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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 6, 1934)
PAGE TWELVE MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune "Ewvoiw in Sou t him Oregon Riad the Mail Mourn" Dal I) Ciecpi daturflaf Hubilihed tr 41KDKUKI) 'RINT1NU CO. A6-3T-39 N. Kir 6L ItliKEItl IV. HUHL, Edlur An Indepflndent Ntwptpw Cotrred u ittood elan miliar it Uidford, Oregon, under Act of Marcft 8, t8I9. SUBSCRIPTION HA TEA Bi Mill in AdT&nee Dtllj, m rear - I' 00 Dill?. li ttont- t.T5 . Dally, OM montn 80 By Carrier In Adfanee MMford, Aibtaod. Jiromlll, Central Point, Phoenix, Tiltat, Gold Bill and on Ulgbvtn. . Dally, one rear IB-00 Dally, ill month! .... 8.35 Daily, om month 60 All wr mi, nb In tdrioet. Official paper of the City of MedfonL Official paper of Jackaon County, - MEMBKH Or TUB ASSOCIATED PBE88 Becelrlni Full Leased Wire Serilce lb AiiocUteo Pren la escluihely entitled to toe um ror publication or bji oewa aupatenee credited to tt or otherwise credited lo tbte paper tool sua to tne locaj new puniisnea nertio. . All rlgbu for publication of apeclal dlfpttdw Herein are alto referred. HEMBEH OF UNITED PHEM UEMBEK OP AUDIT HUKEAD Or CIHCULAT10N8 Adrertlitng KepreaenUtlrw II. C MOIJENSEN k COM PANT Offleei Id New York. Chicago, Detroit, 8u rratielieo Lot Angelei Seattle Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. A haatlly organized posse of mad vigilantes are hot on the trail of an honest appearing bootlegger, whose whoso product waa made in hie own by communists is sustained, isn't it t , 1 rarn-and quite hurriedly. . -rii jt j, ; politics, but nowhere else. " ' wanted citiaens to enlist to aing ! In fact we agree that realistically speaking, such a charge "America" and clap their hands while js absurd. But it is no more" absurd than the charge made by ofturt'houw.10 th drjMr. Gill, that Wall Street instigated support of the sales tax, ' 'and forced the special session of the Legislature to pass such band. eiamouli'Eiombert" ' a measure. Both charges are unadulterated whang doodle, and aid: "Mra. cuibertaon is the great-' CV6ry thinking person knows it. The trouble is however, that est contract bridge player, man on , , , ,.f. , . - ,,,, , . woman, in the world today." (Edi- during a political campaign so few of us are thinking per tor and Publisher). And, don Mr.Bon8 n(j tne professional politicians, on both sides, take Cuibertaon know on which side hla bread Is not buttered? - full advantage Of the tnct. ... It looks like one of the myriad of slogan, vis: I smile like Roosevelt,;'"' to yell "Wall Street," and the head of the school teachers and win lower your taxes. , . j wju cont.jnue to yell "Communism," and the people will vote, A movement has been launched toat'least many of them, not according to the tacts ot the case .have the agn, "Closed on Account of follows: , closed to vote, not qo Finning, Play Oolf, Attend a Bridge Party, Mak., an Auto Trln tn Crescent. Cltv- or Picnio on the Appiegate. , rT'HE proposed sales tax has nothing to do with Wall Street The lying tone'd down the past and nothing to do with Communism. It is merely a busi week and waa not vicious, just leav-' ness proposition an effort to prevent the crippling of our tion, and hia character prone in the , gutter, una 01 mo nars wun a wrae Giruuinuuii . wm nave wj use all nia : . . A . . , . , . ., VTT - p . imagination explaining fibs that come CONDITIONS WHICH PREVAIL. It is also the ONLY form under the head of criminal alander.lf iax thHt w;n oato, (), tax dodgers, those who enjoy the to pun out his tongue by the roots, I or Join a church. A farmer reported that late yester day he was chased for two miles by wen known and old reliable Wail1 don't deny there are many citizens, no doubt just as sincere 8trMt- ... and public spirited against it. The John Moffatt boy is looking! So we can see no profit iii either side calling the other side out the rear window of a new auto, j uameg It ig a quegtion of what the TRUE facts are and what i 'The upstate police are stilt after i is really best for this state, under tlio emergency with which three young men accused of "cheat-1 . f,j ' ' Ing punchboards." Anybody able tol 11 18 toiuromtu. auccessfuiiy cheat a punnboard As far as this paper is concerned, it will continue to con ought not to worry about capture. L,ntrate ,, the fastg) and cave the tom-tom pounding, ami The flelda and hill and dale are as snake dancing, to others, green as the office seeker hopes Mr. ' and Mrs. Voter wm be. . A BIT. or UOl ULK-lllTTEl) LUCK , Your corr. waa hit In the torso lata Wed. pm., by a double-bitted I 3M ano escaped without a acratch. Tne double-bitted axe flew out of i the hands ot a worker aa he waa chopping on a stubborn oak stump on the alte of the new gaa alio. We were gawking at his labors when the two-edged tool catapulted from hla grasp and struck us on the chest, bounced between our astounded lege.! gouged a bole In the cement pave- ment and came to rest on the curb, after ripping three Inchea of outer bide off hind tire, a woman watching from an auto was too ter-j houra beio" wd scared" "noug" 1 to go to the stste saloon, if the axe had hit with one of lt raior edges, there would have been acaa.1 uaity instead of a citiien cured ogUng workers chopping with double-1 bitted axea. The axe-wlelder waa: cared out of three yean' growth, and a carpenter eye-wltneas of the miracle la atlll shaking In hl oxfordi. Anybody who carea can aee the hole speculate on how much bigger' and' better cvlty it could have reused in i fcna wishbone of the writer. Tha' worker is no longer using the .; INDIANA WOMAN IS He swore h would never touch an ADMiniinTUCD AT OQ other axe even to chop n.ndllng lor! UliANUIYlUI nttt A I CO his wife. There waa not much of' an audience prenent. If there had' COLUMBUS, Ind April AP)-- been, an Innocent bystander would The birth of a daughter to Mr. and probably have Ion a foot, or arm. Mrs. Roland Reed has made Mra. We passed the spot five times since. Reed's mother, Mrs. Cecil Henderson, and uad the same feeling one ex perl- 1 a grandmother at the age of 38 years, en ccs when entering a dentist s of Mrs. Reed Is 14 years old. lies. The horseshoe we found live' years ago, and have s.nos packed In ,,fr lllth Birthday, the auto, has earned 1U transport- PHILADELPHIA (UP) Cheerful tlon.a and will be gold-plated and nees. together with abstinence from placed in a ssiey deposit box. It alcohol, smoking and late suppers wma more than a halr-rsislng ex per I- are attributed for ber advanced yeara ence. ' H was enough of an ex perl- by Mra. Mary Ann Asay. who has ence to rats wera, celebrated ber 111th birthday at the Who Is Looney Now? 117ELL, well. We have been nur HmA. hnfr tiav.ii until That's new, and might we have been stigmatized so long as a member of the "subsidized press" and a "tool of Wall Street," that to be written down, as a dynamiter and a Bolshevik, ing of pleasant equilibrium. But, of course there has to be a "CATCH" in it. H. Barton, whose communication is printed in another column, bases his charge upon the fact that this Those who are supporting taxes of the New Deal, are of revolution j whereas those who are opposing both, are, we assume, upholding the government under which we live and defending the citadels of capitalism. Well at least such a statement has the virtue of novelty, But unfortunately for our correspondent, it isn't supported by the evidence. THE charge that the communists are opposing the sales tax, he brands as absurd. In munis't coming out into the lime-light as opposed to the sales tax." ' Nevertheless, that is precisely what Oregon communists have done. If be will look up he will find that on January 29th, 1934, the "ANTI-SALES TAX FEDERATION" was organized in Portland. Ray W. Gill was elected president, and Harry Gross and Richard Lovelace were elected members of the executive committee. Everyone knows the radical proclivities of Harry Gross, who has taken the stump repeatedly to declare the C. W. A. the "biggest fake" ever perpetrated,. He maintains it "kids the unemployed into thinking they will get jobs, and prevents them from . joining the league of unemployed and becoming 'militant'." (Please note that "MILITANT.") Mr. Lovelace is not only an avowed "radical," but was recently a candidate for congress on the COMMUNIST ticket. DOES that look as though "most of the communists are hoping, yes praying, that the sales tax will pass?" Our correspondent should attend a few communistic meetings up and down the coast. He will find every communist in the coun try, opposing THIS sales tax, or any other sales tax. So the charge that opposition to the sales tax is instigated QO, unless all signs fail, the head of the Grange will continue a(. a, but nccorfijng to whjcn Which makes this election, j'i,. , disheartening process. . publio school systemand state j tax that Will 1JKU V 1UE THE privilege of public schools without paying for it. And thirdly, it !b the only tax that will reduce the back breaking tax now levied on real property. Some of the best citizens iii A Word to IT THY does Senator Huey Long stay in tho sonata t Ho is VV .:... i.:. i:. 4 !.. He should be running a sido show, or acting as niniiager for the irrepressible Max Baer. Whenever the boss demaeoeue of Louisiana cots the worst , . . , ,.,,, "l -b"":" " '- v ' ..-..v .... . . - vitcd an attorney in the finance committee room outside, to settle their controversy. We regret the attorney didn't accept the invitation. Huey nught have acquired a better black eye than he received in tiit jona Island wash-room encounter. ' 8 , . . ,, . Wo agree with Senator Harrison of Mississippi that the Ljoxiisinna "King Fish" is less respected in that body, and by . 6 . . ., ., ,i ,ti J. the country 89 a whole, tllHll any is saying a mouthful 1) Hut tho bruisers aud the hop tators' adore him. Why don't preciatcd "Hooey ngo out where you really "BELONG V . called a number of things in f nrlnv a "nniirmnic I" add,, somewhat refreshing t We tends to induce a certain feel . paper is supporting the sales tax. the sales tax, and the processing in HIS opinion, sewing the seeds fact he can not "feature a com the files of the Oregon Journal jue of piffle they swallow first like all other elections, rather a bankruptcy, by the only sort X UiNUS UiNUHtt the state are for the tax. We the Unwise . :.. tl.t .ii;ii,.oti,. lm.lv 0,ujv v.lnr.W 1,a in. Oilier senator mere, v men heads, and the soap box agi you go out where you are ap Burlington county Lisbon, N. J. home at New Dane Waa Knockout. SEATTLE. Wash. (UP) Mra. Mar guerite Dare, 31, waa dancing the Virginia Reel with her husband. Dare lifted hl wife In a wide whirl and she cracked heada with another dancer. Both were knocked out for an hour, All kinds of blanks (or saia (or rent, no bunting no tresneMliw - and other cards (or sale at Commercial' primin upl of Mall Tribune i Phone M2. we will haul away foul refuse, city Sanitary Seme. , I Personal Health Service By William Signed letteri pertaining to personal health and hygiene oot to dis ease diagnosis or treatment, wlU be answered bj Dr. Brad; II a stamped self-add reined envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brier and written In Ink. Owing to tha large number of letters received only a tew can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries, not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 'if 5 El Carnl no, Beverly Hills, CaJ. QUIET RESTFUL SLEEP. Careful scientific observation of the sleep pattern of children has shown that the normal child changes posi tion many times In a night. Graphic record of 78,624 hours of aleep made by Dr. Glenville Old dings of Atlanta gave as the long est period any person slept with out any body movement one hour and forty aeven minutes. An Ingenious ma chine waa used for recording movements. At the end of the ntght'a observation the active minute (every minute in which there- has been any body movement re corded) are counted up and the total number of active minutes constitute the sleep pattern. The children were from 9 to 14 years of age. , The most active boy showed an j average of 110 active minutes in plght of nine hours' aleep. The quiet. est sleeper had an average of only 63 active minutes nightly. Girls proved sounder sleepers than beys: they not only get to sleep more quickly, but sleep more quietly all night. After getting a few nights records the sleep pattern of the individual may be accurately rated. A child who Is a "quiet sleeper" remains a "quiet sleeper," and one- who Is a "restless sleeper" will remain restless from month to month and year to year. Dr. Glddlngs made some Interesting tests of popular aids to sleep. In series of normal sleepers he gave 6 ounces (moderate glassful) of cold water to the child on retiring: the child went to bed at 8:30 and lights were put out. This was repeated five nights. Then warm water waa given In the same way for five nights. Neither appeared to have any influ ence on the child's sleep. A similar experiment was done with 0 ounces of warm milk. This seemed to produce quiet sleep. A beverage containing a small amount of caffeine apparently had no disturbing effect on the sleep of nor mal children. This last observation prompts me to acknowledge that my former teaching about cocoa may be wrong. Cocoa doesn't contain caffeine but does contain a drug with similar ef fects, name, theobromine which Is a stimulant to the kidneys mainly, but also to the heart and the brain or spinal cord. Caffeine (In coffee and certain popular fountain beverages) Is a stimulant mainly to the brain and spinal cord, secondarily to the heart and perhaps least to the kid neys. Of the three domestic bever age, coffee, tea fthelne In the tea ha effects virtually the same, though milder, as those of caffeine) and Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS BIO news scarce again today ex cept Sam Insull, and he's really getting out of the big news class. Sam, by the way, la a LITTLE man not a big one, In spite of the fact that he dealt In hundreds of mil lions In tha big boom daya preced ing 1039. If he'd been big, personally, he'd have stayed and faced the music, In stead of running out between two days. At least, that's this wrlterts Idea ; ' JOHN DILLINQER, "seen" repeat edly out here on the Coast last week, bobs up In St. Paul on Satur day and shoots bis way out of a po lice trap. Dllllnger has been big news for quite a while, and will be big news again one of these days when he's either ahot by the officers or cap tured and sent to Jail again. After he's either ahot or captured, he'll quickly CEASE to be big newa, and will be forgotten promptly. PLENTY of good people complain because we newspaper makers put Dllllnger Into the big headlines In stead of the League of Nations, or the prospects of war In Europe. Honestly now what story did you read first In Sunday's papers First and with moat Interest. Wasn't It this Dllllnger shooting escapade in St. Paul? Newspapers, you know, have to be made to be READ, UT at that the percentage of crime In the average Issues of the average newspaper la surprising ly small running not much more Vn 10 to IS per cent of the total at most. MRS. FRANKLIN-5. ROOSEVELT, speaking at her own weekly press conference In Washington, aaya: "There Is little chance of revolu tion that means bloodshed In a coun try like this where people can regis ter their desires In a peaceful way and where the great mass of the peo pie are not In real want." That tounds like Mrs. Roosevelt Mn, """ ""d cleer-t.Mnklng. That woman la I great help to ber i Brady, M.U. cocoa or chocolate, the last Is least objectionable, I believe, for children under 16 years of age. If the cocoa or chocolate beverage contains plenty of milk or cream, so that the drink Is practically milk or cream flavored with cocoa or chocolate, there is lit tle objection to It for any one. How ever, if the child likes milk It Is much better for digestion and health without any flavoring or sweetening added. - A full meal, even of plain, whole some, easily digested food, taken at or near bedtime, resulted - In marked restlessness which continued all night in many Instances, Baths, warm or cold, on retiring, ap parently had no effect on the sleep of normal children. A child sleeps more quietly In a cool room than In a warm one, or In cold weather than In hot. All of these observations, I think, apply to adults who fuse about their sleep. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Peanuts. Are peanuts starch or protein? How many calories in one-fourth pound? What vitamins do peanuts contain? What minerals predominate? A. M. P. Answer The edible portion of pea nuts contains 25 per cent protein, 38 per cent fat, 34 per cent starch. About 600 calories In one-fourth pound. vitamin B Calcium (lime) Is the main mineral element. As -food peanuts compare favorably with beef, bread, etc. Peanuts should be more liberally used in the family dietary, for they are not only very nourishing but eco nomlcal. Can t In the Pool. Hollywood reader sends clipping showing picture of girl who purports to be a movie actress. Occasion for her agent getting the publicity was a house-warming party, the young laay naving remained too long In the pool and caught laryngitis. Header wants to know why I don't try to make Hollywood folk crl conscious, Answer Of course there Is always a chance of catching any communi cable disease other patrons of the pool may have. As for Common Res piratory Infections, there are plenty of other places where the people are as dumb as they are In Hollywood. Oily Skin. I have used your solution for oily skin with excellent results. Is there any harm In continuing its use regu larly? You remember you .uiggested mopping the skin with pledgets of cotton wet with a solution of 10 grains of resoivln In 1 ounce of alco hol or witch hazel or bay ram or toilet water, once or twice a day Miss J. W. Answer It Is harmless. (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dllle Co.) Erl Note: Readers .wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady, M. !., 365 E. ta rn! no, Beverly Hills, Cal. husband In hla trying problem of providing leadership in a time of general discontent. - THIS writer, Incidentally, has had an Interesting reaction to Mrs. Roosevelt since she became big news. When she first began to appear in the newsreela, she seemed excep tionally unattractive in appearance even homely. But &he no longer seems homely at all. Her personality is so attract- ive, so wholesome, that she creates an unusually pleasing Impression In her numerous appearances. Has that, by any chance, been your experience? Chinese Turn Catholic. VATICAN CITY, Rome (UP) During the past ten yeara there have Catholicism In China, accordm. to a report from the Anostollc DeJeea- tlon In Pelplng. The Catholic popu lation of China now la 2,624,166. Commencement on Gridiron. TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (UP) Inter est In commencement exercises at the University or Alabama has so In creased during recent yeara that this year the exercises will be held In the achool'e football stadium to provide adequate audience space. PEOPLE'S MARKET 105 W. Main Free Fat Hens, each . . .45c Finest Beef I'mperly ajrtl Jtit one nf Ihe l-ratons why mr customers come back, R. I. Red Hens & Fryers Young Rabbits Lunch Meats NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, April 6. Thoughts while strolling: Debblea and their boy friends at noontime. Sliding down life's ban ister. I'd rather hear Glad ya S wart h out sing than Lily Pons, Corey Ford is turning out grand fiction these days. The new English stage star toast, Gladys Cooper. One word de scription of Zasu Pitts dazed. A grand gesture of David Warfleld. Writing a note ot high praise to Clark Gable for his acting. X haven't felt like working since the cold snap. Maybe It froze up all the Juices. That Intrigues me glass book ends with live goldfish. Eddie Peabody Is remindful of Ray mond Hitchcock. Especially that fore lock. Whatever became of Morton Downey? The disembodied penslve ness of Doris Kenyon. And how quickly she melts into radiation I No champion has ever kept hla poise like ene Tunney. One of my favorite people Jay Jerome Williams. Those priests walk ing across St. Patrick's lawn at sun down deserve the pencil of Leonardo. The ugly rumors of war. Spring By lngton and Christie McDonald look alike. Good to see honest dramshops again. Speaks made all feel sneaky. Nobody can look so pompous as Montague Love. Nor Is there any other actor more democratic. Auto graph hunters are thinning. Sug gestion: Why not let George Jean Nathan and William Lyon Phelps swap critical viewpoints for a sea son? They say obesity Isn't caused by glands any more. Now It's the palate, heigh hot Jack Pearl, the coldest day of th winter, was waiting in his limousine in front of Charles's for his wife. He was. rosily cosy in a fur greatcoat and the spread of a monogramed laprobe. A derelict, blue from the cold and overcoatless, shuffled around the cor ner, peered in and opened the door, Pearl Instinctively reached for a coin, But the bum rasped: "I hope you're warm, you such ad such!" And slammed the door. fn a toss of New York'e celebrities the other night I was, as a recording Journalist, cornered with Jack Peerl and Joe Weber. Weber Is likely tne oldest living exploiter of the Dutch dialect and Pearl most successful ot the moderns. Each has great ad miration for the other. But what Impressed me was their size.' On the stage Weber is beefy and. with his enormous folse front, roly-poly. Olt stage he would not weigh 100 pounds. Pearl Is only an Inch or two taller, and not much heavier. Always surprising how the magic of the stage creates Illusion of size and weight. Douglas Fairbanks, a fly-weight, ia a conspicuous example. In romantlo roles he appears an Adonis. Al Jolson Is several degrees slighter off etage than on. The only actor I know who looks his giant stature on and off Is DeWolf Hopper. And hla voice Is equally booming In the same fashion. Dashlel Hammett, silver fox of the mystery yarn, waa called to Holly wood studios shortly alter his sudden fame. After loitering a few weeks, he waa called In and shown the most recent film of quite a hantmy etar. And told to turn out a script for him. Several days later he sent dn the opening acene of the synopsis. It showed an undertaking parlor, and In the dim light waa a coffin. A slow moving close-up. the figure in the coffin revealed the hammy atar. Then workers came In end began hammer ing down the lid. There was more to come, but Hammett left the plot right there. And came on back to New York. E. Phillips Oppenhelm. another grand mystery plotter, haa Just flniahed his all-glasa studio separate from hla home at Cagnes. an hour'a ride along the blue Mediterranean he loves. When Oppenheim la stuck In a atory he playa a round of golf or goea to the Casino to place a few beta. And comes back refreshed. The best of the Japes about the mussy bank acandala came from a subhed In Variety when a certain banker was being grilled In Washing ton. It read: "The Uncovored Wig gin.". From a theatrlca.1 program descrlp- Delivery Phone 1058 We are here to please our customers, When better meat is sold in Medford, we will sell it. tlon of first nlghters: "Mclntyre r rives looking rather regal." My lords, ladies and gentlemen! Charge your glasses the duke I (Copyright, 1934, McNaught Syndl cate, Inc.) Ye Poet's Cornei THE PIONEER CHURCH We Invite you one and all, When you come for the Jubilee, To visit where our fathers Left a sacred memory. In the heart of our fair valley, Near the gold hills to the west. Stands a little church- in J'ville Overlooked by Mt. Pitt 'a crest. Not a church we call cathedral, With its spires of glittering hue, But- a church built by our fathers When our country was first new. Gold dust from the gamblers Brought this structure Into view, And Its memory calls to worship. Calls to me and calls to you. Ancient church beyond the Rockies, Standing there a challenge true, Memories of those passing yeara The Jubilee will renew. Many years has stood this structure, Built the year of 'fifty-three; Yes, we'll count this spot most sa cred 'When we have our Jubilee. Here it stands alone unheeded, A monument of work untold: From memory'a walls we hear the echo Of the song they sang of old. Memory, too, would paint the picture How the fathers brave and true Came so many miles to worship As the pilgrims used to do. Memory sees them as they gathered, Coming miles to worship God; Walking, horseback, buggies, wagons; Now they're sleeping "neath the sod. Forty strong they used to number From one corner of the land; Ten miles to the log church To meet with other praying bands. And the rich and poor together Gathered there of one accord. To sing the hymns and praises And to study of their Lord. ' The old bell in the tower Is silent And the hewn seats empty now, Bringing memories of our loved ones .And a Saviour's thorn-pierced brow. And those brave and loyal miners, How they worked from year to year. Yet took time to read their Bible. Sang the songs of pilgrim cheer. 5 minds with but lempting. . . these delicious little Hydro cookie-sandwiches! . . . Wouldn't it be grand if there were no rules of etiquette? Sunshine Hydrox come in convenient packages of ten ot twenty cookies ot by the pound . . . But no mattet how you buy them, be sure to get plenty! Hydrox have a strange way of disappearing quickly! &eHYDROX:::iL',I LOOSE-WILES BISCUIT CO., PORTLAND ' ' SfeI: SNIDERY "JUBILEE" ICE CREAM I Luscious, pure, tantaliz ingly flavored fresh fruit ice cream! It's healthful, delicious, and the most inexpensive dessert made. Order a quart for ton:jht. . Phone S2v But the "amen corner" la silent And the choir seats empty quite, While the pulpit ever echoes Yes, my brother, "Send the Light." Then, dear comrade, recall the story, How Christ died for you and me; Pause a moment at the old church When you Join our Jubilee. Mae Mark. Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the Files ot The Mali Tribune of 20 and iu Years Ago. 'TEN YEARS AGO TODAY -April 6, 1024 (It was Monday) George Mansfield, Democratic can dldate for U. S. senator, returns from tour of state full of cdnfldense. A six-months -old baby Is held In the county Jail, along with Its moth er the companion of a notorious bandit. Sheriff Terrlll objedts to turning the baby over to a wolfare society. "Let Its ma keep It," says the sheriff. "The baby don't know whether she Is In Jail, or Japan." Tax collections last year .totaled $331,130.81 for the county. Warm weather causes snow in hills to melt rapidly. President Coolidge declares "the people are mortgaging the future, with the Installment plan, and the day of payment may be bitter." Klamath-Ashland highway lent save for one mile. excel- TWENTY YEAR SAGO TODAY April 6, 1014 (It was Monday) Chemists report that water In Ash land springs contains 'llthla."t Work on the Pacific highway Is switched to the north end of the county. A substantial shower falls over the valley, causing the farmers to re joice. Tale of the purchase of the J'ville i -r.d by the Hill Interests branded 'fiction.' Lady autolst races with motorcy clist on Main street, and police Issue edict: "This effort to kill them selves or somebody else must stop. Churches of city prepare to observe Easter next Sunday. Weatfier man predicts rain. WINDOW GLASS We sell window glass and will replace your broken windows reasonably. Trowbridge Cab inet Works. 3 Midget Photos 10c Peasley Studio. a single thought! 203 maty 2 im&m . a Off w A.