PAGE TEN
SIEDFORD MAIL TRIBUlsT;, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUXE 16, 1933.
Medford Mail Tribune
"Ewryont is Southern Oregot
Rtadi th. Nail ffibun"
0&ll Kiuqi fctnxUy
publltiied tft
UEUruKD PBINTINU CO.
1J JT 19 N ITtr St.
HOBKBT . WIJUL, tdJUf
AO UMtepltot Nmptp
Enured u tecood clan asttw at Uadtord,
Oregon, and Act t lUrtb UT.
8UB8CHIPT10N BATES
By Mill In Ad.uies
Daily, on rear 8'0
Dally, ill month -T6
. Daily, on dodUi
a. i. iilnm MmMaH. Aiblwd.
Jarksoovllie. Ceutral Point. Pboenll, Iftlent, Gold
UUl nO OB UlROMJl.
Daily, om ftu 00
Daily, ill oodUu 2
Daily, om Booth -90
AU tar ma. cub la idiaaca.
Official paper of U City of Htdford.
Officii! paper el Jictaoe County.
UEMBEH 09 TUB ASSOCIATED PBEB8
Tbo'AsiocUtMt Preaa la wctuilTely tDtltled to
tM UM ft puoueaiiOD m an om
eradlted to It or eUierwlM credited lo tbla paptr
AU rii&u (or pubUcatloD of ipecUl dlipaUbea
bcreis are ma rtaervBu.
WtMBEB OP UNlTKD PRESS
HEMBFK OP AUDIT BUliEAU
OP C1KCULAT10NB
Adrertliinf BeprocoUtlm
U. C. M0GES8EN a COMPANY
Omeea lo New York, CaicafO, Detroit. Bid
FraoeUco, Lot Aotel, Seattle, Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By ArtM'i Perry.
Wrestling 1b again -.cUlng; the
public fancy hereabouts, and, aa a
means of keeping body and soul to
gether, without going to the peni
tentiary. It Is the laat word, and the
next to the last word. It Is very
tough, and leaves the loser prone,
after being towed carelessly about
the premises by a fellow behometh
with more hair on his chest than
reposes on the haunches of a Rocky
Mountain grizzly. Wrestling makes
gentle ladles squeal and strong men
sweat. Nothing gets treated any
rougher than a wrestler xcept ;he
truth. ,
Several valley Democrat nave
started acting like they wanted to
make a sacrifice for America, and be
postmaster.
"Deer Aunt Ada: X Intend to marry
a man. . . . ."(Ixve Agony Col.)
Wherein a woman decided to do
something original.
DESCRIBED LIKE BRIDE'S DBK8S
(Philadelphia Bulletin)
Lost Wire-haired terrier
puppy, plucked, ears brown, white
face, brown and black forehead,
white collar, black spot rear ear.
Shoulders brown and black. Gray
ish black saddle fringed brown.
Four feet and legs from and
joint, white. Belly and Inside
forelegs white. White akin on
base of four toes and heel, left
rear foot. Roof of mouth, brown,
cream stripe In center. Rewd.
P. D. Fuller. Jr., 3936 Rising Sun
rd Ardmore, Pa.
A man was caught quoting the
Scripture and lauding the Constitu
tion late last night, in an effort to
mask some hind -tire stealing.
... ,
One of the R. Mam trio of kids, :
tor 6 mine. Thursday, besmirched I
the family escutcheon, by not look
ing like he had Just popped out of
a band -box.
A Mid-West millionaire son, alleg
to have slain his mother with a
solid gold book-end weight, is listed !
as "spoiled," and he seems to have !
seen, at least that. It seems that the !
spoiled lad wanted ISO, and all his
mother had was $00, so he slew her
as the finale of an argument. He
has hired four lawyers, will try and
prove that the sheriff who arrested
the lad Is, was and still Is crazy,
The Arcade saloon, on Court street,
la the worst lettered saloon we ever
saw. Strangers go by there and look.
You will be puzzled. (Pendleton
Cast Oregonlan) What the faces of
the hardy pioneers got red about.
' FLEAS 4 SCIENCE VINDICATED
. (Cong. Record)
I would not minimize, even mo
mentarily, the past accomplishments
of science, in government or out. I
do not see how any Intelligent person
can hear some of the complaints
registered against research without
desiring to Jump at once to the de
fense. Certain business groups, a few
highly articulate chamber of com
merce people, have done a great in
justice to the scientific work of the
Government by inferring that con
siderable, sums of money have been
spent to Investigate how far a flea
could Jump, and to look into the)
love-life of the frog.
X am unable to find any account of
a Government project dealing with
the love-life of a frog. It Is true
that someone wrot into the Depart
ment of Agriculture to inquire how
far a flea could Jump, and that one
of our entomologists, after a brief
search through the scientific litera
ture on fleas, was able to make a
suitable reply. The publicist who
ridiculed the Department for this,
Jumped In a variety of Inaccurate
conclusions, one of them being that
special and expensive research was
Involved and another being that
fleas, from whatever aspect, are
screamingly funny. They seem to be
In the same category with spinach.
As many of you know, research on
fleas including a knowledge of how
far they can Jump has been fairly
Important for the human race. For
through this research It via Warned,
back in 1906, that the dread bubonic
plague was carried from rata to man
by fleas. The knowledge of how far
a flea could actually jump waa of
considerable importance in fighting
outbreaks of the plague shortly t-wre-after.
I don't believe 5 should have been
ashamed to have had the Depart
ment of Agriculture discover that
knowledge, auuislng though the very
subject of f.eaa may he to a publicist
with an ex to grind -
Get the Facts Yourself
HPHE opposition to the state sales tai is purely political. The
A primary purpose behind the opposition, is not to better
the financial situation in this state, but to get votes.
And such opposition probably will get votes. For appeals
to class prejudice, are very fruitful politically at all times, but
particularly at the present time, when the people as a whole
are discontented, and eager to find a goat.
So the sales tax is pictured as a "rich man's tax", some
thing that should be defeated for the benefit of the common
man, the way to solve the tax problem in this state, is simple
merely spend less money for public purposes. '
We only wish it WERE as simple as that. Everyone favors
the spending of less money for public purposes, and if the state
and county budgets could be balanced by reducing expenses in
state administration, everyone would be for it.
But they can't be and every well informed person, includ
ing many of the opponents of the sales tax, knows it.
For the routine business of the state has to go on. Just as
the business of the counties and the cities has to go on. Econ
omies have already been introduced, expenditures have been
reduced, salaries have been cut, more cuts can be made per
haps, but not enough to materially improve the essential situ
ation. THE sales tax opponents ARE correct in this, only in the
direction of rigid economy can state bankruptcy be avoid
ed, if the sales tax is defeated. For the property tax has fallen
down. The income tax has reached the point of diminishing
returns. With the defeat of the sales tax the only way out of
the mess, will be to spend less money keep expenditures down
to income.
WHAT will this meant Well in the first place, here" in
Jackson county it will undoubtedly mean crippling or
closing the Ashland Normal. It will mean radical curtailment
of state agricultural research and experimentation. It will
mean, crippling our public school system and perhaps closing
many schools.
For the proceeds of the sales tax are to be devoted first to
the school funds in the various counties. Without this revenue,
and with the situation what it is, the school system can not be
carried on, as it is, and has been carried on.
WE CAN'T have our cake and eat it. If we refuse to accept
a sales tax, then a special session of the legislature must
be called, the entire tax problem reopened, and other ways
devised for meeting our debt charges and administrative ex
penses. We have yet to hear from the sales tax opponents any other
way to do this than cutting down expenditures.
In their own interest the people should carefully determine
just what such a cutting down
and the community in which they' live, before they decide to
fall for the propaganda of self-interested politicians and vote
against the sales tax.
Let them get ALL the facts. Let them regard the matter not
as a political issue, but as a business problem for that is what
it is.
Then let them vote NOT in the interest of some office seek
ers, but in their own self interest, and the sales tax will win.
A Matter of Bookkeeping
A SUBSCRIBER asks how with such a flood of money from
Washington to help the people of this country, there can
be any hope of balancing the budget. Instead of expenditures
being less, under President Roosevelt's administration than
under President Hoover's, he maintains they have been more.
Well, no doubt he is right regarding the expenditures. But
the budget is largely a matter of
tures are placed under the budget and others are not. Those
that are from funds, raised by bond issues for example are not.
This total exceeds five billion for
alone.
This means a reduction of the budget by that amount when
gross expenditures are considered. Congress also gave the
president power to reduce administrative expenditures by
another billion. So we have over six billion cut off.
Even so the budget has not been balanced as yet. It prob
ably won't be not this year at least. But it is not so far out
of balance aa our subscriber would suppose.
It is merely because budget balancing is a matter of how
the books are kept, not how much money is paid out of the fed
eral treasury, in any fiscal year.
Communications
Appreciate Loco! Broadoait
To th Editor!
If w. do appreciate our local radio
etatlon. la It any mora than (air tn
return for their efforte to please, that
wa omatlmM writ or call them up
and say a word of encouragement?
Only the on. In charge who la ahut
up in tha broedcsstlns; room, day af
ter day, Knows how tiresome It doei
get. Ha plsys tha aama records until
ha la alck and tired of them., but
someone ass that h play them over
aft. In. Ho listens to tha aama sdver
tising programs. In fact thare la mora
repetition than ona realises and all
of It geta monotonous.
Wa can tun. In at any time we like
and ahut If off at will but ha mint
bo on tha job day and night.
It la only human to like a word of
pralae or encouragement once in a
while.
A'.i appreclatlre llatener.
URB. MARY O. CARET.
Wen rVeclnct. June H.
Too Much Fighting
To the Wltor:
It la with much amuaem.nt and
eome pity, that we view the attempt
of a email group of aeml-abolltlonlata,
In the effort to keep the pot of poll
tlca. boiling by Irtroductng a ac-cai:-ed
fighter Into the race for the echool
board. I am forced to believe that
harmony In the admlntatretlcn. of
any kind of government In thla eec
tlon la not deetred.
Poor old Jve.-son. whs edmlt In
your column, that he circulated the
petition to place Mr. Ph!?pa in the
race, baa been foroed to walk the
plank, taking hla ciilld with turn.
will mean, to them, their children
bookkeeping. Certain expendi
the present session of congress
Many of '.he frlenda of the petition
who etgaed the aama, realising the
diaaatroua reaulta any further dissen
sion would cause to buelnese, hare
found that they do not hay to vote
a the petition would Indicate.
By the atatement of the auperlnten
dent of school,, we find that the prea
ent board haa very materially re
duced the operating rxpenae of tlila
echool eyatera. Henoe extravagance
cannot be an laaue.
Our aohol eyatem In all department
haa a very ngh rating by all educa
tional agenclea. Therefore Inefficiency
la not a charge.
Mr. Plpea In hla atatement of tup
port of Mr. PMppe atatee that we need
"a true oroaa-aectlon of public opin
ion." Personally I am convinced of one
thing, that the only reaaon for a
change, la to put a fighter on the
board. And I believe Medford. Jack
aon County, and the World have had
too many fight.
FAIR PLAT.
(Name on file).
Medford. June IS.
To the Bailor:
Answering Mr. Hedrlck'a denial that
tha operating echool budget for the
coming year la approximately geftoo
greaur than the budget for the
prewnt year year Juat closing, I again
etate that my ftgurea are correct,
and will now point out to Mr. Hed
rlcjt, and to the voters and taxpayers,
the Joker, which was quite cleverly
put over on the publio through the
means of "controlled publicity."
Mr. Hediir k atatee that for the year
Juat closing, the budget aa published
(In November, 19.11) waa S3S3.0O0.
T.nla la correct: and do not forget
that It waa upon thla budget that
the :ax levy was made and now
atanda agalnat your property and
mine. Ho failed, however, .to tell
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M D.
Signed letters pertaining Co personal Health and byglens, not to rtlirais
diagnosis or treatment, arlli b answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped, sell
addressed envelope is enclosed. Letter snouid be brief and wruteo In ink
Owing to tha large number of letters received only a few can be answered
ere. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instraouona.
Address Or. William Brady In car of The Mali Tribune.
THE CURE OF PILES BY INJECTION
Physicians are notoriously gullible
about investing in gold mine stock
and that sort of thing. Pastors, I
think, are quite as credulous about
remedies or
cures. Here la a
letter from the
Rev. and
he says some
thing Interesting
to a large por
tion of the popu
lation: "When I waa
pastor of the
church
in I
had arranged
for the usual
surgical oper
ation for a long-standing case of
bleeding piles (30 years and very
severe). But I heard of Dr. .
X took several treatments. Each
was perhaps three minutes long
and was painless and I was able
to ride my bicycle home. The
treatment waa perfect and perma
nent In results.
"I was afterward Informed by
one of the leading physicians of
my city that the method was ex
ceedingly dangerous. My family
physician slso told me I wss a
lucky man to escape bad results.
On the other hand I had several
psrlshloners who were cured by
the same method and I have
never heard of any unfavorable
result."
At the time the pastor wrote (five
years ago) I think I agreed with the
family physician and the "leading
physician that the treatment of piles
by chemical Injections was danger
ous. That is a tradition which comes
down to us. In the regular medical
profession, I don't know from what
ancient and venerable source. It js
part of our traditional prejudice
against the chemical obliteration of
varicose veins, the electro-surgical
extrlpatlon of diseased tonsils and the
chemical obliteration of hernia. In
every instance, I now believe, thla an
tiquated policy of ours Is based on
nothing more than theory, assump
tion and here and there an atrocity
committed by some quack.
What a difference five years makes!
I mean in my own attitude I do not
pretend to speak for the medical pro
fession or for any particular clique
of physicians. I speak for myself. I
give you my honest opinion. Take It
or leave It.
At present the very best medical
men are employing with considerable
success and satisfaction all of these
methods which we formerly deemed
"dangerous." Not exclusively, but In
you that In March following the
adoption of this budget, be and his
board made another budget for the
same year, and slashed their over
head 950,000 and announced to the
public that they would save the tax
payers 950,000. As a matter of fact,
there waa not a dollar saved to the
taxpayers. The levy had already been
made upon the $333,000 published
budget. Even though they did act
ually els&h their overhead $50,000,
they did not because they anticipated
a large tax delinquency, well know
ing they would not have the money
to spend. When these tax delin
quencies are paid, this $50,000 (so
called saving will be available for
the school district which will pro
vide new impetus for further extrava
gant spending.
The second budget which they
adoptod (not the published budget)
but the one under which they
operated this year, provided for oper
ating cost of $207,741. The one they
have adopted for next year provides
for operating cost of $314,118. an in
crease of $6377. I challenge Mr. Hed
rlck to further deny this.
A. W. PIPES.
Medford, June 16.
Dick Powell Of
Movies Very ill
HOLLYWOOD. Oal . .T.n la.-orat
Dick Powell, picture actor, la ae-
nouaiy ill of a combination of influ
EL
Liberty Food
Liberty Bldg.
More and more Medford women shop at the Liberty each
week. There' a good reason, too. For, after all, where else in
Medford does one find all the interesting; new foods combin
ed with special low prices. Oet the habit of filling your
grocery needs at this store.
Alexander Grocery. Inc.
Phone 143 ' IS DELIVERY E, F. ALEXANDER, Oen. Mgr.
Borders Fine Cheeses EXTRA SPECIAL
Aged, tasty, atl-vnconln rheeae. U-lb. nkrs.
wl,a Chateau. American, tjrltk. Pimento. Lltn- M'lk, nT own Mayonnaise and uts money,
hercer. One pint Wesson Oil and Mixer
2 for 33c
10o FKO.
se4U.'-J?!e-y
PINT SIZE CAN RIPE OLIVES
LARGE 2JJ SIZE CAN ROYAL CLUB HOMINY, can
CORN STARCH, regular siie package .
HALF 8IZE ROYAL CLUB WHITE MEAT TUNA FISH, 3
BULK SOUR PICKLES, Pint
BULK BLACK TEA, fine for iced tea. Full pound .
MANNING'S COFFEE FRESH
suitable cases. For Instance, while
the old bloody method of removing
tonsils is still the only metthod avail
able for somas cases, the modern blod
less method Is now recognized aa tha
method of choice for moat adults who
can afford better treatment and It is
unquestionably the only method that
ie reasosbly safe for some patients
handicapped by hemophilia, heart
disease or other "contraindications"
for ordinary surgery or general anes
thesia. Likewise these leas radical
and less disabling metthoda ar etoday
being more and more employed by the
better physicians, yet are by no means
the only proper methods In all cases.
My own opinion, speaking as a plain
physician, not as a specialist, is that
the chemical Injection treatment of
plies Is the most satisfactory method
for about three-fourths of the pa
tients who come to the pbyslcan with
this trouble. When It Is applicable
the patient may rest assured that If
his physician la a reputable on the
method la quite as safe as any other
treatment that is curative.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
A Fine Day For It.
What would you advise on a nine
day milk diet to lose weight. Woman
38. Advised at cooking school to drink
9 pints milk a day for nine days . . .
(A. R.)
Answer I can offer no advice un
less the woman gives her height and
weight and I think she should re
duce. We Want To Know.
You preach the alleged virtues of
chocolate when I know it cause seri
ous and fatal , . , Once I Informed
a dentist that sugar decayed the
teeth. He argued that decay always
occurs on the inside ... he has prob
ably learned better since . . . L. J.)
Answer Nonsense, son. Chocolate
causes no such dire results, nor haa
sugar anything to do with decay of
the teeth.
Whitfield's Salve.
I'd tried everything on the msrket
without relief for athlete's foot. Mine
was a severe and obstinate case. Then
I saw your suggestion had the oint
ment made up, and Just three appli
cations brought about a permanent
cure . . . I've never been troubled
since. (H. J. J.)
Answer The recipe and directions
will be mailed to any one who asks
for It and incloses stamped addressed
envelope.
(Copyright 1933, John P. Dllle Co.)
Ed Note: Readers wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should Sfend tetters direct to Ur.
Wlllla.n Brady, M. D., 265 El ta
rn t no, Beverly Hills, Calif,
enza and pneumonia, but hla event
ual recoverd was assured, hla phy
sician. Dr. Stanley Immerman, an
nounced. Powell was stricken last Monday
upon hla return from a personal ap
pearance tour of the east. He also
received an Insect bite which has re
sulted In an Infection, hla physician
ssld.
YES AND NO SAYS
SUPREME COURT
OLYMPIA, wash.. June IS. (UP)
Issuing a rare statement In which
no decision waa made either way,
the atate supreme court 1st Thurs
dsy reported a divided vote on the
etat Income tax law.
Pour Justices favored the law and
four opposed It, an act which ordi
narily would sustain the lower court's
Judgment. However, due to the Im
portance of the case, It will be held
for reargument before the full court
membership, probably next fall. Jus
tice E. N. Parker Is recovering from a
recent Illness,
The Income tat law was held un
constitutional by the Thurston coun
ty superior court and appealed to
the supreme court.
"The Home of Pure Foods'
PALM0LIVE BEADS, 3 for .
CHA8E & SANBORN COFFEE, dated coffee, lb. .
CAMPBELL'S TOMATO JUICE, 3 cans
KELLOOO'S CORN FLAKES, 3 pkgs.
KELLOQO'S SHREDDED WHEAT BISCUITS, 3 pkgs. .27
CAMPBELL'S MEDIUM SIZE PORK AND BEANS, 3 cans..18
1-IB. PKO. MISSION BRAND CRISPY CRACKERS 13t
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK. June IS. Thoughts
while strolling: Everybody In the
American Mercury trie to writ like
Mencken. Wil
liam Rblnelander
Stewart and Jay
O'Brien look alike
So do Dot Aylea
worth and Ruth
Chatterton. And
Ted Baucler and
E m 1 1 Coleman.
Count- Obelen
aky'a Floyd Gib
bons eye - patch
only black.
One word de
scription of Pepy
de Albrew Uky.
1 Ely Culbertson
ut,i nss ine dcsi iiv-
tlng clothes Here
abouts. But no ona haa ever topped
Caruso In carrying a cane. And that
remlnda me Tom Oeraghty goes on
a cane, spat and derby spree when
he blows In from Hollywood. And
ash-cans them when he departs, the
coward!
Wslter Damrosch's snow-white tuft
of eyebrows. Howard Chandler Chris
ty and bis blackened briar. Ben Ames
Williams, the big stiff, walks like a
besr. And a besr of a novelist, too.
Louis Wiley, a Hornell, N. Y., boy. who
made good In the city. Who was It
wondered If he missed the last sup
per? One of my favorite people George
Glrshwln. Whatever became of Rob
ert Cortes Hollldsy? There's a grand
esssylat. Peggy Fears now has two
taffy atreaks In her hair. The great
Marconi and Stelnmets alwaya seem
to me fsntasles of the laboratory
never quite human.
Wish I could grin as warmly as
Wallace Beery. Wonder If others thrill
at a house where a great book waa
written? Gandhi with the Jaundice
gave my Imagination a wrench. The
genteel reticence of that grand old
Roman, Frank M. O'Brien, of the Sun.
Aa soon aa a fellow geta the hang of
the tango they call blm a gigolo.
Fannie Hurst has a Pom that
travels with her on lecture tours. It
Is a hop o' my thumb specimen, and
In passing through train gates she
throws. It over her arm and conceals
It with a fur piece. Recently In Co
lumbus. O., she forgot to cover the
pet. The gateman thumb-Jerked to
ward the baggage car. "No dogs In
Pullman," he growled. Miss Hurst,
flustered and In sudden blurt, aald:
"It lan't a dog. It's mammal." He
glanced again and grudgingly anap
ped:"Oo on In, but It looks like
a dog to me."
The widely filmed Orover Whalen
has never seen himself In a news
reel. His wife, of course, rsrely misses
one. and relays her Impression. Mr.
Whalen Is well poised and expresses
all the aplomb of a veteran ecreen
player. This hss been told him many
times. But he fears one look will
make hlrn forever self-conscious be
fore the csmera and perhaps spoil a
notsnie record.
Adolph Ochs' only offspring. Mrs.
Arthur Hsya Sulzburger, whose life is
devoted largely to philanthropy, has
naa two experiences that would
lighten Bob Rlpley'a chore for a day.
one wss once chssed and attacked
by an angry hen In Iceland and hook
ed by a cow In the Museum of Natu
ral History. The latter adventure
was the result of attending a dairy
exhibit. In passing a haltered bovine
she stopped to stroke Its head. The
next thing she knew she hsd been
tossed In a twirling flurry a distance
or 10 feet, but was happily unhurt.
Relating the Incident to her father
that evening, his newspaper Instinct
predomlnsted. He Immediately
thought of a grand headline: "Ochs
Gored by Cowl"
Mr. Ochs has a favorite story con
cerning his newspsper, The Times.
An esteemed servant long in his
household passed on and several of
her aged friends In service eat up
with the body. When the publisher
arrived home late he went to the ser
vants' hall and asked the watchers U
they were comfortable. Could he get
them anything before retiring? A
spokesman thanked him and aald It
was a pleasure to meet him. They hsd
sll been discussing whst a wonderful
Stores
W. Main
49c
13r
29t
19
21c
9A
L.9
5
cans 25C
10t
39
AS THE DAWN
KMED
Broadcast Schedule
Saturday.
8:00 Breakfast News, Mall Tribune.
8:0! Musical Clock.
8:15 A Peerless Parade.
8:30 Shopping Guide.
9:00 Frlandeblp Circle.
9:SS Talk (or I. D. Phlpps, aehool
board candidate.
S:SS Morning Melody.
10:00 U. S. Weather Forecast.
10:00 Schubert's Love Songs,
10:30 Morning Comment.
10:48 Quartettes Parade.
11 0 Neapolitan Nights.
11:18 The Grant Pass Hour.
11:30 Song and Comedy.
13:00 Mid-day Review.
13:15 Pyroll Parade.
13:30 News Plsshes by Hall Tribune.
13:30 Talk for Dr.. I. D. Phlpps.
school bosrd candidate.
13:35 Martial Music.
1:00 Buy New Campaign Program.
3:00 Dance Matinee.
3:00 Songs for Everyday.
3:30 Program Review.
3:35 Music of Old.
4:00 Cocktail of Musi.
4 :80 Mssterworka.
6:00 Popular Parade.
8:45 News Digest by Mall Tribune.
8:00 Medford Theater Guide.
8:15 Talk for Dr. I. D. Phlpps,
school board candidate.
6:30 Interlude.
8:30 Reveries.
7 :00 Modernistic.
7:30 to 8:00 Eventide.
psper he conducted. "No big head
lines or Inky csrtoons," she said.
"and the most sstlsfactory psper for
shelves."
Simile: As sincere s two actora
shaking hands In front of the Palace.
And there's Leon Gordon's ysrn of
the Interior decorator who fluttered
Into a police station with news his
fellow decorator was lifeless In the
csr at the curb. It proved true and
he was saked how It happened. He
explained they had been arguing
about a room they were doing. He
waa for an effect tn Copenhagen
China blue and his friend held out
for an orchid tint. "We hsd been
arguing," be false ttoed. "I said blue.
he aald orchid, I patted my hands
and again aald blue, he continued to
repeat orchid. Blue, I yelled. Putting
hla band on his hip he screamed 'Pul-
leeze! and In throwing back bis head
broke hla neck!"
(Copyright, 1933, McNaught Syndi
cate, Ino.)
Pool Is Sentenced Arthur Pool, 395,
of Central Point, was sentenced to 30
daya In the county Jail, and fined
8100 when he appeared In Justice
court this morning on charges of drlv.
ing an automobile while Intoxicated.
Pool waa arrested at Central Point
yesterday afternoon about three o'
clock, by state police. He was lodged
in the county Jail.
It? 8 an Old Custom . . (Not Necessarily
Spanish)
This business of getting married has been going on for we don't know
HOW long and from all appearances, it's still considered a good
Idea In Medford.. Here's our adlvce to the bride-to-be: The way to
man's heart is thru bis stomach. Assure the success of your meals
and buy your meat at the LIBERTY MARKET Me feature only
government -Inspected meats . . . and have a modern refrigeration
system to keep them dellclously fresh and In prime condition. .Re
member, GOOD FOOD Is the only WISE investment.
Choice Hens, Fryers, Rabbits
The Finest Meats Always
SPECIALS
Choice Fryers, lb 20c
Petunia Plants, each 5c
The Home of Good Meats Swift's gov't inspected Meats
MODEL
HONEY
COFFEE CAKES
Fruit or Plain, 10c each
Flight 'o Time
(Medford and Jackson Conor?
Hlatory from tbs Files of Xne
Mall Tribune of to and 10 tears
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
June 18, 1923.
(It Wss Saturday)
r,feifcitinn enforcemant exoenaes
exceed fine collected In county.
Shortage of farm labor In the Table
Rock district.
High school bond Issue 1 beaten
by 37 vote.
Auto races at fairground attract
big crowd. Bill Offut. Paul Reddy
and Homer Elwood have cars In tha
races..
Postofftce department makes ruling
that "postal clerks. If sick, must be
sick all day" to draw pay.
A kitten ball league Is formed la
city, with Copco taking the lead.
TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY
June 16. 1913.
(It was Mondsy)
A heavy rain catches considerable
bsy down nesr Jscksonvllle.
Mrs. B. E. Gore Is elected school
director. She Is the first local wo
man to be elected to the post.
Copco workers hold a picnic at Ray
Gold.
"Alwaya Mind Your Aunty" at the
Star; "The Star Beyond the Ridge"
at the Isls, ,
The contract wss let yesterday by
the committee in chsrge of the big
Fourth of July psrade for the erec
tion of the trolley wire on Main
street which Is to furnish illumina
tion and power for the floats in the
night pageant.
Indicatlona point to the most elab
orate parade ever undertaken In Med
ford owing to facilities being fur
nished free of charge by the commit
tee through the courtesy of the Cali
fornia Oregon Power Co. and the
Home Telephone & Telegraph Co., In
furnishing material and power for
the Illumination.
ELK LODGE SECRETARY
EUGENE, Ore., June lfl. (JF) The
body of George E. Wood who disap
peared March 23 was recovered from
the Willamette river late yesterday.
Identification waa made through
watch and a ring.
Wood, prominent Eugene lodge man
and secretary of the Eugene Else club
for several years, disappeared on the
afternoon of March 23. His auto
mobile, coat hat and glasses were
found on the Perry street bridge.
BAKERY'S
MAID