PXGE FOUR MEDFOKD MAIL TRIBUXE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "Ewyme Ml seuthera Oreiee .tail tfte Mill IilbuM'1 ' Cinpt Saturdu Publlitwl br MIliruUD fUlMINO CO. I5 lt.il n. ru st n t B0BKU1 W. BUHL, Editor Ad Ittkneodent Menpaser Cntoxl as Hcond din natter it lledior. Ortega, ender rt Meres 1. UTI. UuamiPTIOM KATES 1 Hill b M-aoae ixiu, Dallr. lU ootbe " Dallr, ana moath u Br Carrier IS Adtenot Medloro. ettlul, JarUooilUe. Cemrel Palm, Pbaanli. leleoi. Cola BUI and an ttltMan. Dalit, am ftar palU, lU "ooll" '" Dallr, aoa aweta s All taraat, eaab In adiaoe. Ofriclal paper at the Cltt or Madlort. Ofllclal paper of Jackaoo County. UEMBtH Ot TUB ASSOCIATE!) PUESS Becelilm rail Uaied Wire Smite The Aaiocleted Pratt la eieluilielj entitled to tin uee lor publication ol all oia dlipaltBea credited 10 It or olnerolie credited Id IhU paper and alao to the local fleet puhlUhed htrttn. All rights for pulilleatlon or ipeclal dlipatehaa tarolo are alao reamed. HtilBIH oi UNITED PRESS afEMHKH OP AUDIT RIIUEAO OP CIECUUTI0N8 Mrerthlnt, KrpmeMatliee Id. C. MOIiENHEN A CUMPANT Orrieea In. Nn Vote, Chleuo, Detroit. Sao SranelKo lot Ancclee Braille Portland. ie Smudge Pot Bo Arthur Parry Wfth . hova found S8300 hidden In a gunnysack under house. The boya, preea dispatches stste, "foolishly spent much as they could ot their And." The boys might have been foolleh aa the original owner, end hid It In t gunny sack, under another houne. A "Vote Straight league" Is In course of formation, throughout the nation. 1U object Is to produce ir.o-e and better voters. It might not do any harm to aee that the votes are counted the same way. a The remains of a dead steer, mis taken for a deer, Ho In the upper end of the pasture. The assaesln was a careful hunter, and mistook Sept. 16. for September 30, a a Claire Windsor, blonde film beauty, has been assessed 875.000 by a Los Angeles Jury, for the alleged theft of the affections of a husband. The testimony In the case Indicated that the husband was a eo-consplrator, and knew all the time what was hap pening to bis affections, in fact, the affections were given to Claire before she allegedly stole them. The husband Is guilty ot romantic negli gence, and still at large, devoutedly hoping he will be robbed agalu. "If the NRA falls WHAT", In quire the emotional and equeamlsh (as they always are) Democratic press of Oregon. The wiseacres are guess ing that the WHAT will be a Repub lican administration. YB PIONEER BAWL-OUT (rendleton Eaat Orrgonlan) PENDLETON churches Pen dleton has some features to be proud of and othera which do her no credit. Among the latter are her streets, her churches, and her school houses. The church buildings are themselves sorry specimens of "gospel shops." but the attendance) must be, to those Interested, more discouraging still. There may be sufficient excuse for this, .but It Is an action of which any person ought to be most thoroughly ashamed to attend church aervlces and disturb those who desire to listen by acting the part of hoodluma in tha back pews. Tou hear us talking. (SO Tra. Ago Col.) a a a Renry French of the Eg. Pt. district towned Sat, and confidently estimat ed be was only the width of two hands from the poor house. Mr. prench waa pufring a cigar, waiting for a chance to blow the smoke in a banker's face. Automotive engineers have Invent ed an "Improved vacuum feed " This may be Ok. for autos. but no matter how much they Improve the vacuum. It will still be nothing to feed on. a "MAKES CRATER LAKE IN TWO HOUrtS' (La Orande Observer). The Lord took more time. a a a Dock Robinson Is back on the Job. and dressed up. Some of the Older Otrla are calling him Romeo and Lo thario. The Shakespearean go-gettera are all right In their way, but a poor deslanstlon for a Dloneer who ran erlve) rlarfc i. V. an Dnurt Unni. ! romery, and other movie dudea pointers on how to hold a hand. l 4 Paahlon In dogs In this pauperlred neck of the woods and weeds. Is now trending towards the Judicial looking, short-legged, long-bodies ftooteb canines In need ot a whisker and eye brow trim. The breed will not eat anything unless It la cooked by their master, or the leg of a guest who haa not been properly Introduced. Ten years ago It was smart to own a Siberian bloodhound. The species were calf sue, and It took a calf a day to keep them properly nourished. Mow the Siberian bloodhound owners have all disappeared, and the blood hounds have gone back to Vladlro stock. a a a It Is now barged that finances at OSC. were handled worse than the football. Mrs Rattle Keames White. Ascredlted Piano teacher, studio 130 Laurel fit. TeL tM-M. W Chancellor Kerr on the Spot SO TIIERE is to be an in ventilation of the state educational system, the University of Oregon and 0. S. C. The recent controversy over an 0. 8. C. audit is given as the exciting cause. If it were not an audit, it would be somothing else. The plain and disagreeable truth is that the chancellorship of Presi dent Keer, has not been a success. It has failed to bring har mony in the state educational system. One hears little com plaint from 0. S. C., but the faculty and student body of the university are up in arms, and want a ew Deal at the earliest possible moment. THHEY don't like Chancellor Kerr and don't trust him. There may be no justification for this. Chancellor Kerr may have done as well, in his difficult position, as any educator could have done. Then again he may not. The fact remains that the university faculty, student body, and the people of Eugene as a whole, want Mr. Kerr to get out, and a chancellor in no way connected with 0. S. C. put in and they won't be satisfied until they get it. "piIIS is not surprising. It would have been surprising, in fact it would have been nothing short of miraculous, if liny other denouement hsd resulted from placing the former president of a rival institution in charge at Eugene. Deep seat ed loyalties and prejudices can't be eradicated over night. To the present writer, it is a mystery that anyone ever believed they could. But a group of prominent Eugene business men, and influ ential Oregon alumni DID b"licve so, or so they said when they endorsed President Kerr for the place. But it is plain to see now, the cause of thiB belief, did not rest in faith, but in FEAR. Fear of the Zorn-McFhorson bill, fear of what would happen, not if Mr Kerr did get the place, but if he DIDN'T. Chancellor Kerr's appointment was the price paid for this bill's defeat. Now with that fear removed, conditions return to normal, and nature particularly human nature takes its course. Such an outcome was inevitable. The surprise is not that an effort to remove Chancellor Kerr, has started so soon after his eleva tion to office, but that it did not start before. the outcome will be it is impossible to state. There . will be a widespread feeling that Chancellor Kerr should bo given a fair chance, and efforts to remove ,him now, are nothing but an attempt to revive the ancient and destructive feud, which has so seriously injured higher education in this state. On, the other hand, there will in our judgment be no material abatement of the determination to get Chancellor Kerr, us long as he remains. In other words, regardless of Chancellor Kerr's qualifica tions for the position, thore will be no harmony in higher educa tion, no general satisfaction with the status quo, until Chan cellor Kerr steps out. This is expressing no judgment upon the rights and wrongs cf the situation as far as this newspaper is concerned, it is merely facing the facts 1 Can 't Pear Waste Be Stopped? TIIE present situation of the pear industry in Southern Ore- gon, emphasizes the crying need of some practical method of utilizing pear by-products. Dried pears are marketable and not perishable. There was once an evaporated pear plant in the valley, which was initially a success, but the operator died and the plant was abandoned. According to our information, pear brandy is a highly de sirable stimulant, while pears with their high sugar content, can be manufactured into a hiiih grade of alcohol. With the new pear grading rules, hundreds of tons of pears are going to waste this year if these rules are maintained, thousands of tons will go to waste in the future. VTe feel that there should be an IMMEDIATE INVESTIGA TION of the dried pear and commercial alcohol possibilities. Of course the conditions this year are abnormal; but we believe in ANT year, the utilization o! the by-products of the local pear crop, would literally be a God-send to the pear growers of this valley do more than any other one thing to put the pear busi ness upon a permanently prosperous basis. Communications rerhaps It Is Beet To the Editor: Please allow me to forward thanks for my family for the many sympa thies from our friends In the recent bereavement of our departed daugh ter, expressed both oral and written, and through the medium of a host ot nowers But we hava laid away the fairest flower ot them all, and experienced the saddest duty ot one's We. The greatest up-to-date orator said at a child's grav. "Men are oaks, women are vines, children are flow ers." Let me say In passing, those who have not read or heard Robert a. Ingereoll on love, UN snd death do not know how beautiful the English language la Friends and neighbors, only this morning on passing a group ot smil ing school children for whom parents have worked so long and faithful that their mothers might send them so neat and clean, and happy on their way to school: but It was a sorrowful realisation that Luclle was not among them. Perhaps It Is best that we ahouM not know why this should be. for wa get no answer: so humanity con soles Itself by building up a hope. There are many sympathetic wishes to the thought. Perhaps what I once heard at a grave when the casket waa lowered, the father said to hie folks: "Come on, let's go, Nellie will be there when we get home." Be that as It may, a beautiful memory of our departed ones we have always with ua. Let me close with the following verse by Rev. J. B. Ooode. handed to me by a friend: Who Ne'er Has Suffervd "Who ne'er haa suffered, he has lived but half. vYrto never failed, he never strove or sought. Who never wept Is sUsnger to a laugh. And he that never doubted never thought." Once again thanks, one and all, W, O. KNIPS. Medford, Sept. IT. Ye Poet's Cornei Autumn. Autumn, with purpling grape snd drowsy air, quiet, Intrt; Spiral of smoke, sky hacy, gold of the drifting leaf; Plight of birds southward o'er hlU gray and early shadowed; Orotesque the fallen acarecrow. spramllng amid frosted pump kins and withered cornstalk; School days, you book-laden student, bidding reluctant farewell to summer's Joys. ChlU morns and nights, glum face of the Ice vendor. These tokens, all and more, bespeak the melancholy days of Au turns. , Mrs. W. H. Anderson. RrfMnlbtlttT. t sometimes wish I might again Know Joyous, carefree days. With gay footsteps irreeponslre. Traverse Youth's rose-strewn ways Should Touth return, 1 know not how I'd meet her smiling gase, Por my heart-strings are deep-tan-flM In duty e endless maae. B'.anohe Logan O'Neal Jenkins' Comment (Continued trom page One) Josephine was next after Jackson with 1M ounces, or SI per cent of the state's entire production. t Southern Oregon produced consid erably over half of all the ata'.e a old la Personal Health Service By William signed letters pertaining to personal araita and oyglene not to dis ease dlagnueie or treatment, will Be answered oy Ot. ttiady u stamped elf-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters tnouia oe oriel and written in Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a leer can be ans wered bera. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Of. William Brady, lea El Cemlno. never ley Hills, Cel. EVOLUTION OF DISEASE. Chios-emu, tht "(i-mii alckncM,N a character title type of anemia In young glrU, was fairly common a recently aa thirty yeari ago. It la ctearjy described as one of the primary or essential anemias In Osier's "Prac tice." the edition of 1808. Every physician who was in practice at that time un doubtedly saw cases of chlorosis. But today this disease has prac tically disappeared. Its place seems to have been taken by another type of anemia, called achromlc anemia, or simple chlorhydrlc anemia, which occurs In women of 35 or older. Another disease the physician saw commonly at the turn of the century was lobar t pneumonia (otherwise known as pleuropneumonia and for merly as lung fever). Yes, any doc tor who was In practice then can remember cases of classical lobar pneumonia. Today lobar pneumonia Is certainly the exception, that is, the typical Illness Is rare, and another type of pneumonia, broncho-pneumonia. Is now the frequent acute lung Inflammation. Classical gout, which must have been a common affliction In grand father's time, simply doesn't hap'pen now. Whatever the nature or cause of the acute Inflammation of the great toe Joint may have been (there Is no good reason to think uric acid haa anything to do with such trou ble), we are bound to admit that the complaint happened often enough a. hundred yeara ago. But what has be come of It now? Burely our excesses of food and drink are still great enough to produce gout If there la such a morbid condition. Tha evolu tion of disease seems the only way to explain the mystery. Acute Inflammatory "rheumatism" or articular "rheumatism" or "rheu matic" fever or acute Infectious ar thritis as It Is now called, has be come a milder or less violent. If none the less serious illness. Even the Joke about the chap who had Inflammatory rheumatism complicated with the Jumping toothache is not so good a joke as it was In the old days when people hsd Jumping toothache com plicated with Inflammatory rheuma tism. As for that, it seems that people don't even have the terrible toothache that our forbears suffered. Dlpththerla and scarlet fever have both been modified by evolution. In the eighties and nineties of the last century the occurrence of either Ill ness in a household was rightly re garded as a grave calamity, for a large NLW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclnryre NEW HAVEN. .Sept. 8. With re turning travelers glooming about Europe, we cancelled reservations on the Europa, push ed Harry Sllvey Into the car, tossed the dogs in after and here we are ram bling! The co lonial charm of C o n n e o t leut's countryside Is e pecislly alluring against autumn's broom. IP J I'm somewhat I A, si tool for white I S1 y v 1 picket fences, WsfcdJ red barns, dove cotes and aheep-foid. And here they are In profusion. Towns flash by. Litchfield. Bethel. Dan bury I lifted my hat for the Danbury News Man and somehow thought, too, of M QuadDerby and this brisk city of New Haven. In college towns I hare learned to take on special deference. Any small-Job msn may be on. the edge of a degree. I once hailed a filling sta tion attendant as "Young Squirrel' In Berkeley. The week before he had become a doctor of philosophy at the California university. Until this evening I hsd never seei Tale, whose purplish pallor shim mered so austerely in the dusk. It aprawls over a hum block close to the city's heart and fronts on a se rene square. There are vlney towers and through provocative archways peeps of the campus. Ths tang of wind-swept hills touched off stinging hunger, J champed to try out one of the Pto maine Tommies among pawky hutches on the fringe of town. A compro mise waa the clattering dining room of a etstlon. Depot restaurants are electric wlttt expectancy ol travel. Pood become exciting. We had a table beside a circular counter and were studying a well thumbed menu when my wife with a gulp announced she lost her watcV Nothing else happened so far, ears we blew two Urea. John DeCarlo, the chauffeur, broke a back tooth at lunch, I came off without a penny and both doga refused food. We absndoned eating and wandered, like lost souls, around the station, hunt ing. It was found on the floor ot the car. So back to vttUtng. I asked a pert blonde, a double for Patsy Kelly, what would be her cut-J sine cholca. (Bsrtlett'a Business Col leg "06 ) She shifted gum medita tively and sugeeated ham sod egss, Prench fried potatoes, sliced tomatoes and a (.a of milk. "Spoken like a true daughter of Tale.- aald Harry snirey. who never got further Us an Hed la toe Third Header. HeK;3taSj4ad It fS3 Brady, M.D. share of cases were fatal. Then came antitoxin. Later toxln-antltoxln and toxoid, to protect children against the menace. Today diphtheria is no longer a dresd disease. Either the character of the disease ha changed or the susceptibility of the race has changed. In a discussion of such a subject one might ring In something about our newly developed diseases such as the "nervousness" of people who live under high tension and all that bunk. But we need not turn to Imaginary maladies. The plain facts are suf ficient to show that there Is an evolu tion of disease. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Dlathrrmy for Pelvic Inflammation Plve years ago I had my appendix, oqe ovary and fallopian tube removed . , . adhesions . . . Involvement of re maining ovary , . . Dr. uced dia thermy (electro-coagulation) Just once. 'Since that I have worked as usual during the entire time . . Three cheers for diathermy from- one who knows. Mrs. A. H. 8. Answer The method has proved a boon In many such cases. But X warn the public to beware of charlatans who pretead to have skill In this. It la always wise to make sure the phy sician or surgeon you consult for such treatment Is one of good repute and standing. The Phunny Pharmacist. The pharmacist at 's drug store tells me that If I try your iron nd ammonium citrate remedy for hypo chromic anemia I must stop all use of tea and coffee while taking It, be cause the tannin In the tea or coffee will react with the Iron and coat my alimentary canal with ink iron tan nate. C. L. E. Answer Par be It from me to take Issue with the head soda-Jerker, but If I were you I'd take my Iron and ammonium citrate and go right on enjoying my tea and coffee Relate the yarn to the traffic cop I'll bet he will be rem I tided of another. Strike Off the Bnnd. Our baby Is seven months old and atlU wears his woolen flannel band. I have been tempted to take It off on hot days, but everybody says it dangerous. , . E. A. S. Answer The poor kid. What chance has he to survive If you keep on doing ss everybody says? 4end a dime and a stamped envelope bearing your address, and aak 'or the Brady naby Book. The belly band or binder should be discarded at soon aa the naval dressing is discontinued usu nl'y within two weeks after birth. (Copyright, I93y, John P. Dlllo Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should lend letters direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D- 26S EI Ca mlno. Beverly Hills. Calif. Afterward we drew up at the Taft. I felt vague misgivings sbout the dogs. Some hotels are still finicky on this side of the ocean. But we trotted them up to the register. Only ladles were back of the desk. They did not glance at the pooches, nor did elevator operators or bellboys. Times have changed. New Haven Is cupped In the hills. The picturesque rise, "Sleeping Giant," northward from the hotel window, suggested at treat lve hiking through the rustle of dry leaves.. All New England towns have a feel of permanency haloed by vigorous tra dition. Communism and social de vices clamoring for change seem far away. There' a puritanical purr to atreet names, too. I notice Chapel, Mead ow. Orange. Church, Temple and Court. Aside from Its big university are five other colleges. The educa tional urge Is reflected In speech. 1 hailed a policeman and Inquired rather clumsily direction of the hall where Nathan Hale lived. I some how expected him to Interject: 'There you go splitting an Infinitive." Early we drove out to see the Tale Bowl. An empty football field looks even more desolated than an empty theater. I thought of Ring Lardner'a mot the day It opened: "Gene Buck's drawing-room without lamps!" It's warming adventure to gipsy along the open road without objec tive. At noon we set off again for we don't know or care where. Just floating down stream with violet In our hair. No guide book. No one home knows where we are. I have decided not to look at a newspsper. Rulers may abdicate, governments fall. Flood, famine and pestilence! But don't worry. Ill be dandy. I hare my mittens. Just think of me dreaming out here under the stars. run of nomadic contentment and plenty of red ant. (Copyright, 1033. McNau?M Syndicate, Inc.) MOSQUITO BITE Urs. A. H. Bamrell of 1403 sjt Main street was reported 111 today with a eerera Infection of the rlpht hand, oeliered the result of a mosquito hue. The swelling In the Infected portion necessitated lancing of her hand and her condition was reported as tm prored this afternoon. Considerable attention was drawn to the case due to other reports here of Infection from mosquito bttee. Count. Judge K. B. Day recently .ut tered a slight baca Infection, beliered brought on by the same pest, and other similar experiences hare been leported to physicians. The gross income to rice growers In this country declined from 45 CO00O0 a rear In the 1934-38 period to 115.000.000 Last rear. VINES LOSES ANOTHER NET TITLE l: ' Imitj , , .J "S 1 Ellsworth Vines was stripped of his Isst remaining major tennis title this year when he was overwhelmed by Bryant Grant, Jr., little fighting gamecock from Atlanta, snd eliminated. from the men's na tional tennis championship at Forest Hills, N. Y. Vines has held tha title for the last two years. Qrant (left) and Vines are shown after their match. (Associated Press Photo) ROOSEVELT MOVE TO PUT WASHINGTON, Sept. 18. (AP) William E. Humphrey continued to serve as a republican member of the federal trade commission today after flatly rejecting President Roosevelt's request for his resignation. The refusal was given by letter sev eral weeks ago. Humphrey question ed the president's authority to re move him without cause. Since, Mr. Roosevelt has taken no step to re move the commissioner. Reports that the president sought Humphrey's place for Philip I Fol lette, progressive republican brother of .Senator Robert M. La Follette, could not be confirmed. But friends doubted that Wisconsin's former gov ernor would take such a federal post. President Roosevelt asked Hum phrey to submit his resignation effec tive August 15. In his request, the president said that while another re publican would be name to the place, he felt his policies with respect to the federal trade commission could he carried out better through ap pointee of his own choosing. Humphrey. Instead of resigning, re plied that the trade commission was a continuing and Independent body not under presidential control. He said the law prescribed the removal of commissioners only for wrong do ing or inefficiency. Neither of these causes were raised In the president's request. Mr. Roose velt based It rather upon his desire to. have a republican commissioner of his own choosing. Humphrey's refusal squarely chal lenged the presidential power to re move members of Independent fed eral agencies who have been con firmed by the senate. KMED Broadcast Schedule . Tuesday 8:00 Breaklaet News by Mall Tri bune. 8:05 Musical Clock. 8:16 A Peerless Parade. 8:30 Shopping Qulde. 8:45 The Royal Club 9:00 Friendship circle 9:30 Morning melody 9:45 Meeting of the Martha Meade society 10:00 TJ. 8. Weather forecast 10:00 Musical notes 10:15 Eb snd Zeb. 10:30 Vignettes. 10:45 The Pet program 11:00 Kay White 11:05 The O rants Pass hour 11:30 Martial muslo 11:35 Song and comedy 13 :00 Mid-day renew 13:15 Popularity 13:30 Newa flashes by Mall Tri bune 13:30 Interlude 13:45 The Oolden West 1:15 Varletlea 3:00 Classified .edition of the air. 8:00 Song for everyday 3 30 KMED program rerlew 3:35 Music of old. 4:00 Cocktail of music 4 :30 Masterworks 8:00 Cecil and Sally 5:15 Quartette parade 8:30 Anson Weeks and his orch. 5:45 Newa digest by Mall Tribune 8:00 Medford Theatre Oulde 8:15 Andy Slough 8 30 The Dollar of the future 8 45 The South Americans 7 00 The Hawk 7 : 1 5 Modern 1st lea 7.30 to 8 :00 Erentlde Put-In-Bay Pish Hatchery, a 8103,. 103 institution, la perhaps the largest and most complete of Its kind, hstch irut spawn from food fish tsken from Lake Erie and p'.antlng the fry for restocking-. Prof. ). C. Peel of Southern col Wft. lakeland, r.a.. recommend, a itudy of history and religion as a cure for economic Uav Fhteen miles of draping material was used for decoration of buildlrus for thts year's Tennessee Vs:;ey la ausmal and Aj.-Kul'.um Jsj. i DEFIES COUNTY'S PURSE WILL BE CLOSED UT TO TRANS ENTS (Continued trom rage One) causes of the low state of the fi nances. To Name Committees. Two or more citizens from each country district, faced with a trans ient relief problem, will be named as members of the committee, to wait upon "squatters, and Inform them food, hospitalization, or other assist ance will not be rendered. Several already have agreed to serve upon the committee, and the spreading of the information will start this week. County Judge Day attended the meeting of the state highway commis sion In Portland Saturday to pro teat against any re -allocation of fed eral road funds. The contract for the Neil Creek-Barron' section of the Pa cific highway was awarded to Von der Hellen and Plerson of this city. It haa virtually been approved by the highway commission and the Federal Bureau of Public Roads. The work Is expected to relieve some of the local unemployment. To I'se Local Labor. t The county court plans that this work will be performed as far as pos sible by local labor. Details of County Judge Day's plan for- reduction of the budget deficit will be announced later. The legisla tive experience of the official Is prov ing of high value In the evolving of the plan to be presented for conside ration of the budget committee, which meets this year In November, instead of December. Friendly I ( , MEMBER. THE ORDER JMjwjf E Rul Naturally our service it a friendly service, because ever since we've been associated with the public, we have realized that friendliness is a valuable asset. We number our friends by the. score, ' friends we have won by thoughtful, conscientious service. PERL FUNERAL HOME -MOyZttCiCUTA OFFICE OF COiiMrv rnenMcn SIXTH AT OAKDALE -PHONE. 47 Hotel Willard Klamath Falls KLAMATH BASIN'S LEADING HOTEL illiifi Flight 'o Time iBledrord and Jackson Count) History from the rues ol l'b riiU Tribune of so and 10 fear ago) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY September 18. 193.. (It was Tuesday.) Condon, Ore, minister arrested as on of trio kidnaping antl-Kln leader. Federal suppression of Kian anarchy In Oklahoma threatened. John Doe forfeits 1S bonds In jus- ties court. He wss charged wlt& be ing drunk on the main street. Many local owners of radiophones' heard the report ot the Berkeley fire over the air last night. Sportsmen of the valley demand accurate reports on condition of Rogue river and the state of fishing. Claim use of water for Irrigation purposes lessens value as tourist as set. Firebug loose in Josephine county forests causes heavy damage to tim ber. Tha nLffhta ara chlllr and m&n are wearing overcoats and fur raps. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY September 18, 1013, (It was Thursday.) California swept by beat wave and . Pasadena Ice supply Is short. I, Cold Hill fair and salmon bak Saturday will be outstanding event of season with an all-night dance. Greater Medford Club to give ban quet for wives of physicians attend ing state convention here, to be formed Southern Oregon tax payers league to be formed. Robbers enter a Rogue River store and escape on a hand car belonging to the Espee. A Proposal From the Duke" at the Star; It Is the first of the "Who Will Mary Msny" series. The Isls presents "The Drama at Gettysburg" and the It four ".high class comedy reels from Kalem studies." Approximately one-third of the 6,000,000 farms of the nation are de voted to production of ootton. Randolph Pinder, 15, has not missed a class at Sunday school since he enrolled at the age of three at West Palm Beach. Fla. Building permits Issued In Miami and Miami Beach, Fla., the first eight months of 1933 totaled 82,383,929. The average monthly old age pen sion In 1932 was 819.31 as compared With 818.89 In 1931, says the federal bureau of labor. Mme. Gabrlelle do BaroncelU Is editor snd publisher of the only French newspaper in Louisiana, at New Orleans. Swedish Massage Hours 8 to 5 Corrective Exercises By Appt. Oscar S. Nissan. P.T. Physical Therapeutics Formerly Director and Instructor Massage Dept., Boston City Hoap. 538 B. Main St. Medford, Ore. Well Seasoned BODY FIR , OAK and LAUREL 8ave by ordering NOW, MED. FUEL CO. Tel. 631 ! We make t specialty ot catering to commercial travellers. Modern, light sample rooms. Popular price Dining Room and Coffee) Shop. W. O. Miller, 8. W. Percr, Pres. Mgr.