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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1933)
PXGE FOUB! MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, 'APRIL 13, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "ETtryom m Hutnirn urnae ftiUl tha Mali Trlkum'1 Dtllj Exetpt Siturdtf pubiUhad br urnrnnn printiK(1 CO. 9S.1M9 N. Fir 8L Vhmt T5 ROBERT W. RUHL, Editor An lndepeodnt Newpapar Entered u Moond eliu matter it Medford, Orton, under Art of Hircn SUBSCRIPTION RATEa S Mll In Adrtnca 4B An Daily, om jtu ';; , Dailr, iU month! Dailj, ent month ? By Carrier, in Adrne Midford, Aihlind, JartotwDlfl. Central Point, Thofnil, Talent, Oold Hill and on Hiihuayi. Pally, one year ' lullr, iU monthi 8.36 Dally, om month -60 i All tirmi, eaah In ad. ante. Official paper of tba City of Mfdford. Official paper of Jackion County. , MEMBER OF TUB ARHOCIATKn PRESS neeeirtr Fiill Uajed Wire Renlce The Aswclatfd Vrtu U eiflwheljr ent it ltd to tha mt for publication of all newt diipatchti credited to It or otherUt credited In thli papar and alio to the local newt published herein. All rllMi ror publicalloB of ipeclil dispalehel fcerefo are alio raiened. MEMBER OF UNITED PREAS MEMBER OP AU1MT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Repretentattree H. C. MO(J ESSEN COMPANY Officea In New Tort. Chleaio, Detroit. Saa Franelieo. u Aoceiea, bmiih, mmiw. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Pen?, Prosperity, on tba way back, haa reached the point, where a man with a ihovel can dig a noie In the atreet. without 71 advisors watching him. ' "It lan't so much that I don't like to catch," Sullivan explained, "but I'm afraid catching will ruin my fln gera. I Intend to practice law and I need my flngera." (Press Dispatch) Something atralght to point at the Jury and a acared witness. 1033 strawberries are on tha mar ket. A box of the same can be pur chased for considerable less than the down-payment on a fl-acre tract. The pregon Stat fair aleo preaent an "analogical paradox" whatever that la. It la proper for a taxpayer to attend the state fair, and bet and lose hla money on a atud-horae race, but not to drink a glase of beer. The even tenor of life In thla fair and fertile valley wsa undisturbed ye terday by anybody miraculously aud heroically catching a fish. A June-groom of two years ago baa t discolored eye. For soma time he has been referring to hla belter 's aa "my woman." It la thought that aomethlng hit him In tha eye. "SALVATION ARMY COOKING STUDENTS." (Headline Del Norte Triplicate) Maybe some of them Deed It. i The recent rain waa a blessing to the backyard gardens, and will en able the weeda to beat the radishes to the open air. , The sob-sister portion of Paclflo Coast press Is asking what will be accomplished by the sovereign state ef Arlrona hanging Winnie Ruth Judd In the early morn of Friday, April 21, and also feeling sorry for her mother. Everybody feels sorry for Winnie Ruth Judd's grey-haired mother; they also feel sorry for the grey-haired mothers of her two victims, slain In a Jealoua fury. The hanging will accomplish nothing. People who cannot control their tempera will continue to alay, -and have their tempera controlled by legal nooses, while society anarla Its approval. It would be nice If hang ing waa abolished. It would be nicer If murders were also. . "LOST $20 bill on Elm atreet. See Beard." (Yreka Journal) What I ha bragging about his wealth, or hla whiskers? O. Yens Tengwald haa a new dog, which put up a great atruggle before being exhausted by Mr, Tengwald and his trio of young ladeli. A good ail) dog haa tha enduranoe of a 95-year-old heavyweight wrestler. The Teng wald dog has not yet had hla day, but haa had two nlghta of good howl ing. The dog U msn'a truest friend, but the womenfolks do not think much of a dog. as a rule, aa they are a natural hnbltat for the pernicious and elusive flea. Ends of It are seized by the danc ing glrle and unwound, so Miss Gray la revealed In about a nickel's worth of tights and six beads. (Eldorado (Kan.) Times) There you go, mak ing light of the "Interpretative dance." ... Quite a few of the outstanding Democrats are growing weary of atandlng out any longer for a poat ma&tershlp, under a fit-throwing De mocracy. t One of the beer men reports that the public la losing Interest In the amber fluid, as It is culled, aa he was only asked 433.507 times yester day, when the new supply would be available for swigging. , And, thla la Thursday tha 18th. TIIR INCURABLE. Our neighbor Newton Creech In formal us that at the last term of the Wolf circuit Court he secured his divorce and la not satisfied with that but la now a candidate for Matrimony again and la looking for tome middle aged woman with dark black eyes and really good looking Who wishes to cross the great sea of matrimony with him he seems to be alow in finding her to our surprise we would have thought that Newt would hava had one already picked, by the time he secured hla divorce, but if ha la aa long finding a helpmate aa he has been tn securing hla divorce from tha woman he left yeara ago, he will be ao gray that he will be out of luck, proper. (Wolfs (Ky.) Journal.) G. Bernard Shaw G BERNARD SHAW is, and always haa been, a "shilling shocker." He refuses, and always has refused, to say anything in either a direst or a simple way. He doesn 't use words to inform, or to persuade, but to startle and amuse. Great a master of prose as he is, he is a greater poseur; amazing as his gift of expression, his virtuosity as a verbal prestigitator, hag exceeded it. As a result Mr. Shaw has not been the foroe for good that he should have been, and had he desired, could have been. He has always been a great Liberal, genuinely devoted to human betterment he has always been at heart a courageous crusader for the truth, and might have accomplished a great deal in that direction in economic, industrial and social betterment. But evangelism bored him. Reforms bored him. Everything bored him but the shocked laughter and applause of the dis criminating world. So he played up to that world, made millions out of it, and now in his declining years, continues in his chosen role as a sort of cosmic clown, the 20th century's great "farceur". s . . . A T HEART, he' has been interested in the masses, but the masses have not heard him. He has been interested in making this a better world, but in any REAL sense, the world has passed him by. He has preferred to be clever, brilliant, paradoxical a sort of gigantic set of literary fireworks to make the people "Oh!" and "Ah!" to being anything else. And in that direction he has been a supreme success. But in every other direction he has been a failure. "A wit's a feather, a chief's a rod, an honest man is the noblest work of God." G. B. S; with all his brilliance, his cleverness, his astounding verbal virtuosity has always been and still is a "FEATHER". Essentially, not as an individual not as Mr. Shaw the man, but as Mr. Shaw the ARTIST G. B. S. has not bedn honest, he has not been interested in what he said, but the way he said it. That's why the people laugh at him, marvel at him, and then forget him, and why in his works will be forgotten. A Paradox Himself 11f R. SHAW in his New York speech paid his tribute to Presi " dent Roosevelt and Wm. Randolph Hearst, because they are doing their best to do away with the United States consti tution that great political humbug. No one takes such a statement seriously. He also took a lusty swipe at Hollywood, the "most immoral place in the world", not because the men drink and play around but because they punch people they don't like in the nose, take the law in their own hands in short are anarchists. No one takes THAT seriously. YET undoubtedly G. B. S. was perfectly serious in both state mfrntji whnn hn madn thorn The truth is Shaw doesn't like ieal anarchist, so he disapproves of the constitution and wel comes attacks on it. The more President Roosevelt puts himself above the constitution and makes himself a dictator the better G. B. S. likes it. For the same renson he likes a pirate like Hearst, and a racketeer like Stalin. On the other hand, while he TALKS like a wild man Goorge B. ISN'T. He is a vegetarian and a pacifist. While he has said many shocking things as an author and dramatist, he has done few shocking things as a man. In fact at heart he is a Puritan, if not a prude. So he honestly detests bloodshed even if it is nothing more than a nose bleed, and abhors violence as a monkey abhors water. Which is only another way of saying George Bernard Shaw, master of paradox, is a paradox himself. He is one thing on paper, he is another thing inside his red flannel underwear. In fact if ono REALLY wants to understand the baffling G, B. S., they have only to read Messrs. Jung and Freud. He would have made a typical case for their clinical observation. Communications "nit of Philosophy" Drivel. T the Editor: I have Just been reading In tha columns of the Mall Tribune an es say called "A Bit of Philosophy." In view of conditions as they hava existed In Jackson oounty for several montha past, and which condltlona have finally led to tha cold blooded murder of one of our beat cltlrena, such drivel seems w.holly out of place. Let us quota a paragraph from thla schoolgirl essay: The Ideal of tomorrow wlU Host Ilka a mlrags before our eyes but unlike a mirage, It will not mock, but will guide us aver onward to yet higher goals. So far this "ideal of tomorrow" has failed to guide tha writer of thla es say on to "higher goals." If the writer of all this whang-doo dle would coma down to earth and learn to distinguish between rlfit and wrong, it would certainly be a step tn the right direction. It seems that a copy of "A Bit of Philosophy" has been given Banka and hla wife. I very much doubt If the "flowery blta of fancy" contained In thla assay would appeal to anyone who would deliberately and In cold blood murder an Innocent man. CITIZEN. (Name on tile.) To Prevent Ballot Thefts To thf Editor: Jackson oounty should be suffi ciently alck and tired of election frauds, ballot stealing, contests and ahootlngs to give serious considera tion to taking advantage of the atate law which allows the use of voting maohinea. Seattle, Tacoma, San Fran cisco and thousands of other cities and towns In the United Statea have used voting machines, for over twen ty yeara without one alngls finger of suspicion being pointed toward tha ballot box. They are free from election frauds, incriminations, contests and shootings. Those cities get Immediate returns e well as save the taxpayera thousands of dollars annually by the another generation both he and laws, is himself a philosoph- use of voting machines. Why not Medford and Jackson county? . Portland has some voting maohlnes in storage which the county authori ties might obtain for use in our elec tions in this oounty. Portland haa not used theae machines because they have ftrat, second and third choice voting there. They will fill every re quirement of the voters of this coun ty and can be purchased ao as to pay for themselves out of their savlnga. The cltltena of Pennsylvania Insist ed and by their vote Installed voting machines after their scandals. It Is time for the ctttaens of Jackson county to act, Install voting ma chines and forever eliminate eleo tlon contests and disgrace . which this community has gone through during the last few yeara. NAME ON FILE. Medrord, Ore. April 13, '33. t Jenkins Comment (Continued from Pagt Out) lowed to buy a cheaply aa potutble, whether American labor hu any em ployment or not. Another argument haa been made that we shouldn't close our market to the poor luro pcan. who NESD them. Meanwhile unemployment goes on lncreaalnc. becauae American facto rlea cant prorlde Jobe for American workers unlaws they can aell what they make. IP all tb La la true and It sounds exceedingly plaualble aa Mr. Gar rett tella 'lt we aurely hare coming to ue all the ridicule that O. B. Shaw, or anybody eLse, oan pile on us. Two-tone, spring's official style In young men's Brownbtlt ahoes. priced 13.00 to 95.00. Buster Brown Shoe Store, 82 South Central Are. Real estate or inaranoa--lseaTt It to Jones. Phone T98. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease, diagnosis or treatments will be amwered by Dr. Brady If a stamped, tell addressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered here. No reply ran be made to queries not conforming to instructions, address Dr. William Brady In care of The Mai! Tribune. THE BEST WAV TO BREATHE. In a talk about good posture I said "Never try to throw out your chest oc pull in your . . . " you fill In the a missing word, 'I but be careful. It must be the right word, the word X used, not a o m e word you think would express the idea well enough. Anterior or front wall of the great body cavity la a bit too awkward. Abdomen Is a silly euphemism and misleading. Stomach Is a barbarous term for It. Belly la the only Engl tan word that signifies precisely what we ;are talk ing about. The essential meaning of the term belly la bellows. Every one should learn to use the bellows in breathing.- I call It Belly Breathing because that la what It Is. A dozen belly breaths In the natural manner once or twice a day will bring a lot of relief to a lot of troubles that peo ple without much knowledge of physi ology that is to say pretty nearly all laymen seldom associate with breathing. A gentleman who gives, or perhaps sells, service to organizations, clubs, business, corporations, asserts that success Is a matter of pushing out your third vest button. For Instance, If you push out your third vest but ton your sales will surely Increase. If you let It sag you're bound to be a failure. If you go Into conference with an executive Just keep your third vest button pushed out as far as you can and you'll dominate your man and gain your objective. Of course, If by 111 luck he, too, knows the se cret of success well, so be It, one or the other of you Is bound to win or bust. Within limitations I think the gen- j tleman Is right In a way. tho he as- I aures me I am wrong. Oh, yes, his i vast experience In teaching the great ; secrets of success to greet business corporations such as (he names some great Insurance companies and the like) has proved that the old army game Is right you must draw your belly In and up when you stand erect. That Is reminiscent of the comical attitude soldiers In the United States army and other armies were required to assume at attention. But even the United States army authorities know better now. KMED Broadcast Schedule Friday - A. M 8:00 Breakfast News by Mall Trib une. 8:05 Musical Clock. . 8:16 A Peerless Parade. 8:30 Shopping Oulde. 0:00 Friendship Circle. 9:30 Today. 9:45 Color Magic. 10:00 U. 8. Weather Forecast. 10:00 Fashion Parade. 10:10 Home Makers' Bureau. 10:30 Morning Comments. 10:45 Seml-classlo Review. 11:00 Radio School of Cookery. 11:18 Quartets Parade. 11:30 Morning Melody. 11:45 Song and Comedy. 12:00 Manhattan Low-down. P. M 12:15 Popularity. 12:30 News Flashes by Mall Tribune. 12:30 Squire Wlgglesby. 12:45 Radio Rendesvous. 1:00 Happiness Hour. 1:15 Varieties. 1 :30 Grants Pass Hour. 2:00 Dance Matinee. ' 2:30 Hollywood Snapshots. 3:00 Songs for Everyday. 3:30 KMED Program Review. 3:35 Music from Yesteryear. 3:45 Siesta Hour. 4:00 Across the Seas to Hawaii. 4:30 Masterworks. 5:00 Popular Parade. AKRON SURVIVORS REACH HAVEN Associated Press tsl, photo Isksn tt ths Brooklyn, N. Y, navy yard with three survivors of ths dirigible Akron's ass crssh off ths New Jersey shore being taken ashore. Richard Deal, enlisted man. Is being carried down ths gangplank from ths U.S.S. Tucker. In ths rear can be seen M. E. Erwln (2) and Lt. Comdr. K V. Wiley, (1) second In command of the lll.fsted dirigible. A fourth member of ths raw, Robert Cooeland, died after being sicked uo from ths sta. Study the breathing ef an animal after hard exertion. Study the breath ing of sn athlete. Study the breath ing of a sleeping person or one under anesthesia. Study, If you ever have the opportunity, the breathing of a savage. You will find that bellows breathing Belly Breathing la the most efficient way. Never try to push your belly oift. On the other hand never try to keep It drawn In or up. Just use It to breathe with. Especially If you find It difficult to get to sleep nights, or suffer with cold feet, or have high blood pressure, or need massage of your liver and bile apparatus, or If you are too tense and pent Hip and unable to relax, or If you suffer with bronchial asthma, emphysema or bronchiectasis. Many who practice It say It brings relief from "gas" and "Indigestion." Anyway. I know It does no harm. If you would like to practice Belly Breathing send a stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for In structions. . ' QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Smoking Mothers. My friend, an expectant mother, smokes three or four clgarets a day. I try to tell her that It will affect the ohlld, but she says she gets so nervous If she can't have her smokes ... I think she has not told her doc tor she smokes. What effect will It have on the baby? Mrs. I. M. h. Answer Probably no serious effect, tho the mother's neurotic weakness or want of self -discipline will be a contribution to the make-up of the child. She Is cheating herself by concealing such things from her phy sician's knowledge. Tonsil Diathermy. Are you willing to explain just the method used In the diathermy extir pation of Infected tonsils, Mrs. D. L. A. - Answer The treatment consists of a serels of perhaps half a dozen ap plications of a high frequency current. which causes electro-coagulation or desiccation of a portion of the tonsil tissue, and later this shriveled portion comes away by minute . particles. Treatments are as painless as ordi nary dental treatments are. Blood less. Safe. No Interruption of usual occupation. No hospitalization. No Interference with regular meals. It Is the modern way and the sensible way to have Infected tonsils removed,. (Copyright, John P. Dllle Co.) 6:45 Popular Parade. 6:00 Medford Theater Guide. 6:05 Sllvertown Sidelights. 6 :20 Interlude. 6 :30 Reveries. 7:00 Modern lstlcs. 7:30 Eventide. 8:00 U. S. Frost Forecast. Phoenix PHOENIX, April 11. (Spl.) Phoe nix Grange met Tuesday with a large attendance. The lecture hour con sisted of a short play and songs by the North Phoenix school berore the Grange meeting. Drill team put on some work which everyone enjoyed. A committee. Mi, and Mrs. Ralph Wilcox, Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Mauat and T. V. Williams, served refreshments fn the Grange dining room. Pep songst were led by Vaughn Quacken buah, with everyone participating. A good time was enjoyed by - alt. . Rev. R. S. Peterson and wife ac companied Rev. Mltchelmore and wife of Ashland to Central Point Tuesday for a special presbytery. April 12 a large group of ladles met to clean the church for the special Easter services. The ladles met early In the morning with each woman bringing a covered dlVi for the noon meal. Mrs. George Drake and Elva Caster enjoyed a hike to the Black Bear coal mine Tuesday afternoon. They reported the lambstongue In full bloom. : 'X L TO Tomorrow morning. Medford high schoos band will Journey to Eu gene with Class A schools In the state annual high school band con test. The local group will Journey north In private ears, and will be ac companied by Director F. Wilson Walt" and Principal and Mrs. O. G. Smith Medford high school's band will play Saturday evening at MaoArtbur court, according to arrangements of the program. Members of the band are Russell Brown, Tommy Green, Mary Mathes, Tom Harvey, Bob Ottoman, John Gll llng.', Jim Horner, Irene Hoffman. Nell Curry. Wlldon Colbaugh. Bob Young Lewis Campbell, Jack Wood. Leo Cook, Cyril Sander, Noel Benson, Herbert NelLson, Alfred Randalls. George Oliver, Gordon Benson. Mar garet Warner, Thelma Fowler. Ted Sen 9 17 pete WInne. Bob Sherewood. Dwlijht Short, Rlolmrd Baize, Paul Hugies, BUI Cummings and Roger Westerfleld. TO Malta Commandry. Nok 4, Knights Templar, will observe Easter in this city Sunday afternoon, with a pro gram opening at one o'clock, It was announced today by Harvey J. Field, eminent commonder end W. H. Day, recorder. , Assemblage to obtain dinner tick ets, will be held at the Masonic tem ple at one o'clock, and at 1 :30, a tur key dinner is to be served at the Ho tel Medford. The traditional templar service is scheduled for three o'clock at the Masonic temple, conducted by officers and the drill team. Vocal so los will be given by Elsie Carlton Strang, with the address by Rev. W. J. Howell, pastor of the First Presrfby teiian church here. The notices being sent to the mem bers state that "equipment Implies regulation uniform, minus baldric and sword. Resident Sir Knights and visiting fraters are courteously invit ed tc attend, accompanied by their ladles ' The committee in charge of arrangements is E. L. Lenox, R. W. Lee. G. B. Alden, Medford; J. H. Hardy, Ashland; Earl New-bry, Talent. f Antelope ANTELOPE, April 13. (Spl.) An telope Literary club will meet April 14 at 8 o'clock. After the business meeting a short program will be given. Mrs. Helen Culbertson haa as her guest this week her mother, Mrs. Pierce, of Medford. Mrs. Culbertson had a very painful accident this past week. In opening her car door it came open with such force that it hit ,her in the side, breaking a rib. Mrs. T. T. Hatlett, Mrs. B. K. Rlggs and Mrs. Bob Baize were In Medford April 5 shopping. They also called on Mrs. Rlggs' mother, Mrs. S. W. Baize. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Blgham and daughters, Mr, and Mrs. T. A. Askew and grandson and Mr. and Mrs. El bert Blgham and children attended the program at Sams Valley April 7. A light snow fell In the Antelope district Aplrl 6. Some work is being done at the Antelope school house thla week. The playground Is being leveled. Jack Woods will look after ditches and water this spring and summer for the Eagle Point Irrigation district. DAUGHTERS OF VETERANS MEETING FRIDAY NIGHT Daughters of Union Veterans will meet at the Armory Friday evening at 8 o'clock. 4 Would Be Delegates. SALEM, April 13. (AP) Harry C. Goble and Glenn Wells, both of Port land, today filed their candidacies as delegates to the state constitutional convention to vote upon the repeal of the 18th amendment. Both stated they favored repeal. AFTER TRAGEDY " j J1 Growling at Luck Means Bad Score I My LUCK jfV i njt oat last "4J5Lj y 1 ft 45 'iaBftn By JOHNNY FARRELL (As Told to Artie McGovern) "Why do I get an 80 one day, and the very next a 96?" This kind of question Is easy to answer. Bad putting -alone may .cost 18 strokes In a round. Moreover, if you fre about It, you are sure to bungle your next tee shot after a 3-putt green and It's here that Old Kid Temperament cornea In . Once played forget the last hole. Golf evens up. Every golfer has sliced a tee shot Into the woods, only to have the ball bounce off a tree back onto the fairway. Or again, a perfect drive right down the middle fairway may settle In a bad divot hole. These trials and tribulations go to make up the game. If we played with approximately the same score for every round, we would soon tire of It. Variety and diversification constitute golf's great fascination, 4 Meteorological Report April 13, 1933. Forecasts. Medford and vicinity: Fair, with slowly rising temperature tonight. Friday, cloudy. Not much change in temperature. Oregon: Fair, with slowly rising temperature tonight. Friday, cloudy. Showers and cooler, northwest por tion. Local Data, Lowest temperature this morning. 34 degrees. Temperature a year ago today: Highest, 69; lowest, 39. Total precipitation since Septem ber 1, 1032, 12.71 Inches. Relative humidity at S p. m. yester day, 33 per cent; 6 a. m. today, 91 per cent. Sunset today, 6:49 p. m. Tomorrow: Sunrise, 5:32 a. m. Sun set, 6:51 p. m. Observations Taken at A A. M., - Meridian Time mint ' O'tj Ef S a s Boston Cheyenne . Chicago Eureka 32 194 Snow 14 .06 Snow .... 48 54 42 . 32 18 Cloudy Clear Clear Cloudy Clear Cloudy Clear Helena 32 Los Angeles 76 Medford 68 62 New Orleans New York .. Omaha .... 68 '46 34 1.1 68 34 ' Cloudy Clear Clear Clear Clear 14 Clear Clear Clear Clear Clear Phoenix ; 82 S3 Portland 58 42 Reno 58 38 Roseburg WM.. 62 40 Salt Lake 46 30 San Francisco 70 66 Seattle 56 44 Spokane 54 30 Walla Walla . 56 38 Washington, D.C. 56 36 .20 Clear 1 Don't extend credit to Mr. New Customer until you find out from the Southern Oregon Credit Bureau how he paid the other fellows. Two Big Bargain Days FRIDAY-SATURDAY Easter Specials ' HATS Hundreds of hats priced at less than one-half their talus. 25c 49c 79c 95c up to $4.95 DRESSES Silks. Knits, Tollrs. etc. at great money-saving values. $1 $1.95 $2.95 $3.95 and $4.95 COATS and SUITS Extraordinary Special $3.95 $8.95 $10.95 Sweaters and Blouses 59 to $2-95 Skirts, a regular $2.95 value. Special .'...$1.95 Silk Hose 49 and 79 Shoes, white of course for Easter $1.95 2.95 $3.95 The Band Box & Shoe Box 223 East 6th St. 'The atore That Flight 'o Time (Medrord and Jackson Count; History from the Piles of The Mall Tribune of to snd 10 Years Ago.) TEN YEARS Alio TODAY April 13, 1923. (It waa Friday) Sunday to mark opening of trout fishing season, and great la the excite ment. Police Instructed to move tourists, who have taken up a permanent resi dence at the city auto park. nrh Alfnrd will alnar tha latest dance hlta at the fair pavilion dance. Steady growth In poultry Industry In Eden precinct. Scores will climb to top of Table Rock Sunday, If weather permtte. Shortage of labor, both skilled and unskilled. Baseball season to open. A local bad boy la sent to the pen. He admitted many burglaries, and broke eight paroles. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April 13, 1913. (It waa Sunday) Chicago smart set members caught In raid on a dance hall. Plot to dynamite Arrant Dam re vealed and foiled. 'The Olrl In the Red Klmona." Ka lem drama at the Star; "Love Falls to Conquer the Counterfeiter" at the It. Grand lodge of the Odd Follows and General Assembly of the Re bekahs to be held here next week. City police warn "fathera and mothers to keep children at home nights," as "there has been a large amount of running around late by the same." Debating Team Going To Eugene M?dford high school's debate telm, Frances Ferry and Dolph Janes, will debate the Springfield school team Saturday afternoon in Eugene at two o'clock, for the inter-dlstrict cham pionship, it was announced today. The local students will be accompan ied t4 Eugene by their coach, Ralph R. Bailey. Stock Exchange Holiday Friday NEW YORK, April 13. (AP) Gov ernors of the New York stock ex change have voted to close the ex change April 14, Good Friday. Not Just Another PillToDeadenPaan But a wonderful modem medi cine which acts upon the conditions which CAUSE the pain. Take them regularly and you should suffer less and less each month. PERSISTENT USE BRINGS PERMANENT RE LIEF. Sold at all good drug stores. Small size 50 i. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S TABLETS FOR RELIEF AND PREVENTION OF PERIODIC PAINS SPECIAL Suits Cleaned rya and Pressed I OC Plain Dresses 75 up Coats 75 up Free Delivery Unique Cleaners 20 8. Central. Tel. 06 save. Von Mnnev" Phone 989