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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1933)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "Ewryort la Southern Ortgoo Ruu Uia all filtKint" Oil!) IXMpt saturtlaf Ptibliibed bf MKDKUHO PBINTINO 00. llll-M N ru BL PbOMlt B0BK.U1 W. UUHU WlW Ad llpodot Niiwf Batartd u Mcood elm utur tt Midftifd. Oregon, oakr Act Hsreb 8. T9. Dsilj. wt ref Jf Diilf. ill Bonthi !. DtUy, om month u By Curler In Adisnet Medford, Aibland, JirUomlUt, Central Point, Pboealx, T&liot. Uold Bill tod on tttmwi. nail' ili month natu mm monUi .80 A'l unut, cull la idTioea. Official papfi Um On of MedTord. OrflcUl w of Jtcksoo County. UKMBEH OV TUB ASSOCIATED PKK88 UmmItIm rull Leased Wirt 8tfrlM Tbl auoclated Press li tzelmucly aotlUed W th um for oublleatlon of til ( dlipslcht credit) to It oUwrvlM credited to tbl ptpor tod tUo to Um local w-n puhltaiwd twain. All rlcbU 'or publication of pediJ dlipttcrie Btriln ua tuo reienea UEMHRH 09 UNITED PIIES8 MKMBKH OK AUD11 BUREAU OF CIKCULAT10N8 AdrertUlnt BeprMtnUtlTM H. & MDUEN8KN COM PANT Ofleaa lo Nee York, Cbicato. Deuolt, Bio YiocUeo lot Antelet SestUs PortUod. Ye Smudge Pot By Annul Perry . ur.- vi-. bean over 15 l-ne ww " years, and, If the Depression wm same, one and allwould be happier The Sale Tax bobbed up again lat ; week. The 8ale Tax Is terrible, say ome. The chief trouble with a Bales Tax, would be the Inability to get away from It. The. country went wet lat week,1 and Prohibition la done for. rear la felt that candidate will continue to et drunk, and make dry speeches. a waa their wont. I I Report from Eugene aay that the I higher education fuaa la aa meaty as I any developed In Jackson county, ex- I cept that combntanta hire a hall. In- j tead of using the courthouse steps to proclaim revolutions. rt Aifn-1 nt phoenix was In town) the middle of the week, and put In a good word for the current Pall weath er, which he said was the beat he had ever encountered. . The greatest mobilisation of legal talent In history oocurred last week, when eight lawyers were Involved In the same law suit, at the same time. Each brought a wheelbarrow load of law booka they never opened, which with their own presence cramped the courtroom. They were not very sassy to each other. Hob Deuel, the woodpile magnate, now sella sawdust, along with wood, and any fuel will be delivered quicker than you can say Gain Robinson. 15.000 or 30.000 folks are figuring on opening a place to sell beverages from the talk that Is going around. Tha major portion of the popula tion along with a number of colonels drifted up to Portland on their week-end, to see the OSC Oregon game. They got there by train, plane and auto, and none walk ed. ... Our street sweeper fooled a number of residents Thursday night, who piled their leaves In the street expect, lng them to be swept away. Instead the sweeper went around them and the neat piles of leaves, the next morning, were right where they left them. Thus the leaf evil is unsettled. . New autos continue to grace the highways and by-ways, and soma are quite toney, affording more room In tbe back In which to cuss the Re publican party, and each other. H. Flewher, the demon baker, has joined the Public Speaking class, and gives promise of being the outstand ing table thumper. He should be a tough foe In a debate. I! the writer was debating with him, we would default the victory, as It would do no good to win, and be taken apart afterwards, with Teutonic thorough ness. Several dentists have Joined, and have been scolded for not opening their mouths wider. Country sausage la on the mkt, and the greater portion of It has not yet been taken to the country. Oltro Shlmoda, B, got a ahebawgo, or apanking, one day last week, for missing one word out of 100 In spell ing. The boy who can do no better than that, has a shebswgo coming. Pspa Shlmoda argued that the word he missed Is the one that counts, and might aa well miss them sll as one. The shebawgo was not very ex cruciating. ... No wrestlers have torn each other aaunder for a month, and fans are again desiring to see some rough oeteopathy. ... The P. Perl kids have started worry ing about Santa Claua. . Robert KM!, who recently escaped from Chile, Is fixing up an Igloo on Oakdale, and will be permanent. The Hallowe'en depredations were finally all completed. No vandalism Is now being committed except steal ing hind-Urea, gasoline, tools, chick ens, turkeys, cows, shotgun ahella, tractor wheels, overcoats, wsah-on-tlie-llne, and canned fruit not under lock and key, and guarded by a dep uty eharltf. Fighting to Revive the Saloon THERE is going to be a ternfio fight on liquor control in the special session of the legislature. The old liquor inter ests are already organized and pulling wires to line up the legis lators against the adoption of the plan perfected by Governor Meier's state committee. UNDER the guise of "home rule", rights of the common people, and down with bureaucracy, a well financed and aggressive drive against state liquor control is being waged. Unless organization is MET by organization, and the real friends of prohibition repeal, gather together, behind the state commit tee, the exceedingly valuable work this committee has done, will also go for naught. ALTHOUGH the committee program may not be perfect in every detail, or above improvement, as subsequent experi ence reveals its defects; it DOES which must be retained, if the is not to return, and the abuses not to bu succeeded by even greater ones under repeal. These fundamentals are state control; the sale of strong liquors only in state stores, in sumption on the premises; practically unrestricted sale of beer and light wines, and the right hibit the sale of hard liquors, within their borders if a majority of the voters so desire. To prevent state control, allow the free sale of hard liquors under local control alone, would liquor for PRIVATE PROFIT, which, regardless of what it might be called, would bring with it all the evils and abuses of the old time saloon. This cry of home rule is all qpuntics of the state would be profits of the state system, the be withheld, nd the obvious or a polyglot system where every community had a different system of liquor control, would Once allow either different cities in this state, or different establishments WITHIN the cities, to compete for the liquor trade, and its profits, and the entire liquor business will be back where it was fifty years ago. TTIERE is another point. In a new experiment like this, a country nominally dry for a decade and a half, suddenly becoming wet over night, so to speak, it is highly important to go slowly. It is important NOT to swing at once, from one extreme to the other, but to move conservatively at tho outset, adopt a policy of trial and error, and allow the final solution to bo tho result of cumulative, progressive EXPERIENCE. The plan proposed by the state committee is not new, it closely resembles the system adopted in Canada, and conforms in a remarkable degree with the recommendations of the Rocke feller committee, which handed down its conclusions at approxi mately tho same time. Whether one agrees with all the provisions of the Meier committee or not, there is no question that the report represents weeks of research and conscientious work on the part of a Broun of very intelligent and public spirited citizons. The only sen sible thing to do, therefore, is to adopt that report at least as a starting point, and then work the problem out, gradually from there on. DUT MAKE NO MISTAKE I This will never be done, unless the right thinking people of this state get up on their hind legs and make a fight for it. Only ten days before the special election opens, and the money and the organization are all on the other side I ' Its jlATAURICE SPATZ, well known local orchardist, has a very " interesting communication in this paper on his experi ence selling Boso pears in Omaha, Nebraska. Mr. Spats came to the same conclusion that this paper came to many years ago, Financial succo' r) in the pear business depends mainly upon two things: First, getting the pear to the retailer in good con dition, and second, informing the consumer of that fact. Number one has to do with personal contacts with the re tailer, by someone who knows pears and is interested in their profitable marketing; Number two with persistent and attract ive ADVERTISING. A system that will bring about these two things will, in good times or bad, put the pear industry upon a permanently prosperous basis, and we don't believe anything else will. 1 Persist PERSIST, Nov. U. (apt.) Mr. and Mr. Roy Proctor called on George Schermerhorn aunaay afternoon. D. E. Hutchison waa bviay Tuesday and Wednesday taking beef critters to town. Dave and Orval Peterson have been transferred back to Camp Rlk Creek, from Lake o' tbe Woods camp and spent last week end visiting relatives at Persist. Raymond Achermerhorn is staying with hta father, while working pn a survey crew on the Buuard mine road. Mrs. L. W. Ash and sister, Mrs. B. C. Zlmmer have moved to Medford for the winter. Peggy Proctor called on Pre Ids How ard Tuesday, whose friends are sorry to hear, has been suffering from a se vere cold. U. C. Zimmer and L. W. Ash have Rone to work In the camp on Bvani creek. Mi . and Mrs. Roy Proctor called on Mlidred Young Thursday. TRAIL. Nov. 11. (Spl ) Mrs. Wll mer Ragsdale, who has been quite 111 for the past week Is little better. Mr. and Mrs. Dee Oentry of Med ford hare moved to the home of her father. Dave Pence, on tlk creek for the winter. Miss Alberta Penoa has returned I , Trail contain certain fundamentals, saloon or its modern counterpart under national prohibition are the original package, not for con of self governing units, to pro result in competitive sale of a lot of buncombe. The various allowed their proportion of the right of local option would not evils of "free trade" in liquor, be eliminated. True to her home on Elk creek having been In Medford for several weeks, working at the cannery, Mr. and Mrs. Claud Ragsdale of Hollywood are here for a month visiting relatives and friends. Mrs. Alma Merrlman spent several days in Prospect the first of the week. She was house guest of Mrs. Orlsves. Boyd Tucker lost a valuable cow on Wednesday. While doctoring her In the night. Boyd fell on some rocks, so has a badly cut hand and knee. Mr. and Mra. Ed Pence spent Wed nesday evening visiting Mr. and Mrs. 8. W. Hutchinson. Mra. Ralph Watson and son. Car roll, were In Medford ehopping Wed nesday, Miss Xtable Ragsdale ts staying with her brothers and oaring for the chil dren during Mrs. Ragsdsle'a sickness. Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Ernst made a drive to Fort Klamath and Crater lake Thursday. Mrs. Charlta Blasse had a slight accident Wednesday when cutting kindling. The knife slipped and cut her chest. Boyd Tucker and 8. W. Hutchin son shopped In Medford Friday. Mrs. Minnie Blasse and Mrs. Jen nie Hutchinson attended the sewing demonstration held In Medford at the senior high school Monday by Mrs. Mack. B. Chamberlain la now teaching the Trail school. Broken windows glazed by Trowbridge Cabinet Works. Fuel Oil delivered the modern way Caul tit. Sad Traufar. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. signed letters pertaining Co personal oesuta) and aygieoe not to dis ease dlaguuals or treatment, wtu cm answer eo oy Ur drady u a tumped ell-addressed envelope w enclosed. Letters inuuld o artel aoo wntUD id ink. Owing to tbe large rjumbei ol tetters received only a imm can oa ans wered here. No reply can 0 made to queries pot conforming to Instructions Address Dt. William Hradj let El c amino, devexley Hills, Cai. HOLDINO A normal person at rest can take a full breath and then hold bis breath 45 seconds that Is the aver age, some persons break at 30 sec onds, some not until a fuU min ute. , But If there Is some Impairment of the heart or the efficiency of tbe circulation, the time the In dividual can hold bla breath Is shortened. If It falls below 20 seconds he should leave a note' ask ing St. Peter to call a doctor. Now and then some one solemnly assures me that although afflicted with tins and that serious malady he can readily hold his bresth fifty seconds. Whst of It? I knew a man who was so sick he was dead and he had been holding his breath for hours when I gracefully bowed myself out. Some students In California, having nothing much the matter and noth ing else to do, held their breath for more than 13 minutes. But they pre pared for the stunt by several min utes of forced breathing first, to get the carbon dioxide content of the blood and the air in the lungs away up, and then filled the lungs with pure oxygen Just before they began holding their breath. Anybody can. by or two min utes of moderately forced breathing that Is, deeper Inhalations through open mouth snd nose, and slightly forced exhalations, at slightly more then the normsl rate per mlnute ao charge the blood with oxygen and lower the carbon dioxide tension In It that he or she can readily hold the breath two minutes. Accumulation of carbon dioxide, and not diminution of the oxygen, in the tir in the lungs, is what makes ua breathe. In any case of asphyxia where arti ficial respiration la being applied. It la a great advantage If instead of air the victim can be made to breathe a mixture of air or oxygen with from 0 to 10 per cent of carbon dioxide. as from an inhalntor but never from, a pump or lung motor. Only Schaffer's manual prone pressure should be used to make the victim breathe. If you are not eure you are prepared to resuscitate In any emergency, send for the Illustrated booklet "Resusci tation" (Inclose a dime and a stamp ed envelope bearing your address.) The chief purpose of the bellows breathing exercise Is to add the boost er pump effect to the circulation, to aid the return of blood through the veins to the right side of the heart, whence It Is pumped Into the lungs for oxygenation. One cannot actually 'Increase the lliS. A former southern Oregon youth. Dean S. Carder, graduate of the Med ford hl&'t school In the clasa of 1015. waa recently appointed aelsmographer for the United States government, ac cording to announcement from the University of California, and will di rect operations for testing of earth quake zones from Fresno to Eureka. Mr. Carder will make testa with the portable seismograph which will determine whether or not transfor- mationa have occurred In the earth, and whether or not continued quakes are threatening. Announcement of his appointment waa recently carried In the Daily Callfornlan, which also carried a story with photographs a short time ago, explaining activities of Mr. Car der and the head of the geology de partment at the university In de termining riamsgea resulting from Jars, allegedly caused by a truck. The seismograph was used In mak ing those tests, presented In a dam age suit. Mr. Carder was assistant In th geology department at the University of California, when he re ceived his appointment, hnvlng gone there on a fellowship earned while principal In the Talouse, Wash., schools. Following graduation from the Medford high school. Mr. Carder worked his way through Oregon 8tate college, graduating In three and one- half years with honors. While a student there he waa a member of the aharpshootlng team which won first awards In national competition, receiving personal credit from Presi dent Harding. Carder later toured the united Statra and was teacher of mathematics and astronomy at Utah State college In Logan for two yeara. From there he continued to the Uni versity of Idaho, where he worked for his master's degree In geology, on a fellowship previously earned. From Idaho, he went to Palouse. Wash., then to the University of Csl Ifornla to work for his doctor's de gree. He wa sentrrlng his third year there when the government appoint ment was made. He had been elected to full membership In Sigma XI. na tional .honorary scientific fraternity. wnne in Logan, carrier waa married and now hu t-w children. His pro gress In srlriuillc fields hss been watched by many friends In this city who knew him when he reallred his first desires to become a geologist. Meeting at Talent Home extension unit will meet at the Community hall in Talent Wednesday afternoon at one o'clock. Mrs Mabel C. Mack. county home demonstration ntrent. Ill give a demonstration of cooking milk. All ladles of the community art Invited to attend. THE BREATH sbsorptlon of oxygen by "deep breath ing." Any and every such spurt or deeper or faster breathing la in evitably compensated by a folllowlng period of shallower or alower breath' lng, even by a period of no breath- lng, so that the normal level of oxy gen and carbon dioxide In the blood Is regained In a few moments. Al most any other exercise than forced breathing will more certainly Increase the absorption of oxygen In the body and tbe metabolism rate. It la best to try to forget all pre conceived notions about the way to breathe, and especially the teachings of "physical culture" charlatans and the like. No matter whether you are a soldier on parade, an athlete In training or lust a plain person, you will find It distinctly -to your advan tage In every way to get rid of your chesty complex and resume bellows bresthlng where you left off a thou sand years sgo. fJl'ESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Buttermilk. Is buttermilk good for a baby with a weak stomach? Mrs. M. A. Answer In certain circumstances It may be good. Buttermilk is gen erally a wholesome, healthful bever age for any one who likes It. It is Just half bb nutritious aa fresh aweet milk. The lactic add bacteria In It (they are the natural sourers of milk) are probably beneficial to di gestion. If Your Loved One Should Need Help I csn't savvy the Idea of your con stant criticism of tbe American Red Cross. And you claim to be a doctor) If you know more than the noted authorities . . . R. W. O. Answer You will "savvy" If you understand the reason for my crltf clsm. It la clearly explained In the Illustrated booklet on "Reauscltstlon." Send a dime and a stamped envelope bearing your address, and ask for the booklet. Immunization. I have hearsay evidence of several cases where children give toxtn-antl-toxln. Instead of becoming Immune to diphtheria, became more auscep- tlble . . . Mrs. A. C. E. Answer I can't conceive what auch evidence would be. It requires per haps three months for the full lra munlty to develop, sfter the toxin antitoxin haa been given. Sometimes a child contracts diphtheria ahortly after the first or second weekly dose, and auch casea lead to auch misun derstanding. By all means give every child who ,1s not already Immune the benefit of toxin-antitoxin or tox oid Immunization against diphtheria before the child entera school or as soon thereafter as may be. (Copyright, 1033, John. P. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D 2S5 El Cs tnlno, Beverly Hills. Ca.lf Ye Poet's Come; Hospital of the Sacred Heart. Rose brick upon a western hill Looking whichsoever way you will It seems somehow a place apart. Hospital of the Sacred Heart.. Across the threshold many footsteps paas. Seeking surcesse of pain. Waiting for that hoped-for gain, Then Journeying forth again. Nurse and surgeon Bring their skill to bear On bone and muscle And on their repair. The kindly word that helpa to find Courage for anguish atlll Will bear Its harvest In tha days to come In peace of mind. Look ever forward. Leave all doubt behind It Is God's will thst we should mend. For He Is kind. Evening comes and waiting there. Its wlndowa flash gold beams of light It seems to speak of mercy and Invite Your presence there. HAZEL A. 8LONEKER. 712 W. Jackson, Medford. 4 The Flag and Its Defenders Thirteen birth stripes and forty-eight atara In Old Oloryl How proudly you wave todayl And what a story I And oh I how you speak deep within vim. me tears oeoim we eyes And the spirit looks beyond the akles Into the glorified sepulchers Of your defenders! Bright are the stripes and brilliant the atara In Old Oloryl Brave, pure, and true, there shines from you A wondrous story: And oh I how you speak to our hesrta Todayl a voice that sends a thrill Of love Into the soul; that bids the will And spirit rise to greet the roll-call Of your defenders! Dear are the stripes snd dear ara the atara v In Old Oloryl Yours Is not death when deeds shall live To tell your story; And oh I how you apeak the righteous deeds Of men enwrapped within your foldr! Of truth, of Ood; of Heaven that ever hoida Blessed your brava! on I glorious monument TO your defenders! FRED ALTON HAIOHT. HEMSTITCH! NO 8c. Mra. Canoose. 17 Narregan. Save address. j 4 Authorized Ms; tax Servloa, Ail. makes repaired. Fboaa KM. ' Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS HERE'S a hot one for you: The government of the United States, which Is hiring farmers to kill their pigs In order to reduce existing and prospective over-production of meat. Is feeding Its CCC camps ex tensively on canned beef IMPORTED from South America! If you can beat that, you're good. THE government! spending vast sums In an effort to increase prices of farm products, including beef. Excess of supply over demand Is the reason why prices are low. Every pound of beef brought Into this country from abroad adds to the ex isting over-supply and still further depresses the price. And yet the government, while it Is doing all this, feeds its own em ployees on Imported beef I I WERE's another good one, related to this writer last summer: The chief of a big government de partment, located here on the coast, observing that blue eagles were going up In the windows all around, thought It might be a good idea to have a blue eagle In HIS window. So he wired Washington for permission to sign the agreement. Here is the answer that came back: "Can't afford it. It would add too much to cost." - GOVERNMENT, of course, is a mighty good thing. We couldn't possibly do without it. And ours ,1s probably as good as any government anywhere. But government does a lot of funny things. ' QPEAKING of government brings up the subject of organizations de signed to Influence the government in one way or another. There are thousands of them in this country most of them existing for the primary purpose of getting dues out of easy marks in order to provide good jobs and traveling ex penses for the smart organizers. It's a great racket. IJUT a new one has Just been form ed to whose purposes this writer can say "Amen" although as a mat ter of principle, or perhaps of thrift, he will decline to contribute dues. These purposes are pretty well set forth In this opening paragraph In Its announcement pamphlet: "America's Interest are basically different from those of other nations. The world has many problems to solve. We must start by solving our own." That Is to say, let the rest of the world mind Its business and we'll MIND OURS. THAT, In substance. Is what Wash Incrtsin tnM it wVin in hi. r.r. well address, he advised against en tangling alliances. Every time we have followed his advice we have done well by ourselves, and every time we have FAILED to follow it we have got into trouble. 11TE got all excited over Cuba's " wrongs, and went to war with Spain. As a result of that war, we acquired a guardianship over Cuba and actual ownership of the Philippines, Cubiyj and Philippine sugar and Philippine coooanut oil are wrecking our own producers, and In spite of all we've done for them both Cubans and Fili pinos regard us as oppressors and lose no opportunity to express their low opinion of us. llfK got excited again and went " into the world war, to "make the world safe for democracy." Democracy Is now in greater danger than for a century, with dictators scattered all over Europe, and we haven't a friend among the nations for whom we fought, bled and died. They borrowed money from ua by the billions while the borrowing was good, and now they twiddle their fin- 1 gers at us and tell us to get it if we can. Then they add a few Insulting re marks about U-cle Shylock. pHIS new organisation calls Itself the Committee for America Self contained. It'a a grand Idea, and this writer, for one. Is all for It so long, that Is, as he doesn't have to put up dues to provide 'me body else with salary and traveling expense. Physical Ailments Relieved by Swedish Massage ana corrective exercise. OSCAR S. NISSEN, P. T. Ml E. Main. Hra. t to 5 p. m. Fuel Oil Any Kind. Any Amount Ask for delivery by Medford Fuel Co. Tel. Ml NEW YORK DAY BY DAY 3y O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Nov. 11A chslky. drizzly dsy. A good one for pondering the value of friendships. Ten treas ured friends three last year have passed beyond mortal vision the past five years. Subtract ten ataunch friends from a ratlW cloistered life and you have an acn lng bleakness. The astonishing angle of my friendships has been tolerance. That is the key stone of sll my undying human tics tolerance. Few have it. Noxt comes that utterly dt&armlng naivete frankness. Will Hogg exemplified the charm of candor more than any friend I ever had. He believed and practised there should be no evasion between friends. If you were his friend and invited him to dinner he might razor blunt ly: "No thanks I'd rather not." Right ly, he did not feel that what seemed to others a stubborn creak needed oiling In sincere friendship. I have two friends on a world tour together. Irregularities of travel hon ed them to a keen edge. One day In Rio one barked to the other: "I'm getting sick of you and you of me." They agreed to go separate .ways two weeks and Join up again. A flimsy friendship could not ride through that. One of the reasone why I have of ten tweaked the log-rolling Algonquin crowd Is because of their vicious back-bltlng. I have heard some of them say the most despicable and caustic things about the others. And the next time I would see them they would be all but sitting In each oth er's laps. My faults add up a grand total, but hyprocracy ia not one of them. If I don't like a person I re fuse to speak. That at least gives him an Idea. A truism about friendship la this: Firmness and age, as with trees, only flourish In good soil. That's why crooks never remain pals long. Thin nest friendships are gushlest. And bustling geniality Is always unstable. Look at France! Enduring friendships sre bulwarked In the Ruth and Naomi saga: "Whith er thou goest, etc." In life's unalter able selfishness this Is seldom attain ed. I do not wish to be misconceived. I haven't a surplus of such loyalty. But It does exist. This Is what I mean. In Paris one time Lee Olwell took mi to dinner at Foyot's with the late Dr. George Dix on, long the personal physician to Plerpont Morgan and E. H. Herriman. Dr. Dixon In the closing years of lite transplanted himself in foreign soli, away from things dear to him and the city he loved, to minister to a college mate of whom he was fond and who could not be moved. I'm cynical about those buttery frlendshlpa so highly sentimentalized among Broadway's chance children. Where are the Clayton.' Jackson. Du rantes of yesteryear? What sentimen talists came to Ziegf eld's, Dllllng- V.-m. n STarl rTftrTnll's aid When life laid them out like a rug? The boys who stand transfixed and war-aim-med chanting "Dear Old Pal O' Mine" at de luxe bars usually find the low ly Bowery the place for a free meal. Right now more people stand des pairingly before a world'a about-face than ever. Trembling hands reach from ahadowy doorwaya In each block. One I think who patrols a block In East 56th street is a walking sermon of the times. Around his neck an ironical placard: "I had a world of friends!" Like so many, his friendships had the stability of smoke rings. In an atmosphere of placidity friends, like smoke rings, clung pleassntly about him. Hit by disturbing air currents, they spread, thinned and drifted away. How I go on! In all the experimental propping for an upset universe I hear only coldly calculated theorizing with the stiff bowing of the stately minuet. Nobody has grabbed a partner and swung off In a dl-sl-do and balance all. Friendliness is the ticket. Charlie Schwab built up his vast steel enter prises with It. Nations might be built up In the same fashion. Instead, they're snarl ing. Everybody can add grist to the mill. I'm going right now and tell the hired girl to take the rest of the day off and take her fellow to the Music Hall on my pass. Look at me right through here! See the sweetness and PLUS CHARLEY Mat ... 25c Eve ... 35c Kiddies . 10c PS Flight 'o Time (AAedioro and Jackson County diatory rrom the riiea ol rne Man rnbnoe of to and 10 fear. Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY November 12, 1923. (It waa Monday) Hay baling underway In Table Rock area. Ex-President Wilson declares In speech, "my Europt-n policies will Bave the world." T. Slater Johnston returns from Portland livestock show, where ho purchased two fancy shorthorn bulls. Divine healing meetings start. City full of people attending Ar mistice Dsy celebration. Medford high defeats Ashland, 17 to 0. before big crowd. Conrad, sub for Fabrlck. did good work In run ning the ends, and gives promise of developing into a star. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY November 12, 1!13. (It waa Wednesday) The rose committee worked val iantly all (Jay Tuesday that Is the lo who came worked so but were un able to get enough cuttings ready to supply one entire building. So the distribution was made Immediately after noon today, and more than 10. 000 rose cuttings will be given to the school children of Medford. Medford tax levy for year will be 13 mills. Dealers advertise a package of gum with every purchase of "Hassam Cig arettes." Fourteen hoboes, who have been hanging around the water tank for a week and begging on the streets are given marching orders by the police. Ashland man Is found guilty and given a year In state prison for ap pearing nude on the street. James J. Hill of the Northern Pa cific wires the Commercial club he will be unable to visit Medford as planned. light. I'm one of the Friendship Boys! (Copyright, 1933, McNaught Syndi cate. Inc.) 1 (Continued from page one) ably will be less rail publicity until the situation Is mended. A large local law firm which thrived on Anti-Saloon League connections for years has now disbanded. The wet lawyers are the ones who are getting the business these days. The farm state governors, recently here, complained bitterly In public about the agricultural administration but most of them gave private assur ance at the White House of their personal xaiin in tne p res went. General Farley's friends can't help murmuring to themselves how differ ent it would be if he had only decid ed to get McKee Into the race before the fuslonists chose LaOuardla. The truth appears to be he did not realize Tammany's weakness until after the primaries and went In too late to capitalize on it. It appears now that Tammany's knife went into McKee's back. At least that Is where It was found. Bankers confidentially profess to be afraid of what La Guard! a will do on New York City financing which already has been satisfactorily ar ranged for the coming two years. 4 Remington. Rand Salesman Here W. L. SieRfreld. with the Remlng ton Rand, Inc., bustnefs systems, has established his headquarters in Med ford at his resdlence. 832 Minnesota, he announced yesterday. Mr. Slegfreld, who came here from Portland, plans to open a sales cam paign here, he stated. All work on machine equipment will still be car ried tn In Portland as previously, Mr. Slegfreld said. . Heating costs cau be reoucd For complete heating service call Art Schmldll. 4181662. NOW PLAYING Till Tuesday Night CHASE COMEDY "BACK TO NATURE" RI TTY ROUP'S IIM.t.OVt E'I'.N PARTY "PAR AMOI NT NEW"