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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 19, 1934)
PA'GE FOTTTl MEDFORD MAIL TRD3TJSTS, MEDFORD, OREGOX, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune "Ewyont In Sotrth.rn OrtQon Rtid (hi Mail Tribunt" Dally Eicept Saturday Published t HEPrOKD PRINTING CO. I5-JT-J9 N. r'lr 8L ROBERT W. BUHL, Editor An ladependmt Ncnpaper Entcrtd u amnd etua matter it Hertford, Ortgoo, under Aet ot Mud, 8, 1879. SUBRCHII'TION RATES r Malt In Adrine. Dailj, one rear IA00 naltv. ill month! a.! o Daily, on month 6l By Carrier In Mnnct Medfort., Atbland, J if ml He, Central Point, PraeoU, Talent, Gold Kill and on UJelitiava. Dally, or year $0.00 Dally, ill month! J.25 Daily, on month 80 AU termi. cub In sdiine. Official piper of lht City of Medford. Official paper of Jaekwo County. IIEMBKB OP THE AKHUClATKlt PHK88 Recclflnt Pull Leased Wlrs Benlca The Aoelatet. Prew ii etcliuliely entitled to the um for publication of all newt dlipateiw credited to It or otherwise credited in tl.ii paper And alio to the lorftl newt published herein. All rights for publication of ipeclal dlapalchu Herein are alio reienea. MEMHBH OK UNITED PIIBHB arEMBK.lt OP AUDIT HUliEAU Of CIKCULAT10N8 Admtlilng Keproaentatttea It C. MO.EN8EN A CUM I' A ST Offlcea In New York, Chlrago, Detroit, Sao PraneltM Lot Ancelea Seattle Portland. Editorial Correspondence Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Terry. The government might as well be pending bllllona to aasure a bit of happiness tor the poor, aa having allckers, already with more than they need, atealtng It, and cutting the pay of their workers, after every particu larly rich haul. ... Zt'a a queatlon which usee the moat vltrol the state treasurer In hla per sonal peeve against the governor, or the orchardlata In their war on "plnhead rot." The pears are not the only thing that produce "plnhead rot." A atreet corner diplomat has re turned from upstate, where be posed, as a Callfornlan, and portrayod the horrora of the Balea Tax, producing 80,000,000 per annum revenue In that state, with no great anguish to anybody. . Cheer up, everybody, the lie de tector doesn't work. (Toledo Blade.) Jutt as If It mattered. . Orandmaw'a geraniums have been blooming two days, and still no dash ing flower bandit has executed a dar ing coup In the night, and made off with them. w PIONF.F.R WRIST 8I.APPINO (Pendleton Kast Oregonlan) A few days since we noticed a fine piece of artistic work on the beautiful residence of Mr. J. E. Adams on Wild Horse creek. Mrs. Adams la a lady of unusual good taste and has had her home beautifully painted and varnish ed. The work was performed by a Pendleton artist, but as we failed to see his ad In the I. O. we forget how to spelt his name. (90 Trs. Ago Col.) Plowing Is the order of the day. Some of the furrows are as straight as the path to oternal life, and othera are as crooked as a etato highway, built before the Oreat War. ... Temptation Is still showing up fre quently, and being seized like It was Opportunity, which Is still alleged to be current and circulating, ... Farmers flocked to town Sat. to be called Mister, and amoks a cigar. . A 11-year-old Missouri girl has graduated from high school, accord ing to press reports. The lassie can now resume her senior year kinder garten studies. If the efficiency of pumping education Into kids In creases, they will receive their diplo mas while still In the cradle. Under modern methods, the tads know what year Hannibal art out to con quer the Romans, before they know the atreet number of their home. Youngsters get their education faster than they drive the family 4d. ... Ths Clarence Woona pasture and Prospect baseball field has been plow ed up. It was on this pleasant, forest rimmed tract that Dewey Hill, the Prospect hired man and athlete, made his historic mistake, by sliding Into what he mistook for third base. The Walla Walla penitentiary riot has revived tha question of how to remove the causes of crime, and edi tors,, savants, heavy thlnkera, and sob sisters have started discussing It anew. The riot demonstrated that nine causes of crime were removed by straight-shooting guards. The records how all the victims had viewed the Interior of other prisons, and when freedom came, took Immediate steps to return to cells. There would be less crime, If fewer criminals Insisted on being Incsrcerated. Some men, (everybody knows at least one) who devote their life to getting Into the penitentiary, It takes some 30 years. Others make It In 30 minutes. Toll of I'lnrnm. NEW YOHK. Feb. 10. (AP) Nine persons perished In two fires In widely separated aecllons of Manhattan to day. I Phone 943. we will haul away rout refuse. City Sanitary Service. Phone 333. Ranking Trucking Co tor Modern Puel Oil deliveries. IOS ANGELES, Feb. 16: Every day in every way, war comes nearer and nearer. At least so the newspapers say, There is to be war between Japan and Russia, as soon" as Manchuria thaws out. There is to be war in Europe, perhaps before. We don't deny war evidence is overwhelming. We fail to see how the European mess can be cleaned up without fighting, and we fail te see how Japan can get the room and resources she wnnts, without mixing it up with the Soviet bear. Yet so much war talk, for such a long time and so persistent ly, makes one suspicious. If Japan really were determined to fight Russia in the Spring, wouldn't she make some effort to disguise her purpose, allay the suspicions of the world and particularly of Russia? Would she listen to this war talk month after month, without denying it, without at least maintaining, she is not inviting it making a peaceful gesture now and thent The Japanese aren't fools. They realize how the world would view one nation that would deliberately insist upon invading another. Or has Japan made up her mind, and decided to bo hard- boiled about it! We don't know. Probably no one outside of the Elder Statesmen in Japan, knows. But because these wars arc being advertised so generously BEFOREHAND, we have a hunch they won't come off at least not in the immediate future. Our belief is when modern nations really want war, they act first. and talk about it afterward, not the other way around. If wo have the right slant on tlio American attitude toward war either in Europe or the Far East it's one of "hands off." Let them fight if they want to, we won't get in it this time. Very sensible, and considering our recent war experi ence, very natural too. But don't forget this. If war onva large scale really breaks out", it will be easier to TALK about keeping out of it than ACTUALLY doing so. War interferes with trade, and if Japan fights Russia, she will treat ocean going commerce in the Pacific much as Great Britain treated it during the World war in the Atlantic. Uncle Sam won't like that. Neither will John Bull. Many people have forgotten that before Germany insisted upon her U-boat warfare, the United States was much nearer a break with England than with the Centra! Powers. One of these days someone will write up Main Street, Los Angeles it is quite as unusual and picturesque as the Old Bow ery in New York nothing quite like it anywhere else in the country that we know of. It is sort of combination of street carnival, Ooney Island, a honkcy tonk, a circus side-show, and the Tia Juana of ten years ago. And then there are the shooting galleries. A newspaper man gave us a new slant on them the other day. We have often wondered how they make a go of it who wants to shoot at clay pipes and whirling rabbits, when they can go out in the hills nearby and shoot at something real! Well it seems the city gunmen do. They use them to keep in practice or so our reporter friend claims. They find it hard to practice in the congested district of a large city, and they don t fancy motoring fifty miles to test the trigger finger. So they drop down to Pete's and crack over a few pipes and see how often they can ring the bell. Strange some enterprising shooting gallery owner doesn't sot upa few "uniformed cops" with a box of cigars when the bullet hits a vital spot! We knew John Cupp was one of the best salesmen and one of the worst golfers in Southern Oregon, but we didn't know he was such a fast worker. John checked in at this hotel the other day, and then after ringing him three- times without any luck the fourth try brought the information he had gone. Checking on those calls indicates John doesn't work on an NRA schedule when he!s away from home. And hero's another disappointment. Dropped in early at the Brown Derby in Hollywood yesterday, and there was Joe Brown alone at a table having luncheon. Imagine the oppor tunity of seeing Joe with no company around, feeding that face of his. Wo expected he would at least slip a butter plate into his mouth by mistake. But ho did nothing but consume his modest lunch in tho most meticulous and orthodox fashion. That mouth of his was a great disappointment also. Like John Gilbert's voice it's half make-up. It isn't actually small or Cupid's bow, but it isn't so noticeable nor so grotesque in fact the man is rather good looking. Somehow in general ap pearance and expression he reminds us of Jim Stevens. We almost asked him to sing "Old Man River." R. W. R. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertalnlnf to personal health and hygiene out to dis ease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady U a stamped elf-ad dressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters sbould be brief and written In ink. Owing to the large nnmber ot letters received onlj a tew can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 26S El Cuomo, Beverly tlllls, Cal. HYPOPITUIT4RV OBESITY. $'U Woman had a waist measure of 27 Inches and. hip measure of 45 Inches. Above the waist she was not at all rat. Below the waist she was big enough for two women her size. Piano legs. A great gir dle of fat around the loins, hips and hypogastri- um. Pat pads above the knees on the Inside of the thighs. Aside from fat pads on the upper arms she was not obese north of , the equator. AM thu had overtaken her In the past two years. The was 38 years old. Other signs or symptoms the doctor noted In her case, but which need not concern us here, confirmed hla opin ion that her pituitary gland function was deficient. In such circumstances the obesity is likely to be largely con fined to the southerly hemisphere. In this particular casu a month's treat ment with the proper ductless gland substance or hormone brought about a remarkable change. The woman lost only 2; pounds weight but she had to have her skirts reduced around the hips three times. The mental sluggish ness had passed and she was now bright and alert. The haggard, almost emanclated appearance of her face and neck had Improved. Apparently there had been a redistribution, rath er than a reduction, of fat. It Is not always necessary for one with thla hypopltultary type of obes ity to receive glandular treatment. A carefully adjusted dietary regimen, together with a moderate course of exercise, has proved entirely adequate In many cases. Hypopltultary Individuals (men or women) usually have a high sugar tolerance that Is. they can eat a greater quantity of starches or sugars than normal Individuals can, without excreting, sugar thru the kidneys. Moreover they are not so strong as normal Individuals, and they usually have a great fondness for starches or sugars In one form or another any thing from potatoes to bon-bons probably becauce such food Is quickly obsorbed and gives energy immedia tely. So we must be patient with these hypopltultary folk. They are miser able without their carbohydrates. In many instances they suffer genuine distress and even serious collapse t they go too many hours without some carbohydrate food. Probably due to their faulty ductless gland function they have hypoglycemia (too little sugar In the blood) and they feel "right" only when they partake of some food which will temporarily bring the blood sugar up to the nor mal level. However, a high protein, high vita min, high mineral salt diet not only reduces but makes these hypopitul tarJana feet satisfied and "right" even without their accustomed gorges. The craving far sweets disappears. Makes 'em quite human, in fact. Yes, yes. Keep your shirt on and tuck your napkin under your chin. We shall now serve breakfast and we cordially Invite all bypopltul tartans to sit In with us. I don't know what It Is about these fat low down ginks, but they are almost Invariably kind, unselfish, gentle and you can't help loving them. AH right, Hawkins, we're ready. You may serve now, out don't answer "Very good, sir" unless you want to go out on your ear. Breakfast One portion of fruit; . one egg and the white of a second gg: optional, clear coffee or tea. bread substitute, and a sugar substi tute. Lunch Three ounces of lean meat, fish or fowl, or small helping of meat. fish or fowl or pot cheese and a glass of buttermilk or skim milk. Or a large helping of pot cheese; one cup S per cent vegetables; one portion fruit; bread substitute; optional, lettuce wltir special dressing. Comment on the Day's News QUEEN MAY IN MUSICAL FANTASY QUKSTIONS AND ANSWKR.S Chronic Carbon Monoxide 1'olnonhig. In this column recently we suggest ed that a garage worker take half a teaspoon ful ot sodium hyposulphite every alternate evening aa a remedy for the mild carbon monoxide poison ing to which his work exposes htm. French physicians have highly extoll ed thla remedy for the after-effects of monoxide gassing and for the ef fects of mild chronic monoxide pois oning. Now a distinguished authority In this country. Prof. Yandell Hender son, of Yale, says that this treatment would be of no avail whatever. Pro fessor Henderson adds that the proper prophylaxis against such monoxide poisoning Is that the garage ahould be aupplted . with flexible metal hose to be placed over the exhaust vent and connected with a suction apparatus discharging out of doors. For treat ment fresh air, or In extreme casea In halation of carbon dioxide to stlmu Iste respiration should be recommend ed. Low Down About I.ow Life. You spoke of parasites In connec tion with Athlete's foot. There are two cases of it in our household. We have assumed the trouble was caused by a germ . . . L. H. E.) Answer No. a parasite, a . fungus. Its management Is described In detail in booklet "Unbidden Quests." ask for copy and Inclose dime and stamp ed envelope bearing your aoaresa. (Copyright 134, John P. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. 8rndy should send letters direct to Dr William Brady. M. D.. 2fla El Ca mlno, Beverly . Hills, Cal. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre beloved of the veteran newspaper men Walter Trumbull. WEDDING BELLS FOR EX-FILM IDOL 5 . v -S uf f I 1 ! I : ' : I i f J W.J : NEW YORK, Feb. 19. Diary: Betimes and a note from Constance Collier; she misses ths New York sunshine In London. Also came an original George Belcher crayon which Frank Crown In shield sent my lady and we hung It In the bedroom hall between etchings of Hen ry L. Doherty and a Morgan Dennis Scottle. Working until twilight and t h r ft u o h the iijsf town, meeting Lee dwell, the gareteei, who told me aa comical a tayle of a clink pot aa ever I heard. Then came upon Walter Chryaler Jr., and pretty Betty Shuator gazing Into the shop win dows. And Idled with them a mo ment. To dinner with the Messmore Ken dalls and much high but atlmulat- Ing nonsense. Home and to bed oy 11 reading Ellrabeth Cobb's "She Was a Lsrtyl", a grand bit of fiction I did not put down until 4 a. m wondering how one so young ac quired auch knowledge of life. y ' v Literary teaa to 'successful au thors" are not touching off tem peraturea any more. It began to dawn upon the unsuspecting Just what they were a publisher's three-sheeting for a doubtful scribbler. The writ er of good books does not need such clrcusy drawing room didoes to boost sales. Sinclair Lewis abhora them. As do Louis Bromfield, F. Scott Fitz gerald, Wllla Cother and William Mc Fee. And Ring Lardner never attend ed one In his all too short career. The Singer Building on rower Broadway, first "tallest building" to waver across the downtown sky, was also first to employ women elevator operators. They were young girls then but became matronly after 25 years and so far aa I know are still there. There was1 one I remember start llngly remindful of Lotta Faust, whose decollete stage gowns uptown brought out all the first row rams of the era. By FRANK JENKINS TUESDAY evening, at 8 o'clock, at the Pine Tree theatre, the Med ford Oleemen will sing In Klamath Falls. The admission price will be 50 cents for a concert that In any metropolitan city In the country would cost from 2 to $3 and would be worth It. fHE Medford Oleemen Is an or A ganlzatlon of 40 business men of this city. It Is directed by James Stevens, a nationally known star of grand opera, whose voice, coupled with magnetic personality, wins everyone who hears It. Two yeara ago, In Port land, the cltlea of Southern Oregon presented a Southern Oregon pro gram at the Portland Chamber of Commerce, and Mr. Stevens' singing was the feature of the program. They Just simply wouldn't let him quit. His numbers alone will be worth many times the cost of admission. BUT It Isn't this concert alone that Interests us here In Southern Ore gon. It Is the spirit back of It. LISTEN: These busy business men of Med ford, whose hobby Is singing, are going over to Klamath Falla Tues day evening at their OWN EXPENSE. They will pay all their own travel coata and buy all their own food. Every cent taken In at Tuesday evening'a concert, above the email necessary costs Involved In the use of the theatre, the printing of pro grams, tickets, etc.. will go to the Pelicans, Klamath's leading charity organization, to be used for Its fine charity work. Could there POSSIBLY be a finer gesture of good will and mutual helpfulness? HfEDFORD and Klamath Falls are tne two principal cities of Southern Oregon. Southern Oregon Is an orphan community, forgotten by the rest of the stste. Whatever It gets, it will have to GET FOR ITSELF. If It la going to get anywhere near as much as It Is going to want In the future, its communities will have to WORK TOGETHER. Generous recognition of that fact Is back of thla trip of the Medford Oleemen to Klamath Falls. MEDFORD andKiamath Falls are unusually situated aa neighbor ing cities. They sre not competitive In any way. EACH Is the OTHER'S best customer. Over In the Klamath country, they buy and consume Rogue River val ley fruit and produce. Here in the Rogue River valley, we buy and con sume Klamath potatoes, grain, hay and meat. Year In and year out, a steady procession of trucks passes back and forth over the mountain, carrying the products of one community to the market In the other community. It .Is a mutually helpful trade. im I Kim f,' May Betteridge, chosen to rule over Southern California's orange empire as queen of the national orange show In San Bernardino, Cal., la shown wearing a Japanese costume In which she will appear In a feature of the spectacle, a Japanese musical fantasy. The queen hails from Loa Anaelea. (Associated Press Photo. friendliness and helpful co-operation In Southern Oregon. Every man who has Incubated a setting of Jitters trying to sleep in a strange town will understand this one. It was 3 a. m. and from the Hotel At or emerged a sleepy -eyed pajnmaed figure muffled In an over coat. Proceeding to the mtridle of the car tracks he twisted a man-hole covering half around, waited to hear If passing cam resoundra with the same clarkety-clack. And when they didn't slouched back to the hotel. A disillusioned and wealthy young man has left the Rlalto flat after severnl experiments angeling shows. He Is Joseph V. Reed, whose love for the theatre is keen but he found the chicane In the stage world de grading, so he quit cold, The chls elera. however, only smite. They know there wttt be many more "reeds to be shaken by the windi," It's wedding ballt again for Francis X. Bushman, ons-tlms mstlnes Idol. The former motion picture star obtained a license to wed Carmsla Ponielle (left), a meno soprano of the Metropolitan opera company of New York. Bushman Is shown above as he appeared when a movie favorite and as he looks now. a retail liquor dealer. (Associated Press Photos) Unieen radio audience proves far more teulfying than In-the-flesh audiences to even those accustomed to appearing In public. When Kath arine Hepburn made her first broad cast recently her hands trembled so an announcer had to hold her man uscript. Merlin Avlesworth, who as head of a big broadcasting chain, knows microphone tevhnique better than the average, has to fight off terror. And such old stagers as Amos n' Andy have occasional flurries ot fright. But most terrifying of all Is to go on the air, turn a page and find the next one gone! ' Personal Domination tot ths most Bagatelles: Singapore now has Prank Buck movie theatre . . . Bing Crosby la another to put It all In annuities . . . Russell Wilson, of Cincinnati, Is the only dramatic edl tor to become mayor of a first class American city . . . The bank raider Jos. W. Harrlman smokes 60-cent cigars in his de luxe private hospi tal suite . . . Freddie Kaplan, Broad way lawyer, la considered the town's best backgammon player ... A roundup of owners of unmuralcd pol ice docs, goody, goody, is ordered . . . Somerset Maugham writes In longhand and dictates from It . . . Kathleen Norrts learned Italian to be sble to read Dante'a Inferno in the original. Lucius Boomer tells of the hang over from the Baux Art ball that teetered In at noon next day look ing for the cap to his mandarin costume. He knew exactly where he had left it In the large ballroom under certain table. A women's luncheon waa In procress in the hall but he went In. looked about and. bewildered. Inquired: "Let me see another one of your big roomy rooms I" BY FLIERS OVER LAKE CASABLANCA. Morocco (API A submerged Roman city In Lake Datrt el Rouml, south of Casablanca, waa discovered by airmen. Flying low over the lake they saw. 30 feet beneath the surface, a vast quadrangle with a sq'iare tower at the corner of each wall. The existence of a aunken city is spoken of In local legend, but his torical records are lacking. Archaeo logists belteve the city was engulfed by an earthquake or volcanic disturbance. valuable to both of usfor the nesr by markets are the profitable mar kets. IT IS generally believed that Mcd- ford and Klamath Falls are In sharp competition with each other for tourist trade. Medford la Interested In the Pac ific highway and the west entrance to Crater Lake. Klamath 1 Interest ed In the Weed highway and the east entrance to Crater Lake. Hence. It Is assumed, they must compete with each other for tourists, each taking from the other all It can. IN THIS writer's humble Judgment, that ISN'T TRUE. The harder Medford and Klamath Falls go after tourists, each on its own account, the more tourists will' come. Those who come north by way of the Pacific highway will be apt to return by way of trie Weed high way. Those who enter Crater Lake from the west will be apt tc depart by the east. Those who come north by way of the Weed highway will be Inclined to return by .he Pacific, and If they enter the park fron the cast they will depart by the west. The result of friendly competition for tourists on the part of both cities will be to bring to EACH city MORE tourists than It would be aole to recur for Itself If It worked alone BOTH Medford nd Klamath Falls have much to gain by the growth and development of Southern Oregon. This desired growth and development will be promoted by co-opcratlon. The more Medford gro-vs, the bet ter will be Klamath', nearby mar ket for Its products. The more Klam ath grows, the better will be Med ford's nearby market for Itr products Each city has much lo gsln by the other's progress. -. pills writer knows that thu gen- A PREPARES TO SEAT LEOPOLD AS KING (Continued from page one) fc there came a pounding at the door, urgently summoning to the telephone. It wag thus, In Switzerland, that the young prince learned he mtwt prepare to be king. Prince llti.rles Home He went at once to the quarters of his consort, and broke to her the news. They started for Brussels im mediately, arriving here early today. The crown prince and princess, the former Princes Astrld of Sweden, 28 years old, hurried to the royal castle at suburban Iaeken. Like Queen Elizabeth, prostrated by grief the prince and princess remain ed hidden today In the castle behind the guarded, grilled fence, while a throng milled soberly about outside. The first Important ceremony dur ing the period of mourning, which will continue until after the funeral, will be removal of the body to the royal palace In Brussels tonight. The body will be borne on a caisson between solid walls of war veterans along the route through the city war veterans who remember the grest figure of a man six feet two Inches tall who risked his life almost dally to be close to his soldiers during the trying days of the World war. To Me In State The body will He in state at the palace until Thursday when it will be taken to the Snlnt Oudele cathed ral. Interment will be In the royal crypt at Laeken. How the wldoed. 68-year-old Queen Elizabeth was holding up under the sudden sorrow could not be learned today. Since the first outburst of pas sionate distress in the death chamber where she knelt weeping beside the body, she has passed the time in pri vacy. Only the second son. Prince Charles, was with the queen until last mid night when Prince Leopold and his i wife arrived from Switzerland. Their sorrowful meeting took place In the queen's favorite apartments In the palace at Laeken. For the next three days, the crown prince and princess are expected :o maintain privacy Insofar as possible the princess particularly. It Is unlike ly that she will appear In public. Take Oath Friday Prince Leopold will take the oath of fidelity to the constitution before a Joint meeting of the chamber and tlie senftte Friday. Afterward, he will be proclaimed king and. with completion of that act, Prlncese Astrld will be come queen. In the castle awaiting removal to Brussels, the body of the king lay to dsy In a bed of rosewood, strewn with white lilacs, a heavy bandage around the head. The face was unmarked, exeept for two, cuts over the right eye. The lips were parted slightly. The light moustache was trimmed neatly. The body was dressed in the. olive uni form of a general. Everywhere today people were still talking almost as though they could not believe the tragedy actually had occxirred. As they recounted the story ot the accident, amid a few whisper ed rumors that he might hsve met with violence, ministers of the gov ernment and authorities at Nr.mur confirmed the manner of his death. Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the Files of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Year, Ago.) TE.V VF.ARS AGO TODAY February 19, 1924 (It Was Tuesday) Sale of Bartlett pears to canneries la recommended at fruit conference Craters promise city an expert to lay out city pork plan. Visiting revivalist claims, "a great shortage of whiskey, presages the suc cess of Prohibition." "Pep" rallies to be held every day until Ashland-Medford high school basketball game Friday night. C. of O. orator tells students and team, "you are standing ot another Marne rout defeat, and fight unto death." Hotel Holland to enlango lobby and l-re-decorate. "Slip of a boy" who admitted 17 burglaries, Is sentenced to 15 years In state prison following a two hour lec ture by the court. TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY February 1!), 1914 (It Was Thursday) Committee named to riruft a new city charter. A couple of Intoxicated citizens made the welkin ring in the neigh borhood of Sixth and Grape atreets about midnight, and were taken In tow by the night police. One of them insisted upon laying down In the mid dle of the street. The A. B. Basco Musical Comedy company will return for another ,n- gagement at the Page. Tango professors making ,85 to 1100 per day teaching valley peofile how to do the dance. "When not tangoing." says an editorial, "the students sre cussing the taxes, and the president of thla country." The University chrt will hold I's first annual ball at the Holland hotel. WINDOW GLASS We sell window glass and will replace your broken windows ressonsb'.y. Trowbridge Cab inet Works. BMndl (Continued tiwin page one) sonal bill of a Republican leader, hat means war. Tho personal bills are those little onea you never .hear about They relate usually to private claims made against the government by cit izens.. Mr. Snell's bill proposed to refund about ,2.000 to a bonding company in hla district. Forty mlnu utes were spent debating it but Zlon check blocked It. Since then Republicans have been objecting to Democratic personal bills consistently. That appears to be the real mo tive behind the action of Republican Fish objecting to all the Democratic bills, rather than the fact the Dem ocrats wanted to bar the Lindbergh airmail protest from the record. nen Mr. Sr.ell gets his ,2.000 th war will be over, but not before. Senator Investlsators sa:d thev were studying the gift of Pan American airways stock options to Charles L. Lindbergh. Suffer from Backache? Medford Kuel Co for Oil .Service, phone 631. eroue gesture on the part of the Medford Oleenwn Is appreciated in T .. 'Klamath Palls and that It will far better ruei j ltowafd building up a new spim ol Elmer Bs of '3. Uth Im., Bw, My ro I bi ft nam in the wnall of my birk. When I Mt down, the che herame more severe nt 1 teh to MilT and tt crn! rttr hack. pt wrK, jK-trti much tvt (reelv. TV. IVrce'i A mittr complftr-lv rid mt of t-e h.kch Vint ttv t r. Pur' :ittr. Bitffit, ((. , Ur IrUl kg. 0 t)mt J'rl.H LUMBER DRIVE-IN SERVICE BIG PINES Lumber Company