
(Copyright. John P. Dllle Co.)
CLOSED 10 NETS
SACRAMENTO, Cal.. March 31
(AP) The fish and game commission
of the California legislature decided
last night the Klamath river should
be closed to commercial fishing and
made a stream exclusively for sports
men. The committee reported favorably
on a bill prohibiting commercial fish
ing in tihe stream and the sale of fish
caught In the Klamath or Smith riv
ers; and another bill extending sport
ing privileges on the Klamath.
The sportsmen's bill incraeses the
bag limit on salmon from two to five
a day between May 29 and September
fi, and prohibits use of nets. Both
billst were sponsored by Assembly
man Hubert Scudder of Sebastopol.
TO BE SURE!
MADR0NA
CHICK MASH
CONTAINS
NOPCO XX
. a.
SAISE BETTER CHICKS AND
Save Money On
Your Chick Mash
Use MADRONA Mash
Monarch Seed & Feed Co.
Cor. 6th and Bartlett. Phone 260
FIRST-NEGOTIATE
LATER -JJ.T0L0
(Continued from Page One)
nlze them first and negotiate after
ward."
Mr. Roosevelt pondered.
The proposal made In the senate
by King of Utah for an investigation
of Russia was NOT inspired Dy me
administration. The Idea la supposed
to have come originally from Col.
Easby-Smlth. He la a local attorney.
The investigation will not be author
ized. Mr. Roosevelt Is expected to
act before that question comes up.
The man who will get great credit
for hastening Russian recognition
here is Boris Sllkorsky, head of the
soviet Information service. He never
gets bis name In the newspapers, but
for years he has been Influential in
stamping out anti-Red propaganda
here. He haa worked closely In an
unofficial way with government of
ficials. The White House misses nothing In
the newspapers. They grew appre
hensive at the dearth of news from
Russia recently. They noted, for In
stance, that waiter Duranty's atorles
in the New York Times were short
and far between. They suspected
censorship.
That angle was put under investi
gation by those who have the power
to grant recognition. The Russians
whispered that their troubles with
the British probably were the cause.
The wet organizations did not say
anything publicly but they were thor
oughly displeased at the fact that
Tammany fostered all the recent wet
legislation. They went to the boys Jn
the front office and asked that here
after someone else be designated to
handle wet legislation In the house.
The national beer bill was In charge
of Tammany Leader Cullen. The local
Washington beer bill was led by Tam
many Lieutenant Black. In between
times Tammany Lieutenant O'Connor
made beer speeches for the movies.
It was entirely too much Tammany.
The drys were thoroughly disor
ganized inside and out during the
beer bill discussions. No dry showed
any aggression outside of Congress
man Blanton. Senator Borah did a
little pecking here and there, but
did not throw the full force of his
bulk into the fray.
One explanation Is that everyone
knew It was -a losing fight for the
dry side. Another Is that the local
dry organizations are not getting
along amicably. They probably will
not work together In pushing con
stitutionality of the bills before the
supreme court.
Those newspapers which published
beer advertisements ahead of time did
not take a chance. They had private
assurances from the attorney general
that If would be all right before they
went ahead. They got excited when
some underling" threatened prosecu
tion, but the attorney general came
through with a public statement for
them.
The leading opposition figure to
the administration arising In con
gress is Senator Borah of Idaho. He
has consistently resisted the Roose
velt program and If the wind ever
changes It will catch his sails. Recog
nizing Borah's Influence Mr. Roose
velt has called bun to the White
House twice for consultations.
Some of the administration enthu
siasts have had to be restrained in
their speeches from selling the presi
dent too strongly to the country. The
word has been passed down the line
to hold the boys In check. They do
not want to repeat the experience of
Mr. Hoover, who was over-sold as a
miracle man during the 1928 cam
paign. In politics you can make your alibis
as you go along.
Take the case of one wise congress
man who did not move out of his
chair between the last session of con
gress and this one. He did not want
to take money for mileage when he
did not travel a foot. Recently the
disbursing office sent him a check
covering his mileage allowance for
the new session at 20 cents a mile.
His secretary came to him with the
check and asked what should be done.
The congressman covered his eyes
with his hands and waved the secre
tary away, saying: "Don't let me
see It. Qo ahead and deposit It like
all other checks that come In here,
but never let me lay my eyes on It."
Communications
Wars. Bight and Wrong
To the Editor:
I shall be grateful If you will pub
lish the enclosed as "contributed. or
as you please, not mentioning me, of
course.
There are wars and wars, and the
war you are waging against Fehl ism
and Banks Ism Is an honorable war.
and Jackson county la greatly In
debted to you. T. W.
Phoenix, March 30.
The Illusion of War
By Richard L Gallienore
War
I abhor.
And yet how sweet
The sound along the marching street
Of drum and fife, and, I forget
Wet eyes of widows, and forget
Broken old mothers, and the whole
Dark butchery without a soul.
Without a soul save this bright
drink
Of heady music, sweet as hell;
And even my peace-abiding feet
Go marohing with the marching
street.
For yonder goes the fife,
And what care I for human life I
The tears fill my astonished eyes
And my full heart is like to break.
And yet tls all embannered lies,
A dream those little durmmers make.
Oh, It Is wickedness to clothe
Yon hideous grinning thing
that
stalks
Hidden In music, like a queen
That In a garden of glory walks .
T1U good men love the thing they
loathe.
Art, tfrou has many Infamies,
But not an Infamy like this.
O snap the fife and still the drum
And show the monster as she Is.
K(7ROK " a specific remedy or
treatment of poison oak. Satisfac
tion guaranteed. Oiace Laboratories,
205 Liberty Bldg.
NOPCO USED IN
Samson's Special Mash
. .
Samson's
Laying Mash
NET WEIGHT 100 LBS.
CONTAINS:
Nop co-xx Cod Liver Oil, Corn Meal,
Ground Wheat, Ground Oats, Ground
Barley, Millrun, Soya Bean Meal.
Meat Scrap,- Fish Meal, Dried Milk,
Ground Bone, Poultry Alfalfa, Salt.
Minerals.
ANALYSIS:
Mln. 20 per cent Crude Protein.
Mln. 4 per cent Crude Fat.
Max. fi per cent Crude Fiber.
Max. 8 per cent Crude Ash,
F. E. Samson Co.
Medford, Oregon
F. E. SAMSON CO.
229 N. Riverside. Phone 833
FREE FEED
WINNERS
In this area ... in the NOPCO XX Ranch Test
Free Peed Cerifleates have been milled to these poultrymem
Mrs. R. E. Carley, Rt. 2, .Medford; Llzzlt Wolgamott, Talent; A. E. Wal
ker, Talent; B. j. palmer, Rt. 2, Medford; E. C. Lockwood, Phoenix; Mrs,
N. J. Garrett, Rt. 4, Medford; C. II. Sclirltt, Rt. 1. Medford.
The Free Feed will be supplied by these dealers.
T. E. Samson, Medford; Morton Milling Co., Medford; Ashland Mills, Ash- ,
land; Mutual Mill A Seed Co., Medford; Monarch Seed & Feed Co.. Med- T
ford. 1
NOPCO congratulates these winners
Each of the hundreds of poultry
men who tested NOPCO XX on bis
own ranch, in his own way, Includ
ed it in either branded mashes
special formula ranch mixed
mashes or grains.
And here's why poultrymen own
ing nearly three million hens en
tered in the Western States NOP
CO XX Ranch Feeding Test tell us
thatjioultrymen should feedNOPCO
XX DAILY the year round
These Ranch Proved benefits
ean be yours AT NO INCREASE
IN FEED COST If you feed one
of the seven hundred branded
poultry mashes sold on the Pa.
elflo Coast, containing NOPCO
XX as a standard ingredient
WITHOUT EXTRA COST to
poultrymen
Remember when ordering mash
My"With NOPCO XX." The
NOPCO Red-Top tag on every
sack assures genuine NOPCO
XX, properly mixed. Also look
for the NOPCO XX trade mark
on the new one-gallon "3-Ton"
sealed ean for ranch mixing.
Letters from poultrymen revealed the Interesting fact that the-results from
feeding NOPCO XX were similar in all sections of the eleven Western
States, This means that widely varying factors such as altitude, climate,
feed and management did not disturb the fact that
NOPCO XX Improves any feed and even makes a good feed better
l,-"l,"l,,,ll,,,'Ml
Flight 'o Time
(Medford and Jackson County
History trom the Files or Trie
Mall Tribune ol 20 and 10 tear.
A(o
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
March 31, X930
(It waa Friday)
' LocjU Legion and Elks protest Im
portation of alien labor tor orchard
work in valley.
Gypsies traveling In 20 high-powered
autos pass through city.
Gold Kill renames Its present crop
of teachers.
Steelhead fishing reported excel
lent. P. C. Blgham catches a Jack
salmon weighing 6 pounds, 4 ounces.
Bogus River ends Its clean-up day
with a big feed.
Rural rush to pay taxes noted Jn
the Eden preclucl.
Thomas Pankey of Central Point J.
raising Black Minorca, on wholesale I
basis.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
(It was Sunday)
A cousin from North Dakota visit.
Attorney O. O. Boggs.
The Tuesday Afternoon and Friday
Evening Bridge club postpones com
ing week session.
Local amateur talent and the Bur
gess grothers to give benefit perform-,
ance at the Star theater for Dayton,
Ohio, flood sufferers.
"Good Citizens' League" Is formed
and will hold first meeting next Frl-
day.
Mall Tribune comes out editori
ally for peace In city affairs and
closes with the observation: "Pig
headedness has no place in civic af
fairs." 1. Of group results submitted cover
ing MORTALITY 73.7 (com
bined average) stated NOPCO XX
LOWERED MORTALITY and
IMPROVED HEALTH aad VITAL
ITY of laying hens, pullets and
chicks.
2. MOLTING PERIOD BETTER
MENT such as (1) shorter period,
(2) better feathering; (3) higher
production maintained during molt
showed the surprising result o!
(t) 48.1.
(t) NOTE: The 48.1 Is the re
sult of the California NOPCO
XX Ranch Feeding Tost,
. which ran through the en
tire molting period.
3. Of the poultrymen who submitted
NOPCO XX Ranch Feeding Test
results on EGO QUALITY and
EGO PRODUCTION, 71.2 stated
that dally feeding of NOPCO XX
Increased egg production.
90.5 stated NOPCO XX Improved
both EGG SHELL STRENGTH
and QUALITY and. in addition.
Improved the quality of the egg
Itself.
The stated Improvements In egg
shell and egg quality were smooth
er, stronger shells fewer checks,
cracked and soft-shelled eggs
and better egg grades, because ot
more large No. 1 eggs with firmer
whites and fewer blood spots.
Dance Music
AND HOW I SAT. NITE
Yowsuh! Yowsuh!
Howard Lewis and Ills 9 Musical Rarablfn
AL STEWART, Muter of Ccrrmonlrs
40c and 10c 9 till 2. Come Early
JACKSONVILLE