PAGE FOUR BEG ON, MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 1934. OREGON, SUNDAY. JANUARY 14, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune "fmvtm to Sotrthor. Orieo Blast IM Kill Itlhiin'' Oolll belt UUMtV PubUltwf Of tUUITUUD PglNTINO CO. It-ir-i, it rust. mow ' lOBEja J. HUBU taut Aa Inoweoorat Hnnptpor found at wcom dots mitt u Unlfor. Orison, ooael AM M Mm I. 1SI. euBscKiniON luna I) Mill ID adtuee DtUjr. fttr ;" Dillj, til aonlbo Dill?, ooo ooolb By Cirrler lo Adttnco Mttliorfl, AiDltnd, JukionrlUo, Control Point, Pbotnli, Toloot. Uold BUI to 00 Ufboon. Dtllj, ooo rur I0U Dtllj. til oothl s. uiil. ooo mom ao All Urtnj ens la tdrtnee. omau m 01 tr cit Mrfrord. OmeUI own of Jtcttoo County. HEllHM Of Tilt ASSOCIATED PKE88 Btctrrlr ruU LctHd Wlro ewtle. n tuoel.ua Pre lo mliwlrelr intlllid too wo lot DubUeiUoo of til om dbptubti eridltM to ft w otlwrwIM credlud lo UU oooor tod oloo U tlw loot oevo purjltirae Heroin. All -IsOU 'or puhllettloo ef toecltl olipilelN oeroto ore aim rotenca. MXMBF.B i)P UNITED PKEB8 UIMBEU 01 AUDIT BIIUEAD 0 CIIICUUTI0N8 AdrertUIng KeprooeoUtlreo If, C MOIIKNWN COMPANY Offleet U Net Vorl. Cnleifo, Dttralt. "to rrtoeltoo loo Aoceleo 8ttttll Portltod. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur I'erry. Science hae dlacovered there la enough energy In half a peanut to provide ateam for an nour or winn ing. Judging by some of the think ing, aome of the thlnkera had no peanut, ao Jabbed themaelvea with a pin. The favorite publicity trick of tha professional friend of the farmer, now aa alwaya ao buoy farming tha farmer, la to aak themaelvea a aerlea of question on the Balea Tai, which they anawer Immediately. It la too much to expect that the type wlU aak themaelvea a queatlon they can't anawer. ... the dollar may go off the gold atandard, and In both foreign ex change and native, product be worth leaa than they were alx months ago; but good poetry la Itaelf pure gold. (Portland Bpoctator.) Now la the time to organize a company, and mine Delroy Oetchell. The ault of the government agalnat the Alcohol Trust for 8,000,000 un paid Income taxea.'la a gentle remin der to the rank and file to aend Uncle Bam the 8 they owe, without further delay. Enumerating the poaalble Demo cratic) asplranta for governor, the ateemed Oregon Voter Usta "En tea Snedecor, who haa the bralna and character but not the votea." Thla la a terrible handicap, particularly If the people are getting ready to let fly with one of their atemwlndlng "mandatea". Under a decision of the United States supreme court, mortgage loans in certain suttee, on farm property, do not have to be paid for three yeare. The atate law covering the however, i' one of the well known double-edged aworde. The man with money to loan, can wait aa long aa he pleaeea before lending any of It. PIONEER BEAUTY NOTES (.Pendleton East Oregonlan) I've not aeen aa yet an old or ugly wouian In eastern Oregon. They all aeem to be angela In disguise. Kven the Indian maid ens on the Umatilla reservation present a charming picture aa you observe their comely flgurea, tastefully attired In their charac teristic uniform, and their cheek ruddy with the glow of health and exerclae. The bachelora are the reverse of the fair aex. for a more ordinary or extraordinary aet of plain, uncouth bipeds you never laid your eyea upln. The pre-Bprlng stealing hit started. In town and country. The rumble aeata of the 1034 autoa ; ISXSrS'u the acenery, without the haunting "tort.uunr.Cr, sardine. In the old style rumble seat, the victim had to be a human frog to get In, and waa removed like a back tooth. Babe Ruth, a baseball player no torious for hit ability to knock a baseball long distances, will only get gat.OOO thla year. It Is thought Mr. Ruth will make It, without working on a CWA. gang, In the forenoons. The milk sltustlon haa been clari fied and regulated, and the price aet. There waa a time when It waa felt hat the cow did not put enough water In the milk, ao the discrepancy waa cor rected at every water faucet between the barn and the ultimate consumer. It la now conceded that the cow knew what aha waa doing, and very little If any milk blending la going on. Missionary slnin BAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 15. (API Word that Pather Ludwlg, young Dominican missionary, waa slain by Chinese bandits when they failed to receive $50,000 ransom for hi" release, wae received here today by Father William T. Cummlnga. N. M. Sin Francisco superior of the Maryknoll fathers. SulU cleaned and pressed 85c. Dresses 75c up. Phone 835-J. Economy Cleaner. Grangers Think for Themselves 1TJTH one statement in Ray Gill's communication to this paper a week ago, opposing the sales tax, we heartily agree. Mr. Gill wrote : "The) mambara of tha tttta grtngo aro not easily lad. Thoy think deeply on all public queatloni." There is increasing evidence to support this contention. The grangers of the state are thinking deeply on this sales tax quel-, tion, and more and more of them are refusing to sign on the i dotted line of opposition. ! As previously pointed out, introduced the present sales tax of the grange in that body voted and spoke for the measure. In this county the Roxy Anne and Jacksonville granges have endorsed the school relief sales tax; the farmers of Polk comity, many of them grangers, have also endorsed the measure; similar action has been taken by the Coquille grange, Coos County Po mona grange and White Eagle grange. Many other granges while not approving the sales tax, have REFUSED to go on record against it. This certainly shows the grangers are thinking deeply on this question, and are refusing to be led blindly into opposition, until they know just whRt the measure provides, and if passed, just how it will affect them, as individuals. SUCH fund a spirit we believe is damcntal principles of grange is essentially democratic. Two of its most cherished ideals are individual freedom, and uncompromising indepen dence. It is not a partisan political organization. Every mem ber is free to vote on any public question, as that individual wishes. In every unit the majority rules. Grangers are not expected to take their orders from their officials; but their officials are expected to take orders from them. This ia as it should be. As long aa such principles are ad hered to the grange can't fail to be a great bulwark to genuine democracy, and a force for better government. Get the Facts 11T11ETIIER or not this sales tax passes, depends in our opin- " ion, upon how many people of this state, follow the ex ample of these independent grangers. That is take the word of NO ONE, regarding this measure, but determine the faots for THEMSELVES. Find out just what this sales tax will do, and how, if passed it will affect their own fortunes, and then vote accordingly. Such careful and independent action will, we believe, con vince them of two things: First! If the public schobls, particularly the rural schools of this state arc to be kept open, this sales tax must pass. Second : If real property, particularly farm property is to be relieved from its present crushing tax burden, passing this sales tax is the ONLY possible way to do it. The more the problem is studied, from all angles and in the light of all available facts, the more inescapable is this conclu sion. So the question for the individual comes down to this: What dues he WANT! Does he want the schools to be kept open! Does he want his property tax reduced t If he does, then he should vote for the sales tax. For there i is absolutely no other way, to bring about these two results. It's a "War' Measure TTHE greatest single obstaole to a sales tax any sales tax, is the traditional prejudice which exists against it. This is an inheritance from normal conditions. If normal conditions existed a chance. This paper, for one, would never favor a sales tax, if a genuine economic and tax crisis did NOT exist. IF property taxes were being paid, if expenses of education and government were being met, if income taxes had not reached the point of diminishing returns in short if there were any practical way of getting the cash, EXCEPT by a sales tax few thoughtful people would favor that procedure. But property taxes are NOT being paid the ordinary meth ods of financing local government, have broken down. If we are to go on, maintain our schools, keep up our public credit, prevent general collapse and bankruptcy, money must be secured from SOMEWHERE, and all competent students of the problem admit, that the only place to secure it is through a tax on sales. Now this prejudice against the aaleB tax is not peculiar to Oregon. It exists throughout the I WIIT ,hpn hl,ve ,h) I""0!1'6 California adopted a sales tax , WHY have tho people of Indiana, of Illinois, of Washington, of iMissiNsipi'i, of Utah taken similar actiont WHY are still other states like New lork, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Maryland, expect ed to adopt sales taxes within the yeart Not because they LIKE the sales tax, not because they deny that it has, like any other tax system, its IMPERFECTIONS, but because they have decided that under present conditions, it is the only way out, the only way to survive. The Proof of the Pudding AND when ALL IS SAID AND DONE, isn't the best proof of the pudding in the EATING t Isn't tho best evidence of what the sales inx is, or isn't, the WAY it has ACTUALLY WORKED OUT! , We don't know about all the states, but we do know some thing about California. We know that the grangers of that state did not favor the salca tax when it was proposed, we know organised labor did not. Hut where does the vociferous opposition to the sales tax in that state come from nowt From the farmers, the ranchers, the workers! . NO I The people of California, AS A WHOLE, are enthusiastic over the sales tax, because it has brought in the uioucy kept one member of the state grange in the legislature, 12 members i entirely in harmony with the this great organization. The for Yourself today no sales tax would have oountry. their splendid schools open and decreased the tax burden on their homes. But according to our information, the high priced movie stars of Hollywood DON'T like it These gilded butterflies, who have so successfully evaded their income taxes, find they ...l . . . n .1 - ' . C IT PCi I ll 1 a . . ... I i, o.ouo uic.r cnuno ioro And they like to go in foreign sive jewelry to the tune of hundreds of thousands of dollars a year I Isn't that about as strong an tax, under conditions which exist today, as ANYONE COULD DESIRE! Personal Health Service By William Signed letter! pertaining to peraonal health and hygiene not to dli eaoe diagnosis or treatment, will be anawered by Dr. Brady If a atamped lelf-addresaed envelope la encloaed. Lettera ahould be Brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of lettera received only a few can be an owercd. No reply can be made to querlea not conforming to Instructions. Uddress Or. William Brady, tos El Cajnlno, Beverly Ullli, Cal. ARE YOU SUSCEPTIBLE TO CATARRHS? It U only In the put twenty years or less that America haa become the greatest center tor postgraduate med ical Instruction. Prior to this generation Eur ope, particularly Germany and Austria, held the lead. No young physician was quite the cat's until he had had his fling at post graduate atudy In Europe, tho the home papers were not at all facetious about what me pampered youth studied over there. It was different when the scandal shooters taught publishers the physiology of circulation. The Germans, I think, are respon sible for most of the quackery In American medicine. I don't mean honest newspaper, radio and almanac quackery, but the subtle sort which every physician, surgeon or specialist practices more or leas, consciously or without malice aforethought. It comes from Germany psychology. There la a fatal fascination In German psychology. It gets you be fore you can gather the wits to break the spell and bleat a dissentient "yahbut." When the German ex pounder gets underway you hate like anything to interrupt; his very earnest absorption, and his rapt con viction in the right and truth of his Idea, forbid the sacrilege. So you Just step aboard and ride with him. Here's Heir Dr. P. Schmidt ex patiating in Deutsche med. Wchnschr. Dec. 3, 1632, on the Idea; subject for German analysis, Who's Afraid of the Big ... I mean Who Is Predis posed to Catching Cold?, and the shrewd Herr Schmidt explains what he means by "colds" before the gen eral hum quiets down and you can get set to Jump on his neck. "Colds." says he, are the common nasal, pharyngeal or bronchial catarrhs. Predisposition thereto may be con genital or acquired, and if the lat ter .. . What would you get from the au dience if you had the audacity to stop the beggar In the midst of his chatter about congenital and acqulr- ed nredlSDoeltlona to lnmtlr. 1IV grinning idiot, what the common naaal, pharyngeal or bronchial ca tarrhs might be? Olarea and con temptuous smiles. I tell you Ger man psychology will not tolerate It. Dr. Schmidt avera that normal persona may have their body heat regulating mechanlam put out of ac tion temporarily by a fall Into Ice water, by alcohol, or by narcotics. But he candidly admits that persons who are not predisposed suffer no "catarrh" from the most rigorous chilling. He estimates that only about one person out of ten la ao predisposed. Not a bad guy, at that. It la only NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK. Jan. 15. Diary: Ba tlmaa and Homer Cory lettr ending "Youra till a nudist haa a run In her stocking." Also Percy Crwby'a auto graphed rolume of "Sport Draw ing, a beautiful torn and a lim ning by Walt Dla ney of my favor ite pig, the gruff one, calling me copy oat for 1ml tat I fug its voice. Baall Woon calling tells sadly of Paris deca dsnee, likening It to an exquisite stren snooting in a tattered shawl. And IHoyd Cllbbona scudding by with an accolade for Nami and Its charms. So with my wife to greet charlea and Kathleen Norrls at the Chatham and Edna Fer ber. Clifton Webb and Noel Coward there. To dinner at Alma Clarbungh's and the president's mother, Mrs. Rooae Telt. the guest of honor. And after ward atopped In to tee Mlrlan and Kent Cooper. Then home and X fU to ridding up my tousey desk and to bed reading Alice Long worth's "Crowded Hours." especially liking tales of Cincinnati. Mae West off the cuff In staccato: Half Irish, half Jewish. Father an Ir ish prlreflghter. who became a night club bouncer. Ahe's Catholic, gives to charities and ts religious. Born In Brooklyn near home of Clara Bow, whose father waa a Coney Inland wait er. On home site of West family la a church. Uvea In Hollywood apart ment houw and ia somewhat a her mit. Seldom goes out; nerer to gay part lee. Works moat of time. Chief companion la a p la tonic friend, her manager. Originated ahlmmy, doing It before Ollda Gray. Doea most of her writing In bed. ftaokea moderately. We halted crossing Brooklyn Bridge mcv iibwj mi pay . uiey goi cars and sable coats, and expen - argument in favor of the sales Brady, M.D. the laborious way of the Teuton that grates on the Celtic sensibilities. Now If I were saying it I'd say "Any one but an Idiot knows that expos ure to cold, wet feet, drafts, sud den changea are followed by lao HI effect in nine cases out of ten." The tenth case we could debate with due respect to the rules. A point. I particularly wish to emphasise In the German doctor's elucidation of his Idea Is that all he says is sheer conjecture, hypothesis, which may or may not be ao. He gives no scientific or experimental evidence to support his hypothesis. But you have to be a cold-blooded cynic to recognize that saving cir cumstance while you are under the fascination of the doctor. Herr Dr. Schmidt drops one un pleasant hint at least I Imagine the old fogies will find it unpleasant. He aays a draft that you don't feel is particularly dangerous because it does not excite the heat-regulating mechanism of the body to action. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Frostbite Please tell me the best way to treat frostbitten flngera, cheeks or ears. (S. P.) Anawer The best treatment la very gentle message with your warm hand. Apply no Ice, anow or cold water, and avoid friction or excusing hand-' of us rank and file members know. It ling. Aa aoon aa the blanched area ' violates no principle of the grange, becomes pink again, atop all manlp- j On contrary, you have led us In ulatlon. Do not be perplexed by ! favoring sales taxation, ancient medical auperstltiona. Too Under atate leaderahlp we Initiated much treatment doea more harm ' ta on butter aubatltutes. than frostbite Itself. I w "aught tax of 10 cent a pound. Pufre Under' Eyea f whlch waa more than the price of the Do puffs under the eyea come from "' to " tated- "O" th!in a particular disorder or may It be a i 87 tlmM hlher th,n the ratM of the complication? What had I better I "raent eales tax law. It was to be do about lt-consult a physician? Imposed on an article uaed especially (M R Y ) by the P0011 wno lk" butter, but who Answer-Pufflneas under the eyes ; cou,ld "f a,f"d , , , t occur. In various lllnes. and often' Y,ou B?W 5 thVle,,1,t"f: IW" from trifling dlsturbancea of health. ! '"""J 'f Ur. - u?",: faulty hygiene, loss of sleep, lov i" cent .V"nd- wch proper diet or drinking, and ahould t r,. . !,.!. . tlon. Glad You Are Not Our Neighbor I am 25 years old and I am atudy Ing trumpet. My teacher advises me to practice belly breathing. He said you give the correct instructions for this . . . (M. P.) Answer Send a dime (not stampa) and a stamped envelope bearing your aaareaa. and ask for "The Art of Easy Breathing." Some Guests Slay All Winter Your euggeatlona for eradicating ants proved entirely effective for us. Have you any advice on how to get rid of roaches? We have lived here eight yeara. and this la the first time we have had roaches. (H. L. D.) Answer Booklet "Unbidden Ouesta" covers altuatton. Send 10 cents coin and a. a. e. for It. Ed. Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady, SI. D 2(15 El Ca mlno, Beverly mils, Cal. by motor for one of those lovely vla taa of Manhattan only after midnight brings. Beneath moon rays la the time to see the metropolis, to adore It. to make promises to it. to pray and plead with It. For the big city, all snUag and serene, seems youra In Il limitable loneliness. For once In 34 hours harmless, unable to hurt or bless . . , lost In dream. A few blocks northward the bleak Tombs prison lifts gray walls and bastions in the dark. Only one sm4ll window is lit; a tiny block of gold nung high In a turret. The mind fas tens to it In thought of a knight nurriedly donning armor and lance, his charger ready below. Of men sit ting dazed on the edge of prison cots awaiting a dawn that may mean freedom or Sing Sing. Of weak hu manlty making the first false step ana nonestly regretting it. Such speculative little window In the froz en calm of a New York night! Peraonal nomination for the gayest shlrta. excepting Isaac Marcosaen's, In all the town those of Ororer Whalen Something utterly fascinating, too. about a railroad station as dawn pinks the sky. Grand Central, for Instance. I Idled In Its desolate depths watch ing a whistling Sam sweep up odd ments of the day. A queer litter; reams of silver paper, bits of cracker, apple corea, cigarette packets, old en velope, the heel of a silvered dance slipper and an unspeakably disrepu table umbrella that had anapped In two. An unfair reminder of the clut tered floor of a monkey cage at the Zoo. A station becomes ao sad and lonely in the wavering night. Adver tlaementa, so chirpy by day. become Insolent to weary 3 a. m. eyea Think of drinking certified cream at such an hour or disporting on the Palm Beach sands I Bagatelles: Nat Burns, straight act or of Burns and Allen. 1 a riot of laughs off stage . . . While Miss Allen la very demure . . . Charlie Russell originals are now higher priced than original Remington . . . When Helen Kane trie to reduce, ahe gains so ahe haa quit trying . . . Noel Coward want ed most to meet Max Beer on his r! cent visit . . . Ash ton Stevens alwa-rs occupies the same Chicago first night Grange Member Challenges Master Ray Gill on Sales Tax jjr. fUy W. OIU. lluter of Oregon .st,M oranje Dear ur. Brother am: ! ot your Offioe you posset a very great political power. Our order haa more than 300 aub ordinate gTcngea, each one having I hall in which you may express your views to a memberahlp of 20.000 vot ers who naturally are prejudiced in your favor. You have funds at your disposal to pay your own traveling ex penaea and those of apeaker of your own ohooalng whUe vleltlng aubordl nate granges. You have the State Orange Bulletin, which goes every aecond week to each member. You have funda to pay tor printing Initia tive and referendum bills and petl tlone. These funda come from dues which we member pay. We circulate your petition by unpaid volunteer work. Most of us down In the ranks are without political ambition. We are prone to follow your lead without suspicion or queatlon. In our organi zation you possess an Instrument with which you may Inspire and build, or with which you may repreas and ob struct, even though having good In tentions, which none of us question. Our organization glvea you a very decided advantage over the governer and the leglalature. They possess no corresponding machinery for defend ing their side of a controversial ques tion. Because of thla advantage of yours, they must of necessity fear you. When they oppose you there la a reasonable presumption that they do so at a peraonal sacrifice rather than betray, a pubUo trust. Your responsibility, therefore, la very great, both to us grangers and to the state. You should not Impose your own personal wishes. You ahould open the columns of the Orange Bul letin and the doors of grange halts to a fair and open discussion of public questions, which you do not now aeem to encourage. When we were obligated we were told that the obUgatlon did not Inter fere with our political and reUgloiu rlghta. Issues In taxation are political Just now you would have the Ore gon grange use Its funda and the labor of lta volunteer workers to Invoke the referendum on our salea tax law. This would hold up Its operation for more than two months at a loss of 1750,000 to our school funda. Yet. so far aa any " .. ,,..,. on oleo and 25 to 30 times higher than the rate of our new eales tax law. Thla for our benefit and In ans wer to our own demand. You know that our gasoline tax la a aalea tax paid by all mo to car users, Including the poor, who drive old g&a burnlng contraptions cast off by the well-to-do. Our national grange leaders have keeps his home In Sullivan, Ind. open the year round . . . John Held, Jr. once lived In New York on 93 a week . . . Dave Montgomery waa billed first In Montgomery and Stone because when the partnership wah formed he waa the bigger attraction. In the world's economic runaway I'm wondering if we might not turn with satisfaction to some of the old timers with a one track mind. It was Kin Hubbard who said he did not care particularly for the fellow with the one track mind but somehow pre ferred him to the gentleman with 1 mind like the railroad yards at Har rlshurg. Pa. (Copyright, 1034, MoNAUght Syndi cate, me.) Comment on the Day's News Br FBA.SK JENKINS MILK strike hit Chicago. Violence flares over hundred-mile area In dalrymen'a war against low prices. Milk prices below cost of produc tion are bad. But Tlolence won't make them any better. Only restoration of the balance be tween supply and demand can do that. nARAOTJAYAN army occupies three abandoned Bollrlan fort follow ing expiration of the Chrlstmaa ar mistice. The occupied forests are located In the denae and trackless Chaco forest, which lent worth any part of the fighting that haa been done over It. Whichever nation finally wlna It will vender what to do with It when It geta It. Moat war, are Juet aa foolish aa that. FRANOE agreea to Increase THHEE rou the quota on American product a announced the first of the year. Ia Pranc making friendly gestures toward thl country? Not at all. She merely wants to sell more win In the United State. Whatever the French do haa a cold ly selfish motive back of It. FIRLOV8 times them, for men of wealth, and everybody recognlees ft "It hod a million dollars," a young t locationt atl"'"n ro wr"T 7y , will H. Haje worry mylf aick trying to hold secured for us processing taxes on such neceasltlea used by- the poor as wheat, hogs, com and cotton. These ratea are 80 per cent to 50 per cent of the market value of the products taxed. We saw how prices rose follow ing enactment of these laws. They are all sales taxes levied upon con sumers for the benefit of producers. Thla sales tax law which you are fighting Is a sales tax for the schools and for relief of tax delinquent. The legislature and tn governor as sert that they acted reluctantly and only because there was no other ade quate source of funds. You may read lly satisfy yourself that there la much Justification for their contention. A cartoon In the Saturday Evening Post of December 30, 1933. will con vince you that the needs of the fed eral government are now very great. It shows a donkey loaded with a bur den of ai 2, 000. 000.000. There la ago. 000.000 for wheat bonus to cut acre age, $510,000,000 for cotton loans and bounties, 9700.000.000 for unemployed relief, ,30O,0O0.0OO for public works fund, (3.663,000.000 for RFC loans and 93.300.000.00 for home mortgage refinancing. You know that Income taxation as a major source of federal revenue Is bound to go to the limit; you also know that tangible property la over loaded now. You know, or ahould know, that the federal government is going to occupy the field of general salea taxation unless the statee do ao first. You know that If we sustain our present sales tax law Its proceeds will keep our schools open and lift our tax delinquency, and that we can control Its future rates. But If we re ject It. and permit the federal gov ernment to step In. the proceeds will go to Washington and control of fu ture rates will pass beyond our refer endum lawa. You know that farmers live from the products of the farm; and that losing the farm la more serious than losing a city dwelling. The city dwell er has left his trade, his profession or other occupation, while the farmer too often la forced Into the ranks of common labor to compete with the most helpless of the poor. And you know the farmer la now the greatest delinquent tax sufferer. You know that public charity steps In where private funds fall. You know that old-age pensions, widows' pen sions and poorhousca are provided. We grangers did not have to Initiate these laws. They were either directly enacted by the legislature or sub mitted by It. The legislature acted In answer to a pressing emergency when It enacted our new sales tax law, following de feat of the first sales tax bill. It act ed for the benefit of our common schools, which we regard aa our most precious possession. But when pressed the legislature to enact an other oleo tax law for us, following defeat of our own bill by popular vote, we sought first of all to benefit our selves. You cannot, Brother Gill, allow pride of opinion, or personal consid eration of any kind, to obstruct a fair and full discussion of thla emergency salea tax law within grange halls or In the Orange Bulletin If you would best serve the grange and the state. C. P. STRAIN. Route 3. Oranta Pass, Or. onto It. I have no worrlea, because I have nothing to lose." There's philosophy for you. e-e TJow'S the potato market?" this 1 writer asked a potato buyer yesterday. "Oh, somewhere from 81 cents to a dollar," was the anawer. "Pretty low for January of a ahort crop year, Isn't It?" thl writer put In. "Tea," wae the answer, "but there 1 no SPECULATIVE BUYING at all thl year to bring the price up, to It atlll hangs low, In spite of the ahort crop." NO speculative buying, so the price stay tow In spite of a short crop over the oountry. We uaed to hear speculation thun dered at aa a curse, yet here we are told that LACK of speculative buying la holding down price In a ahort crop year. We're learning a lot theae daya. WHAT la speculation, anyway? Why, It la buying low In the hope of selling high. Just that and nothing else. Generally speaking, It represent the best Judgment ot ahrewd men who know conditions of supply, and demand or think they do. Really, It Isn't half as bad a dema gogue have been trying for yeara to make us believe. IS thla column, V ahort time back, aome caustic remark were In dulged In about young men who hab- j Itually talk with a cigarette hanging from their under llpe. In this city there la a young mother who hu mastered marvelously the art of talking with a cigarette hanging from her under Up. No Bowery tough could do It better. She ha two beautiful children, and well-kept home. Her children are being raised a carefully a any chll- DAD DYNGE'S BIG BALLOON DANCE WEDNESDAY NIGHT ORIENTAL GARDENS Plenty of Balloons and Fun for Everyone Men 23C Ladies 1 0 dien could be, lacking nothing that can be given them In the way of care. She herself haa high standard and a charming peraonallty. There are exceptlone, you aee, to all rulea. Flight VTime (Medford and Jackson County History From the Files of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Years Ago.) TRN YEARS AGO TODAY January 13, in 2 4 (It was Tuesday) Jack Thompson of Copco leaves for an upstate tour. Autolsta warned they will be ar rested, If they don't get their 1924 licenses. Nineteen twenty-three waa the driest year In the history of Jack son county weather records. Roosevelt school wins the Christ mas Seal sale prize again. John A, Perl will run for coroner. National Thrift week opposed by United Merchants association, "aa It may be carried too far. County court advises dry enforce ment agents "they will be abolished, unless they cease playing politics." Traffic department nabs Paul Scherer for speeding, and he is fined 916. TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY January 15, 1014 (It waa Thursday) 'Tho courthouse ring" la flayed In letter to the editor, and "downfall of the nation" Is also predicted. Greater Medford club Inspects the city schools and reports "the lack of fresh air la criminal and treason able to youth." "Swat the Fly' campaign to be opened next month. Medford to be made a flyless town. Sheriff nips a, plot to escape from the county Jail. Mike Womack discovers an asbestos mine in the Applegate which he will sell to an eastern syndicate. Attorney Porter J. Neff leaves for the middle west to gather data on the commission form of government. Communications He Wonts a Womata Sheriff To the Editor: Well, well, we have a candidate for eherlff and hie slogan Is "Com mon sense and law enforcement with out fear or favor." Now In my opinion It takes some thing besides common sense and law enforcement. It la necessary to know something about book-keeping to fill' the office- of sheriff. There Is any amount of men In Jackson county who have good common sense, but we need efficiency In the sheriff office, I'll tell the world, and why should we put a man In the sheriff's office who lacks effic iency and has to depend on a dep uty to do the work and a woman at that, why not elect the woman who haa filled the office for lo these many years, with common sense, abil ity and efficiency, and let her sign her name Olga Anderson, sheriff. In place of by Olga Anderson, deputy. Well, by gosh, If I had a good an opinion of myself as some of these candidates I might come out for sheriff myself, but aa I know I couldn't fill the bill I am In favor of Olga Anderson for sheriff of Jack son county, and not pay a man $266 or to boss her either. JOHN B. GRIFFIN, Medford," Jan, 13. Ead will deliver FUEL OIL when you want it. Phone 315. This GLORIOUS DRAMA NOW ON OUR SCREEN Until Wednesday Night mm PITS SHORT REELS Doors Open at 1: P. M. at Tt