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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1934)
PAGE TDtf MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune "Ewyofl. In Southern Origan fltad. th Mill Tribuni' Dtlly Exwpt Salurdir PiihllthMl by MEDFOHIl r HI NT I NO CO. J5-2T-2B N. Kir HL BflBERT W. RLHL, Editor An Independent Nisspipcf Entered u imod elm matter it Medford, Oregon, unUr Act of sUrdi 8. 179. eiHSCIill'TlON BATES It M.tt In AriiinM Daily, one year IS-OO . Daily, tlx contm 3 " Daily, on month 60 Br Carrier Id Atlitnee Medford. Aihltnd, Jacltomllle, Central Point, Pboeatt, Talent, Gold Bill and on Ulglmayi. Dally, one year 00 Dally, ill month! 8.25 Daily, one month 60 All terrai, cash In advance. Official paper of the City of Medford. Official paper of Jackion County. . MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRE8B Rfstfrln Full Leaied Wire Service Tbe Ataociaieb Pren li exeliuliely entitled to the use for publication of all netn dltpatchei credited to It or other lie credited In tnli paper and also to the loo) nwi published herein, AU right for publication of ipeclal dUpatebei berelD are alto retenea. MEMBER OP UNITED PREB8 MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS AdiertWng Repretentatliei M, C. MOfiENHKN k COMPANY Office! In New York, Chicago, Detroit, tao Francisco Lot Anselet Seattle Portland. mm :rsk u.s. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur I'erry. Police In several Oregon cities have received scoldings, because 18-yeer old kids ot both eexea, "emboldened by repeal " are Indulging In Juve nile awlgglng to the point ol Intoxi cation. In -the days of the saloon. (which Is not supposed to come back, except when disguised as a tav ern). It a 19-year old kid, so much a intimated a desire to some day drink beer, he would have been wal loped with a hatr-bruah. within .003 of an inch of his Hie, and perman ently crippled bealdea. Then, par ents were not too busy running the government from a street corner, to look alter tneir progeny, ana in, police could devote all their time to the roundtng-up of nlt-wtt crimin als, and an occasional moron. Then, a boy who gathered up beer bottles In a gunnysack and sold them to a Junk dealer was regarded as well on his way to hell, and the penitentiary. It was Just a question, which des tination he reached first. If caught, he was barred from all church Ice cream festivals. The average girl would have fainted at the thought of a casual boy acquaintance salvag ing empty beer bottles for capitalists profit. Now young femalea are less squeamish. They are told they know more than their Qrandmaws, though hustled to scare up enough mental ity to come In out of the rain. Walter M. Pierce, congressman and once Oovernor, pestered nigh unto death, by Democrats after Jobs, an nounces he "would rather be Oov ernor, than Congreasman." Though In dire need of a sound threshing at the polls, It Is the concensus of opinion, that aa long as he has to be something. It Is best that he be a Congressman. Mr. Pierce will be re membered aa the politician who about ten years ago, wept copiously about white-faced steers, and reduc ed the taxea fearlessly by angrily tearing tax receipts asunder, In the city park one aunny day, Proponents of the Sales Tax have followed the lead of opponents of the measure, and started asking themselves questions, with answers served while you reed, '-aamuch as neither aide has yet asked a ques tion they could not answer, it Is sus pected they know ths answers, be fore they ask the question. The proposal of the column to th vest, to dump all the crlmlnala In the Paciflo ocean, la not practical. In the first place, th, Paciflo ocean Ja not large enough, and In the eec ond place It would ruin the fishing In Rogue river. . The testimony of Mae West In tha trial of the "guy" charged with ateal lng her "poke" and her "rocks." In dicatea she did to the English lang uage what she testified she feared bandlta would do to her nose, vis: "bust it wode open." Doctors gathered at the banquet board Wednesday evening, and forgot what they told their patients about over-eating. The doctor, like the law. yer. la of no use except when you need him. The doctor la aupposed to arrive quicker and does. He feels your pulse and predict, "you will be out in a week." The lawyer says, "you will be out, as aoon a I can get you out." New methods of taking a cltlten apart, and still kept ticking wore explsinM. The claim 1 made that a fat la more dangerous to btrda, than a boy "out In the open" with a .33 rifle. A cat never alma at a bird, and hit an Innocent bystander. A valley Democrat who bled and Battled lor ail Democracy's chief- tans, has given up hope of getting I "word from Washington." and Is mad enough to vote for Hoover. a The Department of Agriculture seeks "to decrease wheat production, and Increase potato production." Golutlon of the "prohlem." press dls pstches state, "puuele." Experts may not think so. but the way to con quer the "problem" la to plant lew wheat, and mora potatoes. Suit, clraned and preued, SSc. Dresses lis up. Tel. 83B-J. Economy ClMfiar. 1738 Ko. Rtraralda, . V MIHea MS 7 Z Where Will the Spending End? IN TODAT'S issue a correspondent from Jacksonville views the present "spending orgy" with alarm. He wonders where all the money is coming from to repay these billions, and opines that if a halt is not called soon complete bankruptcy will result. This is a perfectly natural and rather prevalent reaction. Boosting tbe national debt from 20 to over 30 billions, in a few years, is enough to knock anyone's eye out. But what would he or anyone else DO about itt . Would he abandon the R. F. Ci which &as loaned millions to the railroads so they could continue operation and meet their interest charges t , Would he close over a thousand banks which, without gov ernment money, would never have been able to continue under the deposit insurance plan! Would he shut up the C. C. C. camps, which are keeping hundreds of young men employed in our forests, providing sus tenance for their families, and making permanent improvements in our forests which will pay dividends to all the people' in this country, for generations to comet Would he stop all farm loans, all home loans (he wouldn't stop many of these judging by local results), all civil works, and public works expenditures? Probably not. But THESE relief measures the most stu pendous program of material relief ever carried on by any gov ernment in the history of the world, ARE what these huge expenditures are BEING MADE fori , IT IS a lot of money, an almost incomprehensible sum. And no thoughtful person can view such expenditures either with indifference, or complacency. But WHAT is the alternative Our correspondent speaks of does he doubt for a minute that if these huge expenditures had NOT been made, bankruptcy would have been IMMEDIATE? Not only technical bankruptcy, but a resulting chaos and con fusion and collapse of national morale, which might well have reduced this country to a bloody shambles f We quite understand our correspondent's feeling of alarm and apprehension. As time goes on and expenditures increase in volume, such a sentiment throughout the country will prob ably increase, rather than decline. Nor have we any patience with those who would dispose of such critics, by calling them names, or trying to maintain, they are less patriotic, than those who stand back of the President's recovery program, with undiminished ardor and enthusiasm. 1VJO, that ISN'T the course to pursue. This is a free country. A Every citizen is entitled to his own ppinion, and the right to express it. Often the best patriot is not the man who runs with the orowd, and cheers because everyone else, is cheering; but the man who resists popular acclaim, fights the tide, thnt to him appears to be sweeping his country to destruction, and gives the needed warning before it is too late. . But we DO believe, that at the PRESENT time, those so alarmed at what they term "an orgy of spending," fail to see the other side of the picture and the only thing needed to allay their alarm, is to clearly SHOW them, that other side. We can't have our cake and eat it. We can't give idle men work, or starving people food, without paying the bill, for it. All the money may not be spent with the greatest wisdom. There will be waste of course. Thero always is. But the main thing is in the end WILL there be victory? . President Roosevelt says there will be. He has asked for money and more money, but by 1936 at the latest, he de clares further demands will stop, the victory will have been won, our form of government will have been maintained, and the process of spending will be paying back. WE believe he is right. We not only believe, but KNOW, flint nnnrlitinna nnt ndlv l,apn kiif .liHA...TUn... .1.. . ........ are steadily 'getting better. And we further believe they are getting better, not because they would have anyway, had nature been allowed to take her course but because of the relief program that the administration has instituted, aud is now carrying on. 11TE beliove that a country that boosted its .foreign debt to " $27,000,000,000 to fight a foreign war, and after that war was won, paid back nearly $10,000,000,000 in as many years; CAN boost its debt to $32,000,000,000, to fight an eco nomic war, and after THAT war has been wou, pay back as much or more, in an equal time. That is our belief. We have no particular quarrel with those who don't share it. But we will tion or the man who ACCEPTS disaster and defeat without AT LEAST making a fight to prevent it. For the resident's program, right or wrong, is ALL we have, and ALL we can GET. It's sink or swim as far as this country is concerned. We prefer to swim, instead of gasping at the HEIGHT of the monetary waves, and declaring, it CAN'T be done. And we believe that is the way a MAJORITY of the American peo ple, regardless of party, feel about it. N0?s (Continued tram Pag on) Notea. Herman Oliphant, legal adviser to the one who worked out the new money policy scheme a much aa anyone els. He also dratted the bill now In congress. Oliphant likewise originally adapted the Warren the ones to practical application In th gold buying policy. Political technician lues that Patlwr Coughlln'a personal political loitowing numbers no less than a million ellgibl votr. which I more than any eenator of congreasmsn has. Th Texas eorvrmutnen would have been glad to hive had Vice-President Qtnuu Uk over (& Tana patron.-1 t EVENTUAL bankruptcy, but substituted bv the process of say this; they are in the posi ag In th beginning. They are sin cerely against such move now be cause each congressman already has msde specific recommendations for specific Job. If the; handed the problem over to Oarner, they would be accused ot running out on their friends. That I supposed to b the controlling reason why they rebelled 10 SPANISH PRISON MADRID, Jan. 10. - (AP) Four i United States cltlrens were sentenced to aix month and a day Imprison ment today for assaulting a civil gusrd last year at Palma. Mallorca. At the earn time the court acquit ted Rutherford riillerton, Columbus, Ohio, on of five American concern- J ed In th Incident. So far as I know. New York ha Thos who must go to Jail sre Mr' only on enormous 8t Bernsrd dog and Mr. Clinton B. tockwood of with tired looking Wilton Lackey West nprlnglleld Mass : Roger F. ley. I e It wslklng occasionally Mead ot New York, and Edmund w jwith a priest In the Porkville section. Blodgett of Stamford, Conn. lumbering along lawly and totally All tlv ot the Americans were ar-oblivions of th ftesty little pooches rested last year after an altercation In fcottl vllb 4 civil fiukrd. x o Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed lot tefe pertaining to per eau diagnosis or treatment. will be answered by Or. Brady if a stamped lelf-addreued envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be nrlef and written In Ink. Owing to tbe large number ot letters received only a few can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. WWJam Brady. 263 El Cajnlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. THOSE SO AND SO Whenever a quack -pull one about rays, the prospective sucker goes Into i a trance and dreams that the won derful rays are j&m endowed, with all etbt. V'.l th l.AfLlln7 now. era the quack aa crlbes to them. Only a year or two ago plenty of wtaeacrei were paying good mon ey to charlatans for "treatments" with Infra red rays. Far be It from me to deny that Infra red rays are soothing and that they give grateful relief In many caaee. Nearly all of us have experienced the extraordinary effect or infra red rays at one time or an other. Grandma had great faith In their virtues In caaes of bellyache, only she Just wrapped a atove grid dle In flannel and put It on to warm up little Johnny's tummy. She really didn't know she was treating the child with Infra, red rays, but she was. One gets'. Infra red rays from an ordinary hot poultice or from hot .water bag or a hot bottle, in short, the difference between warmth and Infra red raya la not worth more than eight cente a week. But how some gullible persons love to have warm applications In the f6rm of rays I Heat from a radiator or other dark source of heat acta on the skin re flexly. causing stuffiness of the nose. especially In persona who have some low grade chronic trouble such as chronic rhinitis, thickened turbinate, deflected septum. Leonard Hill, Eng lish physiologist, says this disagree' able effect la due to "nose -clotting" rays. The effect la prevented by cool ing the face by ventilation, as by a good draft, or by perspiration. Glass, gelatin or cellophane absorbs most of the "nose-closing rays," aa does vapor arising from water In front of the fire or radiator. Thus the warmth from an Incandescent lamp held close to the face produces no stuffiness of the nose. - . People who We cooped up a large part of the time In offices, stores or houses heated, by radiators have alternative remedies. Either they can open a window to admit a current of fresh cool air or. If they are blind and dumb about "drafts" they can see that water Is kept evaporating constantly In the room. Not Just a wee vessel of water, but a few gallons every day. Those In charge of the heating ar rangements must be made to' under stand though heaven knows how-r-that a room temperature between 64 and 88 degrees P. with a fair degree of humidity feels comfortable to most normal persona, whereas a tempera-: ture several degrees higher with the! air dried out (low humidity) feels I NEW YORK . DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, Jan. 19. Thoughts while, strolling: That revue Jeering Radio City better take another look- see. Always know a western clerk by his "You bet I will." The silky satirist, Fred Keating. Cab C a 1 loway and his blue chow, "Smokey Joe." The old Plaza cabmen are worthy of a Cur rier and Ives. One word de scription of Flfl D'Orsay apurty. Every hotel seems to have a cocktail hostess. Wonder if other non-smokers always carry away one of those free holders of matches, too. Anyway Peaches Browning la rosy around the gills. Nobody seems to enjoy life more than that Rlalto physician, Dr. Leo Michel. The suspended animation and eddy of self -consciousness when someone cries, "Stop thief I" I'm -.ways for getting to ask somebody who would know Just what la genius. France beginning to belly-ache about poor U. 8. wine sales. So you won't pay! Park avenue has become a bedlam. One of my favorite people Elmer Oltphitnt. Judith Anderson and Mrs. Lisle Bell could pass for twins. And if anyone else tells me I'm a double for Ned Sparks I'll fume. He's a good-looking guy. But I'm kind to animals and a wizard at guessing , games. May Quirk has the laugh-1 tnftest eyes. j How middle-aged Ysacha Buchunk looks In the orchestra pit! In close ug he's a Juvenile. But the biggest fooler in a near view is Douglas Fairbanks. He's not much bigger than A. C. Blumenthal. Whenever you see a pair of feet and a big i cigar. It's likely Dave Stamper. 1 Most people whose faces become fa miliar by constant repetition in pub lic prints often discover there Is at ill confusion. Chrtrtopher Morley in one ofxhls essays tells of being ap proached on a train by a young man who asked him to settle a bet. He iM,rt: " Mlrt Ton were Mr. Morley. but my friend said no: he aatd you don't look a bit Ilk th picture In the book ads.' "It'a an Ideal bet." replied Morley. "for you are both right." thai always rush out to snarl at an 7A -4 waned dog. ton at health and hygiene not to dls NOSE CLOSING BAYS rather chilly to normal person. In other words, the provision of a. fair amount of water vapor In the air of the heated room saves fuol and is easy on tempers, 'complexions, furniture, and the comfort of visitors or clients. Where an efficient humidifying aya- tern la not built In with the heating plant, it U some trouble to Install and keep In good working condition an individual humidifier for each radiator or register or atove, but It la worth while, it you value health and comfort. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ' Leukoderma. I understand you have a recipe to remove white spots . . . W. fl. 3. Answer. No. I gave only directions for concealing such spots with paint: Mix lvi ouneea of powdered ilnc OX' tde and ounces of powdered ca'.a mln with a scant tablesponful of glycerin and a pint of water. Then add drop by drop till you get a tint to match the normal akin, tchthyol from 10 to 60 drops of lehthyol may be necessary. Dr. H. M. Cohen of York. Ta.. re ports a case of vitiligo or leukoderma (white spots) in which the spots about the face became normally pig mented after six weeks' treatment as follows: The patient painted the spots twice dally with 10 per cent alcoholic solution of oil of beramot. Ultra violet light treatment waa applied for a few minutes three times a week. Vz grains of gold 'sodium thlosul phate was given Intravenously once & week. Not Every Operator Can Do. I heard & physician -surgeon of many years experience say he tried the ambulant treatment of hernia and that several other leading surgeons had tried It and discarded It before your time, because It caused such se vere Inflammation and bad after-effects . . . W. A. J. Answer Not every operator la a skilled or learned physician. I don't know what the eminent surgeons may have attempted. I do know that ; in skilled hands the ambulant treat ment is giving at least as much sat isfaction a the radical operation ror hernia oan give. Giant Hives. I wrote you a year ago about giant hives with which I haa suiierea near ly five years. I want you to know I took about four boxes of the ad renal gland substance and have not had any hives since. .Mrs. s. k. ueo Answer Thank you. It is an event to receive such a report when tne oorresoondent doesn't want more ad vice about hives, ordinary or giant. (Copyright, 1934, John P. Dille Co.) Ed. Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. ' William Brady. M. D.. 265 El Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, CoJ. My chiropodist from Harlem tells of a customer whose face waa vaguely familiar. He finally confided ahe re sembled Ethel Wattera. "That's no compliment," she sniffed. "I'd rather have anybody's face than hera." There waa a coolness for the rest of the vtslt, for Miss Wattera is the high yellow favorite. However, conform ing to office custom, he asked for her name and address. The card read: "Ethel Watters, No Seventh avenue." And she went har-har-har-tng out to her Lincoln. A new wrinkle in the Broadway ballyhoo has an Atlantic City board walk tang. Up side streets from the barny after repeal type of dinner and revue places are roller chairs with customary rachitic p- shers. Ban ners along the side proclaim: "Free ride to Soandsos." And now and then a couple Is tight enough to be rolled away. The old Astor theater has for yeara specialised In stupendous signs since It went cinema. It Is now exploit ing the biggest single starring splash ever seen along the street: The entire front is blazing in a ralnbowy Jet O-A-R-B-O In shlmmery semi-circle. Greta's first name no longer mat ters. She has. in the cinema world, taken her place with Duse and Bern hardt. Or at least so Hollywood thinks. The novelist, Louis Joseph Vance, had for many years fallen to sleep over his after-dinner cigar, espec ially after he had dined well. Three conflagrations were started In one apartment where he lived and all hia carpets and furniture were seared with scorching spots. The late Ar nold Daly, who died In a similar hola- caust. did the same thing for years. A further coincidence Is that both Vance and Daly were among few Americans to wear monocles. New York Uvea with blinds up. Back home every home had a dark ened room. In our house It was the parlor, which was never opened save Christmsa day and when the silk hat ted traveling optician made his vearly call to fit grandma's spectacles. (Copyright. 1934. McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) Communications Too Much Spending. To It Editor: A front page dissertation appear ing In yeaterday'a Oregonlan emit th startling statement that th city of rosarlsh pulchritude I facing a financial crisis and local bankers have advised th municipal dads thst unless there la an Immediate drastic curtailment in the orgv of spending, a replica of Chlcsgoan chaos will surelv follow In It wsk. , According to th reckoning of these Ingenious gentlemen th local municipality alresdv submerged In debt, will owe the bankers five hundred eighty-six thousand dollsrs additional cash by the end of the fiscal year, and wlth- out oat dollar of avaible uchequei In sight to pay the gigantic deficit. I While X have no word of criticism or censure for any one Identified with tbe administrative affaire of Port- lanrl anH an tnlv a if "T am sarrK " It appears to me that the red light signal of danger, flashed by our sister city, should be heeded everywhere in America. I am only one, Mr. Editor, of a hetrogenlous multitude of per fectly good Americans, who are scared half to death "tHhe prospect of the federal government running us ten billion dollars Into debt, without means to pay. I will leave It to the judgment of any rational thinking man. If the thing that's killing ua now aa a nation Is not the orgy of borrowing, spending, extravagance and waate which has been going on among us for decades. Appropriations of money as volumi nous aa the tailings pouring from the chute of a rock crusher are being shelled out by the administration for all manner of petty projects. The Independent offices bill for 1934 car ries an appropriation of thirty mil lion dollars for "mosquito control." Down In San Francisco the CWA baa employed an army of 300 adult work men to exterminate wharf rats at wages of 60 cents an hour. Repre sentative Walter M. Pierce, acting at the behest of a petticoat contingent favoring birth control, has introduced a bill in congress to curtail the baby crop. If this bill goes through- Mr. Pierce will doubtless ask for an ap propriation to make It effective and being a perfectly good Demo crat of course he will get It tbe same as the fellow got it to control the mosquitoes. At the risk of being dubbed a chlseler, bolshevik, knoCker or something scurrilous, I will state frankly that X am not In sympathy with this orgy of borrowing and spending by the administration which Is now manipulating the reins of federal government. ALLEN O. HESS. Jacksonville, Jan. 18. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS THE Los Angeles complex, as you know if you have been there. Is that Los Angeles weather is always PERFECT, no matter what It is. If it Is hotter than the Hinges of Hades, with the sun blazing down! and the dust a foot thick on every-j thing, they puff out their chests and 1 -n w fhi. , u. ,.uu. a i tell you this la the sunshine para- diss of the world and good for rheu- mat lam and lumbago. If it la raining, like water coming out of a fire hose. . ., . . . , j , 1 they chortle about what It is doing. for the crops. If they ever hear of this fellow admitting that the weather has been') rotten down there this winter they'll sure run him ragged. ; SPEAKING again of the weather, a Bend man was once boasting In the presence of this writer and a few other choice spirits of the marvelous climate of the high desert country around Bend. One member of, the party stood it as long as he could, then remarked drily: 'Yes, you sure have a great climate at Bend. But it has one de fect that always grtpea me. The sleighing over your way Is so Infer nally rotten In August." 1JERE, by the way, 1 a good one 1 1 about th Klamath climate that waa related to this writer yesterday by George Cunning: A tourist coming through along In! the spring, when the weather In the Klamath country, to aay the least, Is apt to be slightly temperamental. I Jumped Thad McHatton about the! chill In the atmosphere. "la It always ' this cold In this country?" he ked. "Well," Triad answered, "It's like, this. See that snow up In them hills? j As long as the anow stays on In the 1 hills the weather can't warm up and till the weather warms up the snow can't go off." THE weather la a touchy subject to write about especlallv In a lauda tory vein. j Thla writer, whtl living In the Wil lamette valley, once actually caught , the sun shining In December and be-. cam lyric about It to th extent ot ' column flower blooming, grass 1 growing, birds singing In the trees right here In midwinter; msrrelous climate and Boy aren't we lucky to b living In such a place you know 1 the line. ' That night the weather changed. th mercury took a no dive and the next morning when the eappy effu sion waa read by an embattled popu lace the snow ws six Inch.vi deep and an Icy wind waa whipping down from the north pol. If you've never been on a spot like that, Just try It once. 1 - 1 "po MAKE It perfect, a relative from 1 back East, to whom thla fatuous scrlb had been boasting at long rang by mall about the soft and delightful cllmat of Oregon In the winter season, arrived that asm dsy for a visit I It never rslns but It pours. j TRUCK RIDERS' SKULL CRACKED BY TRESTLE TILLAMOOK, Ore. Jsn. 19 Ben plasker. a rancher, was fatail; injured lst ntght when his heii struck a trestle over the Wilson River loop roAd as he stood in the back of a truck betng driven along the roi-1 bv his brother, wmum Plajker. fra:turrd skull caused h. death. v;dow survive. Ye Poet's Corner Tribute Money. ' What's all the talk concerning money? ('Tls even said that "money talks"). If "sound money" is man's salvation. Why Is It then that money balks? If "the peeple" have no money. And "credit's lost In bonds and stock." If "capitalism Is a failure. For whom and how does money talk? If "the few" own all the money. (Backed by the price of bullion gold), Doesn't It become a tribute money, When loaned for things that's bought and sold? Why favor gold as "standard money," That's hoarded in a vaulted hold? "Flat currency" coin or "stable," Much pro and con of these we're told. Are we growing a "tower of Ba.be V'? (As befell In days of old), Uuslng lauguage much confounded. And scheming figures to behold. Is Uncle Sam of Mammon's victim, Must he conform to "Wall Street's" mold? Can Uncle bring prosperity, And "hold the sack" for Shylock's gold? If the dollar Is "honest money," (Where confidence can well reside) Why should prosperity now and then 'Go "around the corner" and hide? If "love of money is an evil," (And controlled by the money-lust) Why boast of wealth in terms of dol lars, . And stamp thereon "In God We Trust"? If "al wealth is produced by labor," And "creates all the increment," Why should there be land and money lords. To claim a profiteer's percent? Must Uncle borrow and reborrow, On the credit of labor's toll? And so repeat "ad infinitum," For greedy "money changer's" spoil? Would Uncle wish to get from under The heavy burden on his pack? Must he really buck like thunder. And dump the grafter off his back? How about it. you taxpayer. Is there a mortgage on your shack?" Can Uncle still borrow trlbut-money. And forever hold the sack? W. G. KNIPS. Medford, Oregon. CATERPILLAR TRACTOR aaair-rt nonriT lai inon WIHfVLO muri I IN WOO NEW YORK, Jan. 19. (AP) Cat- erplllar Tractor Co. reports net profit a share, contrasted with net loss of $1,016,873 In 1932. Directors have Glared a special dlviden of 12 cents a share, payable February 28, to stockholder of record February 15. A similar payment waa made " months ago. The daring, distracting play of a woman who loves two men completely simultaneously! Fredric MARC I H J 1 1 Ml.1, i MW Iff 1 W gyg Akai kabaUaaVlaUaVaULUk Gary COOPER Miriam HOPK8NS Edw. Ev. HORTOM DSIGf1 forLIVIflG BIO DOUBLE BILL TODAY AND SATURDAY -in nnrtu.F. UFE" i ii.i mv oish - Roiwn Ynt vn "IRON M A1TR" RffUNUn IIVY . lil t IKE SPECIAL ON STAGE IN PERSON TONIGHT ONLY AT 9:15 P. M. Tr.n AND rVKI.VX CHRrrR Rl'.l ITAL roNi,TiNo or Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson Count; History From ths Files ot The Mai Tribune of 20 and 10 Years eo.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY January 19, 1034. (It was Saturday) A fine of 5 Is Imposed for posses sion of an empty whiskey flask, upon a Hilt. Calif., resident, who solemnly Informs the sheriff, "I'd like to have you catch me spending something in this town, from now on." Fire Chief Elliott, Injured In the Page theater, la out again, but not on active duty. New service station at Central Point opens. Newcomb Carlton, president of the , Western union visits kin In the valley. Retail merchant start a member ship drive. Booze and cigarette cause 000 fire In Portland hotel. a 810.- TWENTY YEARS- AGO TODAY January IB, 1!)14. (It waa Monday) Blustery weather continues, with Intermittent showers. All autolsts who race trains to the Main street crossing will be arrested by the watchman, who has been named a deputy sheriff. City official fear a tragedy. Work Is rushed on the Elks temple. Medford couple srreated at Rose burg, and the Douglas county sheriff promises not to tell their names. President Wilson lampoons Wall street In address to Congress. Local Japanese colony hornswoggled f by fake Red Cross solicitor. "Sal. Where Art Thou" at the Star: "Wild Life in Asia" at the Isls: "The. Schoolmarm and the Drummer" at the It. 496 Ringers Set World Record In Horseshoe Match ALHAMBRA, Cal.. Jan. 19. OP) A new world's record of 496 ringers for a doubles match in which 10 games of 21 points were played, was posted today by the Alhambra horseshoe pitching quartet, Ted Allen, the world's individual cham pion: A. J. Byrns, Frank Beall and Bob Pcnse. Go to San Diego Mrs. Mary Story, Mrs. Lois Van Dyck and sons left Thursday for San Diego, Cal.. where they will be located for some time. Coming Sunday for a 4 Day Run J PRFF.VTINO VMM Nri fin .xt r