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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1934)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1934, PAfiE RTX Medford Mail Tribune "Ewyont in Southern Oregon Ret, thi Mail Trlbunt'' Dail Eietpi HitiwUf Pubilihed by llfcUKUim PRINTINO CO. J 1-21.38 N- Hr 8L tW UUUK It T W. HIJUL, editor An Independent Ncnpaper Entered u tecood etua matter at Medord. Orrfon, undff Act of alalrt 8. lift. BLBSCHIfTlON BATES Br Mall In Adtauca Dilly. em jaar . bath, U a-ontbi 8 Dally, one iconUi ' Bj Carrier In Adranee Medford, Alhland, ' Jicbomtlli, Central Point, PboenX Talent, Gold Bill and on IHslmi. Dally, one year I J JJJ Dally, U nontha Dally, one month All terma. es,o In tdtanea. Official paper of the City of Medford. Official paper of Jaetton County. HEMBEII OF THE A8BOCIATED PHE8B BecelriDS Full Leued Win Serrlco ' Ttio Awoelttei. Pretl la eiclmitely entitled lo tbe uu for pubUeatloa of all oewa dtiwlen credited to It or olhervlM credited In thli piper and also to the lotl new published herein. All rlbU for publication of ipeelal dlapatebc oerein ua alto reserted. MF-MUEB Of UNITED Pit ESS IfEMHEH OP AUDIT KUBEAD OP CIKCU1.AT10N8 Adrertlslng HepreienUthei U. C. MOIiKNBEN 4 COM PANT Orhm In New York, ChlcifO. Detroit, Ban FraocUco Lot Angelea Seattle Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur I'crry. Miss Marie Callahan of Chicago, edi tor of beauty trade megaaine, re port: "Male customer! are now flock mo t the beauty narlore for tnetr permanents." H t;hls keeps "P for a couple of years, Man will be doing the giggling for the high achool glrla. Once more Oregon candidate for governor are cutting the farmer In i two and eavlng the taxes. The vote wheedling will aoon be rampant. The gent who In 1038 would buy a dlnoaaur'e egg or a buffalo hide, If the "payment were Ngni, - wenv d. j iL .1 n.F.a.T H.1 Wed- . OH LIll CC-lllVn.-l'v. " '"J neaday. An.l.rMimrettJ, leaailB DlSn tO again lake the field. If memory aerve i aright, thl la the organization that once oo'ore cauaed the complete dl- ' appearance of tbe cigarette. j The uptate pre la atlll popping eaatern weather with unkind remark. , The picking of a violet by a mosy atone In a rail fence corner, the amolt i running In the coast creek or a gom en unet came acrlbe to remark: "A bllraard la raging in the eaat." No doubt an easterner can atand a 34-hour bllasard aa well a a native of Astoria can live through 114 Inohea of rain In a year, and oelebratea July 4th. (a) because It la the natlon'a birthday, and (b). because hla feet are dry. for the first time In nine month. "A bllraard 1 raging in the east." should be made the official atate elogan, before a Portland poet wrltea a song about It. Space will not permit the enumerating of con dltlona Indlgenoua to Oregon, that provide lively competition to saw too thed eaatern blizzard. The leadlna- bum gues la: "Due to Prohibition, the preaent-day youth knowa nothing about itrong liquor, and will ahun It." The next best bit of faulty prognosticating, held to the theory that beer would speed tax pay menta. t ... Roger (nee Terrible) Touhy, the I Chicago gangster, now pickled away In Jollet prison for 99 yeara for get ting caught kidnaping one John rec tor, blames the newspaper for his current predicament. From Mr. Touhy down to the auto tramp who atole a tractor wheel, everybody but them selves are responsible for their crime. The guilt ot a criminal, or the dema goguery of a peanut politician, can alwaya be measured by the vehe mence with which he cusses a new paper. The homely magnolia tree at Main and Ivy, is being moved to make room for a beautiful gas silo. It will be transplanted to tbe courthouse yard, where It will be handy for In formal lynching ot the official meanle, the district attorney, In the next restoration ot law and order. RF.NATOIUAI. IIAWLOl'T Mr. Robinson of Indiana: I will yield to the senator from Alabama In Just a second. If there la one man on the floor of the senate who should never talk shout fairness. It 1 the senator from Arkansas. Con stantly he Interrupts everybody w.ho attempts v debate a question. It make no aifferenc. whether It Is IB the ml Osi of sentence or not, Im mediately he Interrupt. He doe not wall unin tb chair asks the senator whether he will yield or not, but on the tpd h starts talking, and then he talk., and talk, and talka, and talk: and then he undertakes to lecture any other eenator who atand up for his right. (Cong. Record). . A tin can of gold waa found last week, approximately four mllea south west of the foot of the last rainbow. The owne: couldn't be any aadder, but Is allghtly wiser. . Four or the Older Olrle met at the C. Strang scales Wed. pm, and all talked at once, but got weighed one at a time. ... Judge Col rv's by Pinto on the air Ttiee evnav He sen? a song and barked lite toff. HI Miof will pre dominsle In the nest Walt Disney film. Editorial Correspondence FURNACE CREEK, Death Valley, Calif., Feb. 26. Here we arc in the middle of Death Valley, a gorgeous moonlight night, as balmy as May, sitting on a hotel terrace and looking across the white sand to the1 stage scenery mountains in the distance certainly one of the most enchanting spots in this country and we believe in the world. In fact in our judgment there is noth ing like Death Valley this side of the MOON. To those who come here in airplanes and many do (there is a private plane from San Francisco here on the landing field below) it must look much like the moon through a powerful telescope, the mountains completely bare, the dark craters, the deep shadows, no living thing in sight, a bare relief map, a composite of high lights and sharp shadows in the mellow light of the moon I "DEATH VALLEY!" no place has ever been or could be better named. And that is why the name will stick, in spite of all efforts to change it. There is no doubt the name hurts the tourist business, particularly as the source of all tour ist business is in California. As a large percentage of Californi ans are there to prolong their life, escape death, a place called Death Valley is anathema to them. In the little hotel in Pasa dena which we left this morning, there was only one guest out of 50 odd, that eould be induced to come. "Death Valley" what a name, why should one go to a place like that 1 Were it known as "Paradise Ranch", or "the Valley of the Moon", it would be as popular a tourist resort as it deserves to be. This is our second visit, our first trip to Death Valley was made six or seven years ago. Nothing has changed since then but the roads, and the guests here at the hotel making their first trip think they are terrible. Well they are as roads go now adays. But some idea of how they have improved may be gleaned from the fact that on that first trip we left Arrow Head Hot Springs near San Bernardino, one afternoon, spent the night at Barstow, left early the next morning and driving the car steadily renched Furnace Creek just as the sun was going down. This morning we left Pasadena at 9:30, lunched at Barstow and reached here at the same time (stinset) the SAME day. The little green bug had to take some awful punishment to make it, the dust has gone, ditto the sand, but there arc miles of rocks and chuck holes on a corduroy base instead biit make it, the 1. g. b. did I Mention Death Valley to anyone and nine times out of ten, the comment will bo "Oh, that's where Ssotty, of Death Valley came from," the man who brought gold nuggets out of the desert depths and ran a special train from Barstow -to Chicago in record time a record that has never been equalled. That's all true except the gold. Scotty never found any gold in Death Valley, or anywhere else.' He did find a Chicago multi millionaire by the name of Johnsen, who spent three or four millions curing his asthma and building a fantastic palace near here, and paid Scotty $150 per month to act as his desert agent. Johnsen is bankrupt now. So is Scotty. They are charging tourists $1 per to look over this monument to the post-war boom and the greatest single barreled publicity hound since P. T. Barnum. Ilowover, more of that anon. '. , We have just been informed the one mail today leaves in three minutes. With the air mail off, and -'00 miles from nowhere Heaven only knows when this will reach its destina tion. But perhaps by the time it gets to'L. A. the air mail will bo on again. Here's HOPING 1 R. W. R. ROOSEVELT'S YEAR AS PRESIDENT HAS PLENTY0F ACTION Executive Summarizes Work in Words 'We Are On Our Way' Money Program Takes Main Interest Now By B.vron Price (Chief of Bureau, The Associated Preas, Washington) No one hat tummarl&M rind char acterised the first year of the Rooae- velt administration more eucclnctiy! than the president himself. In these words: We are on our way." By that Mr. Roosevelt means we are on our way toward recovery and million of his fellow-cltlrens agree with him. The ordinary In dices of trade activity show a pretty consistent upturn for the year. Pub lic confidence la unqneationauiy stronger than It was on that dark Inauguration day last year. The agreement Is not universal Some are disposed to paraphrase the old popular song and say: "We are on our way, but where?" They doubt the soundness of the Roosevelt ex periment, and the enduring quality of the results. Rut at any rat, everyone agrees things are moving. To the detached observer at Washington that Is the outstanding development of the year, whatever It may mean. In February. 1033, deadlock, stagnation, wearlneas In February. IfiM, action, motion, momentum. That tells the story. A Livelier Tempo It would take many columns to detail the varying aspect of the change aa they affect Individual fields of action. Government build ing which a year ago droned with the prosaic routine of long-estab lished governmental procedure echo today to the noisy tread of hurrying delegations, flying messengers, mile a-mlnute governmental action. Washington hotels are crowded The streets, even In mid-winter, are like the street of a metropolis. A new air of gaiety prc.vl- over glit tering and vivacious social gather hvs at the White House and at many an humbler fireside. Congress drive ahead, under the Iron hand of strict administration control. Politics Is In an uproar, and the party lines of a year ago maver and totter a new Ideas, new pro J ecu, new vision of breath-taking scope pour from the administration fountain. It la true today' Idea may be for gotten by tomorrow, but no matter: Washington Is In motion, and. after a year of it, Washington begins to think It may be perpetual. The New NRtlonullKin Not the least strange of these new phenonema I the manner In which Mr. Roosevelt has been able to fast en national attention on the prob lems at home and divorce national thought from the distractions abroad You could listen to the table-talk of present-day' official Washington for a week and never suspect that an earthquake Is rocking Europe, or that there la a rumble of war In the rax Enat. The French disturbances caused hardly a ripple of conversation. Al ways excepting the atate department and the diplomatic corps and- they are very much on the sidelines those who showed any Interest were aa likely as not to asa: Do you nip- pose thl Paris rumpus will help us In the end by driving France off the gold standard?" Significant words about America. spoken In Tokyo a little earlier. simply failed to register. The new monetary program has become the absorbing topic, Just as NRA was six month ago. What will be next? Washington doe not know, but It I sure there will be something. If the faroi experiment, for Instance. falls and eome think It already has a new one will be tried. We are on our way. TERRY. COMIC ARTIST, DIES OF KIDNEY ILL CORAL GABLES. Fl.. March I. (AP)-Iohn C. Terry, comic srtlst and a pioneer In animated cartoon films, died here last night. He came here last fall from New York, suffer ing from a kidney ailment. Mr. Terry created "Scorchy Smith.' boy aviator strip, for the Associated Press feature service four yeara ago and tne restue has an'ileved wide- spread atteceaa. It lll be carried on by Noel Sickles, who had collaborat with Mr. Terry recently. Showing snow Slrd E. M. Tucker. former Medford resident and Inventor of an Improved snow sled, arrived here yesterday from Sacramento. Cal . where he ha been located for the past three year. Mr. Tucker ha develop ed a motor-driven led capable or traveling IS mile an hour over snow, and has been uecewfully demon strated In several snow areas of Cali fornia. It embodies numerous im provements over the first model made in Medford some time ago. Mr. Tucker ho established a factory in fiacrv mento and ha sold quite a number ol machine. Personal Health Service By William Signed letters perfalnlt-g to personal health and hygiene not to die ease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady It a stamped telf-addrersed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be orlef and written lo Ink. . Owing to the large number of letters received only a lew can be an swered. No reply can be mode to queries not conforming to Instruction Address Dr. William Brady, 263 El Cajnlno, Beverly BlUs, Cal. FROM THE TIPS Or VOIR FINGERS The bell rang Just as we were dem onstrating the circulation In the cap illaries the other day. By pressing gently on fin gernail you can see the wavering line betweerl the flush and the blanching, pro vided your us 11 re not decorated In the late appal ling fashion. , Capillaries are not blood ves sel, but merely . space between the cell, through which the blood seeps a water seeps through sand. No one ha ever a blood vessel finer then the smallest artery, wnlch phys iologists call arteriole. The blood that has seeped through the capillary spaces It 1 here that the Interchange of oxygen and car bon dioxide occurs, oxygen carried to the tissue from the lungs, carbon dioxide picked up from the tissues to be taken back to the lungs. Also other substances are exchanged nu tritive material given to the cell, waste material picked up to be car ried, to the excretory organ. From the capillary spaces, in all tissues of the body, the blood Is collected in tne very smallest veins, called venule, and these Join again to form larger veins, and finally the blood to the right auricle of the heart. Through an oversight, as It seems at first, no valves were installed between the vena cava and the right auricle. Nothing to prevent the aur- lcle-ful of blood from backing into the vena cava when the heart beat. Nothing apparent. But actually there 1 no such fault. The breathing serves as a booster pump, tending to pull the blood from the vein of the limbs and the head Into the larger veins. and the larger vein have valves far enough from the heart so that they hold nearly a pint of blood. Probably that pint of blood I sucked Into the venous cistern with each Inspiration, and pumped through the heart with each four or' five heartbeat. That's the ordinary ratio of breathing rate and pulse rate. Remember, It takes 23 seconds for the blood to make the complete circuit of the body, and an adult weighing ISO pounds ha 8 to 9 pounds of blood. Six ounces pumped out by every heart beat. How doe It all figure out? From the auricle the blood paases through the tricuspid valve into the ventricle, and at the next heartbeat it Is pumped from the ventricle NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, March 1. No area Is mora distinct with literary connols seurshlp than Gra mercy Park. In dark-panelled old home with base ment dining rooms and opan fires are some of the finest lib raries In town. And because of The Player It attract leading authors of the day. In a brief loi ter there one may often see Will Irwin, Isaac Mar. ifc.. ..a- cosaen. uon Mar quis. Christopher Money, Sinclair Lewis and others. Gravity hangs heavy over Oramcrcy and is not even purged by the shouts of children in the high fenced enclosure that it the park. Ordinary folk who sweep out of the surrounding clamor Into Gramercy slow Into a doleful rosary of thought. It is hallowed ground. Even the flook of beggars that haunt It seem especially courteous. And domestic clatter diminuendo to restful lull aby. Men from many blocks away drift there late at night for the last pipe and a bit of Introspection. It is where Oliver Herford sketched many of his famous cat. It la where Robert Hol llday was Inspired to turn out the best of hi whimsical essays and A. B. Thomas hla best plays. Radio hurdles become Increasingly difficult. Unseasoned talent is al most universally barred. The demand I for "names." Potential Amos and Andya and Tony Wonse get no fur ther than the outer gate. Thi will continue, it 1 said, until the over supply of experienced artist .are as similated. And I wonder how many New York' era have made after dark excursion to the retail radio store that erupt around Waahlngton and Chambers street? .Sidewalks overflow with css-off bsrgsln. Bright lit windows ar placarded with cut-priced offer ings ot all description and with hundred and one loud speakers going full tilt the section Is violent bedlam Most radios are sold after working hours. Changing times have made profes sional Hie for musical comedy Juve niles more Intricate than ever. The type of play exploiting the handsome naval lieutenant with toothy mile who captivates U the ladles has gone into temporary retirement. Oscar Shaw t master of ceremonying in a smart cafe off Park avenue. Such be art fultterers a Paul Frawley. Wel lington Cross, John Steele. Alexander Gray. Irving Fisher. Bernard Gran vlll ami other haw either gone into cafe work, business or the movies. Out of the old guard that once made the mellow New Amsterdam the hub of theatrical life only Leonard Bergman remains. Z leg f eld. Erlanger, Dillingham and dorens of others 4 re gone. The lobby in daytime is dt jgrfJgefcBL' 0 Brady, M.U. through the pulmonary artery to the lungs. Here It once more seeps through capillary spaces around the air-cell of the lungs, gives up Its load of carbon dioxide, takes on a fresh load of oxygen. Is collected into venule, which unite again and again to form larger veins, which carry the blood back to the left auricle through the pulmonary vein. No valve at n- trance of the left auricle either back ward leakage 1 prevented by the ef fect of inspiration. From the left auricle the blood passes through the famous mitral valve Into the left ven tricle. At next heart beat It Is pump ed out through the arotic valve into the great artery once more. Time, a seconds flat, unless you're In a hurry- Any brisk exercise, of course, speeds up circulation and carries the blood around the complete circuit in short er time. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Blackheads. Pimples and Bumps. I am 19 and for some time have suffered from disgusting plmplea. blackhead and bumps In my face. I suppose It Is what you call acne. Miss P. L. A. Answer Yes, It 1 more or lee physiological or normal in youth Send a stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for monograph on acne. Wine. Is there enough nourishment con. tained in wine to warrant Including it In the dietary of a family with a limited Income? Mrs. L. B. Hitherto you have always been lucid in answering queries about the medicinal or food value of alcoholic beverages, but in the answer I hove clipped you seem to assure the per son that It Is Immaterial whether he drinks half a pint (large glassful) of milk or a bottle (say 12 ounces) of beer, a either yielda 175 caloriea. pro vided all the alcohol In the beer 1 oxidized and used as fuel . . . Mrs. M. B. H. Answer, No. t la foolish and ex travgant to spend money for wine, beer or other alcoholic beverage, so far as any nutritive madlclnal, health or remedial value goes. If half a pint of milk ia more nourlahlng than a pint of beer as any compe tent authority must admlt la It nec-J essary to dwell on the unwisdom or buying the alcoholic beverage? (Copyright, 1934. John F. Dille Co.) lid. Nute: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady snoulil send letters direct to Or William Brady. M. D. 263 El Ca mlno. Beverly Hills. Cal. serted. bleaky. Once It uncaulked the smartest witticism of the day. Rennold Wolfe was always a dropper In. A were Bide Dudley, Leo Marsh Ward Morehouse and other commen tators .of the Rlalto scene. It stiff ened into austerity only when Er langer the Little Napoleon his cap abaft, stepped from hi motor ana waddled through. He spoke to no one. the last of the theatrical auto crats. And the only one who could make even Zlegfeld slide down the brass pole to do his bidding. There waa something about West 42nd street in the New Amsterdam's hey-ley that suggested caper. Life ran at full tilt. Even Murray's danc ing floor revolved to keep pace with the tempo. George White would often "busk" along the sidewalk. Leon Errol would play drunk Just for the fun of it. Walter Catlett shot craps with colored elevator boy and I once aaw Henry Savage shadow box with a newsboy. Thingumbobs: John Charles Thom as, new operatic atar. began a a chou boy at the Winter Garden . . Kate Smith's modiste declarea she Is the easiest of all customers to fit . Walter Damrosch writes his wife a love poem on every anniversary of their marriage . . . Daniel Frohman often goes four nights in a row without sleeping, but he relaxes ana is re freshed. Ore' entire life, legend has it, In thu flaah of drownlnc. parades by in & ai.N.i!on of flllmmerv areen glob ule. A stmlisr pnenomenon nnppcna in a nip-up in a oam wo. u mc tt-t.v rinum this evenlne this headline nitaTTnttM a crazv bravado: "Soup Slides Sap to Sandmsni" jna ir any one wants a good humpeo over moan for a kidney pui aa., jusi sen a sruunu (Copyright, 1034. MoNsught Syndi cate, inc.) ALBANY COLLEGE MEET ALBANY COLLEOE The annual Older Olrla' conference will be held March a. S and 4 with Albany Col lege playing the part of host. It Is innAimpMt ht Mrs. Jean M. Johnson. director. Two hundred or more dele gate will be entertained at tne col lege dormitory and in Albany home, a nrADnm nt ceremonle. dinners. speeches and round tables ha been arranged. Every church group of every de nomination la Invited to send two delegate of high school or colle;e ae. ald Mra. Johiuon. The averaee cost of the conference Is 13 per dele gate, including meal, entertainment, and registration feea. Final Notice to Medford Milk Handlers. The city ordinance specifically atates permit to handle or er e milk ahsll be paid January lat of each year, and If not o paid a com plaint shall be filed and action taken." All those In arrears should comply at once. CITY HEALTH DEPARTMENT. Chaa. W. Austin, Milk Inptor (Adv 1 Dsnce tt Rogue Elk Saturday nlgM i Much 1. . 1 Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS DEATH rides the new on tne day these word are written death in about every form Viat could be imagined. - TORNADOES in the South take toll of 10 lives. In the tornado country, a cloud appears on the horizon usually an Insignificant-appearing cloud. The wind that follows deals death and destruction In a . dozen terrifying forma. We of the fortunate Pacific Coast are spared this menace. For that we should give thanks. FROM Indiana to the Atlantic Coast, the country 1 raked by blizzards and burled In snow. Six deaths are attributed to the weather in New England. At Port-! land, In Maine, the snow blanket reaches a depth of two and a half feet. At Mapleton, Maine, a train is wrecked when It runs Into a solid snowbank, and the engineer la killed. TnHE engineer was killed." 1 How often that sentence la a part of the atory of a train wreck. Yet thare is no scarcity ot engineers. Men of this age are not afraid of dangerous Jobs. That Is something to be proud of. INCIDENTALLY, have you ever stopped to think how seldom we .hear of train wreck In these days? . The railroads have become, amazingly safe. CARBON monoxide fumes kill nine students at Dartmouth college, all members of Theta Chi fraternity An explosion occurred in the fur nace during the night, blowing open the door and disconnecting the pipe that led to the chimney. The gas fumes escaped from the furnace, crept through the house until they reached the sleeping apartment where these nine boys lay. That was the end, CARBGM monoxide gas Is present In the exhaust of burning fuels, including gasoline. Never a year passes without marking up Its toll of deaths due to running an auto mobile engine In a closed room, such as a garage with the doors shut. - - WHEN these ACCIDENTS occur In peace time, we are shocked and horrified. . j When gases, far more deadly and I terrible than carbon monoxide, are used In war time to kill men by the thousancV. sending them to their deaths in terrible agony, we say merely: "It's war." WELL, it IS, and war Is becoming more ghastly and frightful with each repetition. Goodness knows what we shall sec If Europe goes to war again, as seems now lo be threat ened. --- AOREAT airliner crashes Just east of Salt Lake City, and the eight persons aboard die Instantaneously, apparently; never knowing what hit them. That is a mercy, when one has to die. it Is fine to die quickly. -- AIRPLANES are still dangerous. But at least they usually KILL. Instead of crippling. This writer, for one. would far rather be killed than crippled. Filipino Held as Wielder of Knife PORTLAND, March 1. (AP) Lino Maplle, 24, a Filipino, has been charged with first degree murder for the fatal stabbing last Sunday of William Newland, 37, who was wounded, police said. In an alterca tion between a group of white men and Filipinos. George D. Green, one ot the white men Involved in the fight, signed the complaint. Another Filipino, John Longboy, 37, was charged with assault witn a oangrr ous weapon. Wild Silk Worms Ravage Portland PORTLAND, March 1. (AP) Wild silk worms are on a rampage here. August Holly haa reported the sec ond annual attack on his fruit trees by the peeta which kill the limb on which they feed. Ordinarily they are found only In the southern states, he ssld. They are difficult to eradi cate, inasmuch as they return to their cocoona after feeding. BIG PINES BUILD COST SERVICE T.Ki:S TUB GUESS Ol'T OF .ML BUILDING PHONE 1 Oo Vntir l.nmhet1 Shopping In the Shopping Area Ye Poet's Comer In the Valley of the Rogue. Just to remind you You promised one day That you would meet me I'd like to say Here grief is forgotten 'And beauty is tree Contentment Is singing From every dear tree. The river Is eager Each trail seems to be Beckoning onward To new ecstasy. Say goodbye to care Come meet me somewhere In the valley of the Rogue. Fragrant old forest Will welcome you. Deer greet you quickly And vanish from view; The freshness of springtime Is here the year through, The tender awakening Of life all anew. The lark and the robin Quite gaily agree The valley la surely , The best place to be. Say goodbye to care, Come meet me somewhere. In the valley of the Rogue. You will always remember The blue of the sky Each day is a rival, To the one Just gone by. There's gold tor the finding And showers satisfy; The snow lingers only Where mountains are high. Blossoms and wild flowers And purple mists seem Inviting a future Sweet a a dream. Say goodbye to care, Come meet me somewhere ' In the valley of the Rogue. Hazel Sloneker. George Roscoe, University of Min nesota basketballer, shoota with one hand almost exclusively, even on free throw's. Rogers Hornsby had not seen more than a half-dozen American league game In hi life before taking over management of the St. Louis Browns last year. If a Child Won't Parents who understand children know where to place the blame when, a youngster mopes, keeps to himself, or is "ufily" toward others. Sluggishness ruins any disposition, ana that's what is usually wrong. But it's just as wrong lo dose that child with sickening cathartics. Until 15 or oldera child's bowels need but little aid a very mild form of help. Stronger things often upset the stomach or weaken the bowel muscles, l-or tne happy solution of this problem see what to do, in the next column: Whose Fault? Following A. D. Lewis, Jr., on his trip west in NEW CHRYSLER AIRFLOW 4 htTRom mi Rwtsns to rra, m amur n omaa axd swemve cmctiunMi m mnct WESTERN (hcattJ I-t twuHt (tn (hen m prtx(4 Ing thai ftdUioa, ROLLA, M0-, FEB. 27, 1934 H FLANGE ARMSTRONG MOTORS, INC MEDFORD. OREGON SURE HAVING LOTS OF SNOW AND ICE AND PLENTY OF COLD STOP CAN'T MAKE MUCH TIME BECAUSE OF ROADS BUT FEELING FINE STOP CAR IS SENSATION EVERYWHERE WE STOP NO CHRYSLER AIRFLOWS HERE YET AND EVERYONE ANXIOUS FOR THEIR ARRIVAL STOP THIS CAR HAS ANYTHING CHEATED FOR PERFORMANCE. A D LEWIS. JR OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA., FEB. 28, 1934 H FLANGE ARMSTRONG MOTORS, INC MEDFORD. ORE. WORST STORM IN FORTY YEARS FOR THE EAST BUT WEATHER BETTER HERE STOP CHRYSLER AIRFLOW SURE A DREAM WITH POWER OF TRUCKS SPEED OF AIRPLANE AND COMFORT OF FIRESIDE CHAIR STOP COST OF OPERATION SURPRISINGLY LOW STOP WORDS CAN'T DESCRIBE THIS CAR STOP JUST WAIT TILL YOU SEE AND DRIVE IT STOP FEELING FINE AND HURRYING HOME. A D LEWIS, JR See Mr. Lewis' Itinerary On the Big Maps at, Armstrong Motors, Inc., the Medford Cham ber of Commerce and the AAA Office. Flight vo Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the File or The Mall Tribune ot 20 and 10 Year. Ago.) TEN YEARS ACiO TODAY March 1. 1931 (It Waa Saturday) Auto thefts In land for the year total 203.987. A baby girl 1 born to Mr. and Mra. Jack Swem on February 29. and tha little miss will have a birthday every four years. Ashland hlsh springs surprise and defeats Medford. 30 to 25 in first game of annual Berle. Tetter writer nrotesta that "banka are not loaning money to those who really need It." netepfltlon call tinon Gov. Pterco at Salem and demand he "make, good on campaign promise to cut me maw in two." The taxes have risen. TWENTY YEARS Alio TODAY March 1, 11)14 (It Waa Sunday) March came In like a lion, with wind and rain. The Baaco Musical Comedy Co., after a slim run leaves for Grants Pass. On their first appearance they packed the Page nightly, but when they returned had lost their appeal. The police and citizens have had several arguments lately regarding the leaving of teama atandlng, un hitched from the wagons on the streets. Team owners labor under the city ordinance covering this act. If the horses are unhitched. The chief objection Is to littering up of the pavement. Rorger skins Medford merchants out of $200 In a Saturday evening ' foray. February dry and sunshiny, rain deficiency Is eight Inches. PIccololst from Tyrol "enthrall local music lovers." British pledge support of Wilsontan policy in Mexico. Play with Others? There arc happy, healthy boys and girls who have never ' known the iltcr taste and violent action of castor oil or similar cathartics. The only "medicine" they ever get or ever need to help the bowels is plain California Syrup of Figs. The senna in this fruity syrup has the natural laxative action that assists Nature as it should. Next day, the child feels and acts him self, and has a normal appetite.. But '.R, "c rco1 California. Symp. of rigs, wnn tne worn rmjornm on the label and on the bottle.