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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1933)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "Cttryom ta Southern Ortgoa Ruds till Mill rrlbuiM' Dtllr iPt atlwday Publlihed bj HIDKOHD PBINTINU CO. ROBEBT ff. BUHL, Cditor As intepcDdent Ntpipsr Cntand u weood elm aitur tt He-diord. Oreioo, aodw act ol live S. 1818. 9UB8CHIPT10N KATES Daily. fir Dlly. u BMntm I " nll?. em mootb 80 o. r.rri in Mwif on!. Aifalind. JwUoiwtll.. Centril Point, PdmdI, Tilfot, Gold Bill sod od ttlehwtri. Dillj, on par UJ Pilly. t south Hallv. eat Booth All term, cib Is tdtanea. OffielU Pr or tm CHj of lltdfofd. Official ptpor of Jtcksoo County. MEMBKH OV TUB ASSOCIATED PUCS8 Bonlrtoc Pull LtiMd wiit Hcrrtct Tfa AuocUUO Prcn l ticlmlitlf tntltltd is th. um for publteatloo of all oa dUpateba eredJtBd to It or olberirts. eredltod to thU papor .u. i i nitt.1lih4 liar In All rlfbta 'or puhlieatlon of ipcelal dUpaUtwa Otrtm ara auo rwriw, MEHKEK Of UNITKD i' 1118 ItEMHEH OP AUD11 BtlHEAU 0? CIKCULATI0N8 Adnrtlilrrg KepretcntatlTto M. C M0( JENSEN k COMI'ANT OfMcn lo Nn York, Cbieato, Detroit, Saa rraorltco ! Angela Seattle Portland. U.S. Ye Smudge Pot 8; Artbul eerry cwnhar. the elorv month of palnt- d leaves, la upon u. The weather U perfect, and people enjoy It o thor oughly. It la felt they would not notloe a tax. Imposed for being alive In Indian summer. 8uoh grandeur and uch perfection ehould not be dispensed to the masses without somebody malting some money out of It. Under the proposed big-hearted plan, the night with a harvest moon beaming, would be free to all. The KRA has now reached the point where It will be necessary to use a combination drop-kick and Boston crabhold, to tear some of 1U noisiest supportors loose from a dol lar. ' . Plana for a revolution have col lapsed, due to a stranger rudely in quiring the whereabouts of the revo lutionist of yester-year. Prosperity algn.""GYPSY WOMEN FRISK MARION COUNTY FARMER FOR $248 ROLL". (Hdllne Salem Capital -Journal.) 0 The alogan, "Oregon First," should be amended to read, If Portland Don't Beat the Rest of the State to the Benefits. Concentration of httch-hlkers In concentration camps by government this winter, la apt to provide some excitement. It does not seem possi ble that a rover who has not remain ed In the same place ten daya In 13 years, will be easily concentrated, and Jvut stop hiking spontaneously. The wine of vagabond la la In the blood. J. H. Orand, Salinas fruit and vegetable company executive, will run for governor, he says with the politi cal slogan of "We have too many damn., fool laws." (Needles, Calif Nugget.) Such sanity will be re warded with the lowest vote. o One of the Oalahevlkta has an nounced a Diamond Jubilee of her own, via the third finger of the left hand. 00 A fine combination of feminine wear la the pancake hat and knickers, and the aame Is resulting In a lot of Impolite snickers. a While the threatened special ses sion of the legislature la doing some thing for the "Forgotten Man", It might also do something for the Forgotten Taxes. 00 Rumormongering continues very brisk over the county, a relic of a year ago, when some people believed lies because they were tired of hear ing the truth. The latest rumor re . ported a suicide, which was not very convincing aa the aljoged suicide showed ip Saturday and was positive he had not committed suicide, all rumors to the contrary notwlthstand. Ing. Before that a rumor waa circu lated that another cltlr.en had met death in an auto accident. He waa very much surprised to hear of hie demise. One of these daya a rumor monger will get caught, and It will be rumored that the district attorney Is getting mean again. o We note from the staff lists of the varloua high school newspapers this year that our scholastic Journalists are operating In the latest approved style most of the papers have from ten to twenty editors each, and three or four reporters. (Kansas City Star) This Is In conformity with the theory that anybody able to operate a lead pencil la an editor, and the main duty of a reporter Is to keep the lead pencil sharp. oo The pumpkin crop of the valley la now waiting for the frost to get upon them. The supply Is short, and will not be enough for the Hallowe'en need, let alone the pie demand. The shortage will be welcomed by the country cowa, who about this time every year start choking on pumpkins not chopped fine enough. "Recovery la now Impeded by un certainty as to what the dollar will do" (Eugene News.) The certalntly of what the fellow with a doil&r will do, also has something to do with the Unbending. The World Series, Etc., Etc. PLAT ball! The world serieg started today. The American people will not only forget about the N.B.A., rational infla tion, unemployment relief, and the Cuban revolution, but tbey will forget about boarding and pungle up hundreds of thou sands of dollars, for the privilege of sitting in on the annual baseball classic. Last night there was a second-rate wrestling match in Port land. The arena was jammed, every seat was taken. Dog races are equally popular, the promoters are making a killing. Begin ning this coming Saturday the football season will get into full swing, and hundreds of thousands of football fans will take Saturday off, and pack various and sundry stadiums, spending time and money on the country's most thrilling out-door sport. . . PVERTONE claims to be broke, but when the people want -J something they seem to be able to produce the where with all to get it. And plainly they want sports, some good, and some not so good, but from the grunt-and-groan melee to the bnt cracking fiesta, there appears no dearth of customers. According to government reports there also appears to be no decline in beer sales. Beer costs more than spring water and fresh milk and isn't as refreshing as the 'first nor as nourishing as the second, but the people prefer the former, presumably be cause there is a "kick" in it. There is a kick in a world scries ball game too, a hard fought football match, a wrestling vaudeville even if it's faked, and a dog race, provided one has a bet on it. ITTIIAT is the answer f The answer is, we like to get away W from it all, we crave to be diverted and amused and thrilled. We may need a new pair of shoes or a set of woolen undies, but there is no kick in buying what we need ; there is a kick in buying what we don't need, if there is a bang in it. IIo hum a strange world, mates 1 Perhaps some Wise Man, can devise a scheme to capitalize this passion for diversion, enlarge rather than restrict the field, and then clap on a tax that will finance the country as a whplc, and pull Uncle Sam out of the slough of despond. Yes, that would be a sales taxi But we wouldn't mind a sales tax on something we don't need, but insist upon having. No tax will ever keep us from a show we want to see, or a game we want to attend, or a contest we want to bet on. Why not utilize this very human disposition, and make it carry our up-keept We herewith present it, with our compli ments, to the Roosevelt brain trust. Don 't Scoff at Brains CPEAKING of the brain trust recently we have detected a certain skepticism among the rank and file, regarding the value of the high brow experts milling about the White House. We don't share that skepticism. We believe this is a special ist age, and we need all the brains and the expert knowledge we can muster. The most hopeful thing about the Roosevelt administration, in our judgment, is its dependence upon the best ability and technical skill, it can muster. In our present fix, we can't have too much of that sort of thing. TPHE fact that no Miracle' Man has appeared, and that recov- ery after its midsummer burst has slowed down somewhat, should not result cither in discouragement, or a demand that the Brain Trust be disbanded, be put in. The country needs above everything else the man that "KNOWS." Ho doesn't know everything, of course, he cer tainly isn't infalliblej but with more knowledge than the aver age, he is the best bet we have. So let's be patient. Rome wasnt't built in a day, and the worst depression in the world's history can't be disspcllcd overnight. Keep the experts on the job, support the administration that is engaging them, and with a long pull and a strong pull, we will yank the ship of state off the rocks yot, and have it floating in cnlm waters before another year goes by. The President Is Right IN frankly telling the American Legion what the government can and can NOT do, President Roosevelt follows the prece dent established by every president since the World War. Presidents narding, Coolidge and Hoover, all adopted the same attitude, particularly tho last two. They refused to be stampeded by the radical wing of the organization, they refusod to sacrifice what they regarded as the welfare of the country, for the special privilege of any group; they met the convention face to face, and fearlessly accepted the challenge. yiHS is as it should be. The president represents the entire oountry, no faction within it. He wouldn't be worthy of the position he holds, if he sacrificed what he regards as the national welfare to political expediency. Although some of the leaders of the legion disagree with President Roosevelt's policies regarding veteran relief, we have no doubt they respect him for so frankly stating them. Eventu ally we feel sure the rank and file of the organization will agree, that in the PRESENT CRISIS, confining relief to those who actually suffered from war service, is the sound and patriotic thing to do. ,FI At a meeting of Crater Lake Post 1B.1S, Veterana of foreign Ware Mon day evening the following officer, for the new year were elected: Commander, t. D. Canfleld; senior vtce-commander, Tom Fuse; Junior vlce-commnnder, Floyd Croslln: quar termaster. N. ft. Walters; Judge advo cate, Oeorge Codding: chaplain, O. . Huklll; officer of the day. . W. WaU. Auaillary officers elected were: President, Julie Canfleld; senior vice president, Lillian Flynn: Junior vloe pre.ldent. Acnes Berber: conductress. '.Charlotte Drummonrt; trustees, Ruth .Wallers (3d Uargaret lufluig. and the professional politicians HUCKLEBERRIES TOIE FOR LACK OF PICKERS Hundreds of gallon, of huckleber ries are going to waste on Huckle berry mountain, between the Crater Lake National park boundary and Union creek. The heaviest crop In year, attracted pickers from all pane of southern Oregon, especially Indians from the Klamath reservation, but a heavy frost a tew night ago mined remaining berrlea. which were Just becoming ripe. Huckleberry City during the month, hsd a population or nearly 1000 peo ple. Including donrns of families, but the VIII... I. now hln. r.ntrilv ri. Ml ted. ltb bushes ,tlU bearUj laden. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. signed letter, perUuunf to personal uraita aod oygiene not to du ase diagnosis or treatment, will oe answered or or. tired u a stamped elf-addressed envelope w sncloeed- Letters Mould M artel auo written in ink. Owing to tno large number of letter, received only ten can Do ans wered bent No reply can or made to queries oot conforming to instructions, address Oi. William Brady. 84 Hi Camino, deverley Him, Cei ONLY A fEW OF IS KNOW HOW TO BREATHE. Whereas, primitive savages and a few civilized persona whoes brains have not been addled by physical cul ture bunk, breathe more efficiently and have greater endurance than ordinary folk: and Whereas, our cheaty complex la unnatural and u n p histological and ought to be discarded along with the toeing out affectation of the past genera tion; and Whereas, the habit of costal or cheat breathing commonly cultivated by persona with quaint conceptions of physiology handicaps those addict ed to It. Therefore, be It Resolved, that all who now wear the emblem of the B. B. club and who doesn't? ahould abide by the rules of the order. The Ideal of the B. B. club la o free the diaphragm. All chest breathers are belly bound. Belly breathing la not "deep breath ing." It la only natural breathing. The novice, In order to reap the greatest benefit from belly breathing, ehould start from scratch, with the assumption that what he or she al ready knows about breathing la not to. You see, most popular knowl edge of auch things la derived, not from the atudy of physiology, but from the teachings of all sort of propagandists, charlatans, mall-order quacks and shortcut health "courses." The diaphragm functions automat ically but not Involuntarily. The untutored savage breathes ireely and naturally with hla belly and diaphragm; so do you when you are anesthetized or fast asleep. The teat of the time the function of the diaphragm la Inhibited or hampered by your bad education. It seems that the adage Mens sana In corpora sano (a sound mind In a round body) doesn't mean an ye thing to our education. The policy In dorsed by the great nostrum and quackery Interests aa well aa many Influential commercial Interests, Is to train the mind and leave the body to pick up training casually. The purpose of the B. B. club la not to teach you how to breathe. Who teaches the savage or the horse how to breathe? Belly breathing merely tends to oppose or correct unnatural tricks or habits acquired from faulty physical education. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEWARK, N. J.. Oct. 3. Newark la the only stop on thia tour that has ahown building construction aotlvlty. New Jersey's jostling metropolis baa always been dwarfed In pub lic thought be cause of near ness to New York. Thouaanda think of It as an exalted Goth am fiiiihntirc X 1 like New Ro- L v"7vl chelle. V si MMnU m 1 W - I r " afaiiCvx.J! Independent com munity. It's the 15th cliy In size in the union, depending more on New York than San Francisco. Most trav. elera are so excited by tta proximity to the big town, they scarcely give Newark a thought, en passant, so there la surprise exploring it. Tall buildings scrape the aklea, there are enormous department store and smart specialty shops that would vie with those along Fifth avenue. All this, despite that in a few min utes one may whisk through the Hol land Tunnel and be In Manhattan. Newark does not permit this prox imity to be a handicap. History also furnished the city with romantic back-ground. In 1666 Capt. Robert Treat and a band of SO Purt tans traveled through the wilderness and purchased the site of Newark from the Indiana for a few gaudy trinkets. That's why Robert Treat la ao venerated. Having visited atrporta of Croyden, In London, La Bourget, In Paris, and Templehof, In Berlin, I somehow thought Berlin's waa largest. But I learn Newark's total transport In avia tion la larger than all three. Only two miles from the ctty'a heartthe airport la the official base for air mall operations for New York. It's one of the porta of entry for Euro pean planes. Too. one thinks of New ark somehow as Inland, yet there are IS miles of busy water front. New Jersey's marshlands have been largely reclaimed and the mosquito haa vanished. But there la still the fatal solitude of a soggy stretch here and there, where one thinks of ugly crimes and haunted houses. Preda tory birds circle over moraasee that suggest auch grand locales for ahud- drry J. S. Fletcher type of mysteries so appealing on wintry nights before biasing loga. The shore In autumn are dread fully glum with all summer gayety tightly coffined. No vista la so sad aa a merry-go-round, sheeted and still, behind locked doors. The roller- coaster with only a lonely night watch seems a world's stepping oft place. Summer resorts have winter popu 1st Ions peculiarly their own. They have spent summers chowderlng clams, frying fish, prddlltig Ice cream and attending drop-In amusement halls. In the fall and winter they llsii from brldgC4 or tHf.raiU oi de m a r- J Belly breathing la a atudy In RE LAXATION, not an exercise in the ordinary sense of the term. Educated laymen generally have only vague Ideas aa to what, where and why the dlaphrgm Is. We have already Implied that the savage or the horse breathes well without Knowing anything about the dia phragm. That only goea to show that no education la better than bad edu cation. In lieu of horse sense a little e.ementary anatomy and physiology hould not come amiss. Back In the gay nineties It was rather smartly facet! oua to say Skldoo and Twenty- three for you, and to refer to the diaphragm when you wished to in dicate delicately anything lower than the heart. Today these quaint affec- trtlons are as ludicrous aa genta In Jewelry. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Baby Wanted. Please give the name and address of the parents In Wyoming who have the baby for adoption. We have been married seven years and it seems we are not going- to have any children. . . Mrs. W. A. D. Answer I can do that only by per sonal letter. The baby waa expected in September for all I know the baby may have been snapped up by someone before you wrote. Cramps In Legs. Will state a good method to relieve crampe in the limbs below the knees (legs, my dear Madam, legs) la to lie on back and alowly life the limb to an angle. This never falls to straight tn out the kinks. Mrs. L .B. Answer Thank you. A half dozen methods have been suggested by our teadera. Perhaps we had better have a referendum and find out which method la best. Safe Water for Tourist. Oolng on automobile trip to the coast. What method do you advise for purifying drinking water along the road? Mrs. A. T. V. Answer Try to obtain your drink ing water only In the cities you pass through. If you have to drink water from the road&ide place, better boll it, If you can't boll It, add one drop of tincture of lodln to the quart of water, and let this stand 20 minutes before you drink. (Copyright, 1933. John F. Dille Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 265 El Ca mino, Beverly Hills, Calif serted piers, read the Billboard and look forward to the best season ever, Optimists all, they have found a way of living pleasantly and working five months a year. Hltch-hlklng la so prevalent every roadside Is dotted with hand-wavers net king free hauls. It la surprising what extraordinary types beg rides people of education and refinement who have cast themselves adrift to move from town to town In search of the Illusive Job they do not seem able to find. Near fashionable or It used to be Lakewood we came upon a atranded tab-show. Nine collegiate youths who had gone bust playing an open Air theater at one of the dinkier resorts. They were on their way back to Se attle, walking, hltch-hlklng, and mak ing of what would seem to many a depressing experience a Borrovian love of vagabondage. One told of running into Will Rogers In a depot In St. Louis. He approached shyly with: "Mr. Rogers, would you shake hands with an ordi nary actor?" Rogers gripped hla hand, struck a poae and cried: "Two ordi nary actors!" We asked tha vounir trnnhiirinri tn join us In lightening the larder at a wavBiae caravansary. Aiterward they got out musical Instruments, put on an lmnroniDtll rwrfnrmanr mnA vrm wound up with an old-time Virginia reei ao-si-aoing and balancing all. About 40 motorists collected and a hat waa passed. The collation war 18.38 and a coat button. Aa we mo tored on I noticed Harry Silvey'a four-buttoned coat had but thrtn buttons. (Copyright, 1933. McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) Ye Poet's Corner Lupine. I The lupines curve and sway. They nod from everywhere. They seem no more a part of earth Than of the summer air. They tint the hill and plains, Oather by roadsides and far country lanes. Aa though entreating you to be Mindful of their company. Away from city heat and glare They are ao free from any care. They view the vast blue aummer sky. They feel the light warm winda go by. They know Ood'a daylight from His night And gently draw thetr blossoms tight At night. Per h ape they offer prayer And know no dark since Ood la there. Their little velvet blossoms would Grace any spot where'ere they stood Chutera above with green below. Are aweet to remember, aa they grow. And when they speak, what do they say? The aoul the blossom of our clay O'er sin and doubt and bitterness Triumphant. Shall know what they say. HAZEL A. BLONEKER. Oirgnn Weather. Fair tonight and Wednesday: little change '.n temperature; gentle change able wind offshore. e Heating costs can oe reduced Foi .imple:e r.eatmt semce call Art TURNER BREAKS CD "i . - . -i Col. Roseoe Turner, who set new wesi-easi iransconnnemai speeo record by flying, from coast to coast In 10 hours S2 minutes, la ,hown aa he waa greeted by his wife as he landed at Floyd Bennett field, New York. (Associated Press Photoi Just WHAT Does The following discussion presents the various suggested methods of raising prices by monetary means and the difficultly in bringing about the desired results. The conclusion Is reached that recovery Is im peded by the uncertainties In the Situation and that business activ ities would be promoted, with resulting higher prices, if the dollar could be atablUzed. The stabilization would have to be with a lower gold content of the dollar to prevent speculative selling that would carry prices down. What do people mean when they my. "We need a moderate, controlled lunation"? They usually mean they desire to see prices put up to the level perhaps of 1926 (particularly of farm prod ucts), by manipulation of the money or credit system. Why la the lfTCB prlve level desired? Because It la contended a large share of the existing Indebtedness was contracted when prices were up, and cannot be paid with prices down. Thus, if a farmer borrowed money on bis farm when wheat was $1.25 a tushel, it la difficult or impossible for him to pay off the mortgage with wheat at 65 cents, or lower. How could Inflation be brought about? Three ways are generally urged. One la by decreasing the gold con tent of the dollar. If the gold con tent were cut in half, aa is permis sible under the Thomas amendment, that would mean that every old gold dollar would be worth two new new dollars. The country's gold reserve would then be counted not as four billion dollars, but aa eight billion dollars. Those who believe In this devaluing of the dollar contend that such action would automatically double prices. What Is the second method? By Issuing additional paper cur rency. A little more than 5! bil lions Is now In circulation (all of It secured by bonds commodities, or told). The Thomas amendment au thorizes the issuing of three billion more, without any specific security. And the third method? By "pumping credit Into the banks" by the purchase of govern ment bonds by the federal reserve banks. The reserve banks pay for these bonds by creating credit. Under the Thomas amendment the Presi dent la authorized to direct the Fed eral Reserve banks to buy bonds up to three billion dollars, presumably setting free three billions of new crdeit for use in business. Thus, a Kansas City bank might sell one mil lion In governments to the Federal Reserve, and be credited with ono :n.:i!on dollars on the books of the reserve bank, which it could lend it customers. As bank checks are large ly used for currency in the United States, an Increase in bank credlJa is equivalent to an Increase in pos sible currency In circulation. Would devaluing the gold con tent of the dollar have the effect expected by advocates of that policy? Experience Is against such an out come. By the embargo on gold pay ments the dollar already has been devalued 33 per cent. Some prices have gone up. others have not been affected, others hare gone down. The average Increase has been only about 15 per cent. In some cases prices undoubtedly advanced because of the expectation of Inflation. What la the reason for the, failure of prices to respond to the depreciation of the dollar? As was aald. If the dollar were to be devalued by 50 pr cent, the amount of gold reserves would become eight RELICS FOUND BY ORANTS PASS. Oct. 8. (Spl.) John Egger of Waldo had his friends guessing here aa to the name of a opium into their pipes: also the "gadget" with which Chinese lifted name of a "doo-dad" used to pick the drug loose when It cakes. An Instrument of this nature, made of ailvcr and linked Into a silver half dime of the mint of 1853. which also had a silver chain was found by Eg ger'a son. Sherman, recently at the Plat uric mine nesr Waldo, and Eg grr was showing it to friends in Grants Pass. Epwr said .his son found the In struments while tinkering around a mound of earth left In the old Chi nes graveyard at Waldo. It seems that years ago. after some of the Chines who operated mines In the oriclnsl 'Sailor Gulch." now Waldo, had beta dead for soma )ear, FLIGHT RECORD Inflation Mean? Nil ion dollars Instead of four billion. That would mean the banks could lend more money. But they have means to lend much more money than they are lending today. They say they cannot find good loans for the credit they have on hand. To increase this unused credit would not help prices except through specula tion based on fear of the dollar. Would the Increase of currency by three billion dollars from 5H billion, Increase prices? It would If people became alarmed over the prospect of tincontrolled in flation and got rid of their money by buying things. But the things bought would be held merely as a speculation. Good so bought would not pass into consumption and even tually prices might fall. The mere Increase of currency to 8V4 billion dollars would not of Itself affe rrlces, because bank checks, and last year transactions totaled 600 billion dollars because of the velocity with which the checks circulated. The additional three billion would be only a drou In the bucket in relation to the 600 billion of transactions. As an expert haa said: "You cannat make up for velocity by volume." How con Id Inflation come by printing currency? As the Committee for the Nation which favors devaluing the dollar, but not printing currency reported, such "a terlfying amount" of cur rency would have to be printed aa to create a panic and thus lead to a tunaway inflation auch aa Germany had soon after the war. Could not the amount of cur rency be controlled? Panicky flights from currency are very difficult to control. If a genu ine scare over the possible value of money gets under way and people generally start to spend, bow are they to be made to stop? Pressure becomes almost irresistible to continue to print more money to sustain the higher price level. In Germany it proved impossible to withstand this pressure. In France the situation got out of hand until the franc had sunk to one-tenth of its gold value, when the Implacable Polncare waa given dic tatorial powers to stabilize. An Aus trian delegate to the recent London conference remarked tt was no trick to raise prices provided you were willing to print enough currency. "We Increased ours 15.000 per cent," he said, "but we weren't happy about what happened." Is there any sound way to raise prices? Yes. Business recovery which la on the way in the United States and other countries will bring up prices. The government hopes to help this by large expenditures on public works. Recovery is now Impeded by uncertainty as to the dollar. If that uncertainty could be definitely end ed, the dollar stabilized and confi dence thus restored, there would be reason to expect prices to rise. Stab ilization, however, probably should be with a lower gold content of the dol lar around the present level to pre vent a selling rush that would CAr."y prices down. Kansas City Star. 1 they were removed from their graves there and their remains were sent to China However, In removing the bodies, varloua trinkets were overlooked, and Slerman Egger found these Instru ments Just under the moea covering of the mounda. The boy also found a plain Jade bracelet, which the el-: der Eggcr did not bring with htm. The Waldo district claims the title of being the first place where gold waa discovered In southern Oregon, Egger said, and under the original title of -sailor Oulch," or "Sailor Diggings" was first operated by Chi- The Esgers .have lived at Waldo for many years, the father operating minea for large mining concerns and the boy. Sherman, working recently as watchman for the Platurlca mine, Cleaning and Pressing, the Camelc serves you rtht free delivery. Tel 1280 Memoers N ft. A "wrdlsh Massage Corrective Exrrrl.es Hour, I to 5 Hi Appt- Oscar S. Nissen, P.T. Ptn.tral Therapeutics Formerly Director and Instructor .Ma.ar,e Dept., Boston City lln.p. J.'! E. Main St. Medford. ore. Flight 'o Time .Meororo and sacasoD uisuiry from the rues ol Zui tribune of o and 10 keen go.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY October 3. J83, (It waa Wednesday.) . . . tn nav last half Kuan or . of taxes keepa sheriffs office busy. Forum hears lecture on -Scientific ; Salesmanship" by an "efficiency ex pert from Baltimore. e .., r, a rM Man ixivoaore ixouci w. ( of the Screen." at Page in "Grumpy, and Dorothy Dalton In "Fogbound fct the Rlalto. osuem paper deciarea -poiiv. bed Jackson county of first prize" at Mann'a atore celebrating 13th annl- veraary. Prohibition enforcement coat Jack son county 91121.80 during Septem- cer, and "twice that much would not be enough."' aavs f?iwii rrv Acent 3 B. Sandefer. City council debates Sixth street crossing for five hours without com irg to a decision. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 3, 1013. (It was Friday.) Attorney Porter J. Neff leaves on a trip to Dulutb. Burglars enter the farm home of L Nledermeyer and steal 940. Harry A. Thlerolf and Phoebe A. Eance were united In marriage by Rev. W. F. Shlelsd of the Presbyte rian church at the home of the bride's mother, Amanda E. Hance, on West Tenth etreet, at 8 p. m Thurs day, October 2. The quail season la In full swing, aijd farmers report disregard of tres pass notices, and much reckless shoot ing. Eagle Point files a petition to vote on local option. The town is now wet. Construction work on dam at Hl ntt Prairie starts. 1 Communications Veteran Gets Aid Here. To the Editor: On September 20, 1933, a World War veteran. No. C-343,878 In tho army of the United States and No. 264.303 in the Canadian army, with 14 years' service in the army of the two governments and with an estab lished claim from wounds and In juries that should be a total disa bility, but with claim pending under the new rating established by present administration, and known as pub lic No. 2 or the economy bill. This veteran stopped In Medford on hla way to where his service record Is, In a California veteran's bureau. For under thla bill there la not any transportation provided under certain regulations. He wanted the Red Cross to help him out with a few provisions and would they please give him a second hand blanket or two, to help him on his way to his local hospital. This veteran claims that he could not get by the clerk'a desk to explain hla case. Also this veteran was carrying In structions from the Ottawa Pension Bureau. Canada, advising and In structing him to call upon all local chapters of the Bed Cross, asking for help on his way home. And also he had lettera from a major general that he was injured In service and a let ter from President Roosevelt admit ting his disabilities, and return to hla local veteran hospital. After making the rounds of a cou ple reliefs In the city of Medford, the veteran called upon Mayor Wilson. When he found out that there waa a D. A. V. in the city and being a member of the Los Angeles chapter he next hunted up the adjutant and commander of thla chapter. He re ceived an order for some provisions and cigarettes and the Four Square Gospel gave him hla blankets and they were free of all charge. ARTHUR E. SALLEB. Adjutant Disabled American Veterans of W. W. Medford, October i, 1 Ted and Evelyn Schrader'a Dance Studio open every Thursday at the Armory. Phone 278-J. 1 Heating costs can be reduced. For complete beating service call Art Schmldlt 4181863. Why Liquid Laxatives are Back in Favor The public h fast returning to the use of liquid laxatives. People have, learned that the properly prepared "I1"0 Ba"" "nng a peneci I movement without any discomfort at the time' or atter- j The dose of a liquid laxative ran be varied tn suit the needs of the ; individual. The action ran thus he , regulated. A child is easily given the rjsht dose. And mild liquid laxatives i do not irritate the kidnevs. Doctors are generally agreed that senna is the pest laxative or every- Dnrty. .enna is a nmiirnl laxative. It does not dram the system like the cathartics that leave you so thirsty. Dr. lildwell s .Syrup Pepsin is a liquid laxative which relies on senna for its laxative action. It has the average person's bowels as regular as clockwork in a few weeks' time. I You can always get Dr. Caldwell's i Rvrup Pepsin at any drugstore, read) j (or use. Member Is. R. A. V;,