PAGE TWO
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ' OREGON, MONDAY, MAT 8, 1933.
Hedford Mail Tribune
"Ewyoni Iff Sotithirn Oregon
Heads tha Mail Trlbuin"
Dally Except Bauardar
PubilsbH bf
MEDFORD PHIXTINO CO.
15-5f- N. Fir Bt. I
BOB CRT W. BtttL, Editor
Ad Independent Kcnfpjper
Entered u leeond eliii matter at lltdtord,
Oregon, under Act of March 8. 1879,
6UI1BCB1PT10N BATES
ft Malt- In Adtanee
Oallr, one rear $6.00
Dallj, ill mootbi t-16
Palb, om month 60
Bv Curler. In AdKi MedTord. Aihlind,
JaeLMQfllle, Centra Point. PboeaU, TaliDt, Ciold
Rill ind on Hleriiai-a. .
Daily, ooe year..., 16. 00
Dally, ill mootha ,. S-2&
Puly, AM month .00
AU tm. caio id uranea.
Official paper of the Of? of Medford.
Official paper of Jaekuo County.
MEM B KB Of TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS
RkbIim Pull Leased Wire Smlee
' Tha Associated Pre U eieluiliel? entitled to
Hia um for publication of all newa dlipatebea
cradtted to It or othtrwlu credited to tM paper
and alaa to the loeal nea milillrtied bcreto.
All rlfhU for puhltraUon of ipeelal diipatcba
Benin ire alto restned,
T
MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS
MEMBER OF AUDIT BIJHEAD
OK CIltCUUTIONS
Adwtlilrtf Reprenenlatlm
R C M0UKN8EN I -U Ml' A. ST
tttnm to New fork. Cblttso, Detroit, Ban
rranelieo, Ul Anfelei, Brattle, Portland.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK, May 8. Diary of
modern Popys; To breakfast with
ruffling gallant more Intent on
little wenching than eating, winding
up at another
tr.ble with a Ti
tian trull.. And
leaving me to
settle the chit,
60 home In duty
until Billy See
man called with
a crop of taylea
from London.
' with my wi
8 to a symphony .
DUt lnswiBM
fine mualo llnee
ran through my
head. In espec
ini: "This la all
O. O. Mclntyre
we ever aey: Ego.
rael. mlhl roe
So to Ann Kirkpatrlcka for P' '
tea and Don Marqula and hia lady
there. And we talked of A"""'
Keata Speed, Phil Slmma and Wilson
Hut-Vat
Dinner at T. J. Whltea where came
the Balnbrldge Oolbya. tha Larry Har
rlaea. Baroness Von Home and B. D.
Ooblenta. And Colby, hie counsellor
ao long, related with high cn
rollicking ti-ylee of Mark Twain. Then
to the golden wedding reception at
th. Charles M. ecnwBDS m uv.u.
late.
ttnlltramnd recently Gilbert Mil'
ler attended a huddle at which Joe
Bwerllng remarked, In apeaklug of
John Oalaworthy. he had purchased
,. .nthor'a "Forsythe Buga." Where
upon Eddie Buzzell, who up until that
time had aaia prajuw.'j
yawned and observed! "A for me,
give me a good five cent aegal"
And at the Algonquin, they were
discussing Hltler'a nationality. "What-
- i 1. inmffina voiced. "I am
rtln he has a touch of race preju-
u To which aoorge S. Kaufman
mildly blurted: "I hoar Paul Kobe
son has a touch of Negro."
Peraonal nomination for the most
perfectly groomed first nlghter Ber
tram Taylor.
No entertainment has ao ably foiled
tha depression's deflation as high
class music. For three years various
symphonies played to capacity, as
have most voice recltols. pianists and
violin virtuosos. Harried folk find
in the maglo of music a disembodied
penslveness an escape from that ma
levolent triad, greed, lust and deceit.
In a symphony audience today. I no
ticed many drifting in who seemed
to be a part of llfe'e castaways,
but In no time at all troubled ex
pressions melted into radiation. One
sees, too, many not expected at sym
phonies. Such as Oscar of tho Wal
dorf, Kent Coopor, Julea Bache and
If my eyes did not deceive, that Marty
tornado, Mae West.
Bob Davis was telling about the
first auto In his town. It waa driven
by a gossipy lady living next door,
who got up at day-break for her first
grip at the wheel. Oolng out the
yard drive she hit the milk wagon
kerplunk, sending It nylng. She was
unable to stop and went on. While
the milkman was gathering up his
cans she rounded the block and, still
unable to stop, knocked htm onto a
neighboring porch, and also broke
the mule's leg. While neighbors were
fanning the milkman to conacloua
neas. the lady got out and rushed up
to explain she did not drive very
well. "You might not drive very
well." gasped the milkman aa his llda
fluttered, "but Madam, you are aure
thorough."
A pie-eyed atay-out, weaving and
twisting along aramercy park the
other night lurched with a hiccup
Into a group In front of The Playera
end went on. "Looks aa though he
had an affair with a wine brick,"
chirped Clair Maxwell.
1 tPioQHf
"it
Thingumbobs : Royalties on Oranfa
memoirs which Mark Twain pub
lished totaled (300 000 . , . Peter
Arno, ultra sophisticated artist, la
Just 30 . . William Hamilton own
the moat complete first editions of
Kipling . . . The Roger Brothers were
once half owroirs of the New Yo.k
theater building, the first actors to
own heavy real aetata holding . , .
Isaac Marooeson la fearful of cat . . .
I.0U1 Long la crack rifle shot . .
One of the literary mytha la that
Kdns Ferber and Fannie Hurat do
sot aoeak , , , Albert Payaon Terhuue
I
The Talent Grange Is Wise
XE ARE glad to note members of tbe Talent grange de
cided NOT to vote against the state sale tax, UNTIL
they had carefully studied it.
We believe careful study
that the sales tax should be passed.
Tbe present tax situation in this county,- and other counties
in the state, clearly demonstrates what will happen if the sales
tax is not passed. There is only one word for it, bankruptcy.
The time has passed when the property tax, farm and city
can pay the major expenses of
relieved, if this state is to be pulled out of the mire of insolv
ency. The question then, is how to relieve it.
TPHIS was the problem the last legislature attacked. After
weeks of careful consideration, study and debate, it waB
decided that the only way ont was to increase the income tax
to the point of diminishing returns and add a general sales tax
The state tax commission also
came to the SAME CONCLUSION.
We are confident, similar
the Talent grange will lead to
a majority that the time has
its traditional opposition to a
This opposition was perfectly sound when normal business
conditions prevailed. But conditions are no longer normal.
They are grotesquely abnormal.
In normal times no one would favor a salos tax. Just aa in
normal times no one would favor inflation or abandoning the
gold standard.
But conditions went from bad to worse, until the alternative
to inflation was disaster. . For the same reason, conditions in
this state have gone from bad
to a sales tax is disaster.
There is, as we see it, no escape from this conclusion.
PROPERTY particularly FARM property must be relieved
of its present tax burden. The only way to relieve it is to
transfer tbe major portion of that burden to other souroes.
But outside of incomes and sales there are no other sources
st least no practical ones. There is s limit to what income
can bear particularly when incomes have been reduced almost
to the vanishing point. That limit has about been reached.
The passage of a sales tax therefore, as we see it, becomes
imperative. '
yiTERE is another point for the members of the grange to
consider. Nearly all of them are farmers. Let them figure
I out their present farm tax, their
implements and farm machinery which will be removed, the
fact that they are exempted as "dealers" from tbo sales tax,
THEN let them figure out the purchases they make these
days for food and clothing, take one percent of that, and esti
mate the sales tax they will have to pay. Let them compare
that sales tax, with their present property tax.
We believe they will come to the conclusion that the farmer
will be tbe principal beneficiary of this sales tax, and that of
all olasses in the state, the farmers will benefit most.
This is Legislator Earl Day's opinion himself a farmer.
We believe after the members
entire question CAREFULLY,
them come to the same conclusion.
Congratulations
ASA postscript to the above the Mail Tribune extends
hearty congratulations to the Ferry twins, Misses Eliza
beth and Frances, who Saturday night, aa representatives of
the Medford high school, won the state debating championship.
These two young girls, took the affirmative of the question :
"Resolved, that 50 percent of state and local revenues should
be derived from sources other than tangible property."
This became in effect, an argument in favor of the state
sales tax, and tho higher income
Those who heard the "twins"
local radio station were not surprised to learn they defeated
Pendleton, the champions of eastern Oregon.
The calm deliberate way in
premises, supported by a mass of statistics, and went on step
by stop to the inevitable conclusion, that materially reducing
the tax burden on real property is a necessity for economic and
financial survival, was simply unanswerable.
The people of this stato will
Those who wish to inform themselves on the subject, oould do
no better thsn to secure the complete transcript of this debate
and read the arguments, pro and con, carefully.
The Unexpected Happens
TIE expected so seldom happens. Twenty years ago every
one expected the late Theodore Roosevelt to be the founder
of a now party the Bull Moose Progressive party which was
to be opposed by ft Conservative party.
Such a party waa formed, with
the election of Woodrow Wilson,
and has never returned.
With the nomination of the
removed," Franklin, no one expected he would found a new
party. He was, if elected, merely to be the leader of the Demo
cratic party.
But that is precisely what Franklin D. has done. He is now
the lender of a NEW PARTY, and what opposition there is to
this new party, there is practically none is made up of both
Republicans and Democrats. His support in congress comes
from both Democrats and Republicans. His policies are abso
lutely new policies, in no way affiliated, traditionally, with
either of the older parties.
It is too early, of course, to definitely declare this new party
will endure as the long awaited Progressive party, to be opposed
by a Conservative party, but at the present writing, every
thing points that way.
at one time turned out more words e
day than any other American writer
. . . Fred Keating it a protege of Nate
Leipzig . , . Burns Ms n tie. celebrated
critic, once operated a linotype in
Denver . . . Oaby Dealys waa first to
Introduce short skirt.
will demonstrate to most of them
government. Property mnst be
studied the same problem and
study on the part of members of
the same conclusion and convince
come for tbe grange to abandon
salei tax.
to worse until the alternative
taxes on cattle, horses, hogs,
of the Talent grange study the
they will at least a majority of
tax.
give their arguments over the
which they established their
vote on the sales tax in July.
T. R. at the head. But with
the party vanished completely
eolonel'i "fifth cousin twice
In e long stored trunk I came upon
the buUI eye lantern acquired from
a eorrespondenoe detective school,
with which I went right out and be
gan ahadowlng the Preebyterlan mid
later. While It gave out only the
glow of a sick lightning bug, It would
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M4).
Signed fatten pertaining to personal beeJtb end hygiene, not to disease.
diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady u e stamped, self
addressed envelopo Is enclosed. Letters should be brief end written In ink.
Oirtng to the lufge number of letters
here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions.
address Or. William Brady In cere of
OUR OWN
Now and again a reader ask
whether the articles in this column
are Issued In book form. I am happy
to announce that
they are not and
will not be ao re
printed or re
hash ed.
Now and again
I discover, to my
chagrin, that
some pirate la
publishing some
thing X have pua
Ilahed In this col
umn, for hia own
advantage, but
without my
knowledge or
consent. It Is usually sufficient to
warn such persona. But I wish to
warn all readors that they must take
any such opinion or advice of mine,
quoted by a third party, at their own
peril.
It has been my ambition from away
back, and probably it will be till far
beyond, to write the great American
doctor book. A novel kind of doctor
book, one that would prove practically
a total losa to any customer In quest
of symptoms, and no great Invest'
ment for the bird who seeks to "check
up" on the opinion or advice of hia
physician.
I want to leave to the world a dook
that nobody will be reluctant or
shamed to own and nobody will be
the worse for reading. It must be
book that shall command the
confidence of all honest folk Irre
spective of their present faith or pre
vious condition of servitude. If you
have Just a little knowledge or smat
tering of the various systems or
methods of healing you may think
such a book la Impossible, but I be
lieve It can be done.
The book as I visualize It will have
moderate thread or vein of hu
man physiology running through It,
but not a silken thread. No, no, my
intention Is to have this thread bris
tling with cactus-like spines wherever
the wiseacre layman might otherwise
slide over It with all his legendary
beliefs or notions intact.
Besides L-nis navoring or numan
physiology the book will Include oc
casional excursions Into bacteriology,
psychology, chemistry, physics, anat
omy, pathology, embryology, and even
therapeutics, nothing technical or
heavy, but Just enough to show the
way. I find that the layman likes to
see where he is going and will follow i
more readily If you show him a nttie
light, even though he be a mere
school teacher, minister, dentist, law-
yer or traveling salesman.
Of course my book will contain a
heat up a barn. And , did anything
ever smell so awful aa an old school
alate. ' t ,
(Copyright, 1033, McNaught Syndl
cate. Inc.)
4
Rogue River
ROGUE RIVER. May 8. (Spl.)
Miss Beulah Tryer became the wife
of Harry McVay of Grants Pass Sat
urday. Mrs. MoVay.haa spent a num
ber of yeara ,ln Rogue River and la
a member of this year'a graduation
class. Beat wlshea are extended to
the young couple.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Sandry apent
Wednesday In Medford vlaltlng and
attending to business.
Riley Boyd returned Wednesday
from Forest Grove, called there by
the death of his eon Rhylf Boyd.
Orvllle Dengler, Richard Scott and
Roy Milton returned Wednesday from
a business trip to Canyonvllle.
Clyde Robblna and Delmar smitn
of Eugene spent last week at the
home of Clyde'a grandfather, J. M.
Whipple. The boyB went on to Med
ford to visit relatives.
Miss Myrtle Willis spent a recent
week-end visiting at the home of Mra.
James In Roseburg.
Miss Arlotha Willis returned Mon
day to Alsca, Ore., after spending
some time visiting her sister. Miss
Myrtle Willis, who teachea achooi
here.
Mr. and Mrs Melvln Whipple and
son. Melvln, Jr. left Thursday ior
Chicago. They have spent many
months here with his father, M. B.
Whipple.
Dick Rlohman made a business trip
to Portland last week.
Many children are absent from
Sunday school on account of chicken
pox.
Miss Oenevleve Piatt. Miss Bertha
Btiford, Miesca Myrtle and Arletha
Wlllla Joined the caravan to Crater
lake.
Mr. and Mrs. Theo Metmuth enter
tained Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hull of
Qranta Pnaa at dinner reecntly.
W. A. White and Nelson Rowley are
improving their placee by building
new garagea.
Eden Precinct
EDEN P.'tFCTNCT, May 8. 8pU
Mrs. Anna Simpson, who has been
spending the winter at the home of
her daughter. Mrs. Nosh Chandler
In Phoenix, was taken to her home
In Medford last Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave ftelvln and
W. P. Andrew were gueftts of Mr. and
Mrs. Luther Hclnrook Wednesday.
Prof. H. C. Feimer and wife were
dinner guesta of Mrs. S. A. Nye Wed
nesday. Clinton Carey, who has been 111
for more than a year, Is quite 1U
at thla time.
Mrs. Ida Lorkwood was taken 111
last Sunday night, but Is all right
at this time.
S. a. Parker, of the highway south
of Phoeniv, was very 111 Monday. Dr
Howard of Medford Is treattng him.
Dr. J. B. Oitlls and wife are mov
ing to Jacksonville and will occupy
the bouse where Dr. Harold OUUs
gf 4& J
received only e few can be answered
The Hall Tribune.
PHYSIOLOGY
few mean digs at practitioners of
other schools than my own, and Just
to show there are no hard feelings,
a few more and meaner ones at the
foibles and fallacies of .my own dear
brethren. Folks might think Old Doc
Brady had employed a ghost writer
If the book appeared without a bit of
sarcastlcatlng. It la all with the best
will In the world; I am sure my vie
tlms know I mean It.
I shall publish my own book. That's
the only way I can say what I want
to say, end, too, It Is the only way
I can afford to write the book. I have
had enough experience with firms In
the book publishing business to last
me for life.
At the moment It Is dlffcult to say
whether I'm sad or glad there la going
to be very little medicine In the great
American doctor book, but a good dl
of Medicine, lr you know what I mean
To make sure. I'll quote Webster:
Medicine the science and art dealing
with the prevention, cure or allevia
tion of disease.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Sound Teeth.
Our daughter, 12 years old, has
made several visits to the dentists
for the filling of cavities In her
teeth. She eats much fruit, and i
varied diet. What dUt do you rec
comend to keep the teeth sound?
a. v. o.
Answer At least a pint of certified
milk dally, or if that Is not avail
able, then any pure raw (not pas
teurized) milk your family physician
or your local health officer approves
Liberal use of cottage or "Dutch'
cheese In the dally menu. At least
one raw vegetable and one fresh fruit
dally. Some fresh green leafy relish
or salad twice a day. Send stamped
envelope bearing your address and
ask for Instructions for Conservation
of the Teeth.
The Btg Bully.
My baby, a year old, Insists on
having hia bottle In bed with him
both for his afternoon nap and at
night. He will not drink milk from
a cup. He. will not go to sleep with
out his bottle. How should I wean
him from the bottle? Mrs. W. C. H
Answer It Is too bad, but It looks
as though you will have to have two
noisy nights. Offer the baby his
milk In a cup at the last feeding of
the day. If he refuses It, then put
him in bed and let him fight It out.
When he Is tired he will aleep, fltr
fully. When he Is very hungry he
will take his milk from the cup. The
second night he will fight for only a
short time. The third night he'll take
It from the cup and like It.
(Copyright, 1933, John 3. Diue co.)
has been living while Harold la In
the east taking P. O, work.
Eden Precinct la very proud of their
boy aviator and plane builder, Cecil
M. Hartley. We claim to have Llndy
the second. Cecil waa born and raised
In the vicinity of Talent and received
his education In the Phoenix schools.
Mrs. Adle Barneburg waa In Med
ford for treatmenta again thla week
She hae not only aurvlved the effects
of a bad paralytic atroke. but is able
to climb the atairs at the doctor'a
office.
North Phoenix school will elose
May 31.
Tolo
TOLO, May 8. (Spl.) Mra. Blllle
M. Billings of Lone pine service sta
tion with Mra. Mose Barkdull of
Medford. motored recently to Yreka,
Calif., and apent the day with Mra.
Sylvia.
Al (Doc) Stevena and Albert Jr..
formerly of Medford have rented the
house and several acrea known aa the
Tolo gardens and are hurrying to get
In. the crops aa the weather permlta.
Rev. D. T. Randall, unton mission
ary, vlalted In Tolo Tuesday.
A band of gypsies are camping In j
ui oaaa near tne overneaa Dnage.
They took a worklngman'a lunch
away from him one day, and made a
nuisance of themselves with their
begging.
Mtes Dorothy Inmann la spending
few days with her sister. Mrs.
Johnny Bohnert of Central Point.
Another out-of-town man la visit
ing Medford merchants, soliciting
sales books, waiter checks, and other
printing. Remember you can buy all
of thla printing at home cheaper
than out of town, and help maintain
a home payroll. Don't buy any print
ing from trawling men you always
pay their expenses, plus the price of
the printing. Phoen 75 and have a
local man call and see you.
Man's Heart Stopped;
Stomach Gas Cause'
W. t. Adams wss bloated so with i
gas that his heart often missed beats !
after eating Adlertka rid him of all :
gas. and now ne eats anytning and ;
leeia line. oio in Aieoiora oy uestn s
Drug Store. 1
BURRELL STEER
CONCERT VIOLINIST
BALDWIN RECITAL HALL
Monday Evening, May 8
8 o'clock
Admission 35c Students 2c
44M't i
Saddle Horses
and Ponies
For hire by day or hour. Private
riding lessens, several good younfj
animals foe sale. T
- X
Medford Riding Academy
Phone 838-11 i
Comment
on the
D'jy's News
By FRANK JENKINS. '
A FEW DAYS AOO thla writer at
tended a Rotary club meeting
here In Southern Oregon at which
a number of apeakera took part In
a "program of optimism," and what
they had to aay waa ao obviously
genuine as to make It perfectly ap
parent to all who heard them that
they really believed what they were
saying and were not Just whistling
to keep their, courage up.
Their message -waa ao hopeful, ao
filled with enthusiasm, ao sharply in
contrast with the pessimism of the
past three yeara that It ought to be
carried to all of Southern Oregon.
ONE of the speakers was W. E.
Lamm, of the Lamm Lumber com
pany, of Modoc Point, one of the
large mills of the pine country east
of the mountains.
Mr. Lamm has Just returned from
the East. Based on what he learned
there, he predicted that within 60
daya the pine mills will nearly all be
Loperatlng on some sort of basis, and
that by next year at thla time they
will be back to about their 1038-20
schedule of production.
He preceded this prediction with
an analysia of conditions In the turn
ber Industry thBt was so clear and
convincing aa to lend added weight
to hl hopeful vlewa of the future
An attempt will be made here to re
produce, briefly, his analysis.
I ET'S get at, first, whst haa caused
JLi the trouble of the past few yeara.
Consumption of lumber, Mr. Lamm
said, reached a peak of 48 billion
feet about 15 years ago. From this
point, due largely to Increasing use
of substitutes. It declined by 10JB
to 38 billion feet. Authorities esti
mated at that time that It would
stabilize at about 30 billion feet.
Capacity of the sawmills of the
United Statea Is about FORTY-FIVE
billion feet. In other words, capacity
of the milla la about 80 per cent above
probable normal consumption.
IN 1030, then, this was tne picture:
Capacity of the mills, 46 billion
feet. Probable consumption of lum
ber, somewhere around 30 billion feet.
In 1030, there waa atlll a hopeful
spirit, and thla excess capacity of the
mills was employed to build up ex
cess stocks.
The pressure of these excess stocks
broke the market, wrecking prlcee and
forcing shutdowns.
THE YEARS of 1031 and 1033 were
years of sharp curtailment.
At the beginning of 1031, atocka
on hand at the mills amounted to
about 13 billion feet. By the end
of 1033, these stocks had been re
duced to around elBht billion feet
Thla reduotlon of atocka waa
brought about by ahut-downs, and
these foroed shut-downs brought un
employment. We all know about that,
and It lsn"t necessary to enlarge upon
It. .
These yeara of curtailment have
been black years.
NOW for the more hopeful part of
the picture.
In 1031, consumption of lumber
was around 18 billion feet. In 1033,
It dropped to 13 billion feet. That
la to say, in the TWO years there
was only ONE normal year's consump
tion of lumbor.
In other words, normal consump
tion fell ONE FULL YEAR behind. It
Is reasonable to assume that this
will create a dammed-up demand that
will begin to make Itself felt as soon
Dad says:
"When you see a msn being kind
to a dumb animal you can be
pretty sure he'll give a human an
even break."
YOU CAN OCT A BREAK!
Of course, there's no percentage
in treating a cat to a new house
but with your chick THATS
A DIFFERENT STORY. Modern
housing and quarters mean more
contented chickens that alao
means more egg and more eeea
mean more PROFITS FOR YOU.
0c iftclmflcrJYumk-rM
tyorjhui Priced Qimber
ECONOMY
LUMBER, CO.
'Vtl HOftf BUILDfSS NtoRTKNl STOKi'
MRY BUIL0INQNUD
NO. PACIFIC HIGHWAY AT COURT SI
MEDFORD, ORE.
aa business conditions Improve and
people get back their courage.
sfTJTJT." you "win "probably say at
15 -this point, "capacity of the
mills la atlll 48 billion feet and con
sumption only 30 billion. So it won't
take long to catch up."
. Mr. Lamm covered that point on
Friday. For various Reasons, be aaid,
chiefly financial, the mills will not
be able to get back at once to ca
pacity production.
Their operating capital la gone, and
the banks refuse to advance more
money until a definite profit show
ing can be made. Many mllla wUl
be unable to start at all. Others will
be able to run only on a slow ben
It will take at least TWO-YEARS,
he thinks, for the mills to catch up
with demand.
MEANWHILE, yafd atoeks all over
the country are low. Houses are
In disrepair. The railroads are far
behind with Improvements. It all
points towsrd IMMEDIATELY in
creasing demand.
(
Communications
Greetings to Hunts.
I wish to express greetings to Mr.
and Mrs. George A. Hunt, my former
employers, and wish them every pos
sible success In their return man
agement of the Crater lan and Rlalto
theaters.
Mr. Hunt has kindly offered me
my former position as cashier, which
I have refused, preferring not to re
turn to that position at the present
time.
Remember, If It's Hunt's show, it's
the best. VHNITA DALEY.
PHOENIX GRANGERS TO
GIVE TWO INITIATIONS
PHOENIX, May 8. (Spl.) Phoenix
prange meets Tuesday night. There
will be no program as the third and
fourth degree team will Initiate two
new members. Refreshments will be
served by Mrs. Lillian Coleman, Mr.
and Mrs. Noah Chandler and Mr. and
Mrs. V. R. Bonham. All Grange mem
bers are urged to attend.
CAROLINA TORNADO
TOLL NOW EIGHTEEN
ANDERSON. S. C, May 8. (AP
Three additional deaths In hospitals
here early today brought to a total
of 18 the number killed or fatally
Injured when a tornado struck this
section of South Carolina yesterday.
Make Your
Skin Lovely
New, - wonderful MELLO-GLO face
powder reproduces the tempting
bloom of vouth. Spreads smoothly.
stays on longer, hides tiny lines and
wrinkles, prevents large pores. No
shiny noses, no drown or "pasty"
look. Women trust MELLO-GLO be
cause new French progess makes It
the purest face powder known. De
lightfully fragrant. Try MELLO-GLO
today. 50c and $1.00. Tax free.
Jarmtn 6a Woods Drug Store.
San Francisco's Newest
AND MOST MODERN
Downtown Hotel!
600 OnUldfi Room ii
2C3ronm it S3..V)
179 rooms at 1.00
I'nomilry
AuraetiTO Rates to
P'tmintnl
CuetUl 1
Private garage in base
ment of hotel building
with direct elevator ser
vice to Lobby and all
guest-room floors!
Apply foil strength "Black Leal
40" lightly to perches. Body head
of roosting birds releases nicotine
fumes which penetrate feathers
and kill the lice. No handling; of
birds. Saves time, money and
bother.
Also Kill Garden Pests
Wben osed a. a ipnr. "BUclr Lrwf 40
t. etftttiv. asminst Aphis (plant lire)
aad other insects which attack plant Ufa.
Sold br
mm.
l .bits im :
r.tu. i i
mm i
Si' --j I ;-:.Hv
Flight 'o Time
(Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of Tbe
Mall Tribune of 80 and 10 Veen
Ago.)
TWLNTY YEARS AOO TODAY
May 8. 1021.
(It waa Monday)
Road between McLeod and Pres.
pect in "awful shape" motorists re
port. Small boya who catch suckers 1b
Bear Creek, and leave them near the
city auto camp to be dealt with se
verely by Mayor Canon.
All-steel wheels to take the place
of paper wheels on all Pullman oars.
Eugene girl, a missionary In China,
Is csptured by Chinese bandits.
Water pressure la lew, as the wea
ther Is warm, and many water their
lawns at the same hour In the even
ing. Grandstand at the fairgrounds is
shingled.
First codling moth spray ordered.
TEN YEARS AfiO TODAY
May 8, 1818.
(ft waa Wednesday)
Survey of road over the Slsklyous
ordered.
Medford ranks third In the atate t
number of private owned autos.
' Forty-six students to graduate from
the high school on May 33. Frederick
Heath waa one of the 18 boya.
"The Red Rose of Tennessee," aa
Edison drama of love, hate, war, gold,
and lust, at the Isls; "Love Laughs at
Locksmiths" at the Ugo.
BUI Offutt, an automotive expert,
opens a shop on South Bartlett.
Roney Boya in concert at the Nat
tonight.
OLD PEOPLE
LIVE LONGER
at the
CONVALESCENT
HOME
153 Granite St,. Ashland
We Develop
FILMS
FREE
3
Sunday,
May 14th
Mother's
Day
A Beautiful Selection of
Mother's Day Cards here.
Price 5c to 80c
SWEM'S
GIFT SHOP
Hotel Sir Francis Drake just
off Union Square most conven.
icnt to theaters, shops, stores,
business and financial district .
Only California hotel offering;
Servidor feature thug enabling
you to combine "maximum pri
vacy with minimum tipping".
All rooms in the Tower with
Western exposure have ultra
violet-ray (sun-bath) windows.
In every room connection for
radio reception, running filtered
ico water, both tub ana shower.
Dinner in Coffee Shop from 75e)
up in Main Dining Room from
$1.25 up. Also a la carte service.
"ASWUti? mm viva
Sir Francis
DIKAKE
HccKro.NiwcoKB Horn. Co.
Towell Street at Sutter San Franciao
SUMMER IS COMINCr
ON LICE WILL
BREED BY THE MIL
LIONS GET AFTER
THEM RIGHT NOW
WITH
Black
Leaf
DO IT NOW
Save yourself a lot of
trouble.
MONARCH
SEED & FEED CO.
Phone 260
Imother. cards "I
va wwa: ifflM to.T -Yj