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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 7, 1934)
PAt.lS SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOUD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY; FEBRUARY 7, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune "Emyont in Southern Oregon Bud. tht Hail THbuaV' Oiily BiccfK Saturday published by ilKTIHiltll PfilNTINQ CO. Sfi-31-29 N. Kir 8L Ifves 16 ROBKItT ff. BUHL, Editor An Independent Kiwiptper Entered u terand cltst matter it hUdord, Oreion, under Act of Mard. 8. 18T8. SUBHCHiMlON BATES Bj Hail In Adiaitct HaJlr, one rear fft.00 Daily. Hi a.onllM a.T liallv nn month 60 Bt Carrier In Afhanea Medford, Aibtand. JarksonrllU, Central point. Pboeoii, Talent, Uoid Bill and on IMclmij't, DaJIr. one year 8 00 Dully, ill tnonthi 8.25 Daily, one month 60 All term, caub in advance. Official paper of the Clly of Medford. Official paper of Jacluoo County. MEMBEH OF THE ASSOCIATED PHK88 IiMdr1nt full Leased Wire Berrlce Trie Aitociateu Preta la eielushely entitled to th use Tor publication or ail neva aupaicnw credited to It or oUierwite credited tn Ihla paper and alio to the local mm published herein. ' All righla for publication of ipeelal dlipatcbtt bereln are alto referred. MKMBEH OF UNITED PBK8S MEMBER OP AUDIT HI) BEAU OF CIRCULATION'S Adtertlilnc Represent at lr M. C. MOIiENSEN COMPANY Offlcea In New York, Chicago, Detroit. San Francbeo Lot Arcelea Seattle Portland. Ye Smudge Pot Bv Arthur I'erry. Ever so often some cltlaen forgets the government '1 now 8ant Clam, and launches an enterprise, hiring men under his own steam, and la promptly ' rewarded by the fearleai preaa, printing an account of nil unuaual gumption, next the aoclety Heme, or on the want-ad page. The Jackson County Republicanism la now showing the faith they used to twit the Democrata for possessing, when Texas went Republican. They behold victory, as the Democrats be held It when Coolldge was running for president. Considerable Indif ference and arrogance has been knocked out of the Republicans In the past two years, and they are now In r. mood to use common sense, it Is hoped. 1 There seems to be quite an argu ment underway anent juvenile delin quency, and the blame la divided be tween the police and repeal of pro hibition, neither or which have a suf ficient number of votes to worry about. Three men congregated on the po. steps yesterday, and were telling a naughty story, Instead of settling a few economic problems. . The womenfolks have started fret ting about new spring hats and the men are wondering If last year's straw hat will last another summer. 'TWAS NUT PICKINO TIME. (New York Herald-Tribune) Tet only a year ago. In the contusions and perplexities of the short session, Huey was one of those portents about which It was necesssry to think twice. Wax he not shrewd, bold and equipped with some ability? Had he not , arisen with that strange crop of men Jan band leaden, radio parsons, cancer doctors and sound-truck "personality" artists fc who were clamoring for and winning the suffrages of the cltleenry? " The Older Girls continue to hold smokers, or bridge parties. Treason busted loose in Lane county yesterday, when a protest was filed against an NRA lecturer, becom ing too enthusiastic In his speech, that pictured everybody as happy aa a lark, and doing less work than an Sngllsh aparrbw. The gent spoke here enrapturing Young Democrats, and some cltlrens who have not worked since Hoover, or since Orover Cleve land. The orator left the quaint Im pression that everybody with over $40 waa a wretch and should be downright ashamed of himself. Carousing waa reported Mon. evng.. the carousers refraining from motor ing, aa the auto was new, and the genial boat firmly objected to a per manent wave In his fenders. No new cars sre ever muaaed tip hy a tele phone pole, In a drunken condition. It waa a 18 per gal. fiesta, with a as 50 per qt. atmosphere. The snake bite was served from dimpled. 3 cornered bottles, that once held the sunshine of Maryland. The liquid had the wild taste always found In the product of aouthern Oregon's most Isolated canyons, singing broke out shortly after a a. m. The U-k Jubilee Is looking for a light comedy, "that win reflect the spirit of the southern Oregon country . . and depict a phase." How about re-enacting a courthouse steps tan. trum, and close with threatening to lynch a prominent guest. Instead of the district attorney. Aa a grand finale, and to show no hard feelings, a liar and a lamb could lie down to gether. The prologue could ahow the covered wagon crossing the plslns In InM and rural Fords, with a tank full of county gasoline, racing to a h'llralslng in 1933. There should be a large chorus. While one section waa singing the Constitution of America, Uie other half could be robbing the courthouse, with Inno cent bystanders at all prominent cor' nen. Thla would not alone be funny u iuFrr o n mvn, man u u ! to get, , . . . JMCIA, VINE SEES HOPE LARGE FUNDS FOR GAME CONSERVING Ashland Member of Oregon Game Commission Home From Washington, D. C, With Optimistic Word- Oregon and the entire northwest la especlslly favored In large-scale plans now In process of formation for game conservation and restoration, and recreational development, according to Prof. Irving E. Vlnlng of Ashland, who returned Monday from Washing ton, D. C, where he attended hear ing as a represehtalve of the Oregon game commission. Professor Vlnlng went to the capltol to attend the twentieth conference of the American Game association but during his stay found his time largely taken up at hearings of President Rooeevelt'a committee on wild life restoration, of which Thomas E.' Beck Is chair man. Vast expenditures are possible In Oregon under the committee, with resulting attraction of tourists and sportsmen, said Professor Vlnlng. presents Platform Professor Vlnlng outlined to the committee a project for acquiring sub-marginal land for migratory bird sanctuaries on Lower Klamath lake and Malheur lake and a vast reserve for antelope and sage hens In the Hart Mountain country of southeast ern Oregon. The proposal was given careful at tention of the committee, the game commission member said, and pro vided owners of such tracts as It may be necessary to purchase, do not gain Inflated Ideas on the worth of their lands, no great difficulty should be encountered in carrying out the plan. Four major projects Important to the west are before the game con servation committee, according to Professor Vlnlng. Money to carry out these projects Is available and starting of the work waits only final acceptance of detailed plans ny oni clals concerned. Taylor Bill B Menace ' The commissioner lodged a com plaint on the Taylor bill, which would give the secretary of agricul ture authority to turn over certain areas of publlo lands to organized stockmen without regard to preserva. tlon of wild life or recreational pos slbllltles. An amendment was draft. ed and adopted at a hearing and there Is strong hope that recreational and game representation will be giv en a voice In allotment of the landa for stock raising. tn analyzing the duck flights of the season lust closed, Professor vin Ing said he secured information In the east to show that the ingni, while near average on the coast, was the poorest in years through tho Da kota country, due largely to drought In Canada, The Mississippi and Ohio flight was average, as was the areat Lakes and eastward flight. Due to destruction of eel grass on the northeast coast the flight was early and scattered. The southeast Atlatnlo seaboard flight was good. Approve Hug Limit The consensus In the east was that the bag limit should remain aa last year and the stamp tax of 1 was unanimously approved by all sports men's organizations and also belore the senate wild lite committee hear ing in Washington. Pish and game commissions of the western statea will meet in Portland In June and, according to word giv en Professor Vlnlng, Chairman Beck of tho Roosevelt committee may at tend. His presence would aid ma terially In securing projects of Im portant In the Pacific slope conser vation program. The federal flaherlea bureau chief Is also contemplating a visit to the coast In the spring. Professor Vlnlng declared that west ern delegates recommended prohibi tion of live deooys and feeding be fore blinds. Widespread feeding, how ever, was. advocated. Grating Moot Topic Forcetry service permits for graz ing of shoep expire thla year and must be renewed In 1938. Eastern delegatea favored prohibition of graz ing In national forests, mainly for the reason that the grazing prlvl leges gave western wool growers an economic advantage over the eastern producer, whose sheep must be fed on private lands. Western delegatea offered as a so lution a regulation and quota sys tem which would give stockmen time for adjusting their flocks to smsller range. Professor Vlnlng gave It aa his opinion that the forestry privi lege would not be cancelled. While House Visitor During hla atay In Waahlngton. Professor Vlnlng called at the White House, hla visit coming the day be fore President Roosevelt' birthday. He delivered a complimentary Ore. gon fishing license to the chief, ex ecutive and saw thousands of pack afes being unloaded presenta for president's birthday from all parts of the country. The Oregonlan found conditions vaatly Improved In the east with trains well filled and a general feel ing of optimism. The only question troubling the east at this time, he said, Is whether prlvste Industry and enterprise win be able to absorb the labor surplua when It Is released from CWA and other governmental activity. BEARCAT BASKETEERS DOWN LINFIELD, 32-28 SALEM, FPU. 7. (AP By virtue of a 13 to a Iftul RMntvt nrly In th 8tme Willamette university edged out 93 to 38 win over Lin ft eld college In the first bueketball content of the en eon between the two team lant night, Lin field had pulled tip to 11 to 10 at the end of the half, free throw accounting for U point of IU total, I Roquefort cheew can now be made from cowa" milk In thla country in- ateao oi irora Mieepa' milk, as in sFrsiiioe. , Confesses Kiclra"'i V f I f 1 i I U T II OfcW kWsa .ll I Ik a Goldon Francis Alcorn (above) reputed pal of Verne 8ankey, cap lured Dakota desperado, was ar rested In Chicago and department of luetics agents eald he admitted -a part In the kidnaping of Charles Boettcher II of Denver. (Associated Press Photo) MODEL OF FRUIT E A true model of Vie Oregon Ex preu, one of three slater ships Washington. Oregon and California Is now on display In the window at the chamber of commerce, through the courtesy of Harold Carl, manager of Page Bros., Inc., of Portland, agent. The ship, made In Odense, Den mark, In Vie summer of 1033, was built for the Fruit Express Line, the Pacific coast manager for the com pany being the International Pnclflc Coast corporation, with offices In the Skinner building, Seattle. The liner was arrauged for at the lntance of J. A. Smith of Gwin, White St Prince, Inc., of Seattle, for eign sales manager of the company, while on a trip to Europe a yenr ago. The Oregon Express Is used for the movement of pears, apples and other Paclflo coast fruits, and does not. carry a general cargo. The ship Is fully refrigerated and carries 90,000 boxes. The speed of the boat Is approxi mately 18 knots per hour, making an average trip from Portland to Euro pean ports In approximately 31 days via the Panama canal. A Inrgo quantity of Medford pears were shipped on the boat this fall, according to Raymond R. Roter, who returned this week from Portland, where he had dinner aboard the Ore gon Express. "The express service proved by ( these boats has much to do with I the popularity of Medford pears In , European markets," Mr. Rcter said, J "and because the trip Is made In such a short time, the pears are delivered to Europe In excellent con dition. The model, which was also made In Odense, la on display in a large class case. Every detail of the ex press Is carried out minutely and the small ship has already attracted a number of passersby. FREElfAlES Housewives who visit the local Safeway storo this Friday will depart with a copy of a sparkling national weekly magazine tucked In among their purchases, according to plans made by A, Q.' Anderson, manager. Mr. Anderson says: "Every copy or 'The Family Circle,' the name of the magazine, has been exclusively pur chased by Safeway and will be dis tributed free of charge to customers in appreciation of the friendly rela tionship existing between them. Edited by Harry Evans, former managing editor of 'Life and the present cinema editor of that humor ous weekly, 'The Family Circle la anything but a 'booster sheet or house organ. 'Its a smartly edited national weekly of over 1.000,000 circulation. Western readers have not generally been acquainted with the publication heretofore, as Its circulation has been largely confined to eastern subscrib ers, The contents of the magarlne are designed to appeal to the entire 1 family. Special departments of the ; publication Include fiction of the j highest type, cinema reviews and in- I tervlewa, radio, fashions, cosmetics, humor, foods and contests." The Issue of February 0th w ill . offer, among other outstanding tea-1 lures, a short story, 'Two Wise Men,' by Richard Connell, uatlonally fam- i oil fiction writer; 'Technique of Cooking', by Ida Bslley Allen; Ideas , for a Valentine party by Julia Lee Wrltiht: 'A Dinner Dttte with Kay Francis' by Harry Evan whloh prom- j mlses some Illuminating news; 'Sons who Dodfie Their Father's Footsteps',! by Harriet Torndyke; Robert Pilgrim's 'Food for Thought': moving picture and stage reviews by Harry Kvana; a section of cartoons and humor; an Illustrated department for children which will introduce a new Split-. word contest, and a Jnliy JukIcs' contest In which there will be $1t In prices and 91 winners each week. "Altogether there will be three con- tent In the hume and the prima will total more than 9100 each week Mr, Anderaon Mid that thla week, Wid each PYlday thereafter, any per- ann o.tn.i- . . n.r.... .t . Rnrdlrw If a purchnae In' made. mv i obtain a free copy of "The Kamtly 'circle', ' Personal Health Service By William Hlgned letters pertalnlLg to personal bealtb apd hygiene not to dls. taus diugiiosls or treatment, will be elf-addressed envelope Is enclosed. ink. Owing to the large number ol letters received only a. few can be an ' .wervd. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructlona .tddreas r r. William Brady, 265 El Cam I no, Beverly Hills, Cal. FRESH AIR IN SCHOOL Now Is the time when school chil dren, studying physiology, hygiene and all about health, suffer the viti ating effects of bad air. It takes a lifetime and more to learn how much fresh air It la safe to admit to a school room without exposing oneself to the grave hazard of getting caught In a draft. The health au thorities of the country are still singing that old refrain: "Get plenty of fresh air but beware of drafts or sudden cnangesl" The average dumb egg turns the problem over In his alleged mind for a few years and finally decides to heed the second clause In the Injunction and trust to luck or the concern of other persons for his pure, fresh air. So what chance has the child In school? There he Is at the mercy of teacher. superintendent, Janitor or the member of the board who Is told to fix the rules and regulations pertaining to heating and ventilation. And In thousands of schools all these of ficials, in turn, are at the mercy of the firm that manufactured and In stalled the ventilating system. Yankees are all pretty much alike In their credulity. The young ones nowadays, they say. drop the Santa CI hub. fairy tale, stork business at a shorklngly early age and go on to higher learning. But the delusion of taking cold, while It does not cramp the enjoyment of the young ones so much, certainly keeps old fogies in their place. The young of our day have less reverence for authority than the young of past generations had. and this Is an encouraging sign. The old folks, from lifetime habit and from sheer Incapacity for constructive thinking, are more inclined to accept notions or theories as facts or truths If these notions are stated with suf ficient vehemence by some old party who holds himself or his colleague out as an authority. That la the reacon why the cold delusion still prevails among the old people. I am not excepting old doctors and old health authorities: nor the shrewd youn publicity agents or spokesmen i nr Rhost writers they employ to sup port" and defend the notion that cold or dump Is a cause of disease. I merely suggest to nil who are still young enough to take a new impres sion that there Is no authority In science, but only learning, and o no man can pronounce a theory or belief NEW YORK . DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, Feb. 7. Bob Brinker- hoff, Juggling a variety of Jobs with the deftness of a Serge Flash, sal vages as much fun out of the business of living as anyone I know While his main vocation Is the comic strip, his range Includes many other art istic endeavors. Plump, fair haired and with Flemish high col oring, ne is as distinctly a Hol lander aa William Van Loon. Aside from his cartoon creation, he Illus trates for magazines, writes books fof boys, designs dolls. Invents puzzles, lectures and talks on the radio. Yet never misses a roundup of artists. Now and then he circles the globe, stopping off to visit Roy Chapman Andrews on the Gobi or to sketch In Algiers. His student days were tn a Montmartre attle which he still maintains at the magnificent out lay of 950 a year. His summers are spent on Brlnkerhoff Island in Iaine. He has a rich tenor voice and hh prematurely white-haired wife every body calls "Pat," was, before mar riage, a professional concert alnger. Their studio In West 57th may be visited one night by C. D. Gibson, the next by a Bowery tatooer. Or in a far away corner you can tee Bluch, the shy circus clown. Few places Incubate so many terse and descriptive phrases as the Jouatv bars of metropolitan clubs. Esmond O'Brien was having a later afternoon libation with a blierardy die-hard at the Racquet. The old Tory poured himself a generous hooker of brandy. And as a waiter held the seltrer bot tle over It awaiting orders, "Just a toot!" he cautioned. Tallulah Bankhead, In languorous convalescence, is doing the rounds of auspicious first nights. Her helter skelter mop of shoulder hair throws her face, sharpened by many month of Illness, In chalky bas-relief, so re mlndetul of Jeanne Eagles. At inter missions Miss Bankhead. sitting in an aisle chair, holds court with seasoned play-goers In that fever-bright spar kle that is her metier. Several major operations and a prolonged te$re a, various hospitals hare not dimmed her radiance. There are ten song-writers whose long ago hits gave special plume to Tin Pan Alley, who are recipients or 3.0O0 a year from the Society of American Authors and Composers In this way they do not face old agt worries and. aa It often happens, are ..ble to turn out another salable eoiu tore tans. More perhaps than an Wr guild, the soivt writers, th.vi Ut ;eiy to Gene Buck take care oi then own 3 Urady, M.D. answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped Letters should be orlef and written In "an established fact" or "generally accepted" unless he cites the evidence on wAlch the establishment of the fact Is based. I call attention to the negative or, disappointing results of all scientific experiments and an actual human tests of the cold theory. It is not only fair but Indeed It la the only attitude for a young person of studious mind to ask, how these putative authorities about .catching cold get that way. j Compromise between those who are craiiKS Hooud irean air ana wiooe wuv wish to exclude It from the school room Is a practicable solution of the problem. X mean that a compromise has been adopted In many schools. village and city, with satisfaction to all concerned. Dr. John B. Todd of Syracuse, N. Y., introduced this prac tice. Equip all the windows of the schoolroom with screens of un bleached muslin. Thla excludes wind, draft, rain, dust, snow, but ad' mlts air. moisture vapor, light. Saves heat. Gives fresh air at a healthful temperature and humidity, at trifling expense. There Is no patent on the Idea. .Try It in your sleeping room or your living room or your work room or your office. QUESTIONS AM) "ANSWERS. I am 23, 68 Inches tall, and weigh 167 pounds In the nude. X am almost thin in the face, but very large around the hips, the thighs and In the legs, I mean heavier than the ordinary girl. I walk 20 blocks a day, and several evenings take the dog for a walk. I. O. Answers Sounds like hypopltultary obesity. Send 10 cents and stamped envelope bearing your address, for booklet "Design for. Dwindling," and follow the regimen laid down for that -form of obesity. Epilation. Ben Told pulling hairs from the nose causes cancer. V. L. Answer Not so, but It Is better to clip the bristles or hairs that grow Inside the nostrils. Pulling them In vltes painful Inflammation of the fol licles or sometimes bolls. Barber Tools. How can I cheaply sterilize my bar ber tools? Brushes? K. K. B. Answer Boiling is best. Some brushes are made to stand boiling. If boiling Is Impossible. I, think plain soap and hot water washing and then a soaking In formaldehyde solution is good way to disinfect Implements or brushes. (Copyright, 1934, John P. Dllle Co.) tid. Note: Renders wishing to communicate with Dr. Brnrfy should send letters direct to lr William Brady. M. It.. 361, El Ca mlno. Beverly Hills. Cal. Max Baer captured the Broadway fancy a while but his spirits were too exuberant for even that lively street. He Is the exploding clijar kind of comic who zooms Into gath erings to inspire wonder whet will happen next. He la likely to knock an acquaintance from under his hat with a back-slap or send a waiter with a heavy load sprawling with a suddenly outstretched foot. And his multiplicity of heart balm suits are explained by his reputed penchant ror proposing to every girl he meets, A part of his quite unfunny routlno. A few yeara ago Peaches Browning. ringing through the headlines, was a plump and gawky girl, bewildered by sudden notoriety. ' But now, sleekly brittle, perfectly poised and a ringer for those Monte Carlo maidens In tow of the monoeled dandles of the gam ing tables. She puffs at her cigar ette with the nonchalance of the fin ished Inhaler, walks to her cafe table with a Lady Vere de Vere grace and Is oo longer dewey with surprise at Broadway's dazzle and pompous fig ures, Broadway's insatiable Itch of cheap curiosity overshadowed the stage goings-on at Peggy Fears' recent pre miere. All the regulars craned hackly necks to see If A. C. Blumenthal, the husband rom whom she Is separated, was in the assemblage. The energetic "Blumle" Is dlflcult to see .even in a close-up. but he waa there. At least, he was outside among those watting for limousines after the curtain fell. Matrimonial deflections In New York, are often over-night whim. On a recent evening we were to dine and aee a play with a long married and apparently happy couple. The morning of the dinner the papers told of their separation. What to do was a problem, but later came a te'u gram from the husband: "Dinner off. theater off. business off, stocks and bonds off. O, yes, wife off to mamma." (Copyright. 1934. McNaught Syndi cate. Inc.) Oregon Weather. Occasional rain tonight and Thurs dsy; snow in high mountains; little change in temperature: strong south erly winds offshore with occasional gales. Corn production in coastal coun ties of North Carolina waa reduced I 40 per crent because ot damage done by two hurricanes last (alt. Spores that attack tomatoes, pota toes and trult crops travel through the air at helghta up to 18.000 teet. I POOR COMPLEXIONS Clogged fores, pimpies Improved tn a few days by Rcsinol Soap and the ssHsir effective medication of fm Resmol Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS, D O YOU like figures? If you do, here are some that may Interest you : With a population 17 per cent as large as California's, Oregon produces only 13 per cent as much manufac tured goods. With 60 per cent ol Washington's population, our manu factured goods are worth only 51 per cent as much. With eight-tenths of one per cent of the population of the United States, Oregon's manufactured pro ducts are worth only six-tenths of one per cent of the total. HP HE conclusion seems to be .usu al fled that we ought to have more manufacturing, In order to provide more payrolls. The big question is HOW TO GET IT. Y UMBER is our principal manufac- !-j tured product. In output of tt we are second only to Washington, which leads the United States. Oregon's production of lumber now far exceeds that of Mississippi and Louisiana, which only a few years ago topped us by a heavy margin. The time will- come when Oregon will top Washington, for we have more standing timber than Washing ton. AS TO lumber manufacture in Oregon, here are some further in teresting figures: In 1929, which was really the last year of normal production, we had 2464 manufacturing industries in the state. Of these, 608, or almost exactly one-fourth, were engaged in the manufacture of lumber. Of $411,000,000 of Oregon manu factured products, $136,000,000 was represented by the value of manu factured lumber or considerably more than one-third. QO MUCH for value 'of manufac- J tured product. Let us now take a look at payrolls. Of a total of 75,000 persons em ployed In Industry in 1929, 36.00U were employed by the lumber In dustry. Of $106,000,000 disbursed In Industrial payrolls in Oregon In 1929, 53.000,000 was disbursed by the lum ber Industry. f ET'S sum up: . u In 1929, lumber manufacturing industries represented approximately one-fourth of all tho manufacturing Industries In the state. The value of our manufactured lumber was about one-third of the value of all manufactured products produced in the state. The lumber PAYROLL was almost exactly ONE-HALF the entire Indus trial payroll of the state. These figures will give you some Idea of the part lumber plays In our scheme of existence here in Oregon. . HTHE lumber industry has been flat 1 on Its back for at least two years, and a few pessimists have told us dolefully that it will never recover that the big days of the lumber In dustry are over. But the lumber Industry has been flat on Its back many times before, and EVERY TIME It has come back. Mark this prediction: It will come back AGAIN. And when It does, Ore gon will see real growth and progress again. The Girl Scout court of awards will be held at the Jackson county court house auditorium Friday night at 7:30 o'clock. It was announced today. Mrs. Hamilton Pat ton is directing the program and skits will be pre sented by several troops. The Phoenix Girl Scouts will also be present and all parents and the general public are invited to the court. More than 64,000 men have been given Jobs on 1673 civil Works Ad ministration projects In Kentucky. I Kmp if Vk. If I r" Y i Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the File of The Mai Tribune of 20 and tU Years Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY February 7, 1924. (It was Thursday.) "Get Acquainted with the Farmer" week started. Jacksonville to vote on gymnasium for high school. Oil meeting at the Publlo Library is closed with prayer. Ladles' halr-cuttlng parlor to opun Governor asked, to do something about sheriff Terrlll, who "insulted the special dry forces by declaring "the governor's men watch me more than they do the bootleggers. They are welcome to what they see." A number of local enthusiasts have M00 Man Jongg sets. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY February 7, 1914. (It was Saturday.) Coldest weather of present season 31.5 above zero is recorded. Medford pears a familiar sight on Broadway, writes Arthur M. Geary, after return from New York. Expert from O. A. C. studies Med ford. and recommends enlargement of Commercial 'club activities, and a budget system. 1 E. W. Carle ton has returned from spending the winter in New York city. . The Ranch Colony form a roller skating club, and will skate every Wednesday. The Ladles' Kiltie Band at the Star; "Nellie's Stigma" at the Isls; "If He Never Comes Back, It Will Be Soon," at the It. iCuntmuea from Page Oner and resumption of a more normal international exchange of goods. Expectations. Put these prospects all together and they look very bright. They Indicate thtnsg are crawling back toward nor mal faster than the average man on the street yet knows. The expectations may not all woik out the way they are supposed to. but most of them will. Some may see In them a hint that Mr. Roosevelt's current tack Is toward right wing methods. That is true. but only temporarily true. There w.il be many slips and slides toward the left as we encounter unforeseen ob stacles along the way. The .long range movement will bs to the center. It always has been. It waa a brain trustee, Intimate enough with Mr. Roosevelt to call him Franklin, who said behind hla hand recently: "Franklin's purpose apparently is to have Theodore go down In history as his fifth cousin. North Carolina, In which dairying Is a major phase of the agricultural Industry, did not have a commercial dairy plant until 1909: Mississippi ranks as the twelfth state In the nation In cheese produc tion, manufacturing more than S.OOC.otK) pounds last year. Sand bars are being formed which. It is believed, will connect the Aleu tian Islands with the Alaskan main land. REMODELING IDEAS TAKK ADVANTAGE OF OUR COMPLETE REMODELING SERVICE Big Pines Lbr.Co. PErENDAIH.E lll.DO. ADVICE TEL NO. 1 Severin Battery Service Orrison Made Batteries SEVERIN and Ml I.TNOMAH Expert RcnlnUliijr Generator A Armature Est nance 1.1?: No. Riverside. Phone 390 I s I s urn as ?). STARTS TOMORROW 2 DAYS THURSDAY FRIDAY DOUBLE BILL Once . Ladies and Gentlemen! They discarded civilization with their c,o,he" mk CECIL De MUXE S FOUR IS MGMEHED PEOPLE ' CLAUDETTE COLBERT HERBERT MARSHALL MARY B0LAND WILLIAM GARGAN 4 Paramount Pitlmrt ALSO HOOT PLUS Short Reels News Reel 'Fanny's Wedding Day' Clever Cartoon COMING SATURDAY FOR 4 DAYS See Why Two Little KWords Made . . . . . . tear the town in twol The words are And that's the title of his latest and creates. Warner Droj. hit . . ., I'M SHORT HF.I.I.e. II LAST TIMES TODAY! KAY FRANCIS in "The House on 5Gth Street" 111