FOTTH MEDFORD M23TJ TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, M'AY 7, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune "Enryfliw in Southirn Ort Rtadt till Mall Trlbum'' Dally except tatwdiy Publlihed by IfEDfORD PRINTING CO, tt-H-U It 9U BU BOB BUT W. BUHL, Wtor Ao Indtpeodiot Nmpaptr Batcrw) M weoniJ ilm vttUr t Utttford, Orffoo. QaAtt Act Of Mireb I, 1819. SUBSCRIPTION BATE! ft Hill In AriruvB Dillj, ottt retr 10-00 Dally, ill tonttai S.Tfi Dtllr. M BODtb ') R PsrrW In AdTMM MMforrJ. AlOUod, MckiODTllli, Crtra) Point, ftuuli, Wont, Oold Bill ind an Hlchvan. Dally, OM yev f0O Dally, alt months Dally, ooa bddUi .60 All Urna. eub la ufim. Omcltl papf of Um City of Mtdford. Officii! piper of JackMO County. MEMBBB Of TUB ASSOCIATED PUESt Beectrtni fitfD Uaud Wirt BwtIm 1b AuoeUUb Pratt la axehujialy wtitltd to tha uh for Dumlcatlon of all om oupateoai eradltad to It or othenriia credited Id tbla paper ind alao to tfaa local oea ouhiuhM acrois. All rlfbta for publication of apodal dlapaldM Serein art tin raamaa MKMBEB OF UNITED PBESB MEMBER Of AUDIT BO BEAD Or CIBCULATI0N1 Adrtrtlflng KepmenUtlm H. a MOtiENSEN A COMPANY Offteca la N Tori, Cnleaio, Detroit, Boa rraocliu Lot Angelaa Beattla Portland. Ye Smudge Pot ' By Arttinr Perry. Then I aoma talk of stabllshlng Stat bank. Just think of every body who swept out a bank, while working hU way through high actio"! running for bank president I A Nevada man, a divorce complaint eitea, naa nos epoicen to ni wue ior three years. Hla lawyer will ae forth he waa waiting for her to get through talking. e Complaint haa been filed against motorcyclists who wake people up, with the coming of dawn. An effort should be made to get at the root of this evil, and do something about the people who wake the motor cyclists up. A farmer towned Saturday, waving a newly purohased curry-comb In op position to the Saloa Tax. It Is a noor ourrv-oomb that won't work both ways, but that Is what alls the Sales Tax. . . e IN BAYS Or OLD (Pendleton East Oregonlan.) ; Martin Cabanakt, the Pendle , ton tailor, has seven children and Is proud of every one of them. "Umaplne," the rascally Indian mixed up In the last Indian war, Is dead and we are glad of It. Husbands should take the E. O. home and' let their wives see what Is going on. We have been re quested to make this request. (0 Years Ago Ool.) . . 'see The Administration announces Its Intention to abandon Its "prlee-flx-Ing" policy. Aa a matter of uncom plicated economics, and no regard for what effect It would have on Bul garia, It looks the thing that needed fixing, Is the pocket boon. It Is gen erally agreed that If the pocketbooxs are fat, the prices will fix themselves. And, a wallet oan't recover from an emia unless something la put In It. to take out. see One of these .days, one of the nu merous ladles traipsing over the Mid dle West with No. 1 Bandit John Dllllnger. will get ahot while rushing out the back-door of a road house with John, Then the sheriff will get edi torial scoldings for lack of chivalry and poor aim. e e adeshow oratory la a high form of eloquenoe beside which atump-apeax. Ing and Jury-pleadlnga are merely branches of hog-calllng. (New York. . er.) The Public Speaking Class dl solves Into thin air. A POETICAL O, Yeah! CAN NOW BR OIVBN So want new deals for under dogs, The masses, we believe, Are those for whom the tears are ehed. And whom they would relieve) If rotors are so Ignorant, And uninformed and dumb, Some candldatea, Who tempt the fates, Are likewise going some. Through all the bedlam, claim and charge, And racket going on, We think It simmers down to this, With all the Issues gone: The voters want to pick The Man, With some hoss sense endowed, Integrity And decency This year will win the crowd. (Oregon Voter.) GYPSiETPAYHOMAGE ST. PORTLAND, May 1 ( AP) Knights of the covered wagon, the gaudy ban gles and the horse tradee the Serbian Gypsies gathered here Sunday from all over the pacific northwest to honor their patron, St. Oeorge. Mora than 100 of the tribe making Ita headquartera In Portland were present for an all-day dinner featuring plat ters of roast aheep with onions and garlic, small pigs roasted whole, chicken and cheese cakes. Tot Quasi) irwiuHt m-h . Sam Insult, J. P. Q A1IUEL INSULL has already J ion. Whether or not he remains to be seen. The aged financier on his arrival today, makes the first pub lio statement regarding his case, years ago. He admits he erred grossly broken the law or been dishonest. Well, the lowest type of criminal is entitled to the benefit of the doubt. Legally his innocence must be assumed, until his guilt has been proved. Even' those who feel most strongly against Insull should reserve judgment, as far as his VIOLATION OF THE LAW is concerned, until his trial is DUT technically innocent or " Samuel Insull represented that type of insensate greed, and financial exploitation, which more than any other one thing, brought on the collapse of 1929, and which also more than any other one thing, the Roosevelt administration is resolved to destroy. Whether or not Insull actually BROKE the law, we don't know no one knows but that through stock promotion, holding-company manipulation, and all the tricks and dodges of high finance, he did make himself a multi-millionaire, at the expense of proper service to the people, no informed person denies. . A S has been previously pointed out in this column, the trag- edy of Samuel Insull is probably the tragedy that he came TOO LATE. We, at least, will he was no more a criminal than was a criminal. Very likely he and power companies of the tried to do with U. S. Steel. that a subsequent period of great prosperity, made his effort SUCCESSFUL; it was Insull 's tragedy that a subsequent period of economic collapse, made his effort end in DISASTER. Thousands of small investors profited when Morgan won; thousands of small investors lost all they had when Insull lost. Public opinion aoolaimed Morgan, publio opinion wants Insull 's BLOOD. But ethically speaking it is highly probable that these two men played the same game, and shared identical views as to what is right and what isn't, in the administration of Big Busi ness in this country. . XW course this diagnosis may be entirely wrong. J. P. Morgan was strictly speaking an honest man, and what he did, he did within the law. Evidence may show that Insull was dis honest, and that what he did violated the law. But if such is the case we will enough and smart enough, to usually smart and able enough obtainable, and never disregard The point is what Morgan did the unwritten law that is publio opinion but what Samuel Insull did, was a violation o that TPIMES hove ohangod. What eration ago in Big Business, is no longer according to Hoyle today, and it is all to the good that this is true. Whether Insull is oonvioted represent a type of American idol that was once worshipped in this country, but is no longer. self and the devil take the hindmost, charge all the traffio will bear, the publio be damned, etc, small extremely capable (and extremely ruthless) group with TOO muoh money; and the great majority of the people with NOT ENOUGH, it was the idol of the "billionaire" and ex treme selfishness; against the IDEAL, of a competence and true publio service. The lntter has won or at least this paper BELIEVES that it has. And behind all this talk is the determination to consolidate this victory, and make it impossible to create J. P. Morgans and Samuel Insulls, in this country, at ony time in the future. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK. May 7 In the man. ner of Arnold Bennett's Journal: A lady told me ahe waa lunching today with her husband not seen slnoe divorcing him bitterly ten yeara ago. It auggeat ed lunching with a cadaver. More than any youth of hla years I am Impressed with Hoy Howard's son Jack. He la following In hi father's Ink-stained steps in Indianapolis, after Yale and press bureau experience in Europe and the Orient, reading copy and living witn his society bride In a ISS-a-month apartment. Today I made a vow to work three hours a week on my autobiography. Writers should not read their mall until after dinner, a custom I hare followed five years. A hsavy mall can disarrange- thought the whole day, My barber, who knows so many things, tells me Kipling waa famous at 31 and La Place became greatest of French astronomers under 20. Shelley died at SO. Brisbane could probably tick off, sans reference, a hundred such ex amples of youth triumphant. Some one at breakfast said men who rub hands together while talking should be avoided. Probably as flimsy as condemning Inability to look one squarely In the eye. Many ahyly honest men csnnot do that. Ernest Hemlngwsy. bsck from a lion hunt, ought to turn out a best seller on such an experience. But hla bull tight title, "Death In the Afternoon," wants beating for aptness. A little often makes a brisk sal for a medl ocr book. "O n 1 1 m e n Prefer Blondes," for example. Unabashed ribaldry of youngsters Is startling. An egg.faced Jerkin, waiting In the Waldorf foyer the other day, greeted par, buckleberri tit. ."Jill ajjiuu- n jejunal M and F. D.R. been convicted by public opin will be convicted by the courts, since his flight to Europe, two in judgment. He denies he has over. guilty, there is no doubt that not be surprised to learn that the late J. F. Morgan the First, merely tried to do with the light Middlewest, what J. P. Morgan It was Morgan's good fortune, be surprised. For a man able do what Samuel Insull did, is to secure .the best legal advice it. within the law, did not violate unwritten law. was according to Hoyle a gen-1 or acquitted, he will continue to It was the idol of, each for him etc, etc. It was the idol of a about the Roosevelt New Deal, petl" And swung off merrily, arm In arm. Those were fighting words back yonder. I catalogue women Instantly aa silly or serious, liking both kinds. Indeed, there Is no type of femininity I find distracting, save the elbow nudgers at tense moment of a play. Pannle Hurst has added a Siamese oat to the eoo In her study. Complete: Two monkeys, two cats, a parrot, a Pekin ese and Scottle. All living In amex Ing tranquility. A white Russian wolf hound Is the most decorative of all domestle pets. They are remindful of Dolores In the Follies. All ani mals suggest personalities. Clarence Mackey, a chipmunk: Vincent Lopes, a aeal; Wilton Lackeye, a tired blood hound, and so on. Bob Davis, who has knocked about the Malay Junglea, doubts authen ticity of a vigorous python biting Frank Buck's arm In that film. He thlnka the cinema python waa a worn out, playful apeclmen. v The python constrict like a whiplash. Davis tells of a Malay boy coaattng rapidly down a steep hill at night on a bicycle. A python stretched aoroas the moonlit road. In a flash every apoke of the wheels and every bona In the boy's body were crumpled. Still Buck re mains a hero to me. Wakeful. I like In the dark to close my eyes and form a sort of surrealist movie grey squlggles, blurred shoots, flashy rock et and spinning phantasmagoria. In the whirl there Is usually a face aug- geattng a stretched film of Polly Mo- ran riding a broomstick. A lady lrrNew Orleans tweaks my curiosity Inquiring about my harvest of words. I figure the totsl crop an nually mors than S0O.0O0. likely a ellm estimate. Damon Runyon prob ably surpasses any modern write In output. Hla total probably excels that of all the round table boys. M. called my attention on a walk from the theater this tvenlng that the moon waa only beautiful on a large expanse of water. I recalled the time we saw It aalant palm trees In Flor ida upon which orchid were growing. W agreed that wa breathless. What Cluy de Maupassant could do with this on I A woman under the marque of a declasse hotel In the 40s hallooed to me some evenings sito rather late. Supposing she wanted to k direction, J HaltM, At to Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene out lo dls. ease diagnosis or. treatment, wlU be elf-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a tew can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions Address Or. William Brady, IDS El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cel. LET WASHINGTON'! BONES ALONE. Whenever I visit the national shrine at Mt. Vernon I go Into a trance In which I work out in complete detail the plana for elan destine ne cropsy on the re mains of the first p r e s tdent. But back home again or far from the a p o t, broaching my scheme to colleagues whom I should desire as accomplices, the Idea seems almost as foolish as most of my oolleaguea mink it Is. Still, you never can ws much without an autopsy, and that applies with psrtlcular empnasis w the last Illness of Oeorge Wsshlng- ton. on the other hand. I wonder now long any discernible trace of organic tissue (discernible, mas is, to m. skilled pathologist) would be pre served In such soli aa wasningwu was burled In and In the manner of auch burial.' As I sit there and lleten for the muffled oars of the rownoat In which the four of us would arrive for the nlght'a work, I tentatively turn over a bit of the soil with the toe of my shoe, and wonder whother it Is of the character that favors mummification. These armchair pathologists who make no doubt at all that Washing ton took cold from getting the neck and shoulder of his cost wet with snow while he waa out riding the afternoon of December 13, '70 and then sitting down to dinner without troubling to change to dry things when he returned from his ride In sult the quality and character of the man, it seems to me. Washington was no mollycoddle. He waa alwaya accustomed to the most vigorous out door exercise. It Is simply Impossible to think of him ss timidly avoiding exposure while his soldiers were en during the terrible winter at vaney Forge. The latest to account for the last Illness and death of Washington In this stultifying manner la a Wash ington ear, nose and throat specialist, who goes Into a trance and Imagines Washington consulting him. "You must remember, Mr. Washington," this droll little specialist admonishes a 300 pound man, who atanda e feet 3 Inches In height, "that you are not as young aa you once were and cer tainly not aa strong , . .'Our advice that you go to a mild warm southern climate for the winter. If you elect to remain In your Virginia home on the Potomac, be especially careful to avoid undue exposure In cold, wet weather , , ." And much more along the same line. This commentator de duces from the authentic records that To My The Voters of Jackson County, con atttutlng the Sixth Senatorial Dla- trlct of Oregon: I am a candidate at the coming primary for that position formerly held for several term by Senator Dunn, who la known ss the grsnd old man of the Senat which we admit, he la one of the only two or three of 30 .senators who are past 70. The Senate la composed of men between it and 85 yeara of age. It haa been 25 yeara since my op ponent waa County Judge, and at that time that county business con stated of a small part of what It has been the past ten years, during which time I waa a member of the County Court. I have had a large part In the road Improvement of the county; Including the selling of the last Issue of road bonds and the retirement of more than half of all the road bonds Issued and outstanding; taking care of the O. It C. funds so prudently that wa could retire the road bonds mentioned; having funds to build our courthouse, and still leave $300,000 In the county treasury for the further retirement of road bonds. During my term of office the county war rants were alwaya at par, even during the panic yeara of 1031 and 1033. The county audit ahowa the funds are accounted for and tne courthouse bills paid for as let by the contracta to the lowest bidders, with no discrepancies. It completely refutes all misleading statement and exonerate me In every detail, and I believe you by your vote will do the ssme. The audit Is open for Inspec tion In the olerk's office, to any In terested taxpayer. I am placing my name before the voters of Jackson County for the posi tion of State Senator, believing that I am qualified by my experience for the position I seek, and feel that I can give as good or better account of my stewardship there a I did In the county affaire. The most Interesting and upper most subject before the voters at this time is the sales tax or school relist bill. It haa been referred to the people tor action and will be decided by the voter on May 18th. Their decision should be final. 1 will abide by their decision at all timet, as this is a democratic form of gov ernment where the majority rulea aftl I will be governed by your vote. The sales tax. If passed, will relieve Instant I noted the mood was one of coquetry w both gav a quick atart and turned away embarrassed. Her husband waa once rather a warm friend. I had dined at their home frequently. I like a Jaded bachelor' Sutton Place apartment at cocktail time when the fly and roguishly rouged ladlea on the make drift In. A merry rlngle to the wis guy talk. Flro ftaught banter covering ateeltrap trickery. Such ladle Ignore m com pletely. M. suggest It might be they think I'm a bouse detective Caeca invldia estl (Copyright, 1034, McNaught Syndi cate, inc. 1. v! tpX V.J answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped Letters should be brief and written In Washington died of suffocation, brought on by edematous swelling of the larynx from a atreptococcus In fectlon. His guess, of course. Is sj good as any other. But If the spec ialist, when he Is not In a trance, ever diagnoses streptococcus Infection In an actual caae, he had better not try to make the patient, the public or the health authorities think It all came of getting the neck, shoulders or hair wet. Personally I am partial to the theory that Washington contracted diphtheria from some of his slaves on one of his rounds and that this brought about hla death In two or three days. His own reluctance to pay any attention to hla Illness, hla resolve to "let It go as It came," hla assurance that he never took anything for a cold, would be quite In keeping with the early stages of diphtheria. In that atage the patient doesn't feel very 111. . Other doctors opine It was pneu monia, some form of angina (chok ing), edema (dropsical awelltng) of larynx or lungs Incident to chronic nephritis. It doesn't matter to me. I'm going to let Oeorge Washington's bones alone. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. 178 Calories a Bottle. -Please tell me whether beer Is fat tening and how many calories does it contain. P. T. L. Answer The report of the analysis given by the brewer of the best beer says It contains 0.4 per cent protein. no fat, fl.O per cent carbohydrate, per oent alcohol by weight, and this would give 71 calories from the carbo hydrate, 6 calories from the protein, and 101 calories from the alcohol (as suming one can oxidise or burn all the alcohol), or a total of 178 calories In the bottle of beer. A pint of milk yields 325 calories. What, No Fnysicianr Will It be harmful for me to take the calcium lactate for aick head aches If I have a goitre? Mrs. R. O. D. Answer Certainly you should take nothing your physician does not pre scribe or approve. Skilled Dentist can Match Teetn. One of the finest dentists In the city put a porcelain Jacket crown on my tooth. He promised It would look exactly like my own teeth. But It does not match my teeth at an and looka very bad. L. A. Answer If your complaint la Justi fied and the dentist Is a reputable one, of course he can remedy that. Any good dentist can match the pa tient's teeth. (Copyright, 1034, John F. DUle Co.) , Ed Note: Readers wishing to should send letters direct to Dr. communicate with Dr. Brady William Brady, M. D., 269 E. Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Col. Friends about one-tenth of the total tax load The other nine-tenths of unpaid de linquent tax la a different problem Some of It Is school funds as well as county, city and district funds. It going to be a serious matter for the county to function If larga deiin quenoles continue, which they will until commodity prices rise. Some method will have to be found to refund county warrant so the county and school can receive cash to operate. I believe by my expert ence I can be of valuable assistance in the legislature to solve that prob lem. The county cannot at this tlmo foreclose on delinquent property and resell to obtain the funds, as prop erty has little value now and ahould wholesale tax sales take place all value would be destroyed. A rep resentative of the people cannot look to the Interest of the state alone, but must look to his county welfare as well, i The county courts of the stst dur ing my tenure of office Initiated many needed reforms and new laws which have been passed ana become laws In aucesslve session of the legis lature. During my term of office I worked with the district attorney, read and studied law and court decisions so that we were able to save Jackson county from all costly litigation. I have helped to draft bills presented In the legislature, which give me valuable experience along those lines. As to my qualifications: I am a farmer by calling, have had 30 yeara' experience as a bank director, 13 yeara as a llveatock ahlpper and feed er, six years chairman of Rogue River Valley Irrigation district, tne first to qualify for federal funds on account of It fine financial condition, and lastly my years of experience on the county court. I have never been ap pointed or selected by any secret com mittee of whatever name, nor a party to any Intrigue, but have come out aa a candidate by the solicitation of friends who have asked that I place my name before the voters for the position of state senator at the com ing election. I would urge you as a civic duty to attend the polls on May 19th to vote. Will appreciate your vot. My slogan: The People's Candidate. My record and experience your protection. VICTOR BURS ELL. (Paid Adv.) .c. AT KLAMATH FALLS Many Medford people motored to Klamath rails yesterday to attend the Joint mutation of Knlxhta of Colum bus councils from Bend, Klsmath Falls and Lakevlew. The southeastern Oregon district wa well represented at the Initia tion and the banquet, which folloaed. at which covers were arranged for M guest. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS QENATOR BURTOK K. WHEELER, w ox Montana, speaking in Detroit, s&ys: "Attacking Amarlct-'i monetary and economic evils by remonetlslng 11 ver Is the untried but CERTAIN means of ending the depression, m JTAYBE BO. ivt There's an old hunting proverb, you know, to the effect that "there's luck where there's lead flying" meaning that If you shoot at ran dom Into the air yoi MAY hit some' thing. If we keep on passing lawa to end the depression, we MIGHT finally stumble Into one that would work. E AN WHILE, alo7of people old- 11 fashioned In their views, perhaps cling to the opinion that If fewer laws had been passed and fewer ef forts made to end the depression WITHOUT WORK we would be farther along the road to recovery. GETTING back to Senator Wheeler's speech, what is the chief mpne- tary evil In America today? Nobody knows, of oouree for SURE, that la. But It is highly probable that the principal trouble with our money these days Is that nobody Is Just quite certain what It will be worth a month hence or year hence. Tinkering with silver wouldn't make us any SURER, to say the least, as to what our money will be worth In the future. A N OTHER question, suggested by T Senator Wheeler's speech: What la this country's chief eco nomlo evil? npHERE are plenty of answers to 1 to that question, but the trouble Is that so few of them are alike. The doctors know the patient Is sick, but they can't agree on the diagnosis. A lot of them insist that the trouble la organic and grave, and that serious measures are necessary including, perhaps, a few major operations. Others think the patient is merely run down and weak and If given the opportunity for rest and quiet, will recover nicely. T !HE brain trustera and the more enthuslaatlo of the new dealers are In the first group and the general run of conservative business men are to be found In the latter. PUT aa elmply aa posslbl, here 1 ON IB economlo evil In this country: People who have money are atlll afraid that If they lend It they WON'T GET IT BACK. A long a people with money remain In that frame of mind, business recovery will be slow. They will remain In that frame of mind until their confidence In the ability of borrowers to earn enough to repay Is restored. The trouble with so many new laws and new schemes Is that they have a tendency to SHAKE confidence, Instead of restor ing It. ' . FROM an of ehlsyou will probably gather that this Insignificant writer Is one of those who would pre fer to see the patient given the op portunity for a little rest and quiet, In the hope that a naturally strong constitution will pull him through, rather than seeing him subjected to further serious operations. , Well, you wouldn't be far wrong. 1 Communications Is This a Threat? To the Editor: In advocating Electa Fehl for the county Judgeship, I feel perfectly Justified In assuring the voters of Jackson county that there wilt be. In the case of her election, an ef ficient, consistent carrying out of the policies adhered to by her husband, Judge Earl H. Fehl. I wish to stress the fact that Electa Fehl Is perfectly competent to do this. She ha for years been the constant companion of her husband In every detail of hla service to our people. When during the last year his work waa made inexcusably difficult for him by his political enemies. It wa his wife who ably carried on the edit ing of the Paclflo Record Herald. She haa always co-operated fully with him. giving generously of her Intelli gent sympathy a silent, but most efficient partner in all hla public work. It need cause no misgiving that she Is not a Iiwyer, but rather should It be csuse for congrstulatlon. The American public cannot soon forget the words of wsrnlng uttered by U. S. Attorney General Cummlngs, and the president of the American Bar asso ciation, that the entire association must undergo a drastic cleansing or It would disintegrate from aheer cor ruption. Personally I have observed no evl- dence of a reformation In the ethical standards of the Southern Oregon Bar association. So It la Just as well that Electa Fehl Is not a member of this profession. It has been my privilege to see a great deal of her during the last 18 months and I recognlre In her a woman of courage and Integrity, of consistent loyalties, and of persistent effort In the face of adversity. The votera of Jackson county are (ortunste Indeed that Elect, Fehl h Mother Jailed For Burning Girl S 1M ,-"3' " t4t' f aaV-! 1 ft I';. "7" V - . , - !iJi3sl&. E A fx--; , - . Mr. Marguerite Reed, 29, wat sentenced to 30 day in Jail at Lake wood, N. J., charged with burning th leg of her daughter. Ether, 6, with a red hot poker. The woman admitted In court that she had burned both her children on aeveral occasion, and declared she "knew of no other way of making them mind." (Associated Pros Photos) offered to serve them In the capacity of county Judge. I support my contention by quot ing the immortal Jefferson: "The whole art of government con sist In being honest." ARIEL BURTON POMEROY, Mays. , Excelsior, Minn. T STATES TIGHTER CHICAGO, May 7. (AP) A merci less sun, beating down on the parched prairies of the north central states, gave no prospect of relief to the drought stricken areas today. Only some moderation In the high temperatures of Sunday was predicted. High temperatures ruled the na tion generally yesterday with the central west taking the brunt of sum mer's preview. By mid-afternoon they had soared to 100 degrees at Sioux City, Iowa, breaking all records for May. . In Chicago the mercury Jumped to 92.1, smashing the all-time heat record for May 8. The previous high was 86. One death was indirectly at tributed to the heat. Hot winds swept parts of Nebraska, passing to the drought peril. Kansas, Missouri, Wisconsin and Minnesota remained rainless and the moisture deficiency in northern Illinois reached 61 per cent since January 1. Around Wausau, Wis., forest fires menaced the village of Moslnee site of the moslnee paper mills. Seven families were made homeless. Mill buildings and Moslnee residences, parched by the long dry spell, were soaked with water to remove the danger of flying sparks. ? The lower Ohio and Mississippi val leys and their adjacent sections were more fortunate. In some Instances the weather bureau reported heavy rainfall In these areas. Warrants Calif d School District No. 30 will pav war ranto No. 363 to 397 Inclusive at the Farmers and Fruitgrowers Bank. In terest will cease on this date. May 1, 1934. SIgntfd: S. S. ABBOTT. District Clerk. MEMBER, THE ORDER Emergency! We regard an invalid coach call as an emergency; we keep our invalid coach ready nt all times to answer a call on an instant's notice. In a critical moment, split seconds count; that's why we don't waste time. One calls, and shortly the hurrying wail of our siren comes sweeping toward the scene. PERL FUNERAL HOME OFFICE OF COUNTY CORONER. 5 IX TH AT OAK DALE -PHONE. 47 Flight .o Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the File, of Tbe Hall TrlboDe of to and 10 (ears Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY May 7, 192. (It was Wednesdsy) Th. nuntv court relects the appll- cstlon of an Oklahoma tourist, with five children, for a loan of 1300 to get back home. Radio Is heard In Oregon Caves, at a point 1600 feet down. Officials doubt that the body of a young man found In Rogue liver la that of Hugh DeAutremont, sought for the Siskiyou tunnel murders. Public Utility commission issue a ruling that beauty parlors can cut hair, but not ahave patron' necks, unless they pay a barber's license. Th king of Denmark snubs Mary Plckford and Douglaa Fairbanks, during visit to Europe. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY May 7, 1014. (It wss Thursdsy) April rslnfall above average f other years, and was .38 of an Inch. "Her Sin, or Teara and Pearla," at the It: "Night Along the Nile, -or Egyptian Love," at the Isla; ''Ken tucky Blooda" at the Star, and "When We Were 31" at the Page. May Heath, Dorothy Newman, Laura Dates. Louise Qulzenberry, and Elisa beth Gore among Medford grade pu pils who win musical awards. A number of home guard teamsters employed in hauling on the Central Point division of the Pacific highway, have quit In disgust, and gone to yelling on the street about there being no work for them and their horses. On the Central Point work they received from to $1.86 per dsy, for two-yard hauls, and Imagine they should have from $5 to $5.65 a day. Those who are yelling the loudest are those to whom feed waa advanced for their stock, and deducted from the pay check. (Cunttnueo irom Page One) Glass bill over his protest from th floor of the senate. Speaking of new buildings, the famed American Legion lobby has purohased a building of ita own for $125,000. . Copyright, 1934, by Paul Mallon. Buzzing In Ear Caused By Bee MILWAUKEE, Wis., May 7. (AP) Howard Wlchgelda, two years old, of St. Francis, complained to his parent of a buzzing In his head. At emergency hospital surgeons re moved a bee from the boy's ear. Drop In st Tahoma Beer Parlor and Sandwich Shop. Pleasant evening as sured. 38 miles north Medford on Pacific highway. PLAN THOROUGHLY IDEAS and ESTIMATES WITHOUT CHARGE n n DIU 1 PINES gtncsu I Lumber co. Rirjnfeig Phone .gyJ1 i SERVICE gL. 1 as-:: 'iVS nJ J?ygOF THE GOLDEN RUU