I 1IEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1934. PXGE FOUR vIedford mail Tribune "CnryOM hi Southarn Oragae Mada ths Mill Tilbuna1' Dally Eietpt Saturdaf Publth1 bj HCPKOHI) PUINTINO CO. i.r-l K. air su nsss ROBKKT H. BUHL, EdlUf An iDdcptndent Nawipaper Bntarsd aa second elu) aattar at Medtord, Union, under A of Mateo , 1. SUBBCltllTIOS RATCH Ur Hill In Ad.UK" niur, in vir ;; Dilly, 111 matte '? Dallr, DM BnlH V 7 Bj Carrier In Ailianea jMelford. Ainland. Ilfliomllll, Central Point, Pboaoil, IlllDt, Uold lllll and on lllihuaya. Pailr, cm rear :: Diiir, in Dallj, ens month .SO All Urmi, esib In Khanta. OfMtlal ppr of thl Cltf Mastoid. Official papr or Jaekaoa Countr. MEMHKR OF THE ASSOCIATED PKEB8 IteeelTlna Pull Uaacd Win Rerilca Tha Aitoelatatl Praia la ticlusliely entftlad to lha uta for publication of all nlwa dlapatcJiaa irtditad to It or otherarlia credited In Ihli papar and also te tea local nevt publlihed herein. All Menu for publication of apedal dlipateba nereln ara alio reierred. MEMBEn OF UNITED PIIE8B irtSIBKR OP AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS Advertising RepraientatliH U. C. MOGF.NBEN A COMI'ANT Offleee In Ne York, Chicago, Detroit. Sari Franeueo toa A-aelaa Beattla Portland. Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Perry. "Why don't you come out, and run for something, some time I" Mae West-en a citizen to another citizen yesterday. Dr. F. 0. Pease of the Mt. Wilson Observatory and Fred Pearson of the University of Chicago have audited the speed of light, and report It travels 309,774 kilometers per aecond. This Is 22 kilometers slower than the old figures, as compiled by astrono mers. Science la so smart, It looks Ilk they would get things right the first time. One is pained to note upon the sneering Up of Hon. John Dllllnger, the Indiana killer and bandit, now reposing In an Arizona Jail, a wisp of mustache, known In flippant clrclea as a 'go-to-hell" mustache. It now looks Ike the law would Insist that John live up to the name of his hlr tute adornment. The capture of Mr. Dllllnger, et al, Is heralded as a se vere blow to crime and criminals, and a great victory for law and order. It waa more than that. Standing be hind the Dllllnger person la the Arl aona deputy, beaming from beneath 10-gallon hat, and from behind a handle-bar mustache, uncombed and uncurled. Most of the 15-year-old lassies got home before noon today from the last Saturday night dancing. Russia and Japan are both talking war. On their Great War reoord, the Russians are the best runners. You will perhaps recall that every time they had the Germane cornered, and Russian victory waa Inevitable, "In the Carpathians," the Russians started running. The Japanese make little If any fuss, about dying for the Mikado. This makes them Ideal ene mies. Since they Insist upon It, a war would do both much good. VB PIONEER KIDS. (Pendleton East Orrgonlan) Parents should keep their chil dren, -In the shape of small, bad boja, away from the depot, as we are told by the "railroad boy" that some of them will be killed. They climb on and off the cars while they are going slow and an accident must happen unless the marshal or the parents enforce rigid rules. Keep the mischievous prsta away and let the tired con ductor have a little rest. (SO Yr. Ago Col.) There has been no "revolutionary militancy" In these part for some time. Lack of desire on the part of the "evolutlonlats, to have .the state board and room them for an Indefi nite period. Is blamed for the peace fulness. It looks like the Salee Ten campaign would be conducted with no more mayhem than displayed In a polite wrestling contest. Ons of the new model autos has no running board, so where Is the wolf that has been hanging around the backyards, going to sit. t The deadly weapon season for msle Juveniles, has passed without discom moding the coroner. as The report he would run for some thing In the primary la wrong, as he hss gone and purchased a new car and lost the old Ford vote. ortEvr (iR txnAn Great Grandad waa a busy man, He cooked his grub In a frying pan: He picked his teeth with his huntln' knife And wore the aims suit all his life. Twenty-one children came to bless The old man'a home In the wilder ness: tit Great Grandad he didn't lose heart. pnr the dogs hunted rabbits and thsy ketched right smsrt. He raised 'am rough and raised em well, When their feet took hold of ths road to hell He filled m full of the fear of God And straightened 'em out with his old ramrod. (Old Cowboy oni) The President's Birthday IT is extremely fitting that the celebration of President Roose velt's birthday tonight, should take the form of a popular contribution to finance the war against infantile paralysis. For in our opinion the turning point in President Roosevelt's career, is marked by the time he contracted this dread disease. The amazing thing about Roosevelt, since his inauguration, has been and still is, his unconquerable self confidence and optimism, his freedom from all doubts and misgivings, the buoyancy and bounce of his spirit. These qualities we believe have been more responsible for the success of his gigantic and complicated recovery program, than all the alphabetical codes combined. For it gave this country a genuine and dynamic leadership, when such leadership was its most crying need; it gave the country confidence, when all confidence had gone; it allowed the rallying of hopelessly scattered forces, behind the banner of recovery and reconstruction, when very little was needed, to turn a major disaster, into a complete national rout. WIIMRE did this spirit come from, this self confidence, this smiling optimism and conquering faith t Here was a comparatively young man, born to the purple, raised in the lap of luxury, who entered public life obviously as merely a "careerist", a man who before his nomination for the presidency, had never given any striking evidence of outstand ing ability or moral fibre but was generally accepted as merely another "politician," an opportunist who pulled the wires so well, that he secured a nomination which the outstanding lead ers of his party, neither wanted, nor expected him, to have. And then a miracle was performed! Or at least what most close political observers regarded as a miracle. From the moment he took office Franklin D. Roosevelt proved himself to be the man of the hour. With everything confusion about him, with the morale of the country not only shattered but practically gone, here was the new president, calm, self assured, determined, with a definite plan of action perfected dowii to the slightest detail, and without a moment's hesitation or delay, he proceeded to put that plan into execution ! IJOW did it happen, how did it all come about, why did no one, before the event, discern the TRUE character of this mant The reason as we see it, was that the Roosevelt character was judged by what he had done in public life, not what he had done in his private life, attention was concentrated upon his political record, and no attempt wag made to lift the veil, and discern what Franklin D. Roosevelt had done as a MAN. llf ANY years before he was elooted governor of New York, Franklin D. Roosevelt was stricken by infantile paralysis, from perfect health he was suddenly crushed, and brought to the very gates of death. His life was despaired of, his political career was done or Bt least so everyone assumed. But this young Roosevelt had another idea. He fought against death and won, won against overwhelming odds. A hopeless cripple or so the doctors said he refused to accept that verdict either, and-he refused to abandon the career he had chosen, At the very next demooratio oonvontion, he appeared ; he not only appeared, he was carried to the speaker's platform and there sitting down in a chair, he made the nominating speech for Alfred E. Smith that famous peroration to the "Happy Warrior.'" He delivered a tribute to the Governor of New York, which should have been delivered to himself. For he WAS the Happy Warrior and he is today. IT was that victory, thRt victory Vin nrnn TJTCGl?T.ni ,, . , witii, recognizes he is today, THAT EXPLAINS HIM I When a man has faced death, and conquered, when a man lias faced the end of his career, and by sheer fortitude and will, refused to aooept the verdiot, when a man by his own efforts and his own efforts alone, has shown himself to be "master of his fate, captain of his soul" well he is a different man there after. From that time forward he is never the same. AND so it is most fitting that the oountry should celebrate the president's birthday with a popular contribution to a "Roosevelt fund" which will be devoted to the war against infnntilo paralysis. For it was the crisis in his dread disease that gave the American people the inspired leader shipgave them the KIND of president they are so fortunate m having TODAY I Ye Poet's Cornei . Ceaseless Quest The restless moll of the human heart la like the ocean waves, With Its ceaseless motion and toll For the things that mortal craves. Prom early morn to shades of night, I Ths hurrying, moving mass; The whole day long, yet never find What they crave, thru days that pass. Tha sun may ahlne or clouds may ahade: The flowera bloom and go. Yet the restless heart la ever the same No mean of peace they know. We dream our dream of love, to find The heart of song has ceased. The fires of youth burned low, The God ot love released. Yet the ceaseless moll ot the human heart, Urges mortal to aeek lis quest. And like the motion of the waves, Find no place where tnere la rest. From youth to old age go hurrying on Hoping against hope, aa It may be: Seeking knowledge, yet ever dumb, forsooth, Until we enter Into eternity. The new-born Infant gives hla wall, Something the liny mortal craves; This first surging of the heart begins The endless motion like the waves. And when at last the surge Is stilled, The great, the humble ara laid low, Yet In our fondest dreams we prays The spirit's quest may onwerd flow." Mary O. Carey. over death, that victory that - J - L : iL. innutj nun uib runu, evcrjuutj ' career, brought about bv that KMED Broadcast Schedule lt:10 CHAMBER or COMMERCE NRWS. ;0O BrrakfMt Newt, Mull Trlbunt- 8:0 Miulral Clock. 8 Pe rtu Parade. 8:30 Shopping OutU. 9 :0O PTltncUhtp Ctrcl Hour. 0:30 Morning W tied jr. 10.00 Mutcl NoUi. 10:30 Morning Comment. 10:45 Quarttt Paradt. 11:00 Grant Pt Hour. U:1A Marching Along. H:0 Ton Picture. 13:00 Mid-dT Rcrut. 18:10 Chamber of Commerce Newt. 18:10 Radio Rendeevoua. 18:30 Newt Fine he. Mail Tribune. 18:30 Plpa Organ Program, 13:45 Popularlltt. 1:00 Varieties. 8:00 Clajwlfled Edition ot Atr. 3:00 Song for Everyday. 3.30 KMED Program Revue. 3:35 Dreaming the Walt Away. 4:00 Rhythmical Cocktail. 4:30 MuUrworka Program, 8:00 Popularity. 5:15 Hllo Serenadera. . 5:30 Interlude. 8:45 Newt Dlgeat, Malt Tribune. 6:00 Meclford Theater Guide. fl;,S Al Piche't Sport and Fiah Flathea. 6;90 Dinner-dance Program. 6:30 Andy Slough, Voir ot Radio. 6 :43 Modern . Y.IO to 8,00 Ivtntld. Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment, wUI be ensnered by Or. Brady 11 a stampeo wit-addressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be orlef and written In Ink. Owing to the large number ol letters received only a few can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady, iti HI Cajulno, Beverly Hills, Cat. TWO OLD TIMERS THAT LISTLESS AND LETHARGIC FOLK SHOULD KNOW, For yeara I have been trying to de vise different waya of saying In the space of a short article what a rare - old timer said as !:! aucclntly as a Scotchman would send a telegram: "He who would eat much must eat little." Tbla famous epigram of Cornaro's makea people think. Luigi 'cornaro (whose life you had better read, If your public li brary Is still open) attained the age of 103 years four centuries ago equivalent to 300 yeara today, I should estimate. Yet In his youtb he did Indeed apply hot and rebel lious liquors In his blood and all the other heAlth-destroylng and life shortening evils the roistering youth of that day Indulged In. Cornaro, like all fools, laughed at doctora and health rules when he was a rollicking blade, i If hie conscience ever trou bled him st all he drowned It out as do all fools. It waa not until he had become what In those days waa re garded as an old man, nearly forty, that he got hygiene. You know, aa burnt-out old sinners get religion. Cornaro taught two great lessons In hygiene, to all who care to learn how to keep well. First, that one must est sparingly to live long. Second, that It la never too lata to get hygiene. Then there waa another great old timer named George Cheyne found himself at thirty llatless, lethargic, short of breath and much overweight. He weighed 448 pounds In fact and In whatever they wore In Scotland early In the eighteenth century. But he dldnt despair. He girded up his loins with a ahlp'a cable and entered upon a reduction regimen, dieting on milk and vegetablea chiefly, and gradually accustoming himself to exercise. In this way Cheyne reduced bis weight to 160 pounds and lived to the age of 73 years. His essay on health and long life Is still a classlo and his aphorisms contain much wisdom even for today. This one Is quoted In the doctor's bible Osier's "Practice": "Every wise men, after fifty, ought to begin to lessen the quantity of hla aliment, and If he would continue free of great and dangeroua dlstempera and preserve his sepses and faculties NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, Jan. 30. Bob Hague Is about the last of Broadway! good fellows, the ort who purge decorous gathering with blast of comedy. A millionaire, he has rounded the Horn on wind jammers, knock ed about the hell roarlngest a e a porta and toyed with a teacup In select drawing rooms. As vice - presl of a major oil company, he con trol a fleet of ri.-Jf ireignier ana w loved by his crews, trom oil wiper to captain. He Is married to Mary Lewis, the freckled Arkansas beuty who sang her way from Talt'a-on-the-Beach to the Metropolitan opera. Indicative of his grasp of the arts, three months after hla marriage to Miss Lewis he naively observed one evening at home: -'They tell me you singt Let's hear youl" And while she trilled her golden -throated aria he clung to a dead cigar and inored. But Ahe adorea him. Hague by wireless from somewhere in Brarll will act a host to several hundred actors at the Lambs. He is a sucker for the hard luck story and can put away a quart of Bourbon and still yawn over the dullness of the evening. Hla favorite crony Is William Gaxton, the actor. A tragl-comlc tale concerns a Jet bonneted lady carrying her deceased Peke to Brooklyn in a hand Mtchel for interment. A man in the tub way askeel If he might not relieve t.er of her burden. She held to it nerv- omly. He followed her up the atept, snatched the satchel and sprinted I The Kaxtadale Doc Cemetery la the the resting place for moat New Tork dot whose owners can afford th reasonable charftea. A plot and burlsl coat about MS and for 3 yearly graves are kept ereen. tt Is on an upward slope from the Hudson. The most depressing structure In town Is the mammoth and abandoned hospital at Weal End avenue and 72nd street, occupying almost a half block on the former sue of the mansion of Huyler the candy man. It la now in rapid decay, broken windowed and cobwebby. I am told bondholders salvaged only a penny for each dollar invested. A few blocks away on Riv erside Drive la the Bonus Csmp, where Jobless ex-soldlera are bravely riding the economic storm In tin can huu. There should be a llnature between thla forlorn building, with room for all. and the cold, cramped qviartera of the squattsrs. Upper Broadwsy. beyond 72nd. dotes on rich food. Many shops hsrhor the diabetic rocer. the dietetic bak ery, get thin restaurants and other round-upa for obesity. The grsnd hotel of the district Is ths glngsr- bresdy An.onls, dubbed at dedication "Stokes' Folly." and the Manhattan home of Theodore Dreiser. The swtnk apwlmeut souse is the Aptborp, a I pmJ'OsV i, Brady, M.D. clear to tha laat he ought every seven years to go on abateling gradually and senolbly, and at last descend out of life as he ascended Into It, even Into the child's diet." The child's diet means milk dtet. The seven-year notion la Just one ot those old medical superstitions. No one knows whether any part of the body is replaced by new cells or tis sues In seven years or In seven months or In four weeks or In a thousand days. But the tenor of Cheyne's hy gienic advice Is quite sound. Indeed, wise men and women do begin to em ploy greater moderation in their eat Ing and drinking, as well as in their physical activities, after fifty. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Sulphur Dlnxlrlp. What effect has sulphur dioxide gas, used In refrigeration, on one's physical condition? R. B. Answer Human beings quickly be come tolerant to small amounts or sulphur dioxide In the air, but fre quent exposure causes chronic In flammation of the resplrfftory tract, and of course a gassing by a break In the pipes containing sulphur diox ide may fatally poison. Aeute poll sonlng produces suffocation from spasm of ths throat, and burning of the moist mucous membranes by the formation of sulphuric acid. 8 ex. Is there any rule to determine the sex of the child before birth? Mrs. V. H. Answer There is no dearth of "rules" or methods, but In my opin ion no one can predetermine the sex of the child. And It is probably bet ter so. Speed the Smarting tiuests. This little booklet of yours about "Unbidden Guests" Is worth many times the 15 cents It costs. By fol lowing Instructions In the booklet for ringworm or' fungus foot Itch I have obtained more relief than I got from much medical treatment. f R. O. H. Answer Ringworm, fungus Itch, athlete's foot, trlcophytosis. gymna" slum or swimming pool itch. Take your choice of names for It. It Is a parasitic Infestation and hence be longs In the category with cooties and the like. (Copyright, 1034. John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr William nrady. M. D.. 263 El Ca in I no, Beverly Hills. Cat. grim building with gray uniformed guards and enormously sombre In side court. I stirred up a mare's nest In a re cent anlff for precise grammar. But the majority of letters maintain, para phrasing Hamlet: "The paragraph's the thing." The greatest stylists and masters of rhetoric with flyspeck crit icisms are so often bores. An anal ogy may be found with champion golfers. With the exception of Bobby Jones, the greatest are devlAtors from orthodox form. Ernest Hemmingway's phrases are so awkwardly clipped they shame the Oxford Englishman. A new writer, Myron Brlnlg. stipples similar stac cato. Not many hold them paragons of literary purity. But they are direct and grip readers. Contrariwise, .Drei ser Is verbose, prolix, circumlocuti ons end Involved. Also a writing master. The chapters of his "An American Tragedy" between the time the murder was committed and the murderer apprehended, are more tragically breath-taking than even Victor Hugo's similar chase of Jean Valjean. Arnold Bennett admits he wrote best when he chucked gram matical rules out the window. Now that Anthony J. Drexel Blddle has ended a 20-year self exile on the Pari boulevards, another expatri ated die-hard, E. Berry Wall, is ex pected to Join the dollar flight he glra soon. His English boiled dinner saratorlal effect will add lustre to the Park avenue promenades. I once sauntered with Mr. Wall and hi chow from Sulka's corner along the rue de Rivoll to Rumpelmayer'a. Mickey Nlelan. stepping out of the Murtce, glimpsed us and, grabbing a megaphone from a yap wagon spieler, yelled: "Everybody grab partner for Gay '80 totter I" (Copyright. 1934. McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) The President To Hear Her Sing Jt 1 t - tNS --. i Nan Johnson, 18. of Clevsland Is going to take tha full three octavea of her aoprano voice to Washington some time In Msrch or April and ling for Prssidsnt Roosevelt (As sociated Press Photo) r . i . i Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. CRITICS tell ua the newspapers print too much that la fluffy, Inconsequential or sensational, and too little that U solid and Informa tive. The answer of the newspapers la that they print what their reader WANT TO READ. AS THESE word are written, two storlea are coming over the wire- One tells of the resignation of Pre mier Camllle Chau temps, of France, and hi entire cabinet. Tne other de scribes the sudden and mysterious departure of Mary Plckford from Bos ton last night, In her car, escorted by a Massachusetts state police car. She suddenly left the stage where she had been appearing! after com plaining to the police a man and' woman had been trailing her, left Boston In her own car, with a police escort, drove to a private home at Buzzard's Bay, and upon arriving re fused to see any outsider or to answer the telephone. Which of these stories will YOU read first and with most Interest? YOU, of course, may be the excep tion, and read the first and with keenest relish all about the resigna tion of the premier of France and hi entire cabinet. But MOST readers will read first and with greatest Interest all about Mary and her mysterious departure from Boston. ON THE front page of a repre sentative Southern Oregon news paper yesterday, there were 38 stories. Of these 38 stories, only TWO dealt with crime, one telling of the break ing up of a gang of Middle Western criminals and the other relating what the officers are going to do to put an end to kidnaping. Two atorles, both short, neither heavily displayed, dealt with divorce one the Impending separation of the sister of Curtis Dall, son-in-law of President Roosevelt, and her husband, and the other with the application of Dorothy McKalH for a divorce from her crooner husband. One story dealt with an automo bile accident in which two women were injured, there were several atone dealing with tha liquor problem In volved In the new Knox law and it application, two stories about local politics and several sport stories. NOW listen: tf There were THIRTEEN stories, all heavily displayed, dealing with world economic conditions and what is being done to Improve them so that times will get better and people will live on a higher scale of comfort than during the past three or four years. Remember that proportion two crime stories, two possible scandal stories If routine divorce It regarded a scandal, which la rather doubtful and thirteen atorles dealing with economic conditions. That Isn't unduly stressing crime and scandal, 1 it? A N OTHER a tor told of the unusu- l ally mild winter prevailing In Oregon this year. There was a tale about the f'.ndlng, up In the Willam ette valley, of the skeleton of an Indian, with a long knife burled be side htm. Another concerned the warning of Superintendent Pray, of the state police, that if the state liquor com mission put liquor price too high the bootlegger will get the business, And ao on Just an average picture of an average day. THE newspapers art not perfect j few Institution are. They do , print much that 1 trivial. But then there it a lot In life that la trivial.; The fact remains, however, that ' they do represent a fairly accurate 1 picture of the life of their day. 4-L PORTLAND, Jan. 30. ( AP) W. C. Reugnlta, president of the Loyal Le gion of Loggers and Lumbermen, said today the recent wage advance of 2 V, oenta an hour for employes of i-h logging camps and sawmills, will Increase the payroll by at least 1.000.000. The Increase to 4S rente an hour for common labor will be effective Feb. I. BAKER. Jan. 80. (AP) Bernard Metnwarlni, editor of the Democrat- Herald here, and Miss Jennie Lewis or. Pssadena, were married Monday at Covlna, Cel.. friends here have been advised. The ceremony waa perform- i ed by the Rev. rrancia M. Arsnl, pas ! tor of the Christian church. For QUICK, dependable FUEL OIL Delivery, phane 315. Eads Transfer Co. HUSKY THROATS Overtaxed by smoking I 3 Sinclair Is Charged With Embezzlement IT: 1 af4f J ' - Warranta for tha arrest of Harry F. Sinclair (above), oil magnate, and 24 other men high lr oil and banking clrclea were Issued at Tul sa, Okla. Embezzlement In connec tlon with the failure of the Ex. change Trust company was charged. (Associated Press Photot Meteorological Report January 30, 1934. Forecast. Mediord and vicinity: Cloudy to night and Wednesday. Moderate tem perature. Oregon: Cloudy tonight and Wed nesday, except rain tonight or Wed nesday northwest portion. Moderate temperature. Local Data. Temperature a year ago today: Highest, 39; lowest, 31. Total monthly precipitation, 257 Inches; excess for the month, .05 inch. Total precipitation since September 1, 1933, 6.15 Inches; deficiency for the season, 8.94 Inches. , Relative humidity at 5 p. m. yes terday, 77; 5 a. m. today, 100. Sunrise tomorrow, 7:36 a. m. Sunset tomorrow, 5:24 p. m. Observations Taken at 5 a. m-, 130 Meridian Time. in -o 3 2 Boston 6 0 Cheyenne 42 30 Chicago 4 -2 Eureka ' 48 48 Helena 44 28 Los Angeles . 70 50 MEDFORD 47 30 New Orleans - 46 30 New York 16 6 Omaha 14 4 Phoenix 66 48 Portland - 50 42 Reno 60 30 Roseburg 44 42 lt Lake 36 30 San Prancleco....- 54 48 Seattle - 46 44 Spokane 36 32 Walla Walla 42 32 Washington, D.C. 14 8 Clear Clear Clear ' Cloudy Clear Clear Foggy Clear Clear Clear Clear P.Cldy Clear Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Clear TO DETROIT, Jan. 30. (AP) Olfti of (22.500 from tfte automobile In dustry of Detroit and 91,000 from U. S. Senator James Couzena to president Roosevelt's birthday fund, for relief of infantile paralysis suf ferer, were announced today by Ed sol Ford, treasurer of the committee arranging the birthday ball here. Mr. Ford said the Individual don ors of the $22,500 did not wish their names used. ROOSEVELT BIRTHDAY RADIO TALK TO BE HEARD OVER OUR BIG WESTERN ELECTRIC SOUND SYS TEM TONIGHT AT 8:15 P. M. YOU WILL HEAR HIM AS THOUGH HE WERE ON OUR VERY STAGE AGAIN TODAY AND WEDNESDAY J LAUREL V HARD r in f heir new full length feature picture SONS OF THE M-G-M plilir"1 rVtvre CrT& Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the Wee of The MsU Tribune of 20 and 10 Veara 4o.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY January-30, I9J4. (It waa Wednesday.) Democrats to out a full county ticket In the field. Phoenix to have a -Torum." Rswles Moore returns from Port land, where he "went with blood In hla eye" to deliver an address before the district sttorneye' convention, on the interferen of Governor Pierce In Jackson county affairs. County tax S90.543 greater than last year. Victor Bursell fllee for county com missioner. , County fair board decldea to "have a racing program next fall, that will never be forgotten." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY January SO, 1914. ( was Friday.) More varletlea of rosea needed tn Medford yards, O. A. C. expert de clares. New contract for Pacific highway over Slsklyoua signed. Salem politician reveals plan "to force Wall street to pay all Oregon taxes." "Comely lady of 32" peases $200 worth of bum checks on Medford merchants. Argument over Socialism In Front street saloon brought to close when one debater stabs the other In the stomach with a Jackknlfe. "Ish ka blbble" takes city by storm aa slang term. Mall Tribune editor writes an editorial on It. H. B. Cady, the agate expert, pro poses that the front of the new Elks temple fireplace be "faced with home grown sgates." YOUR KITCHEN CAN BE A MODEL KITCHEN SEE Big Pines Lbr. Co. DEPENDABLE BLDO. ADVICE TEL. 1 FEATURING OWEN-OREGON GRADE MARKED LUMBER DANCE WED. NITE ORIENTAL GARDENS ' Musio By Dynge's Orchestra Playing Latest Dance Hits ? Mir CHARLEY CHASE