i?GE FOUR
MEDFORD MXTTi TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON", WEDNESDAY, MAT 30, 193?.
Medford Mail Tribune
"EvtryoM In Southarn OraQoe
BlHl till Mill TrlbrnW
Dally lipt gaturdar
Publliiw) br
MEDrOUD I'BLKTlXa CO.
31-lf.n N. rir at, imi t
BOBEBT W. BUHU, Miter
Aa lodepaoarJt Ncsapaper
Entered ss tceond elui mitur it Mtdiord,
Onion, uoier Act of Much 8, I8T9,
UB8CB1PT10N BATES
a U.1 In Arirane.
Dallr, one jaar IJ.JJ
Dallr, 111 month l.'a
hallr. oh monttt P
n. r.rrtM in Adranu Meriford. Alhttnd,
lacksonrlUe, Central Point, Pboenlx, Talent, Oold
BUI end 00 Htha.
Dillr, one rr J.O"
Dally, ill monlhf S.J5
nallf. oot mootii .0
All terma, easb In adranea.
orflelal paper or the City or oledford.
OrMclal paper of Jaekion County.
liEMBEB OK TUB ASSOCIATED PBK88
Bl,lM Ihill Laaaad Wlr Barrlee
Toe Anoalaled Pren la eielialrely entitled to
too ute for publication of all neve dUpatchea
credited to It or othertrtte credited In thla paper
and alio to the local newa published herein.
All rlshta for publication of apecial dUpatchee
herein are alio reaened.
MEMBRB Of UNITED PBE8B
MKMBEIi OP AUDIT BUBEAU
Of CIRCULATIONS
Adrartulng BepreientatlTH
M. C. HOUKNBEN k COMI'ANT
Offlcn In New York, Chicago, Detroit, 0ao
Fraoelieo U Angela. Seattle rortland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
LITTLE GREEN TENTS.
TUB LITTLE GREEN TENTS,
WHERE THE SOLDIERS BLEEP, AND
THE SUNBEAMS PLAT AND THE
WOMEN WEEP, ARE COVERED WITH
FLOWERS TODAY; ' AND BETWEEN
THE TENTS WALK THE WEARY
FEW. WHO WERE TOTJNO AND
STALWART IN SIXTY-TWO WHEW
THEY WENT TO THE WAR AWAY,
THE LITTLE OREEN TENTS ARE
BUILT OP SOD, AND THEY ARE
NOT LONO, AND THEY ARB NOT
BROAD, BUT THE SOLDIERS HAVE
PLENTY OP ROOM; AND THE SOD IS
PART OP THE LAND THEY SAVED.
WHEN THE FLAG OP THE ENEMY
DARKLY WAVED, THE SYMBOL OP
DOLE AND DOOM.
. THE LITTLE OREEN TENT IS A
THING DIVINE; THE LITTLE GREEN
TENT IS A COUNTRY'S SHRINE,
WHERE PATRIOTS KNEEL AND
PRAY; AND THE BRAVE MEN LEFT,
SO OLD SO PEW, WERE YOUNO
AND STALWART IN SIXTY-TWO
WHEN THEY WENT TO THE WAR
AWAY. (Wait Mason.)
Orators of the) itate are now leveling
their larnyx at the) high school gradu
a tear pouring forth Into the world, to
battle for a chance) to place) their
academlo noses upon the economlo
grindstones, and, never, were the
chances for that so scant. The youths
are inflated with advice on citizen
ship, clean living, thrift, honesty, all
the virtues, and the' best road to hap
piness. No speaker has admonished
youth to keep a stiff upper Up, as
did tne pioneers, and not spend every
waking moment worrying, aa all their
kith and kin have been doing exces
sively since 1029, to so good end.
The depression has fattened and lived
long, upon a surplus of fancy fretting
about something that never happened.
O'Rourke and Barnes split. O'Rourke
gave the Irishman B rounds, and Ross
J; Barnes gave Ross 11 and McLnrnln
I. Referee Forbes gave Ross 13 and
the Irishman 1. (Press dispatch)
How strange! O'Rourke votes for an
Irishman.
SOME CIIICKKNS RETURN HOME.
(Albany Democrat-Herald)
While Sweet Home opponents of
the sales tax and there were
many of them were opposing
ratification of the measure on the
round that It afforded Loula W.
' Hill a bigger lump aum property
tax saving than It gave to the
smaller property owners, the au
thorities of Sweet Home union
high school district were Impor
tuning the very same Mr. Hill to
pay his delinquent school taxes,
so that they could pay the'
teachers before the pedagogues
' left town on their vacation,
which, otherwise, would be a
fundless one.
A probe of the power trust has
tsrted at Salem, to determine whero
the money la procured to pay the
taxes and the wages, and scare up an
Independent candidate for governor.
: The atork flapping over the province
of Ontario, Canada, last Monday de
livered quintuplets, to a family In
the Tillage of Callendar. No doubt,
With characteristic) Inefficiency, the
tork showered the surplus blessings
upon the poorest family In all tho
province of Ontario.
o
A new high In political pledges Is
made by Mrs. Novsda Benson, candi
date for sheriff of Tulsa county,
Oklahoma. If elected, says the would
be sheriff, ahe will divorce her hus
band so she may devote all of her
time to the office (Cut caption, S. P.
Call-Bulletin) The nation's worst
case of Itch for office.
Fire Engine for Sale.
UPLAND, Cel. (UP) Some Indi
vidual who accepts the offer of this
city may fulfill his suppressed de
sires. The city hss asked anyone who
wants to buy a fire engine to drop
around at the city hall. It is being
replaced by a larger model and the
highest bidder will be the owner of
his personal fire truck.
Phone 848 We'll haul away yout;
Muse, C.lt SaalUrj Serrloe.
Editorial Correspondence
NORTH COAST LIMITED, Enroute East, May 28. It's
really hot outside. But cool as the proverbial cucumber in here.
The reason the car is air conditioned. Not the entire train
but, that, says the Pullman conductor, will come later only the
diner and the observation car. This is written in a compartment
in the latter, donated as a courtesy to the travelling newspaper
man. That is what is known as service. The Northern Pacific
is famous for it
We were due at Spokane at 7:15 this a. m. but arrived at
8:15, just an hour late. The reason given by the dining car
steward this time was a small engine. "Can't pull a train
like this up the grade with a small engine" said he. The engine
looked big enough to us. But for two hours before we reached
Spokane the North Coast Limited puffed like an elderly asthma
tic and barely crawled, up the grade.
0
From a car window Spokane hasn't changed. We recognized
the old city hall, the court house and the imposing Davenport
hotel, also the Spokesman Review tower, where we wrote edi
torials for a couple of years back in 1909 and 10. They had a
dining room on the top floor of the building in those days, and
we can still remember the India rubber flapjacks. Commodore
Perry was a reporter on the paper then, as was Walter May,
the latter now manager of the Portland Chamber of Commerce.
Walter was always a hustler, and with half a chance even in
those days could have talked either William Jennings Bryan or
Billy Sunday down. Which reminds us of one late afternoon, at
Jakie Wirth's but that s another story and too long to recount
here. Besides only the few old timers who knew Jakie would
he interested. But THERE was a talker, too, and a good one.
We are sorry for people who
or who can't, comfortably. A few moments ago in the smoking
room, the man we were talking with leaned back heavily, drop
ped his hands and suddenly became as pale as milk. We jumped
for a oup of water, but he waved it away, and produoed a
weak, sickly smile. "Just car sick" he explained, "I am going
back and lie down." Tough luck. He is going through to New
Tork, too.
And then a middle aged woman reading a copy of the New
Yorker, bored to tears with a cross country train trip she has
taken "50 times" and the fact the company couldn't afford a
compartment. "It's barbaric" she volunteered, "riding in an
open Pullman during hot weathci. They do things so much
better abroad,' '
She Is New York buyer for a large Seattle department store
and "when business gets better" will take a plane.
We have always enjoyed train trips like to see them go by,
like to get on them the romance and glamour of "youth in
flight", has never completely gone. The reason may be merely
the "Gypsy foot." Some are born with a desire to roam, and
others aren't.
But there are so often interesting people on board, and if
they aren't interesting one wonders about them anyway. There
was the young woman well
30 who boarded the train at
on the back platform, smoking
A delegate to the Professional
tion, we surmised called back
morning a tall, well built chap
volunteered the information he
was bound to Missoula on some engineering job. A half hour
later, he and the lady delegate were consuming ginger ale high
halls, in the club car, on a wholesale scale, their conversation
flowing as fluently as if they had been pals for years. Well
perhaps they HAD been. But one wonders 1
.Some people have no ourlosity in others or In anything else.
We can understand how travel in the heat or in the oold
would be tiresome to them. They are probably better neighbors
than those who have. But our advice to them is to Btay at home
and never venture in the newspaper business.
Before leaving Portland last night ran into a well posted
amateur politician at the Imperial hotel. He whispered into the
editorial ear that neither organized labor nor the Grange are
pleased with Messrs. Joe Dunne and General Martin. They are
regardod as Power Trust men .(Ye-aht) And Charley Thomas
is to run on an independent ticket in the fall, and clean them
both up (Yeah again I) . . . However we wouldn't be greatly
surprised. We are not so woll posted on Dunne, but we know
well enough that General Martin isn't a Power Trust man or
anyone ELSE'S man. But noither is he an ANTI-Power Trust
man or a demagogue. An election in Oregon would be out of
character with no one chasing the Power Trust as Ed Binns
chased the Beef Trust so many years. So if Charley T. doesn't
do it, probably someone else will.
And a picture of Chan Egan in Meier and Frank's store golf
window captioned "a real ohampion" Chan with pipe in
mouth against a background of tall firs.
The North Coast Limited is chugging up the grade now,
along a paved highway, During the last half hour at least 10
motor cars have whizzed by as it the N, C. L. were standing still.
This is a fine train and as trains go a fast one, but it's no
"zephyr" which is on the front pages of the Sunday papers
after its record breaking run from Denver to the Chicago Fair.
One of these days the N. P. will have ita "Zephyr" and it will
be a diffcront story and a hotter
A flash of bright color in the foothills instead of a ball
game, they are having a Sunday rodeo. Bright yellow shirts,
crimson ones, white chaps, 10-gallon hats, and a high fencod
oorral, in which are tho bucking broncos they don't look vory
fierce, it's hot, their heads hang down just a few inohes above
the dust, ....
Along the cool banks of the Flathead river now there's a
family fishing party on the rocks one can see the lunch bas
kets, but no fish, fishing isn't very good now one of the
fishermen wears trunks as the train passes, he waves both
hands and dives in tho swimming appears to be OK, anyway.
R W.R.
REIMBURSE KLAMATH
TIMBER CONTRACTOR
WASHINGTON. May SO. (API An
award of 818.000 was voted by the
house last nlht to unburn Knapp
don't like to ride on trains
perhaps not so young perhaps
Portland last night and stayed
cigarets and looking at the moon.
and Busines Women's conven
home for some reason. This
boarded the train at Spokane,
was a resident of Idaho and
ad for the railroads.
tor losses suffered In 10U when the
Interior department revolted a per
mlt given him In connection with
a contract to cut timber on the
Klamath (Oregon) Indian reserve-
tlon.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D. .
Signed letters pertaining to personal bealtb and hygiene not to dls
ease dlsgnosls or treatment, will be
self-addressed envelope Is enclosed.
Ink. Owing to the Urge number of letters received only a few can be an
swered. No reply can be made to q aeries not conforming to Instructions,
address Dr. William Brady, 268 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cat.
THE DD8 AND THEIR CBYOPHOBIA.
Persons who have ehronlo rhinitis
(catarrh to you), whether the trouble
Is Intermittent as In ordinary chronic
353??a rhinitis or con
stant as In hyper,
trophla rhinitis
(enlsrged turbi
nate bodies), and
also persons who
have chronic sin
usitis, react ab
normally to
everyday environ
mental c h a n gee
which give nor
mal persona no
annoyance or dis
comfort. These
suujei'ts oi chronic trouble In nose or
throat emit loud complaints whenever
they experience such discomfort or
annoyance and tell the world they are
"taking more cold." To all appear
ances they are well .folk, and their
fuss about the draft, change of waa.
ther or dampness or chilliness does
Impress the uninitiated observer.
They atuff up and run at the nose
or begin coughing, sneezing, hawking
or complaining on alight provocation
or none at all as It seems to well folk
around them, and eventually they
Impose upon every one the necessity
of deferring to their whims about
heating, ventilation, clothing and
other things In order to avoid dis
putes, I contend It Is all wrong to allow
the pathological minority to have
their way about everything and com
pel the healthy majority to aubmlt
to all aorta of unwholesome condi
tions Just because the near-lnvallds
like things that way. They have no
more right to take such advantage of
family and friends or associated In
dork or business than has the bird
who procures for himself a soft and
easy path thru life by practicing ner
vous Imposition.
With the aid of a simple headlight
and nasal speculum any doctor any
ordinary general practitioner or fam
ily physician can find out for any
DDD (demon draft dodger) why he
makes himself such a nuisance, why
he Invariably has the delusion he Is
tsklng cold" if he gets hie feet wet
or sits In a draft or encounters a
sudden change of weather or wind
without extra clothing. By such ex
amination the ' d o o t o r discovers
whether the trouble Is simple chronic
rhinitis, enlarged turbinates, sinusitis,
polyp, adenoid hypertrophy, or what
not. Furthermore any good family doc
tor Is not only competent to trest
such conditions successfully but, In
my opinion, can give lasting relief by
conservative methods In many cases
where the average apeclallst can only
operate. From experience and study
of the question, I doubt that any
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
BY O.O.McIntyre
LOS ANGELES, May 30. We spent
most the dsy at Will and Betty
Roger's ranch, a Ifi-mlnute spiral
through the can
yons from our
tavern. The 800
acred estate
sprawls In up
sweeps and
down-ahoots all
over the moun
talnoua country"
aide. For ex
ample: On one
eun-baked plat
eau a polo field.
In a cool ravine
a golf course.
Down to the
cast-iron door scraper, It expresses
the homespun simplicity of the
Rogerses. Every touch Is auporbly
mellow with wholesome, oak-bosomed
Americanism. In the living-room
ohandellers are a double-tree and
neck-yoke of pioneer dais, more
charming In their '40 rusticity than
a glittering Delmonlco drop.
An enormous window from which
Catallna etches Its faint tracery on
lucid daya wans an Inspirational
gift from Zlegfeld. The floor checkers
a bright mosalo of Navajo ruga and
the walla bristle a hodge-podge of
spurs and riding quirts from Argen
tina to Canada. Mounted brass and
liver bossed saddles from all ovsr.
Rogera haa the four most famous
Charlie Russell westerns, also a
plunging cow-boy bronae of himself
by the famoua plainsman painter.
Over the mile-wide fireplace stretches
a set of Texaa longhorns, the gift
of the always generous Amon Cartsr.
And best of all, In a corner Is a
Ghetto hurdy-gurdy, exquisitely dis
cordant. When we arrived Bill waa Just Jog
ging over a ridge with our aunt
and others In a three-seated buck
board, remindful of an ancient ber-
Un and drawn by matched dappled
mulea. Exploring a canyon, they rode
a moment with Death. On a down
grade, the gig ran upon the mules,
bolting them Into a hell-for-leather
dash. A cooly competent cow-hand.
taken along for emergency, eaved
the day and a tew necks by Jockey
ing the runaways into In Impasse.
I thought It venturesome comedy.
a ranch gag for tenderfeet, but Bill
dragging me to one aide gasped "I'm
plum scalrtl" He waa a atatue In
chalk.
Rogers at home Is sartortally him
self. A contnl-t to Irvln Cobb's
study In orange huea. To Will Hays
in snow white riding costume. To
rred Stone roughing It in Benham
plaids. Rogers wore frequently
washed W.certt overalls, a buckskin
shirt and a aomebrero from a lost
age, He does not chew gum at home.
His eyes follow hla wife In dog.like
humility and she can render him
mute and confused with a fleeting
glance. The most aeU-etiacUoi celeb-
I f v. it cfir- t
answered by Or. Brady If stamped
Letters should be brief and written In
body with normal nose and throat
condition, that Is, without one or an
other of the pathological troubles In
dlcated, la sensitive to drafts or sud
den changes of everyday exposure.
The casual observer seeing a DDD
stuff up and begin to sneeze or run
at the nose Immediately upon lav
pact of a passing zephyr cannot help
being Impressed that there may be
something In the poor gink's claim
of susceptibility. But if the casual
observer will take the trouble, as I
have done, to watch the progresa of
a few such alleged "fresh colds" of
Instantaneous development ha will
find that the beggars Invariably for.
get about the "fresh cold" within an
hour. Some of 'em childishly Imagine
that whatever emergency measure
they try has "broken It up" or "ward
ed It off," Of course that Is the
bunk. The truth Is that the alleged
"fresh cold" Is not a new Illness at
all, but merely a manifestation of the
chronic rhinitis or whatever the par
ticular complaint may be.
Z take no more atock In these in
stantaneous "colds" than I do In
quick "cold" cures.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
It'a a Damp Shame.
We have three children, 11, S and
4. years old, and the two elder ones
both wet the bed nearly every nlgnt,
while the youngest never has auch
trouble. Both of these elder children
started about three years ago when
they had the measles . . . A. E. M.
Answer Any parent or guardian
who tells me his or her child or ward
wets the bed may have a copy of a
monograph which Instructs bow to
correct the habit. Inclose a stamped
envelope bearing your address. Do
not ask for my cure for bed-wetting.
Better Late Than Sever.
We are a young married couple and
we both want children. We are nor
mal and apparently healthy, but I In
sist that for the children's sake we
should both have ft medical examina
tion to be sure we have no disease
that could be passed on to our
children. But my husband cannot
see It and Insists that he knows he
has no disease, therefore needs no
examination . . . Mrs. M. F.
Answer In this instance It seems
that the gentleman doth protest too
much. You should have Insisted on
such an examination BEFORE the
engagement, aurely before the mar
riage. If the man has nothing to
conceal why should he decline to
humor his wife In ft request that Is
not at all unreasonable?
(Copyright, 1934, John P. Dlllo Co.)
Ed Note: Readers wishing to
should send letters direct to Dr.
communicate with Dr. Brady
William Brady, M. D., 263 E. Ca
mlno, Beverly Hills, Cal,
rlty wife In the world, she rules the
Rogers roost. A grand lady.
Roger's son Jimmy, going to school
at Pomona, was over for the day.
The other son BUI, la at Stanford,
and hla daughter Mary, has been
trouplng In the Old Dominion. Jim
my Is lean, drawling, a superb horse
man and Inherits his dsd's sly
humor. When he came In to say
good-bye, his father kissed his cheek
awkwardly and, aa though embarras
sed, called after him: "Don't git your
neck caught in a well!"
Blllte Burke, upon whom gathering
years leave no Imprint, was at the
Rogerses with her daughter Patricia,
now a tall, willowy lady of de
butante ripeness, remindful of her
distinguished pater but with her
mother'a flre-ln-thornbush locks. I
asked Miss Burke If ehe hsd deserted
New York. She replied wistfully she
had not. But here In the serenity
of Callfornla'a calm she can draw
on the preclousness of memory and
live over again exciting daya when
she aa a clrcua clown'a daughter,
was a first Frohman star. "My world
has changed," she murmured. But
It has not changed lovely Blllie
Burke. She Is called Hollywood's
bravest lady.
Later to the Brentwood home of
one of my favorite screen beauties.
Doris Kenyon, for dinner. The John
Barrymores, the Bud Krones, the E.
P. Huttons and Will Haysea were
there. Her famous gsrden, selections
for which she snd her husband
Milton Sills, spent so many happy
years, waa arched with the sun's
dying splendor. It blooms with ev
erything from exotic India sandal
wood to betelnut for savages. The
apple of her eye is a 7-year old son,
Kenyon, bright, beautifully brushed
and handsome but with a sly arid
appealing dash of Tom Sawyer. Ev
erybody hereabouts adores them.
Theda Bara, her saucar eyes still
Convenience and Economy
Stop In OAKLAND
tlot el San Pablo offers:
Comfort
without Evtraraganre
Central Location
RATES! 81.00 to II. IS
FREE OARAGE
MODERN COFFEE 811(11
Directions lo Hotel: Slay on
Main Highway (San Pablo
Annus) directly to 0th St.
Management
HARRT B. STRANG
s tl
vamplahly kohled, dropped in at
Doris' with her taU, tweedy, Joke
muffing English husband. The
screen's wickedest lsdy never smok
ed or sipped a drink during her
professional career and is still un
usually temperate. A modified Dot
Parker, however, she gives a qulppy
perk to every party. Out In Cincin
nati we claimed her aa a local pro
duct, but ahe fixes her birthplace
nebulously aa "below the Mason
Dixon line." And has a Southern ac
cent. At the hotel a box of beautiful
flowers for my wlfe'a aunt, with a
card: "The best sport sver turned
out In Oalllpolis Will Rogers." It
pleased Bill that she lost her hat
twice but not her head In the wild
ride down the mountainside,
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
IN April of this year, the people of
Oregon used 48.985,348 gallons of
gasoline, aa compared with 47,718,103
gallons In April of lsst year.
If Increasing use of gasoline Is a
sign of Increased buying plwer, times
must be getting a Uttle better In Ore.
gon.
IN round numbers, there are a mil.
lion people In Oregon the actual
number Is somewhat under that, but
for purposes of easy figuring a mil
lion is near enough.
So, you see, consumption of gaso
line In this star In April of this year
amounted to about 48 gallons PER
PERSON, as compared with 47 gallons
per person In April a year ago.
This, remember, Is per person not
per family. Gasoline Is getting to be
quite an Item In the family budget.
COMETHING else worth noting:
J On the rasollne consumed In
April of thla year, the people of Ore.
gon paid 13,449, 371 In taxes. This was
paid In the form of a sales tax, a lit
tle at a time, and for that reason It
was paid without much protest.
In no other way could so much
money have been raised with so lit
tle complaint.
THAT Is the beauty of the Sales
tax In times like these It Is
paid In cash, a Uttle at a time. '
I IIOHWAY construction Is a big
item of public expenditure In
Oregon, as in other states.
The gasoline tax, along with auto
mobile license fees, goes In this stste
toward construction and maintenance
of highways. Thus those who USE the
roads pay for them.
That seems fair. "
COURT costs are another large Item
of public expenditure In this
state, as In all others. Court costs are
caused chiefly by those who break the
lawa.
If those who break the laws, and
thus cause the bulk of our court costs,
could be msde to besr the bulk of
the court costs, It would be fine for
law-abiding citizens, wouldn't It?
THS trouble la, of course, thst there
are some things we csn do and
others we can't. Making law-breakers
bear the bulk of the cost of our
courts Is one of the things we can't
THE Oregon State Motor association
estimates that a yellow line can
be painted down the center of Ore
gon's main-traveled .highways at a
cost of 835 per mile.
From the standpoint of additional
safety and driving ease, It says, thla
center line Is equivalent to a TWO
FOOT widening of the highway.
Pretty cheap widening, Isn't Wl
THE motor sssoclatlon says In a
bulletin Illxt tunast
"It hss been demonstrated bv a
close check on state police accident
The Mail Tribune-Jubilee Committee
Subscription Offer Will Close
THURSDAY NIGHT, MAY 31
One
Full
Month
Your friends will receive all the news of the Jubilee
as well as the Jubilee edition a full month's subscrip
tion for only 30c
ONLY ONE MORE DAY
reports that center-Use marking re
duces accidents on highways at sight
by 78 per cent."
That Is to say, there are only one
fourth as many night accidents on
highways so marked as on those thst
sre not.
That Is a pretty strong statement,
but If you have driven much at night
both on highways marked with the
center line and those thst are not,
you will be Inclined to agree with It.
rhas been demonstrated by experi
ence, Incidentally, that a yellow
line Is more easily seen under all
lighting conditions than the white
line that was formsrly used.
Yellow, or possibly an orange tinge
Just off the yellow, hss also been
found most satisfactory for the mark
ing of snow stakes along the highways
in winter, being better visible under
all conditions than black, which was
formerly used.
4
(Medford and Jackson County
History from the Flies of The
Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Years
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
May So, 1924
(It Was Friday)
Qolf course at the fairgrounds to
be opened June 8.
Gain Curd to appear at Armory.
with tickets at $3.78 each.
Nathan Leopold, Jr. son of a Chl
csgo millionaire. Is held ss suspect
in kidnaping and murder of boy, af
ter ransom paid. ,
City pays reverence to soldier dead,
with parade led by G. A. R. members.
Twenty one Civil war veterans were
in line.
Plans lsunched for modern hotel at
Ashland.
Donald Ross of Central Point Is giv
en loving cup for work as student In
high school.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
May 30, 1914
(It Was Saturday)
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ulrich are sur
prised by Jacksonville friends, who
give them a party on their seventh
wedding anniversary.
First cutting of aUalfa suffers from
rsln, fsrmer report.
The "Olsss of 1914" receive diplomas
at the Page theater.
"The Squaw Man" with Dustln Far
num at the Star; "A Toss of the Dice"
at the It; "Your My Meat" at the
Isls.
Depressed state of business through
out the nation, blamed on the rail
roads by Democratic leaders.
(Contlnuea trom Page One)
talking about what they wlU do, but
the inside situation is such that any
one who starts the fight Is almrwt
certain to get the worst of It.
Japan and Germany are supposed
to be the two bad boys who might
start trouble. Japan has been out-
jockeyed by Russian diplomacy dur
ing the last six months. Germany
really has no Intention of fighting
until she recovers strength enough to
make fighting worth while.
Therefore, at least half the trouble
seems to be diplomatic rather than
pugilistic.
Warrant Call
Notice la hereby given that there
are funds on hand for the redemption
of School District No. 6 warrants No's
497 to 709 Inc. Interest to cease May
29, 1934. Warrants payable at the First
National Bank, Medford, Oregon.
OUY TEX. Clerk,
School Dlst No. a.
Flight o Time
Ye Poet's Cornei
A Monument of Lore.
What are flowers on a grave?
We aee them everywhere.
What are costly monument.
Unless your love is there?
Faith In life and until death
Is the monument that gives
Peace to the dead and comfort
To those who afterward live.
Give of your love and faith
To those you love while here.
Let this be your marble shaft;
To show you held them dear.
By Mary O. Carey.
Talent, Oregon.
Freeze Aided Maple Sugar
CHARD ON, O. (DP) A sudden
shift of temperature to the below
freezing point, after farmers had
thought warm spring weather was
definitely here, brought maple sugar
producers 50,000 worth of additional
sap because of the "freeze."
No, I Didn't Have
That Covered by
Insurance
Let us see that you are fully pro
tected. Turn all your Insurance
cares over to us and we will see
that you are fully protected at
the lowest possible cost.
Charles A. Wing
Agency, Inc.
109 E. Main.
Phone 728
9
DEAF
Bonephone. The much talked
about and wanted bone con
duction phone has arrived.
Free demonstration.
Dr.Orville Scheetz
Optometrist
60ft East H St., Grants Pass
Near Fostofflce
e Every FtrettOM Tin gfvt you tfvt added p
boo of Gun-Dtpped Cordi and Two Extra Gun
Dipped Cord Piic Under the Tttid. Why gambit
on an unknown tirt J Enjoy Firtltottr ufcty at trw
pnet you want to pj
SENTINEL TYPE
low r v
COST 1
g S,ZE 4-40-ll
-c . e.. n . ... . .
r ""-'J s uownej but nvn tob im kmco PtOCM-
I
Itti WCI SIZI eaici
4.40-21 5.13 5J5-18 17.52
4.30-20 5.56 5.50-19 8.70
4.50-21 5.82 6.0O-18H.D. 11.28
4.75-19 6.23 6.00-19 H.D. 11.59
FIRESTONE
Service Stores, Inc.
"ONE STOP SERVICE"
9th and Riverside. "Phone 820
aTwsjrassi