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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1933)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUXE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "Enrvont Ip Southern Orwoa Audi Mi Mill MbUM Dill deep. tUturiliy Publlirnd bf UEDruUU PB1NT1NQ CO. 15 -IT -19 N. ro at thorn It BOH Km W. BUHU tdiiof Ad lndipodot Niwiwpw BnUrtd M iteow) elan mitUr tt Utdlord. Oroa, uDd lex ol turen 8. 18TB. 9UB8('rtIPTION BATES at UalLin AriianM oj rtr IJ.OJf Wily, tli oooUu....... lilllf. AM BOOU) j Kfriar In ArftUlM MwlfOfd. iHlUrjd, lKbonlll, Cwtral Point, Pboeols, Talut, Gold BUI ud on ttlfhMji. Dill, om fMf I-0U Dillj. dx Doothi " Dillj. om nooU. 80 AU Urmi, tub lo vhioM. OftVW piptr of lb City of Htdord. Officii DWf of Jietsoo County. itEMBEH 0? TUB ASSOCIATED PUBS n ah. 1 1 ...1 liriM DanlM lb AnOdaUO Pre If MeluMulf toMM 10 tM ON IOC DUOUUUOO W HI 0wi - eridiud to U or olixrwtit errijtd lo tnt pipor ud kIm to tbi locil wt publish! ncrilo. All rlsnu ' puhileitiOD of ipeclll dlspsLef Mrtlo art ilu rcMned. MEMBEB Or UNITED PHE88 EMBED OP AUDI! BUB2A0 Or CIRCULATIONS Adicrthlng BeprMfnuthet H. a M0UEN8EN COMPANY Omcw to tin York, Chlcuo, Detroit, 80 rriadaeo l Angelas SettUt Porthnd. Ye Smudge Pot Br annul Perry Report! from Salem Bay. "the ape clal mmIoii of the leglalatura U work, lng Ilka Trojans." Even ao, they are till playing like a aenlon of the Oregon legtalature. r . Turkey! are now on the market. Thar don't coat a much aa laat year. but are harder to ateal. The peatered farmer haa loaded up hla ahotgun -with rock aalt he ahould be feeding to hla cowi. Lee Tracy, a he-actor of Hollywood haa been chaaed out of Mexico, for appearing In hla ahlrt-tall, on a Mex ico City plan. A parade waa paaalng and Mr. Tracy arose from hla alesta, In an effort to give It aome competi tion. It waa hla Idea to he offenalvely cute. Inatead, the Mexlcana regarded the event aa plain cuaaedneia, and In formed Mr. Tracy If he would leave their country real pronto, "they would not offend the American pub lic." by casting him Into the "baa tlllo". Mexico waa entirely too polite. Thla week Mtae Dorli Duke, helreaa of Jamea Buchanan Duke, the tobac co magnate, cornea of age and Into full control of a ahare of an aetata, containing beildea many homes, two trust funda aggregating In 1937 153,000,000. It haa shrunk aome In the depression (Salem Capital-Journal.) Just think of the Depreaalon shrinking your wealth to a mere a6S.000.000. The Moon and Venus had a con Junction Tuesday evening, Just about milking time, about four miles south of the F. Bybee place. The heavenly bodies appeared about the aame time, at the aame place last evening, but only had an adverb. The weather la atlll fine, and la held In higher esteem than a Grand maw holda a grandson. Bob-tailed fur costs are all the rage among the fair aex. most of the rage being confined to the mere male, who pungled up. The abbreviated bit of faahlonsbla wear makaa the tall girl ahorter, and the ahort girl taller. The original ownera of the fur cams from Siberia, Tibet, Abbyalnla, far away Arctic reglona. and the ateppes of Russia. Thla la a long Jump from the rugged Individualism of the girls of a few yeara back. They flung the hide of a coyote over their left ahoul dera, and fastened his tall to hla nose, with a hook and eye, and went placea. In the same era, country dudea wore calfskin vesta. A man In the aouth end of town fooled everybody, and la erecting a home. Instead of a gaa alio, on a vacant lot with an oak tree on It. The Jackson, county deficit of aolona waa eliminated by the governor and now thla progressive neck of the weeds haa fit representation at Salem. Xt la not the fit representation you era thinking about. The governor hoped the appolntmenta would please everybody, knowing full well they would not. For one thing the De mocracy of Jackson county was slap peA In the face. It waa the face of tt.s Young Democrata that stopped the assault. The prealdent will prob ably get a telegram about It. Both the appointees are Republican wretchea. and deep-dyed In that po litical faith. It might teach Demo cratsboth old and young to vote for their own candidate next time, even If they are offered electric lights for nothing. ... "Dale Austin Is much Improved since being kicked by one of hla fath er's mules" (Dorrts, Cel., Itema.l A branch of osteopathy, mayhap. PIOMvKR r EAHI.K.SSM XH, KTC. (Pendleton F.a Oregnnlan) ' A man came Into our office and WBntArt mnlWD tn .n, .Anialhlit. In eat while he waa at the time full of I gin. He waa bounced without cere mony. We ask those interested In cruelty to antmals la that correct? A friend trili in that a coyote ate up a mana watermelon patch near Heppner. We don't believe It, but we Imagine our friend meant the coyote ate up the watermelons, pot the patch. (50 rs. Ago col ) Aulhurued Miytstf service. All makaa repaired, than too. JMCIA, 2 Excellent Appointments WE feel confident the naming of Glenn 0. Taylor and A. E. Brockway, to represent Jackson county in the legislature, will meet with the general approval of the people. Naturally the friends and supporters of other candidates will be disappointed, but where there are a score of applicants and only two positions to fill, obviously all could not be satisfied. For those who are disappointed there is only one sportsman like thing to do, get behind the and give them every chance to make good, Thjs is no time to hold grudges or give expression to personal prejudices. Give the two men a chance to show their quality, let them be judged by their RECORDS, not by whatever preconceptions may now be held. THERE were a great many things to consider in making these selections. With Ashland already represented by Senator Dunn, it was important to have Medford and the rural districts also represented. Mr.' Taylor is from Medford, an old time resi dent of the highest standing; Mr. Brockway, master of the Jack sonville grange, a practical farmer, is splendidly qualified to represent the rural districts. The two appointments therefore give Jackson county a well rounded REPRESENTATION. IT was also highly desirable in these appointments to void selec- tions which would have opened old sores, and tended to revive the bitter internal strife, from the destructive effects of which the community is just recovering. From this viewpoint citizens actively identified with either faction, or who held local office during the "rebellion" were automatically eliminated. Fortunately neither Taylor nor Brockway were thus involved. They were identified with neither holders, with the inevitable underground complications- IN fact their strongest recommendation and the strongest hope I we have of their success is their complete FREEDOM from any entangling alliances. 'While they both happen to be Repub licans, they were not even the selection of that party's central ccaumittee. , They both go to fe-:oi, as free as the air, literally with no interest to represent Iwt the public interest, nothing to thwart them in doing whatever they believe should be done, to advance the welfare of their district and V17E believe they will both give a good account of themselves. ; ' They are men of good judgment, integrity and character. I While they do not happen to be the two this paper originally favored we are for them, and eager to do whatever we can to transform what we KNOW will be a record of conscientious . endeavor, into a record of constructive achievement. Have They the Courage? CTATE REPRESENTATIVE OLEEN would finance destitu- tion relief through issues of county bonds in small denomi nations, the "bonds to be baoked by proceeds of taxes delinquent from 1027 to the present and to from the proceeds of those taxis when collected, either in cash or by foreclosure and sale of the property against which the taxes lie. It is not likely that bonds could be marketed on any such basis. The interest rate on delinquent taxes is so low that there is little inducement to pay them. The process of collection by foreclosure and sale is slow. Bond buyers would be certain to eye askance so uncertain a security. Mr. Oleen has distinguished precedent for Ms failure to put into hia bill provision for any adequate measures to collect delinquent taxes and make them a sound security. The gover nor, only a few days ago, similarly kept away from anything of the kind in advocating application for a federal loan against delinquent taxes. Mr. Oleen's proposed bond buyers, not less than good old Uncle Sam, are likely to require that the security of delinquent taxes be made sound before borrowings are made against them. Officeholders and politicians being what they arc, one begins to wonder whether there will be anybody in the legislature cour ageous enough to initiate legislation to enforce collection of taxes. Orcgonian. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY 3y O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Not, 33. Rarely Ml deeply Ingrained reverance for an American rotor ao flowered Into kiaMMi apontaneoui out- 7 V G burat aa the I ' cheera for Oeorge w J M. Cohan'a new aucceaa. At 86, he provea .again he la "the flrat actor," In a play by the flrat play wright. Eugene O'Netll. A Guild production, If you pleaael There have al waya been die- mmtihAui-t.iiS harcla about Co nn n. Not on Broadway, of course, where he la ao beloved. But In oruatler ctrclee where anything English, even to the perverse philosophy of Noel Coward and Lonsdale, U revered. Too such Cohan remains: "Clever, you know. But Just a hoofer t" In hla latest offering Cohan gives the stage a new technique In re straint. His entrance la even muf fled by another figure obscuring him. At every curtain drop the audience glances about bewildered to real lee it la In a theater. Joe Jefferson In Rip Van Winkle did no better Job of rharacterlMtlon. Moat critics agree Cohan far out shone the play. There Is no other actor likely to have transmuted It into the moving pastel of a country editor's life It la. X have heard Co him will do one more play of his own. Then permanently retire. And what a loss that will be I I If K. K Pars more, Jr., la correctly .fiaretted. Peter B Kyne Is definitely nsshed up with moiton pictures aa on of (ha arta. Asked to eipres two men who have been selected, faction, nor were they ex-office their state. be raid, interest and principal, an opinion of a film, Kyne barked: "I never go to pictures. Asking me to aee a movie la like asking Pader ewskl to hear a child do five-finger exercises." Beauty no longer seems the com mercial asset It waa. Dearth of mu sical shows and cabs ret cramped the local market. But a bigger reason la movies no longer depend upon per aonal pulchritude. Katherlne Hep burn, now In ascendancy, would not become "Miss America" at an Atlantic City pageant. Neither would Oarbo. Katharine Cornell, best box office bet of the atage, la In the same category. Eva La Oalllenne'a family gaaed dis appointedly In the cradle at "the ugly little thing." No. 977 Park avenue Is likely the last of the rambling mid-town apart ment structures with huge Inside court, throbbing fountains, graveled walks and terraced gardens. Among Its many celebrities Is Oral dine pnr rar. So vast is the Inside area aome 20 doormen are on duty. The de mand for space will likely never per mit another of Its type. Arthur Samuels, of Harper's Bssaar, has been more successful than any other editor extracting ahort atorlea from Dorothy Parker. Of all modern writers she Is most difficult In ob taining copy. A do sen editorial hands are extended for anything she turns out. But her total output consists ot three slim and torturously win nowed volumes of versa and two books of ahort stories. Thingumbob: Norma Bhaarar Is Camera's favorlt movlt atar , , . Hflan Broa.rlca, eemedlenn, haa a aa-yaar-old son , , , Paul Whitman's allotment of sweats la a atlrk ot pep permint Cindy arary al weeka , Small and Leaser promise "btaset and better productions" in Hollywood , . . Constance Collier haa a Sealyham that barks only at Japanese ... Lee Shubert never takea eyes oft the ataxe when he taaee a theater teat . . . H. T. 'Webster. Herb Roth and Milt Cross bave lunched. toUiar a vary Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. tftgoea letters pertaining to personal aeaita and oygtene not Co dta. ase diagnosis or treatment, wllj oe answered oy at. tsiady ii a stamped lell-addressed enveiupe ti enclosed- letters tnuuid oe artet ana written in Ink. Owing to the large oumhei ot nered here. No reply can oe made to qoerlee not conforming to instructions Address Or. William Brady, 281 El cam! no. tieverley ilius, Cat. SO BEE STING IS GOOD FOR HHEl'MATIZ? Personally I don't believe more than a small fraction of the tale of great new cures that come out of Europe, via the popular press. Even when the yarn la re plete with cir cumstance and names of the savants who fig ure In It, I Just admire the lm agination of the correspondent or the Imagination of his medical cronies. But here Is . one that gives me pause. It comes from our regu lar correspondent In Paris, I mean the . correspondent of our leading medical Journal, so listen. Prof. Maurice Perrln and Mr. Alain Cuenot of the Nancy medical school decided to try some experiment to test the popular belief that bee stings are good for the rheumatism. Now. right here I wash my hands of thla. X don't even know what rheumatism Is, If anything, and I warn you that I can give no further Information than you will find In this article. The gentlemen began their Investi gation with great skepticism. Or so the medical correspondent says now. They were a astonished when they found the bee venom actually does benefit victims of rheumatism. You know as well as I do what they mean by rheumatism.) Among the condi tions they studied were cases of arth ritis defomans, articular rheumatism fthts quaint diagnosis Is extinct In America), arthritis, rheumatoid pains, muscular pains, lumbago and sciatica. There you have the works, I should say. About all the painful maladies hot Included are neuritis, bursitis, felon and corn. But the French are that way. Everything goes in the soup. The technic these Nancy investi gators employed was quit, simple. They collected bees by holding a wide mouth bottle before the opening of the beehive. They took up the bees one by one with forceps and placed a sufficient number In a cupping glass on a sheet of paper. The cup ping glass was then placed on the skin at the site chosen, the paper quickly withdrawn, and the bees set to work promptly, being somewhat annoyed at the Indignity. The experimenters assert that the pain caused by the stings is much less In a person affected with rheu matism, whatever that may be, than It la in a normal person. While the stings must be applied to the painful or affected spot, the action of the venom may be exerted at a distance or throughout the sys tem. Thirty bees atlnglnj? the patient at one sitting, a sitting every three days, and the treatment continued from day for three years , . . Ernest Hem ingway sits at the same table every night in Pedro Chlcote's cafe In Madrid . . . Jed Ktley and Hank Walefl, long Paris cronies, are now bungalow lng together in Hollywood. Otto Kahn's favorite gesture in niggling concerns the white silk handkerchief that adorns his evening clothes. He hides It from his valet after wearing ao It will not go to the laundry. Few humans haven i a tiny touch of absurd stinginess. The ex-King of Spain, like Rupert Hughes, is a rubber-band -saver. Mayor Gay- nor's coat lapels were always edged with stray plna picked up here and there. Frank Fay is a paper bag put-ter-awayer. My prlee parsimony la with tubes of tooth and shaving paste. X squeeze them to paper thinness no one sal vages so much service. Then some Imp of deviltry makes me fold them, when deflated. Into a lump to fire out a bath window at the crossing cop. Twice I nearly got him. Some day I will triumph and my next stand will probably be behind latticed bars calling "Hey Jack, gotta match?" to passers-by. (Copyright. 1933, McNaught Syndl- cat, Inc.) FREIGHTERSCOLLIDE IN NEW YORK WATERS NEW YORK, Nov. 33. (AP) Two freighters collided in lower New York bay shortly after midnight today, leaving one so badly damaged that for a time It was feared aha would alnk. The damaged vessel waa the Ohlo i of the American-Hawaiian line. Inbound from Seattle. The other was the Liberty of the Cosmopolitan line, whloh had Just cleared for Baltimore and Le Havre. . Trustees of the Internal Improve ment board of Florida have applied to the federal public works adminis tration for a M94.000 loan to be used in reforestation. DANCE DAD DYNGES Grand Opening ORIENTAL GARDENS Saturday, Nov, 25 Two 0rche9trn Two dances, one admission Biff Hall I Small Hall JftEI Men 35c. Old Tim Ladies 10c letters received only a can oe ana two or three months, constitutes fair test of the method. Boy, Ideal combination for thla treatment would be a doctor as deaf as I am and a patient aa dumb as dumb. Perrln has prepared a solution of bee venom which can be administered by hypodermic Injection with the same results as though one were host to 30 bees Mondays and Thursdays. He extracts the venom sacs from the bees with flamed forceps and trans fers them to receptacle with abso lute alcohol. Later this Is dried In vacuum and preserved in the stand ard ampule of physiological salt so lution, ready to inject. Don't ask me whether or where thla bee venom can be obtained. If you must know, perhaps Prof. Maurice Perrln of the Paculte de Medeclne de Nancy, Nancy, France, would Inform you. There Is nothing about the bee sting treatment In my booklet, "The Ills Called Rheumatism," but several corespondents have assured me the booklet is worth the dime and stamp ed addressed envelope. QUESTION'S AND ANSWERS Copper In the Iron Tonic. How much copper sulphate should be added to the iron tonic you ad vised for simple anemia? A druggist said he knew about how much 1' would take, as I had lost the clipping, but It made me retch and vomit quickly each time X tried to take it Mrs. S. A. E. Answer One grain of copper sul phate dissolved in a tablespoonful of water, is a quick emetic for child or adult, in poisoning emergencies. One grain of copper sulphate la enough for a pint of Iron tonic, or one-fourth gram in the four-ounce quantity, The tonic Is simply a solution of one ounce of the old official iron medi cine, called Iron and ammonium cit rate, In four ounces of water. Of this take & teaspoonful in water flavored or sweetened as you like, after food three times a day for at least two or three months. The Iron neither lit' Jures the teeth nor causes any di gestive disturbances, though of course it will and should blacken the de jecta. Carbon Dioxide Snow. X noticed you advocate surgical re moval of warts. For 15 years I have used carbon dioxide snow for warts and similar blemishes. It produces little pain or discomfort, takes only a few minutes, does not scar, and in the great majority of cases there Is no recurrence. ( , M. D.) Answer Thank you. Doctor. Lay- men take notice that carbon dioxide snow is not safe except in the hands of the skilled physician. It destroys the tissue by freezing. (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dille Co ) Ed Note: Headers wishing to communlrate with Dr. Ilrbdy hu ii Id tend letters direct to Dr Wllllam Brady M. U.. 265 El Co rn I no. Beverly Hills. Calif (Cunimuea uom Page One) A man who knows as much about It as anyone says they were "diplo matic" calls rather than social ones. It is his theory that Mr. Roosevelt Is trying to maintain a proper bal arte in his consultations, that he neglected to consult the Morgans, Barucha and Taylors during recent months, and that he Is consulting them now as a diplomatic gesture. Ache son. Those close to Dean Acheson say he received no acknowledgment from the Whit House on his resignation as assistant treasury secretary. A person in authority and able to speak for the administration explains privately that the President desired to make "a conspicuous example" of that case. This fits in with the general Inner administration trend toward demand ing stricter support from those who are working for it. Australia now has 68 woolen mills producing about 1 (J, 000, 000 square yards of woolens, worsteds and flan nels, a million blankets and 8.000.000 pounds of yarn yearly. San Diego firemen dashed to a home In response to an alarm to help untangle a cat from a washing machine ATTENTION TURKEY GROWERS! at JlifsVi Bear Fruit & Produce Co. ItJ-UJ ahlnilon street, San Irancl'co, Tal. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. THE Ban Franclaco Chronlcla aaye: "The Chamber of Commerce 01 the United states, representing Amen, can business, urgently calls on Preal' dent Roosevelt to stabilize business by stabilizing the 'money In which business la done. It demands early return to 'a' gold atandard, but not necessarily to 'the' gold standard, It Is ready, provided It can be done soon, to accept a devalued dollar, ol fewer gralna of gold than the former gold atandard, so that there may be restored parity between gold and paper without further Inflating the one and deflating the other. "But It wants It DONE NOW. It deplores the continued artificial ma nipulation of a fluctuating dollar, which Imperlle even the national credit, and makes all long term busi ness commitments Impossible." nnO THAT SENTIMENT, this quite 1 Insignificant writer would like to add a loud and fervent "Amen!" If we're going to have inflation, let'a have it, and get it out of the way, and find out definitely what our cheaper dollar Is worth today and Is GOING TO BE WORTH tomorrow. If we're not going to have Inflation, let's find that out also. ABOVE all else, let's get to SOME KIND ot standard that will be reasonably dependable ao that busi ness men can make future commit ments with some degree of assurance that these commitments can be car ried out without ruin. ACK of confidence has punished l-i us terribly in this country In the past year or so. First It waa lack of confidence In the banks. People took their money out of the banks and hid Lt in socks or burled It under the house or laid lt away in safe deposits, thus weaken ing the foundation upon which the modern buslnesa structure la built. which Is bank credit. Bank credit, as everyone must know, is built upon BANK DEPOSITS. When bank deposits shrink, bank credit must shrink along with them. Then, Just aa hysterical fear about the banks began to pass away, talk of inflation came along and shook commence In the ultimate value ot the dollar. JUST as people wouldn't make a move toward business expansion when they were fearful of the bank ing structure, and later COULDN'T make a move because they couldnt get credit, they now won't make a move toward business expansion be cause they don't know what kind ol money they will get paid In If they sell or will have to pay In If they buy. It's getting to be high time to end all this uncertainty. SPEAKING of Inflation brings up the subject of credit, and aa every body knowa lack of credit la generally supposed to be the principal thing wrong with us. That Is to say, we're out on a limb because we can't borrow enough to get us oft. PARTIALLY true, without a doubt. But only PARTIALLY. The real root of our trouble la TOO MUCH CREDIT back In the big yeara when everything was lovely and the goose hung high. We borrowed ao much then that It'a wrecking us now to pay lt back. w 8 NEED CREDIT, of course; must have tt If we are going to go on doing business. Modern business CAN'T be done without credit. But unlimited new credit ISN'T. our biggest preaent need. What we i all need nfJw, more than anything else. Is to get our debts paid and get j back to the place where we have a little money of our own to do busl nesa on and don't NEED ao much credit. That goes fof Individuals and gov ernments alike. 1 Receiving Turkeys Nov. 24-25-26 at Davis Transfer Co. South Grape St., Medford. l.tcenMrl nd boodM b? the Mate of California. Rffpirnew lUnk of Amfrica, ral. Mont gomery St., Sn Francisco, l al. Now Ex-Princess ' L.K11" 1I I1 II 14 f X vfiiM ! w I kfay&iWtfW.t -WWlTi t1aJ Mary McCormlc, opera star, at she appeared In a Los Angeles court seeking a divorce from her husband, Prince Serge M'Dlvani, member of the "marrying M'Div. an is'". It was granted at she dropped provisions for separate maintenance or alimony. (Assoc), ated Press Photo. HEALTH ASSOCIATION ' L MEET The Jackson County Public Health association meeting tomorrow after noon at the court house promises to be one of the largest of the year and members In all localities are urged to be present for the Interest ing program arranged. The meeting will open at 2:30 o'clock and each member Is asked to bring, spoon, cup and saucer for tea, as the court house Is without china. Read the "Ads" but don't ignore medical opinion A doctor will tell you that the care less choice of laxatives is a common cause of chronic constipation. Any hospital offers evidence of the harm done by harsh laxatives that drain the system, weaken the bowel muscles, and even affect the liver and kidneys. Fortunately, the public is fast returning to laxatives in liquid form. Can Constipation be Corrected ? "Yesl" finv medical men. "VasP say thousand who have followed this sensible medical advice: 1. Select a good liquid laxative. 2. Take the dose that you find suited to your system. 3. Gradually reduce the dose until bowels are moving regularly without assistance. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin has the average person's bowels as regular as clockwork in a few weeks' time. Why not try it? Some pill or tablet may be more con venient to carry. But there is no "convenience" in any cathartic that's taken so frequently, you must carry it wherever you gol What is the "Right" Laxative? In buying any laxative, read the label. Not the claims, but the rnnlfinl If If innloini nna ,lnktr..t drug, don't take it. Dr. Caldwell's oyrup repsin is a prescriptions TURKEY GROWERS Don't Ship Your Turkeys On Consignment WE WILL BUY TWO CARLOADS FOR CASH a MEDFORD POULTRY & Ffifi fin J 128 North Grape Flight 'oTime (fiieaiofd and j season Coonty History from toe rues ol roe Malj Tribune of e and 10 Years Ao.) TEN YEARS AQO TODAY November 28, 1923. ' (It was Thursday.) Sams VaUley ranchers tell many sheep. County court provides aid for 1A families "to whom fate has been cruel In the midst of prosperity." All ar rived here last spring from Texas, and have been "unable to make ends meet, through no fault of their own." Real estate, sales in Central Point district show lively signs. City and county over-subscrlba quotas for relief of Armenians snd Belgians. Cold mornings and balmy after- . noons are the order of the day. t 4 Hood River, Ore., la hit by a ter rific gale. Damage alight. TWENTY YEARS AQO TODAY November 23, 1913. (Zt was Sunday.) Forecast of snow gives promise of a "white Thanksgiving" here. War on blight started In orchards of valley, and a weekly paper says "the heritage of mankind Is in th balance, as the Constitution pro vides." High price of eggs In Oregon to be proved by government. Frank Upton of Central Point dis trict was a recent business visitor in Medford. Some of the finest Spits apples on display at the exhibit build ing came from his orchard, and sev eral boxes of the same fruit have a. been sent to the Chicago land show. Portland to place a "taboo" on the tango dance. Tom Matthews. 16, of Wrens, Ga., lost his left arm in a cotton gin and three weeks later the accidental dis charge of a shotgun tore away his right arm. if you want to keep bowels regular and comfortable make constipated spells rare as colds avoid danger of bowel strain preparation fn which there are no mineral drugs. By using it, you avoid danger of strain. You can keep the bowels regular, and com fortable. You can make those constipated spells as rare as colds. How many dimes and quarters are spent on "popular" laxativesl How quickly they count up, as you use more and more of these habit forming helpsl A bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin would save you money and bring you real relief. Why Doctors give a liquid laxative The habitual use of irritating salts, or powerful drugs in the highly concentrated form of pills and tablets is risky. The properly prepared liquid laxative will bring a . perfect movement without discomfort or injury. You need not take a "double dose" a day or two later. The public can always get Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin 1 at any drugstore. We Will Pay ' the HIGHEST Market Price Honest Weight Fair Grade Friday and Saturday Nov. 24-25 Phone 16 5 '