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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 30, 1934)
P2TGE F0TT1? MEDFORD M'A'TL TRIBUTE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, XPRIL 30, 1934. Medpord Mail tribune "Enryons Is Sou t turn Oregon ftud. Ihi Mill Tfibuiu' Dalli Sieept Bitiirdif Publhtm) bj MEDFtJBD I'HINTINO CO. 46-3M9 N. rir 8L 80BBHT ff. BUHL, GdJUr Ao (iritpendeirt Ntwiwpw Entered u iteond elan Bitter at lledfonj, Oregon, under Act of Man 8, 1S79. SUftKCHlI'TION KATES m MlU to Ad.aoc. DaUr, one jttr 95.00 Diitj, in ttonit i n Dally, one moots 60 Bf Carrier to Afirane Hedori). AshUnd, laekxocnUe, Central Point. Pboeolz, Taleot, Gold HIM and afl lUshvira. Dally, om rev 98.00 Dally, tlx moothi 1-25 Dally, om aorta ,80 ' All terra, eaib Id adiam. Officii! ptpn of U City of Medford. Officii pipes of Jirtioo County. IffiSIHKK OF THIS ASSOCIATED PUKBS BMC171U Full Lud Win Dcrrle lbs AMoeUtM. Prm U eieltiilielj tntltlcd U at OM ror publleitloo or ill oew auptiensi oredJUd to It or otber1s errditwj lo tbU pipor ud also fo tbo loeil new puhlhhrd brrrln. AU rlgbti for puullctlioo of ipedil dUpiLcbM win in iuo rcKnra. MEMBER Or UNITED PgKSS muBeu or audit buiieau Or CI1ICUUTI0N8 Adrertlslnf KrprescntllliM IL C MOVEKSEN 1 COMPACT Omen to Nn York. Chimp). Drlrott, Sia studies bat AntelM Reattl. I'ortlind. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Candidates have started acting the fool, and some of them are not act ing. , , 8000 men are chasing No. 1 Bandit John Dillinger. with scant success through the northern Minnesota . brush. In the light of hl known I astuteness, it may be that John has ; joined this gigantio posse, and la i now chaalng himself. The esteemed Portland Journal Is editorially disgusted with vice con ditions in "wildcat" towns near the Grind Coulee dam. In Washington state. The conditions are due to Man, but the wildcat gets the blame. m OlUaens are getting so, If asked for match by a stranger, they don't give him a dime, from force of habit, i ! ; Living eosta have increased 1.3 per ' cent If It can be called living. Olorlflcatlon of the good -for-noth- in. MnllmiM tn tha rintrlment of the worthy poor. An Idaho native has been sen tenced to three years In state prison bid toten million dollnn. h would hv had a bettor lawyer. Miss phemnyo Sparrow reported to 1 th police that a rough appearing oat followed her to tho front door of her &Mt in Awning Arma. Aa a result of the Do prowl on, a number have atgned a pledge not to realst Opportunity the next time It J cornea along. SOLON SHOWS nillNOINO VP (Cong. Record.) I do that because ho matter what the lady says to me I have to smile and bear It, becauM I am a gentle man and I cannot talk back. I never say anything unkind to a lady. They can aay anything they want to me, but I always smile. Unfortunately, sometimes, when we are fighting a bill that a lady wants we cannot yield to them. (Laughter.) Mrs. Norton. Will the gentleman yield? Mr, man ton. Oh, I yield to my good friend, because X am her friend, and the gentlewoman knows It. I am going to try to kill her bill, but I shall be pleated to yield to her, Mrs. Norton. Tho gentleman knows that In the end he will probably Tote for it. Reports from the rural areas Indi cate that back -of -the-barn Is giving the street corner a battle, as a forum for telling campaign lies. This change of venue haa many advantages, and nab lea a campaign liar to charge a county official with everything but electricity, at a safe distance from the courthouse. Nobody ever thought of the rear of a stable, a a broad casting center before. The next budget committee should set aside funds for the erection of a barn on the courthouse lawn. This would enable a cltliwn to pay his taxes, I and have a barn handy to get behind and tell how he was robbed, and all about the corruption he discovered In the office he is seeking. It would also relieve the congestion on the street corner, and in the course of time grow Into a Lying-Center, It would also save tha time and gasoline now expended In running from barn to -bam. On the other band, the courthouse barn would be close to the true facts and figures, and the i .-ir. !? . , I the court house and rub hi, nose In his own He, Instead of waiting for a chance to catch him while snooping around the courthouse. Science haa proven that the further the barn from the courthouse, the bigger the He. In other word, distance Inflates falsehoods. A lie told behind a Pros pect barn has a greater bust measure ment than one whlnpered behind a Jacksonville barn. A courthouse barn would not stop the lying It would Just centralise It. There will be chronlo llara as long as there are chronlo believer of Ilea. ' 8s correct. y o.rij in an Artist Mild by Itaeiwjo B, Hoffmann, Ridiculous! TrHE police of the country are seeing things. Every holdup man that gets away and plenty of them do ii John IHI linger or looks like him. No matter where the crime occurs, the police claim it wai committed by Dillinger or a member of his gang. The Dillinger obsession is becoming ridiculous, Yesterday, just when the tiary was proudly announcing locked to prevent the notorious breaking in and rescuing his no way connected with John, They didn't do the job with a wooden pistol but they could have done so. The one pistol they had was never fired. They merely waved it about, locked up one group of guards, dis armed another, walked down a ladder and went their wsy rejoicing. THE same day in Chicago, in a police car, saw another They started in pursuit and finally discovered the car at a filling station. The policemen got out upon they were covered by a to hold up their hands but forced The four yeggs escaped, and the policemen are positive one of them was Dillinger and surmise two others were Dillinger 's pals, Baby Pace Nelson and John the Fox. AGAIN, not a shot was fired I WHT. give our police, GUNS, and arm our prison guards! If a showdown comes there appears to be an unwritten law not to use them. To a man up a tree it looks few more town marshals like many flat-footed and wooden headed policemen. No one denies there is a war on in this country, between organized crime and disorganized society. But a war in which one aide shoota to kill and the other side doesn't shoot at all can only end in one way. 17 A R he it from us to advocate bloodshed. In fact that is precisely what we are not doing. UNLESS there is some disposition to fight fire with fire, on the part of the mid-west constabulary, bloodshed will steadily increase, and the shedding of it will ALL be on the part of the innocent and law-abiding citizenry. A new spirit and a little new blood is needed in law enforce ment oircles particularly in our larger cities. Prison guards t id t b k do j f ' city police paid to meekly stand Such travesties on an honored 4, . . . are not so imperative. We need a little more of the Canadian mounted police spirit in this country, if this war against crime is ever to be won. The sooner we have it, the sooner the bloodshed will stop and the tiresome "shooting" will be over. The Tax j IT is already apparent that, despite the S percent rebate and installment payments provided by the legislature and the a I federal loans on homes and farms, tax -delinquency is to be I heavy this year. The first four aoliuquencxea. Of Columbia county's total had been paid at the date of the had only $17,643 or 9.7 paid on a roll of $97,993. Hood River had $137,382 paid on a roll of $407,745, but of this 25 taxpayers paid $90,923, leaving only $46,458 All of which indicates that our property tax system is on the verge of collapse, and can no longer alone support the gov ernments which depend upon it for revenues. Unless taxes in substantial amounts are gathered from other sourees, many of our schools must olose and other Excluding utilities, which are property on Oregon tax rolls was delinquent last November. Out of 154,000 taxpayers, 80,000 were delinquent, many of them for two or three years. Unless relief is had, many of the far mers and other property owners will be foreclosed and driven into the army of the unemployed! For emergency reliof, the aalcs tax offers tho only way out, as taxation has come to consume about all the inoome from pro perty, some of which because of high taxation has become a liability. The sales tax has solved the crisis in other states and will provide the way out in Oregon if adopted. It will bring in $4,000,000 a year to keep open the schools and relieve property of that amount of taxation. Geo. Putnam in Salem Capital Journal. Communications Jubilee Jtfiers. To the Editor: Tils Jubilee business Is (alnlng mo mentum let me tell you. and If peo ple don't Invite their frl,nds and get their own work done up and "sot" to to. they'll be sorry. I Its hard to tell what you wont aee In the parade. Here w read In the Tribune about these black widow apldsrs, and It caused some talk about town, everyone dodging spider webs like the dickens, side-stepping every Innocent looking Insect that crawl, along the sidewalk, t suppose t.'i, poor spiders heard or the Jubilee so thought they'd turn out eavly to liven things. There are some whoppers around though. The other day 1 beard ol a man w.ho went up on top of Rosy Ann to get some kindling, he picked out a good slsed log and started to rolllHg It down hill. H, got tired about halfway down and flopped down to rest awhile, went oft to sleep and when he woke up there was a pair of those black widow spiders hitched up to, the log and starting off down hill. The guy for got to give th,m his house number and tie last anyone saw of them they were dragging that log out West Main heading for Jacksonville, and the last I heard of Verne Shan gle he was ndlng a motorcycle hot on theli' trail, trying to get them chained up some place to use In the parade. Well, well, t bun to uy ybal ou ' I warden of the Ohio state peniten that the doors had been double and ubiquitous Dillinger from imprisoned pals, three convicts, in proceeded to break OUT. three city policemen, fully armed car crash through a stop light. and approached the car, where machine gun and not only forced to give up their guns. as though the country needs a the late Wyatt Earp, and not so t WOoden nistols. nor are - ' by while gangsters disarm them, and useful profession should be , ,. Crisis counties reporting show heavy tax of $700,000, but $216,392 first delinquency. Curry county or 14.6 paid by all others. public activities decay or cease, not delinquent, over half the (Conunueo Irom Page One) ago the British lay down on their far eastern lesdershlp Job and we had to carry It alone. Apparently they are ready to go ahead thla time. Moat of the big boys here are con vinced that the lafrst Japsnese ma neuver will case endless unsstlatac lory diplomatic negotiations but nothing am serious. There have been some suspicions that Agriculture Secretary Wallace's tariff campaign haa been serving a useful political purpose, as well as sn economic one. It hss diverted at tention somewhat from the AAA. At least that Interpretation waa put on It by one of the first five new dealers, who said subtly of the new Wallace campaign: "I told Henry he ought to ,top his hpg-kllllng. wont see In the Jubllre parade. O. M. COOK. Hertford. April 90. P Oaraea Jrwim, fei. tu-J.. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal beallh and Hygiene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment, wlU be answered by Or. Brady u stamped elf-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letter, sboulr) be brief and written Is Ink. Owing to the large number or letters received only a fen can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions Address Or. William Brady, Wb El Camlno, Beverly Bills, Col. THE HYOIENE OF SWIMMING. A correspondent writes that he has been a life guard and a pool mana ger for several years and has rescued a number of vie tlms and has seen msny others res cued. Once In i while such a res cued person claims to have suffered leg cramps. The cor respondent has never seen heard of a case of stomach cramps, however. He has questioned many other life guards about thla and none of them has observed such a case, either. He says the Red Cross pam- nhlet No. 1003 states that cramps are due to eating lust neiore swimming. The only 111 effect he has observed from swimming Immediately alter eattne Is nausea or upset stomacn, and In such Instances invariably the individual has Just eaten a breakfast of sausage and pancakes, or a big highly seasoned hamburger sandwich or "hot dog." The Red Cross pamphlet Is probably written by some nice old gentleman of some social prominence, or else by some bright but Inexperienced young chap who Is the protege of some social leader who Is a big noise in the organization. At any rate the notion that any evil comes from en- Joying a swim Immediately after meal Is without foundation in fact, Mere common sense. If not stomach sense tells you to avoid any unneces sary effort of any kind Immediately after a big gorge. But unless you are an Invalid In which case your own doctor is your best adviser there Is no reason why you shouldn't go right In after breakfast after lunch or after dinner. As the correspondent's observations and inquiries Indicate, the occurrence of cramps of any kind is a question able inference. It Is an inference one commonly made to eplatn other wise Inexplicable drowning of a good swimmer. Any one who attempts a hard or long effort In very cold water Is cer tain to tire more quickly than he would In warmer water, and when complete exhaustion comes there may be a sensation of cramping In the powerless muscles. However, this is not a cause of drowning. Cramps Just don't happen except in morbid Imagination. No room here to discuss the various disease conditions or accidents which may cause sudden drowning of a good swimmer. Suffice that these cases are frequently ascribed to "cramps." NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.Mclntyre NEW YORK, April 30. The pala ver turned to coincidence. And I related this. During the Chicago World's Fair my father registered at the Great Nor thern from his home town, Plattsburg, Mo. He noticed Im mediately above his signature that of "E. O. Hall, Plattsburg," a gentleman my father knew. In his room, he phoned to Mr. Hall. A voice he did not recognise said he was Mr. Afo ri Hall. Father explained who he was snd exchanged salutations of the dsy. The Mr. Hall waa courteous but vague. He did not recall knowing an H. B, Mclntyre. "You are B. C. Hall, the lawyer from Plattsburg h?" my father inquired. The response waa affirmative. My father explained again who he was. Still there was indecision so my father Inquired: "Let me get this right, you are B. C. Hall, the lawyer from Pittsburgh In Clinton county?" The gentleman replied he was and would come to my fathers room. They met and were perfect strangers. The comedy of errors had resulted from the fact that not once had the state of Mlsaourl been men tioned. The bewildered gentleman waa B. C. Hall, a lawyer from Pitts burgh, which la In Clinton county, New York. A further coincidence, as I recall, was that both had been mayors of their cities. At the Oerdee in Cincinnati, a ren deavous for visiting ball teams and vaudeville folk, there was a blunder ing good humored bus-boy. the crowd at our newspaper table called, some what cruelly. "Stewp." a shortening of Stupid. Despite giggles and his comicalities of syntax, he never for got to be courteous, won a place In our afftvtlons and, as bus -bora do, passed out of our ken. In Cologne, 30 years later. I arrived by moVor one night at the Dome hotel. It warned to my wife and me we were attended with unusual graclousnesa all the next day and until the next noon. The manager. In a cutaway, escorted lis to the car on departing, present ing a beautiful bouquet. To freshen the flowers later we stopped at a roadside Inn for water. My wife no titrd then a card attached. It read: "A joyous journey ts the wish of Mr. j Mclntyre's old American friend Stewp." Arnold Bennett, during a seasonal stay at Harbison, used to do much bicycling In the cool glades of Fon talnbleau, One warm afternoon after long spin he dismounted and stretched out i a green arvdia to ' 5- The correspondent says my com ment about the sanitation of swim ming pools startles him. The pool he has charge of has only filtered water, and Is clarified by alum and soda ash and disinfected by chlortna tlon, and regular bacteriological tests show negative germ count. Bo what diseases can possibly be caught by swimming In such a pool? The answer Is that the method of sanitation seems as good as It can be, yet If John Jones and I happen to enter the pool at the same time and John or I happen to have any little communicable condition we are likely to share It, regardless of how clear and pure the water may be. The more persons patronising the pool the greater the risk involved. Could you catch the crl In such a clean pool as the correspondent de scribes? Aye, aye, and a few other diseases besides. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. ' Dlathermv tor Painful Shoulder. Please tell me Just what your opin ion of diathermy Is for dissolving calcified bursa In the shoulder. Mrs. F. E. Answer In my opinion the best treatment for such bursitis (painful shoulder) Is a series of dally appll' cations of diathermy. If that falls to cure the trouble In two weeks, then It Is In order to consider surgical removal of the affected bursa, usually the sudeltolt or subacromial pad Just under the tip of shoulder. Clarifica tion of the bursa (as shown In the X-ray film) doesn't signify much, for calcification may remain long after the trouble Is cured, or clarification may ahow In spite of severe bursitis. When diathermy falls to relieve the attack, the only alter native Is manipulation of the stiff shoulder to break up adhesions. That requires general anesthesia, and If the patient Is going to take an anes thetic It Is Just as well to remove the bursa and be done with It. Snuff. Friend used snuff for years, but gave It up a while ago. He claims It seemed to clear his head. Re Is professional singer. He thinks be will resume using snuff. Please tell me whether it Is Injurious. E. P. Answer According to recent maga zine article there Is still several mil' lion dollars spent for snuff each year In the United States. Most users chew a smsll cud of It, but a few snuff It In the traditional way. Its effect, however used, Is the same as chewing or smoking. (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 203 E. Ca mmo, Beverly Hills, Cal. relax and watch the clouds laze by. In vrnal reverie he recalled one Hodgklns, an English friend he had not seen since youth, and made mental notation to look him up when he returned to London. Refreshed by a brief nap, he carried his bicycle to the road and was about to pedal off when he decided to slake his thirst at one of those cupless drinking foun tains nearby. . A man ahead, bowing over to Up the gush of water, raised up. It was Hodgklns. One night rather late Joe Moore and Lee dwell dropped In at my apartment with John Neylan, San Francisco attorney. We discussed newspaper topics, a subject In which all were Interested, until quite late. In the hall, Neylan, plunged what he thought was the elevator but ton. It rang the apartment of neigh bors across the hall I did not at the time know. "You are on your own' I exclaimed to Neylan. "I do not know those people. Make the apolo gies." Unable to arouse her servants, the mistress of the establishment finally came to the door. Neylan started to fumble an apology, both of their faces lit up, and they went Into a dance. She was Mrs. R. L. Heebener, a San Francisco lady Ney lan had known since childhood. Flo Zlegfeld greatly admired the artistry of the ballroom dancer, Flor ence Walton, when she was In ascend ancy, in his office with him one dsy he expressed himself about her. His then manager, Frank Hope, came in and Zlegfeld inquired If Hope knew where she was these day. While Hope was riffling through a vest pocket memorandum book, Ztegfeld's private secretary, Miss Dix. stepped In to an nounce: "Miss Florence Walton la outside to see you." She got in from Europe that morning. I reserve for a finale the spookiest of all coincidences I have observed. There was In Dayton, O a bar known as Klefsber's, among whose pstrons was a lovable telegraph operator known to all middle west newspaper shops as Charles Melrose. We were lined up one afternoon lifting a ahog to vile care, but In mld-atr Melrose put his glass down. "I must go home quickly. he ssld and rushed out. leaving his overcoat. It's been long ao and exact detalLi are vague. But at the exact moment Melrose reached home, a doctor had turned from either Melrose's mother or sister, bowed re i signedly and pulled a sheet over the 1 pillow (Copyright, 1934. McNaught catc. Inc.) Syndl- D. i4. V. Planning Another 7nc4iBWTnrnw, in'1VUiC' sVUMCC increase the d.w. The D. A. V. will hold an old fashioned barn dance Tuesday, May 1. at the D. A. V. employment head quarters. 3ft Soutn Riverside. So many of those who attended the last affair requested that the D. A. V. continue the barn dances, that It was decided to hold another with AI Wright, and real old time nnt-ic. Door prlwa will be given for the best old- tana costume. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS IF YOU are a regular subscriber of this newspaper, your way of life Is probably pretty well settled. You may lack many of the comforts of life, and even some of the necessities we or dinary people are getting used to that after four years of depression. But at least you know pretty well where you are going to sleep tonight, and what you are going to do tomo row. Including what you are going to eat and where you are going to get It. SO THIS question becomes perti nent. How much do you know, if any, about the life of the transients who have become an Important class of the population In these years of hard times and scarce employment? If you don't know as much as you'd like to, It will pay you to go down some representative street and ta?x to the transient relief service of FERA which means Federal Emergency Re lief Administration. You will learn plenty that is In teresting. ffllTHAT kjnd of people do you deal W with mostly?" this writer ask ed the Southern' Oregon director of transient relief, yesterday. "All kinds," he answered. "We have men with college degrees. Including master's and doctor's degrees. We have business men, clerks, government workers, skilled laborers, common la borers. "As a matter of fact, we deal here In the transient relief bureau wltn Just about an average cross-section of life. We could take the people who come to us and start an average com munity, with about all the ordinary businesses, professions, arts and trades represented. "Misfortune In this depression h.is been an individual matter not matter of class." tfllTE DEAL, of course, pretty large- " ly with the wreckage with the flotsam on the stream of life That Is apparent from our name- transient relief service. The people who come to us have been shaken loose. In some way or other, by some shock or other, from the ordinary, settled ways of living. But when you come to know thel: problems, you find that they are just common, average human beings af ter aU. "Our Job Is to help them back to a settled way of living, and It Is an In teresting Job. After some time spent at it, I think It is an Important J jb more Important than a lot of peo ple realize." THERE is a lot of talk going around 1 to the effect that those on re lief, transient or otherwise, don't real ly want to work, but prefer to draw their rations from the government, without effort or responsibility. Th.'s director doesn't take much stock in this talk. Ninety per cent of those who come to us," he says, "genuinely want to work end earn their own way in the world. They don't want relief. They want JOBS'. They want to know again that they are earning their own way in the world. "The Job of reabsorbing these trans- tents Into Industry Isn't going to be half as big as a lot of people try to tell us It will be." 4-4 ttllTHAT trade, profession, or busl Tf ness Is most numerously repre sented among those who come to you?" this writer asked. "I don't think I can answer that,1 the director answered with a grin. "because I don't really know. "There aren't many editors, how ever," he added. - can't find time to be transients Although a lot of them would like to be. There's alwaya too much to be done around a newspaper although what there Is to be done isn't always profitable. "I REALLY think." the director says, "that cooks are about as numerous as anybody coming to us. I don't know just why that should be. and I don't even know positively that It Is true. But a lot of cooks do come to us here In the transient re lief. I reckon one reason Is that cooks are temperamental. They are ART ISTS, with the true artistic tempera ment. When something goes wrong, LIFE LONG "FRIEND" Keeps Them Fit at 70 This safe: all ver - tabiiMaUTe NR has been an dependable m a family doctnrdur ing their trying "after forty' ycart. MR keeps them fffftiJar year after year faithfully wu' No wontlrr tlwtr Twilng of life " fci po free from complaints M 1 Llious cf people wflcom t he atd of hi n ItaNe conrctiTei For Natures Remedy sirerurthenBandriwiilatea theflfireUmui 1 1 re t ract ; safe ly carries a way t he poiaoos th bnnn on head- a-bes. colo. aWMB TUMS' Quvk rrWi tor sod trxl-rf-s.-n-i. hrartNum Onlv l'V THIIS MtWCINl CHtlTl- roa ?o YUM I they axe apt to fly off the handle and quit the job, even In times like these. "Anyway, we get a lot of cooks." TJOUSEWTVES who cook three meals sTl a day, month In and month out year in and year out, probably won't find It hard to understand that state ment. Many of them, possibly most, In all probability, have seen moments when throwing up the Job and gofrg -ut vagabonding, with no responsibilities no meals to prepare, no dishes to wash would have seemed like heaven. But they evidently restrain them selves at these moments, for the cooks, fererred to aren't of the housewife kind. There are practically no house wives among the transients, BUT this column 'is running into a lot of length. So let's cut It off here, and go on with this subject on another day. Communications Ariel Soars Again. To the Editor: My attention was drawn to a com munication In the April 30 Issue of your paper called "A Strange Anal ogy." The' communication ended In the following statement: "Wanted editorials that help to put teeth into law-enforcement." I would supggest to the writer of this article that over the United States today as well as In Oregon, that the law-enforcement In protec tion of the power Interests will never lack for teeth. It seems only too evident that there will be provided a powerful pair of false teeth to put a wicked bite Into the "so-called" legal procedure In behalf of the power octopus. The editor's note asks "Does our correspondent make no distinction between murder and stock manipu lation?" I would suggest to the editor that the type of stock manipulation In dulged In by Samuel Insull and many others of his ilk who are still at large, is Indirectly responsible for the death of thousands. Does the editor condone the mur derer only when he la at a safe dis tance from his victims and the deed more decorously consummated? It Is becoming more and more ap parent to the American public that, any champion of the citizenry who has the temerity to expose the cor rupt practices and tyranny, yea, even terrorism of said utilities companies, Is forthwith persecuted, robbed, framed, trapped and railroaded to some penitentiary. Such spectacles have saddened thousands of citizens not only in Oregon, but In Minne sota also I find. I have learned directly from TJ. S. Rep. Shoemaker from Minnesota, that he has been through the peni tentiary mill for daring to expose bank Irregularities In his state. The banking system of our beloved coun try and the utilities Interests It seems click in perfect unison and are blood brothers under the skin. The whole country Is sick with the same deadly disease. Why cannot the press of the na tion cease giving us the poison of false propaganda for a cure? Give us truth, for the blessed truth alone can put real teeth Into all laws, functioning alike for a beggar or an Insull. I realize in the light of recent his tory in Jackson county that a "soft ening" toward Samuel Insull would be an altogether logical frame of mind for the editor to possess. However It takes many minds and types to make a democracy, so I re quest, yea I even challenge you to print my communication anywhere in your paper, no matter how obscure the location. Yours in behalf of Just law-en forcement. ARIEL BURTON POMEROY. R. F. D. S. Excelsior, Minnesota. April 38. City Warrants Called for Payment Notice la hereby given thet there are funds on hand in the General Fund of the City of Med ford for the redemption of Warrants Nos. 335b to 3576 Inc. Interest on the above War rants will cease after Mav 3. 1934. Dated this the 30th day of April. 1934. GUS H. SAMUELS, City Treasurer, In Ashland Todav Mrs. R. D. Tur ner Is spending today In Ashland, having made the trip by train this morning. Follow the The Great Outdoors is Yours When You Travel The Greyhound Way Relax in the perf ea comfort of s deep cushioned chair ... watch . glorious panorama unfold in the wide vision idow ... nor, vou are i really seeing the country. Trim blue and white Grey hound butts serve the entire Pacific Coast and Eastern cities on ZSZ." Mn-n' low far" mjke I'whn" SAMPLE LOW FARES O-lWi, ter-ff trie- DEPOT PORTLAND $ 5.90 $10.65 Jackson Hotel EUGENE 3.65 6.60 Central and th SAN FRANCISCO . . 7.60 13.70 Phone Jos LOS ANGELES . . . 12.40 22.35 Flight o Time (Mtdford and Jackson Coontj History From (be Piles ol lhr Mail Tribune of 20 and 10 Yean Ao. TEN YEABS AUO TODAV April SO, I02i. (It waa Wednesday) City plans a new water system, and objectlona pour In to council. Snow la melting last at Crater lake. Leader ol the world air grdllng flight reported missing. The Mm cellar ol a Jacksonville citizen la padlocked by the sherlir. Orchard lets taking out hall Insur ance. The fishing In Rogue river "was never poorer, and a disgrace to recrea tion seekers." sportsmen report. "Too msny people on wheels' is warning by President' Coolldge. "The American people are running wild and money mad." declares Methodist bishop In address at Atlanta. Ga. "The nation Is living In a fool's para dise, and aad will be the awakening," the cleric further forecasts. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April 30, 1914. (It was Thursday) "Huerta must go," America's word to A. B. O, mediators. Steamer "Siberia," with 363 aboard wrecked off Formosa. Portland I. W. W.'a hoot name of Rockefeller. Attorney Ous Newbury and Mrs. Newbury, and Mrs. August Paulsen, wife of the Spokane millionaire prop erty owner and mining man, had a narrow escape from death or serious Injury, when the front spindle of the automobile driven by Attorney New bury broke, at the approach of a bridge near Ray Gold, and a pfunge down a 10-foot embankment nar rowly averted. Plans for the 1914 county fair started. DIES IN RESEDA. CAL. Word was received here yesterday of the death In Reseda, Cal., of Isaaa Householder, long time resident of Jackson county, who made his home In Medford for a number of years. Mr. Householder died In the southern city yesterday. He will be remembered here as a happy and loving friend to the many persons he knew during the 30 years he lived In the valley. He la survived by the following sons and daughters: Ralph of Talent, Ethel of Reseda, Charles of Santa Monica, Nina Dusenberry of Gold Hill, Iva Mason of St. Helens and Mae Forbes of Eagle Point. Notice of Final Settlement In the County Court of the state of Oregon for Jackson County. In the Matter of the Estate of Alfred J. Weeks, deceased. Notice Is hereby given that the un dersigned has filed her Final Account in the above entitled matter, and the above entitled Court haa fixed May 31st, 1034, at 10:00 o'clock A. M., In the County .Court Room, In the Court House lu Medford, Oregon, as the time and place for hearing objections to said Pinal Account,. and for the settlement thereof. Gertrude E. WEEKS, Executrix. Mr. Reames Ones North attorney A. E. Reames left Sunday on the Southern Pacific for Portland. Holders of Bond Certificates of Medford Lodge No. 1168 B. P. 0. E. Funds are on rtopo.lt with the Trust Department of the Fttst National Bank of Medford for pay ment of Interest due May 1st on bond certificates of Medford Lodge No. 1168. B. P. O. E. Holders of said nond Certificates are requested to present them for Interest payment. Open Road A