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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 9, 1934)
'AGE FOUR ifEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON. MONDAY. APRIL 9, 1934. i(edford Mail Tribune Mfwy9flt In Southern Oresoe gtasa tne Hill Tribune" Dalle Eiecpl Saturday Putill!b) or HCDrOIID PRINTING CO. M.JM N. fir BU BOBEKJ IV. WJUL, Editor Ad (ndepeodent Nenpapsr Entered u eeeond elasa oiltter it Uedford. -"egos, under Act of Marco 8. 1879. 8UBSCHIPTI0N BATES .:. Mall In Adranea Dallj, m tut 19.00 Dell, all ftontni l.Tfi Oiiir. on aooto 60 Bf frrrler In Adrinee Medford. Atolind. ubomllle, Control Point, Phoaoil, Talent, Gobi ,.u and on talxnoin. Ollli, cm fear I.00 Dalit, 111 montM I J Dally, om nontb 80 AU teres), eaib In adranea. OMIelal paper or tlx Cltr or Medford. Official paper of Jaekioo County. 4 IfXMBKB OP THE ASSOCIATED HUES . Beeelrins Kull Leased Wire Berrlee TtM Aiaoelalet, Preea la eieluiirele entitled to iro uae for publication or ill oein dlipaicnai edited to It or oloervue credited In thla paper nd also to Lai local neve puhllined herein. AU rUbte ror publication of ipeclal dltpatchea lerelo are also reaeneo. HZMBEH OP UNITED PBEB8 MSHBEB Or AUDIT BUBEAD Or CIHCUUT10N8 Adrertlilnf Kepreaeoullree IL C. MOUKN8EN k COMPANT Ofrleee In Nee York, Cblceto. Detroit, Ban Vranelaco too Auclee Seattle Portland. Ye Smudge Pot 1 By Arthur Perry. A number of citizens have been enjoying rides In the new 1934 autoe the psat week. They are now as dis gusted with their old bus, as a mem ber of the Young Radical club of the "ISJSx . The aervala star. Marlon county ' sheet, has started a campaign to see who can write the best song about tse candidacy or earn crowns ion wne lor rial aspl - variation t hymn: governor. All the gubernatorial aspl rant an singing their own of the soul stirring Methodist "I win save You '. . i Noblest Thought and Best Ides, of the Past Week; "Let's not make our selves bigger jackasses than are." U; S. Benator M. M, Neoly or j Weat Virginia. ' Lucky fishermen Sunday caught the limit of unlucky fish. Betty Parker, girl friend of Clydo ! Barrow, Texas bandit, denies she , smokes cigars. Miss Parkor does not deny she has been running around with a bandit. The hole be'ing chewed out by the j on Stewart ateam ahovei, on the ait Tw a"nT . it is regarded by many as a voryingainst tnem they stand to lose poor hole, in comparison with the one they think they are in, and wilt never get out of. R-R-K-VFNOKI! (SF, Call Bulletin) The dime novel Is snturated with the pioneer spirit of Amer ica. It portrays the strugglss, exploits, trials, dsngers, feats of hardships and dally lives of the American pioneers from the days of the Puritans to the death of Ouster. And It breathes the spirit which for two and a half oenturlea ahaped the conqueat and development of the conti nent north of the Rio Grande. It is literature Intensely national istic snd pstrlotlc, In character designed to stimulate adventure, self-reliance and achievement; to exalt the feat of the pioneer women and men who settled the country. . John porter of Long creek an nounces his candidacy for county commissioner. Citing his business ability, John saya he Is the owner of sawmill, a throehlng machine, a stallion and a racehorse, and hasn't gone broke yet. (Canyon city Eagle) Credit ahould be given for possessing something bestdrs the desire to run for office. e a e A person by the name of John B. Mudd, a denizen of New York City, hits written to the editor of the Lit. Dig., In pr.rt as follows: "Are all red-blooded Americans gone? Is masculinity dead? Have we definitely and forever forfeited our right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness? Well, then, what are we going to do about the Issue of pear salad? pear salad and all the other In sipid, patience-wrecking, ne-ve-shredding dishes that are being served dnlly In minions of restau rants, hotels snd homes, under mining our family life. Jumping the divorce rate, snpplng the vital lty of the nation? What, I repeat, are we going to do about Itl And, further along the gentleman, as you might say, continues: Don't think that we are Intoler ant, Except for pear salad, which every right-thinking Am or lean recognizes must be eradicated at the earliest possible moment, we hare aa yet placed no other dishes on our black list," It la not known what alts Mr. Mudd, but It Is suspected he sells oranges. Sentence Huipemlrd Maurice Put ney was given a 10 days' suspended sentence when he sppesred In city police court this morning to answer charge of reckless driving. He en tered a guilty plea. Putney was ar rested Sunday, It's Hard to "PHP Oregon Journal must be "skeered" that the state sales tax will win. For its latest argument against the measure shows a complete victory of fear over intelligence. There is only one answer to such an hysterical and absurd outburst, as was contained in its leading editorial on Sunday, namely; that the opponents of the emergency sales tax are getting desperate. For the Journal is terrified by the prospect of sales tax DELINQUENCY, or pretends to be. It maintains that if the measure passes : "One big (roup wheu property will be subject to seizure and sale without hearing In court . . . will be the food producers out on the (arms of Oregon." In other words the Journal has the effrontery to maintain, that the farmer who sells his store in the city, will stand to stove to his home," if he fails We dislike to accuse the misrepresentation, and yet the paper of complete and abysmal For it SHOULD know as to read the terms of the sales ducer "out on the farm", who butter, or apples, or WHAT NOT, to grocery in town PAYS NO SALES TAXI The retailer pays the tax, and ONLY the retailor. The only way the anything he produces, is to become a house-to-house peddler, or mov to town and open a retail Then how in the name of common sense can he ever become delinquent on a tax he never has QERIOUSLY we are surprised J temporary. It has a perfect if it doesn't believe in it. There is no such thing as a popular tax. Against any tax, there are perfectly legitimate objections, particularly from those who have to pay them. BUT, there is no excuse for any self respecting newspaper, to resort to such tactics, as the Journal resorts to in this Sunday editorial, to gain its political ends. It is unworthy of a great metropolitan newspaper, which whatever its faults, in the past. we have always regarded, as fair and square in its methods, however mistaken it may have been in its policies. We read over the editorial several times, in a sincere effort to find that we, not it, was mistaken; that there was something beside the cheapest sort sf demagogucry to justify its conten tion, which at first reading had been overlooked. BUT THERE IT WAS IN all about the horrors of "your cook stove and your home subject to seizure and sale" AND THEN: the greatest sufferers of ALL the producers of . iuuu on we minis 01 tins grout i . 1 ""PHE only explanation we 'I Hteady growth of pro-sales niece of sales tax onnositiori has For not only is the farmer exempt from a sales tax on every thing he sells for resale, but he is more favored by this measure than any other class in the state He pays no sales tax on "occasional seller"; he pays no tax on regular sales, unless they are in excess of $50 per month; he pays no tax on rent, doctor's hills, insnrnnnn snln nt nnrsnnnl nr vr.nl nrnnnrt.v CNCi ONE '. , 7 , vvrioj, ana more man mat, no rax on came or poultry ieoa pm.CI,ase(l for his OWN USE. . , , . , .. .. . And yet here is the Journal seriously attempting to persuade the farmer! of this state, that the sales tax will hurt them more than anyone else ; and if they doii't pay their food produot tax tax, we repeat, which they CAN'T pay for it's not levied stove to home, the "last rag from the mouth I" Sad, sad very sad I Where Pioneer Heroine Battled Savage Horde Though the years have been many, i opened fire, wounding the daugnter. the old -timers of southern Oregon I while Mrs. Harris kept up a steady still remember the vallance of pioneer motherhood when Indians roamed on paths of war, attacking pioneer fami lies attempting to build homes In a new country. The story of the Har ris family today almost a tradition and the battle about their log cabin will never be forgotten. Memories of the heroism of Mrs. Harris who held back Indiana tor hours sfter her husbsnd had been mortally wounded and her daughter shot through the shoulder, will again take on definite form during Oregon's Dlsmond Jubilee celebration In Med ford next June ft to 0. observing the 75th anniversary of atatehood and paying homeage to pioneers who set tled an unknown country. The autumn dsys of 1868 found the Hsrrls family In the Oravs creek hills. Savages approached the lonely cabin early one October day with death to all their motive. The hired man wss killed In the yard His skeleton wss found a year later bleaching In the summer sun. The Harris boy, David, was slain but waa never found, Mr. Harris was shot while near the front of the cabin and stumbled In side. Hurriedly he tsught his wife how to use the family firearms, a rifle, a double-barrel shotgun, a re volver and a pistol. The Indians Understand! "food products" to the grocery lose everything from his "cook to pay his sales tax. Journal of willful and malicious only alternative is to accuse that ignorance, everyone who has taken the time tax KNOWS that the food pro sells his potatoes or eggs, or farmer CAN pay a sales tax on store, for HIMSELF. to pay 1 at our esteemed Portland con- right to oppose the sales tax, BLACK AND WHITE, double- delinquency under the sales tax, state i cah see, is that because of the ' tax sentiment, the official mouth temrjorarilv lost its head, his gas; he pays no tax as an , ' , j all their property trom cook from the back and the last bite stream of bullets at the attackers, who aought safety behind trees. Be tween shots she attended her expir ing husband and until nightfall held back the savages, who finally with drew. (Photo by Peter Brltt) The next day volunteer soldiers brought ths herotc women to Jack sonville with her dsughter. Though death has overtaken her many yeara ago, her name haa never died, In scribed forever on the undtmmed psges of Oregon history. Wheat Delegates Talk Export Price ROME, April . (AP) Discussion of a minimum export price for wljeat again occupied the attention of the! delegates to the world wheat advisory commission tod.. AU countries now have been heard wh,n """0 ssld something Incon on the question. equentlal and barged out. There were After the morning meeting, the ' ""or1" hfTr ntl I begin to suspect he delegatea aald Informally that their study was progressing uniformly. Confers Here B. P. Anderson of San Pranclsco spent Sunday In Med ford conferring with Contractor Bill von der Hellen. Mr. Anderson ar rived here on the Shasta In the morn ing, and returned south on ths even ing (rain. Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to persons! health and hygiene not to dis ease diagnosis- or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number ol letters received only tew can be an swered. No reply ran be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady. Wt El Camlno, Beverly Bills, Cel. WHY THE POLITICIANS RUN THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT The administration of public health is subject to the whim of the polit ical boaa In every burg In Yankee land from Hlckvllle on the Hudson to Hot Dog City, California. With every election the political gang that wine imme d lately turns out the Incumbent of the better berths In the health depart ment and pute in deserving "work ers In their places. Public health la as solid a patronage racket for the politicians as la the conduct of our prisons everywhere In this crooked country. A woman whose huaband works In a foundry asks whether fumes from coke are polaonoue. , At the foundry they have used heaters all through the plan this past winter, burning ooKe and having no pipe or flue con nection to carry the fumes out of the work room. Her husband suffers constantly from splitting headache, and so do many other workmen em ployed there. The woman thinks It la against the law, but her husband says no, that state Inspectors are around about once a month and If It was against the law the Inspectors wouldn't Allow It. Naive, the dumb cattle are about these matters, eh, fellow capitalists. Now if the graft-ridden town where this condition exists were blessed with a plain un beholden health officer something after the fashion of the one who has mode Rochester, K. Y., famous this good woman would never have thought of writing to me about the matter. She would have reported It to the local Dr. Goler, and he would have had stovepipe on those furnaces or stoves in short order or the owners of the plant would have found themselves In seri ous trouble. Of course any such heaters, no matters what fuel Is burned In them, must have stovepipes to carry the products of combustion out of the room. A coke fire, a coal fire, a kerosene or oil burner, a gas stove, or evon wood fire, may give off the deadly odorless ca rbon raonox ide gas or fumes If there Is a closed or Insuf ficient draft or If there la any leak In the stovepipe or flue. It takes only a small pollution of the air of shop or room with carbon mon oxide to produce poisoning, and split ting headache Is one common sign) NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.Mclntyre NEW YORK, April 9. In the man ner of Arnold Bennett's Journal: I like Kay Brush's term for the dilet tante Lucius Bee be aa "New York's most exquisite mug." At break fast Col. P. said women and the Stock Exchange ruined mors men than drugs snd liquor. I n cllned to sgree. At a dinner, sitting next to her, I found Mary Plckford of ex- sT traorainary charm, her conversational range wide and more than most actresses unde ceived about the stability of the claque. Her emotions are typically Irish In the clouds one day, the lowlands the next. I finished Thomaa Burke'a "The Beauty of England." His darkling prose of Llmehouse and Its cause ways better stuff. I'm ever promts Ing to write vignettes of people I see In apartment house halls, but aiwnys procrastinate. Sometimes I think I would muddle life even In Utopls. Margaret Illlngton wss not only a superb and adorable actress, but how thoughtful always. Ws had a mutual gastronomic weakness potato bread. Wherever she found It in her travels she sent a loaf or so. Her wsy with every one. It will be difficult for her j Eddie to take up life again without her. t tried excitedly to dlsl on the wireless Meredith Wilson's suite called "O. O. Mclntyre," broadcast from San Francisco. The work Is in three movements. The first "Thlngums bobs" 4he second. Andsnte. "Thoughts While Strolling." snd the third "Locsl Boy Makes Good." Static prevented reception save for a few snatches, and I was highly flattered. But I never "get" anything I want on the radio. This morning I told M. I would not Indulge In a spurt of anger again. Last evening In Dunhlll's I lost my temper and my voice became a thin squeak, like a rusty hinge. And I was hoarse for two hours. Jeanne Eagles once told me that when flung Into a violent pet she had double vision for hours snd the bsck of her neck throbbed like a frog's throat. WorrT n1 humanity's twin P0"0"1 - Irvln Cobb dropped by to read some clippings in the easy chslr. He a in csim. letnargic numor. and has reached the point of ahunntng folk because they expect him to be funny. But little wonder! One story I've heard him tell of a Paducah char acter 50 times and each time funnier. Wisecracks die overnleht but a good story never stales. S. D. Coblents' vam of the Chinese wood-chopper, for Instance. Or Chsrlle Russell's rf mating the pumpkin vines. Or Mon- SLs -;: m (I Brady, M.D. of mild carbon monoxide poisoning. The reason why the health admin istration Is left to the tender mercies of the polltlclons Is obvious. - Bis business can't be bothered by a lot of fool laws and ordinances which Interfere with business. For Instance the manufacture and sale of gas heat ers that have no stovepipe connec tion and no provision for this safety factor. The people wouldn't buy and use so many of the dangerous con traptions If the law or ordinance pro hibited the pipe If ss kind. So the bootlicking health officers or com-; ml as loners hang on to their soft Jobs as long as the boss likes the way! they betray the health and the lives of the people In these minor matters, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Appendicitis Is Pathology. Our hygiene class at school has taken up the study of appendicitis, Is operation the only cure lor chronic appendicitis? Kindly send me articles and pamphlets concerning appendi citis. Miss B. R. Answer "Chronic appendicitis'1 is not a lesion or condition a doctor can diagnose. It Is Just a guess which affords an excuse for an ex. ploratory operation a look see. I have no such pamphlets. This Is a health service. I cannot distribute morbid Information or advice Indiscriminate' ly. There Is enough the pupils should learn about simple hygiene, without branching off Into pathology. Pure Milk. What diseases can be contracted by consumers of milk where steriliz ation of dairy equipment la not en forced? What diseases other than Tbc. that affect cows may be con tracted by persons drinking the milk? D. O. Answer Certsln diseases which the milkers or other handlers of the milk or dairy equipment happen to have for Instance, typhoid fever, amebic dysentery, diphtheria, possibly strop tococclcosls or septic sore throat or scarlet fever. Prom- the cows may come not only tuberculosis but also septic sore throat or streptococclcoils from infection of the udder, and un dulant fever If the animals happen to have contagious abortion. 1 Unless -iyour doctor sasurea you the milk Is pure, it Is a wise precaution, I mine, to boll it for five minutes, no matter If It purports to have been ."pasteur ized." (Copyright. 1834, John P. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 265 E. co mlno, Beverly Kills, Cel. tague Glass' of the Cockney doorman at Old Vic. Or Chic Salo's of the village hackman'a new hack. How capricious the average mor tal's amusement taste. At one of those continental type of music halls I saw a turn I liked tremendously a grotesque girl dancing with a comic sense of lazy rhythm. Something like Pugot at La Seals In Paris. I roared. No one else seemed to laugh and a lady suggesting Julia Hoyt eyed me through her lorgnette. The act laid an egg that night. Dawn Powell's "The Story of a Country Boy" estab lishes her In the top bracket of de plete! of American life. Along with Sinclair Lewis, Charlea O. Norrls, Edna Perber and Pannle Hurst. Sunny days hive a strolling urge. I like to saunter down Second avenue, the street pleasing me most In the Ghetto. Frequently I stumble upon a book. George Moore's "The Lake," par example. Reading exquisitely but msklng no sense. I like the foreign smells, the dandles of the Yiddish stsge who strut and tuxedoed head waiters who stand In doorways at sundown, like George Rector In the old days of Oliver st Tour d'Argent. And that quaint bureau do tabac under the elevated where they sell tiny candle-like matches. In hand painted boxes and Voltaire's Candlde In a yellow French paper back. I must take Hattle Belle Johnston there some time. In the astonishing blzzerle of theatrical first nights nothing In trigues me like the shirt fronts of Bernard Glmble and Joe Moore, smooth expanses of white, stiffly crepitant. No matter how much they laugh, their shirt bosoms remain se rene at the curtain drop. As though Just taken out of the pink tissue of a French laundry. I never get beyond a smile and that drily at the theatre, yet my shirt fronts, after a play, sug gest a concertina designed by the mad King of Bavaria. Most amusing of the seasonal hilarities Is the Hepburn girl, snatching at 'publicity Oarbo llke, hiding from reporters and sneak ing on a liner via third class. Apropos de rein! (Copyright. 1934, McNsught Syndi cate, Inc.) IPN PUT !N NARROW ESCAPE SAI.KM. April ,-(AP) Justice Harry Belt of the Oregon supreme court, and president of tbe Marlon County Isaak Walton League, with two companions had a narrow escspe from drowning while fishing yester- 1ST - The Judge, hla son George, and "VAVT "0r"'.y' r. i rsisi iram a wsun ine m w . tne estucca river near Heoo wnen tne boatj struck an under-water cable ' and capslred. Judge Belt and his son were able to grssp the bottom of the boat and cling to It for a long time until It was taken down stream by the current to sand bar. Plas-1 eckl swam to ahore and reached It near exhaustion. WINDOW GLASS Ws sell window glass and will replace your broken windows reasonably. Trowbridge Cao urn vroru. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. THIS headline flares from the front page: "France Fearful of Armed Revolt." France, one of Europe's most con servative nations the only country of major Importance remaining on the gold standard. France, -whose boast has been, until very recently. that the depression hss left It rela tively untouched. Yet armed revolt Is feared. Can you Imagine that? THIS armed revolt, a Paris dispatch asserts, Is being prepsred by both "rightists" and "leftists." Thousands of rifles sre said to have been smuggled Into France during the past few weeks aa If there weren't enough there already. Prance being probably the most heavily armed country on earth. SILLY people in this country tell us we should forbid ownership of guns by our citizens. This flock ot guns pouring over the borders Into Franca shows us how useless such a prohibition would be. As a matter of fact, forbidding ownership of guns In this countr; ould be exsctly equivalent to con centrating possession of guns In the hands of criminals. Honest citizens would observe the law. but crlmlnsls WOULDN'T. BUT let's go back,' for a moment, to France, and thla statement thst armed revolution Is being prepared : by both "rightists" and "leftists." What Is a "rightist?" What Is "leftist?" These are strange terms .In this country. A "RIGHTIST" is an extreme con servative. A "leftist" ii an ex treme radical. A "centrist" Is a middle-of-the-roader. These terms arise out of the fact that In European legislative assem blies the conservative members sit on the right side of the hall, the radicals on the left side, and the mld-dle-of-the-rosders In the center. In this country, we mix 'em all up together. THEY do many things differently In Europe. In most European countries, both monarchies and republlca, the premier la the reel head of the government, the president or the king being more or less of a figurehead.. When the legislative assembly, which corresponds to our congress, votes AGAINST the premier, he and his whole cabinet resign; the presi dent or the king appoints a new pre mier and the premier choosea a new cabinet. So, you see, they get a "new deal" rather often over tiere. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT, the Other day, vetoed the appropriation bill providing Increases In veteran com pensation and In "salaries" to public Job-holders "sslarles," please note; no feeder at the public trough ever accepts anything so bsnal aa wages. 'Sslarles" are dignified. Mere wages sre not. And the holder of a public job Is frightfully touchy about his dignity. BUT we stray from the subject. If WE followed the European custom. President Roosevelt and his cabinet would have resigned after congress passed the appropriations. bill over his veto, and we would then have had a NEW president and a new cabinet. Would that have solved our problems? Most emphatically. It WOULDN'T. It would merely have precipitated us Into a peck of NEW ones. THE EUROPEAN system, revolu tions and all, la all right for Europe, If Europe LIKES IT. The less we meddle with Europe's affairs, the better It will be for us. But for ourselves, we prefer our OWN SYSTEM. BRAIN TRUST ACCUSER OFF TO EXPLAIN WORDS CHICAGO. April 9. (API Aceom psnled by his wife. Dr. William A. Wirt. Gary Instructor, departed for Washington yesterday on the Capitol Limited, to appear before a special house Investigating committee to ex plain hla recent .charges that certain members of the "brain trust" plsn ned to torment a revolution. f 8 Midget Photo 10o Pessley Studio. Notice of Final Hearing. In the County Court of the state of Oregon in and for Jackson County, In the Matter of the Estate of R. R. Duncan. Deceased, Notice is hereby given that O. H. filed his First snd FlnaV Account ol Administrator and petitioned for sn ord uhng the esute, and thst Thursday the 10th day of May. IBM, at 10:00 a. m.. In the County Conn Chambers. Medford. Oregon, haa ben fixed as the time and place ot hearing ssld Petition. . Al1 Prsona Intereted are notified 10 "PP" thf". n5 to ncw count should not be approved, and the Administrator dlschsrged and the Surety relssed. I O. H. BRNOTSON Administrator of the Etstl of R. B. Duncan, deceased.! Pioneer Scion John Claire Montelth, baritone, he will appear in concert at the Southern Oregon Normal School Tues. day, April 10, at 8:15. His program, "The Oregon Trail and Indian Days," will be of Interest to all pioneers and descendents of pio neers. It will also bring a real thrill to those who have not the good for tune to be of such descent. Mr. Mon telth, as the grand-nephew of Marcus Whitman, has much to -give that has never been written In any book and he tells It In a most fascinating man ner. His songs, sung with a full rich voice, are authentic Indian ceremo nial songs. In addition he sings some of the Indian, songs based on real tribal melodies composed by such well known men as Charles Wake field Cadman. Tickets for the recital are now on sale at the Toggery. loans. Jones' excuse Is that he had nothing to do with the management of the bank, but his name Is signed to the 80 per cent liquid report. Congressman J. Buell Snyder, from a western Pennsylvonla district, will try a novel campaigning Idea. In a few weeks, before the primaries, he will get an airplane to take himself and several of his congressional col leagues up to his district. He will take them around the district In the airplane, making speeches. A strong force behind the move to amend the securities act la Mrs. Roosevelt's good friend. Congress woman Greenway of Arizona. She Is thinking about mining stock rather than the White House. . Speaker Ralney is adopting Garner (Continuea trom Page One) To Foot Sufferers THANK YOU for jour most generous response to my announcement of a clinic for Foot Correction. Yonr response was so generous that Dr. Holloway was unable to care for all the patients, nnd he will return . for two days only. Tuesday and Wednesday April 10 and 11 In order lo care for those pntlcnts. A limited number can be cared for In addition to those who already have appointments, so If you are suffering with bad feet, or from Lnmabo, Sciatica, Pelvic disorders, or any of the other various disorders which come from bad feet, please phone for appointment early, as this Is the last oppor tunity to see him before he returns to San Francisco. PHONE 1433 for an appointment A nominal fee will be charge for complete examination. DR. E. J. CARPENTER Medford. Holly Theater Bldg;, 2nd Floor MEABE. THE OROErJ ggjf yjMOf E GOIDEH P.ULS 1 1 I IV K IB Many Years is Since the name Peri began to stand for fine funeral service in this area, many, many years have passed. And with each succeeding year, the ex perience gained has made our ser vice better. Those who have called upon us will attest the fact that the present Perl service is worthy of its heritage. PERL FUNERAL HOME -MnyzticicwA ?iviEA?.CHNJv CORONER - . r,. yft UALC HMUNC 4 7 Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson County History From tbe Files of The Mall Tribune of io and 10 Year, Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY April 9, 1924. (It wss wednesdoy.) Mall Tribune will give a M35 elec trie range as first prize at the cooking school. Supreme court holds state Income tax law Invalid. America's around-the-world Were reach; Alaska. Ralph Sweeney purchases the Fred L. Heath home. Ernest Nledermeyer has a herd of 90 goats on his Jacksonville farm, F. E. Upton of Central Point will oppose Victor Bursell for oounty com missioner. County court adopts policy of "no aid for transients stranded here, as there Is plenty of work." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April 9, 1914. (It was Thursdsy.) Crescent City hsrbor to bo re-surveyed. Leonard Carpenter was In from his ranch for a few hours last night to attend a meeting of the Medford Golf and Country club. Twenty-two new members have been added since the first of the month. Sixteen-year-old boy is fined $10 for emoklng a cigarette on Main street. The youth Is paroled after lectures by County Judge TouVelle, Prosecutor Kelly and his father. The police are looking for a boy who smoked a cigarette In front of the Nash hotel, and ran when Chief Hitt son tried to catch him. The first good rain in two months falls, and the fruit and farm Inter ests smile again. MoMnrphey Here George V. Mc Murphey of the Chet Crank Adver tising agency was a business visitor In Medford today.- tactics In the house, rushing bills through before the representatives have a chance to object. He got 100 minor bills through the other day. (Copyright, 1934, by Paul Msllonl) Weather Strip Eliminates SMUDGE In the Home See Bid PINES LBR. 00. Phone l; Have Gone! w X i f