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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1934)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune "Emyont In Southern Oregon Rudi thi Mill Trlbuni'1 Daily EiMpt eituntij PublUhed br MKDKOHD 1'HINTINO CO. S5-3T-39 N. rir St. BOBEKT W. KUHL, Editor Ad IndepcDdtnt NewMptr Entered u tecond eltsi sitter at Uedford. Oregon, under Act of Mtxeb 8, 1ST 9. SUBSCRIPTION BATES Bf Mall Id Adranu Dtttj. or fear $5.00 Dally, ell moot hi 2.T5 Pallf, one soma SO R Cut er In Arhuie Medford. AJBl Jarkaonrllle, Central Point, Pboeoli, Talent, Gold Rill anil an Hlshatva. , Dally, one year $8.00 Da nr. ill month! S.'iD . Daily, one month .60 ' All term, cash In adraiice. Official paper of the City of Uedford. Official paper of JacktoD County. i UEMBP.lt OP THE ASSOCIATED PKES8 flecelrlne Kull Uaied Wire fierilce The Anoclated Preii li aiclutlrely entitled to the use for publication or all new diipatenea credited to It or otherwise credited In (hit paper and alio to the oca nevi nubluhed herein. All rlihta for publication of ipeclal dUpatcbei herein are alio reimed. MEMBER Or UNI1BD PRESS IfEMBEH OF" AUDIT BUREAU OK CIHCULAT10NS Adfirtlilrif (tepreaentatlree M. C H0UE.NBEN a COMPANY Offlcea In Net York, Cclcifo, Detroit, Sao Franclico Ui Anjelee Beattte Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. - j MORE PIONEER CLEANINGS. i The report that the wide-awake enterprising Secretary of the Ohambe&l of Commerce had alaln the low-llfed, Inefficient weatherman la not true- unfortunately, i The fir tree puted in th b"k- t Eml! Brltt waa born yard on the day . is now 13 years old. e ! A movement haa been started to build a railroad to the Coaat, which ought to quash the threat of the Espee not to come to Jacksonville, but Instead build a new town on the banks of Bear creek. i ' The Misses Issle MdCully, Amy Dow and Stella Levy are three Jacksonville belles working at the courthouae. . ''. Joe Wetterer haa a palr of the new pegged top pants, and toothpick shoes. , The party of local people who left last spring for Crater Lake by team have returned, and report a warm October there. ! : Philip Metschan, a hustling young business man of Canyon City, who plans to atart a hotel at Heppner aoon, was married here last week. . ' Leon Haaklna has returned from Stanford unlveralty, where he la taking a course in pharmaoy. ' Many of the Jackson county farmers are much Impressed with the speeches of the "Boy Orator of the Platte," William J. Bryan, and his free colnsge ot silver scheme. We beard the fol lowing story on Populism, etc., re cently, and now tell It: ' The father of 17 sons took bis fam ily for a visit with the governor of a silver western state. Trie governor appraised the family and said, "Well, John, I auppose your fine family of sons are all good Populists and all for free sliver." : "All except one," replied the father. "Which one?" asked the governor. The father aald, "That little runty feller there In the corner." "And what's the matter with htmr" asked the Governor. "Wall," drawled the father, "That little critter has learned to read." Quite a number from here attended the hanging In Yreka a week ago Fri day. Theodore Miles Is attending the normal school at Ashland, and playing left end. A family by the name of Orelve have arrived from the East, and are stopping with the Earhart family In the PhoenU district. They will locate here. Three Portland drummers were here the first of the week, telling stories about Scotchmen, and predicting the election of Ben Harrison. Little Alice Kanley, despite her youth. Is winning a reputation as the best maker ot angel cake In Jackson county. Old ang;' eake eaters declare It la the best angel cake they have ever eaten. The S gold piece, aealed up In the southwest corner ot the courthouae w::en It waa laid last summer, Is still there. This 140,000 edifice, when finished, will give the taspayera a pain In the pocketbook. It la the work o the "Ashlsnd gang." , A Klamath river gambler waa ahot late last night. He had too many aeea. There haa not been enough of this. Fran hie Bybee of town has a calf. a m 11 e west of - Fred Tire, the stage driver, says he would tike to be on the Yreka run, and have Black Bart, the outlaw, try and hold him up. The b 1 1 1 lard ta d brou gh t from Crescent City on the back of mules, has been ringed up. and Is very popu lar with our cigarette-smoking dudes. . A team belonging to the Of fen bftcher boys of the Applegate, balked at the foot of the hill, attracting a large crowd, who pawed the afternoon Joking Hermit and Fred, Editorial Correspondence EN ROUTE TO OMAHA, They were complaining of drought around Buffalo, Wyoming, but the fields were green, the cattle and sheep plump. Through eastern Wyoming, South Dakota and western Nebraska, through which we have been running the past twelve hours, most of the country is parched to a dry cinder. In Wyoming and South Dakota particularly the grain, which never got more than inch high from the ground is burned to a crisp. The creek beds are dry, the roads thick with dust.. One doesn't need to leave the train to know what the dry farmers in this part of the country are suffering. The tragedy hits one between the eyes mile after mile. Yesterday they gave the visitors on the ranch a send-off, by rounding up 200 cows and branding the calves. It was done. on a few hours notice, and Mr. a branding crew he didn't have time for lunch. It was a very ! windy day and the most interesting- part of the performance was watching the cowboys drive the creek and into the corral. but the bull calves like naughty boys had other ideas in their heads. One of them particularly didn't like the idea of jump ing the creek and proceeded to bolt it for the rear all alone. With tail high in the air, back he tracked, running like a grey hound, and three cowboys in.pursuit. Had he not run full speed into a wire fence, and spilled He could dodge like a jackrabbit, and how he could get over the ground. He was a tough customer. The cowboys were sore and decided to brand him first. It took two of them to get him down, and when that iron started to burn, he gave a lurch and kick, that sent one house for repairs with a hoof slash on one hand. These boys daged hand, and a smeared visage he was back on the job in half an hour. The show was put on particularly for the young lady in the party. With a cowboy hat, overalls, and an expectant smile she took, a seat on the top rail of the corral fence. In spite of the constant bawling of the cows and calves, ' the maternal anxiety of the former and the desperate but ineffective resis tance of the latter, she made a bold face of it for quite a while. But when directly beneath her, one of the boys nonchalantly'cut a piece out of the calf's ear, about the size of a trout spinner, and the cadaverous looking Vet, jabbed a hypodermic needle into his hide, a foot deep, that appeared, and she nearly dropped her precious camera in her 1 rr ...... r , j HBSIG IQ gel, uauK ill Lena iiiiua o(ja,u' j." a ously threatened, and a solicitous parent unlimbered to ad minister first aid. , When the young lady however saw her young cousins not only going through the ordeal without bat ting an eye but one of them sitting on a calf's head, and calmly studying the major operation she thought better of it. After a drink of cool water and a few minutes rest she not only climbed the fence but joined her pals inside the corral and a few minutes later was wrestling with a white-faced calf herself. Thus they make cowgirls out here. , t ,'",' . Going back to town in the evening the herd was out in the alfalfa field again. All the cows were eating, but all the calves except that one obstreperous young bull, were lying down and thinking it over. They had had a hard day. That young bull was lucky after all. It was he will be papa of a herd. " NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre LOS ANGELES, June 7. W. O. Fields, who sponsors them, took ao out to see the weekly fights at Jim Jeffrie's ranch barn near Burbank. It's the r 1 n ft gladiator's last stsnd sgalnst the furies o t Fato that have strip ped him clem. Like an amiable awkward old Bruin he waddles around the ring as referee. If he obstructs . a view, he la res sed. The fighters are all aockers. From unknown plug-uglies with mule-kick wellop, to lighter Filipino boys who dsnce In nimbly to slash each other to rib bons. In the rich welter of honest sweat, the arena goes beserk with wild Lupe often looping her wildest loops. A delightful Mrs. Malaprop, un mindful ot leather-lunged Jeers, In troduces celebrities, who exploits er- ery sort of bow from Mae West's swsggering leer to Leslie Howard's mincing nod. The ringside Is first night Broadway, the back tier Hell's Kltohen on the loose. Al Jolson tot the evening's major applause, Flghtera get 13 each, win. lose, draw. Prom the ring I was hsnded a "Cer tificate ot Victory" that I had knock ed Mark Kelly cold In 3 rounds. How are you, Mark? Fields and I, old friends, had much to discuss driving horn.. We said nothing. We were thinking ot Jeft'a godbyt wave In front of the home he la about to loose. In an outlying cafe one saw at sett tered tables Bayard Vllller, Edgar Sel wyn with Peggy Wood and John V. A Wearer, Oeorge B. Reynolds, Chlosgo banker, the sportsman Ms Flelsch man, William Wellman, aos director. Sam Ooldwyn, Irene Castle, WlllU'n Collier and Oeorge Bancrort. It might have been any restaurant a pips whiff from Broadway. Indeed, Llndy's or Dinty Moore'a. Catallna and Its glass-bottomed boat to view under-sea life bring tourist although ths yearly deficit sustained by the gum-making Wng leya remain around one million. Yat the Improvement the elder Wrlg'.ey planned, before passing, are to be continued. The heirs consider the sd vertlslng value compensates lor the hiie outlay. Sailing lo Calalins some, how has never mad me wsnt to ch,v gum. Neb., via C. B. & Q.( June 2 . B. was so busy getting together the herd over the hills, across ; The cow calves weren't so bad, himself, he might, be running yet. of the boys back to the ranch print in his nose and a knife are tough though. With a ban expectant smile on her face dis decided that one of these days & W. B. High on a Los Angeles knoll Is a replica ot the 14th century church, "The Little Church of Our Flowers." The original was Inspiration for Thomas Orey's Jmperlshable "Elegy" and there rest his remains. I found myself motoring around It amost every dusk. In pleasant upshoot It seems In quick thrust to tesr out the sick new things ot life and beacon the strong old promises. Mollis O'Dsy, whose name offers such Celtic cadence, never seemed dis tressingly plump to me. But every time I come out here I read she Is starting on another diet. I hope It la Just press agent abacsdabra. Mol lis O'Daya of the world should have the corn-fed bloom of the Klllarney rose and the laughter ot a waterfall. A thin Mollte O'Dsy Is as unthinkable s a fat Qarbo or the likes o' thatl The garllc-fed counterman ' In " a wayside hamburger hutch near Ven ice grew garrutoua In his loneliness this mid-afternoon. He told how he had been helping hla neighbors dur ing ths depression, feeding them when hungry and such. He stressed the fact that he was not a churchman, not having attended service In yeaxa. "Although." he remarked brightly af ter a long pause, "I am not an imbe cile." They were talking of Fatty Arbuck le, the deep tide that engulfed him and how all auch aubmerslons may hinge on triviality. There waa a gath ering In Los Angeles at which a song plugger tired everybody out Introduc ing his own arias. Flnslly Arbuckle suggested getting away from the fel low. Someone replied to do so he'd have to leave town, "All right," cried Arbuckle, "let's drive down to San Francisco!" 5o under the inspiration of the moment they did. And that's how tragedy Is born I Lionel Barrymore seems the on'v member of the so-cslled royal family whose rush of grsndeur to the hesd ha not Jelled. He Is mellow In his most financially productive years, en Joying Informs! drop-Ins at homes of friends to chat. His hobby Is etch ing and at this artistic endeavor he likes to have hi wife, to whom hs Is unusually devoted, reading at his side Studios regard him sure fire In every part. A peaky mocking bird outside my window goes Into mockery at 4 a. m. dally. I don't mind a tew mocks at any time, anywhere. But I aee no sense in a fool bird trying to squeoM an entire opera out of what la only a slnl bar. My mocking bird crave can be completely outfitted with a one-tweeter, that will put on his act. then call It a day or night) (Copyright, 1034. McNaught Syndi cate. Inc.) Certain elaborate New York gar-1 ri.na. nrlvntplv owned, .r. nnen.cl to the public in the spring with ,h. admission, rsveau given to clisrltj, Personal Health Service By William Signed letters 'pertaining to pertonal health and hygiene not to dls- ea,e dlafnosls or treatment Hill be answered by Dr. Brady II a (tamped .elf-addressed envelope It euriosed. Letter, thould he brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number ot letter, received only a ten can be art fwered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. iddress or. William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cat. BACK FROM THE SAX. For the sake of persona with ar rested tuberculosis who are resuming their ordinary civilian status and for ryww- v-w.-igB, the reassurance of n.ran. h r education b been neglected, we are glad to pass along these suggestions sub mitted by a pa tient recently re turned from the san. "It la people with exaggerated tear of germs that make life burdensome (or nits. Of course .the fact that tuberculosis , la an Infec tious disease and patients who still have sputum are likely to be a men ace unless they are careful, makes this attitude hard to combat. But the physicians at the sanatorium taught me that I cannot be a men ace to anyone as long as I observe the following simple rules: "(1) Always cover nose and mouth when coughing or sneezing. "(3) Dispose of sputum In such t way that It can be burned without being touched by any one. "(3) Sleep In a bed and If possible a room alone as long as any pne has any cough. "(4) Be careful not to kiss or pet or fondle young children, and spend as little time as possible near them, unless out of doors. "Of course, one adds to these the ordinary precautions of washing the hands, having Individual drinking cups, etc., as observed by most de cent people, whether 111 or not. "But even all that does not satisfy some people. "A sister thinks I should not be allowed to use the same wash bowl and bathtub as the rest of the fam ily. She insists my clothes should be washed separately, and that I should use separate dishes and boll them 20 minutes. If my dishes are kept sepa rately, why boll them? My sister's husband will not let her vlstt our home overnight except when I am away, and so for my sake my mother must give up the pleasure of having her other children and grandchildren with her. ..." Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS EARLY settlement of the shipping strike seems Improbable. New violence, the headlines tell us, feared. What a pity, with millions sUU out of work and buying power still ex ceedingly low. Something is always happening to take the Joy out of life. f I EAT spell sends grain prices 1 A higher. July wheat touches 91.06 and December wheat goes to A1.07V4 after a day of frenzied trad ing In Chicago. Please note that It is NATURE, not legislation, that does It. For years we've been passing laws trying to raise the price of wheat .and In the face of all these efforts the price has gone steadily down. But when nature takes a hand, It's different. , The traders know that when nature starts In she means bus iness. D" ROUOHT In the Middle West raises grain prices. That won't help the Middle West, which appar ently will have little grain to sell. It Is the prospect that sends prices up. Out here on the Paclflo Coaat, where prospect for a wheat crop are fair, IT WILL HELP. One man meat is another man'a polaor. D ROUOHT and heat send grain price kiting upward. Rising price sound good, after years of stesdy decline. But mark this: No nation ever became prosperous as a result of drought and crop fail ure, HERE'S an odd' Item In the news: Harry Cobb, of Prescott, Ari zona, sues Msude R. OUtlllsn, ot San Jose, California, for $100,000 for breach of promise to marry him. It's a msn's right to sue for breach ot promise Just as much as a wom an's, and If any suffering 1 really Involved In such esses which this writer doubts-a man can suffer as much as a woman. 1 BUT speaking wholly privately and not for publication what's our ; opinion of a man who aues a woman for breach of promise? DISPATCH from Geneva tells us: "As ths world dlssrmament con ference gasped on what appeared! to be Its deathbed, French spokesmsn expressed confidence that "eome thlng will be done.' "'In all event,' he told the Asso ciated Press, 'Franc does not Intend to permit anybody to throw ths re sponsibility for the collapse on her shoulders.' " The chief Interest of France In the 'smenl conference, that Is to '), is to PASS TEE BUCK. Brady, M.D. The absurdity of the exactions sis ter would impose becomes apparent when you think how unhesitatingly you and I and even squeamish people ! f " WH " . the lunch counter (for me) and or der schnapps and certified milk re spectively, without ever a question as to the health of the recent custom ers served with the same utensils, or even a thought of the tuberculosis, syphilis or whatnot the bartender or waiter may have. Likewise, the ab surdity of the demand In reference to the use of the wash basin and the bathtub becomes apparent when we think how we Yankees demand bathtub or at least a wash basin in our room whenever we stay at a ho tel and God only knows . , . From the context of the lady's let ter I gather that sister's husband Is trying to keep his children from pro longed Intimate contact with the pa tient or ex-patient. In that he is ab solutely right. Gran'ma will Just have to deny herself some of the Joy of having all the darlings with her all the time, and If I know gran'mas I believe she will heartily second the Idea. It Is In childhood that Infec tion is most likely to occur. - So this hard-boiled brother-in-law Is . only setting a good example for all other parents In a similar situation. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Salt Makes You Fat and Loggy Please tell me whether It is harm ful to eat large quantities of salt on everything. I want everything salted so much that others can't eat it. (C. E. 8.) 1 " Answer. Yes, too much salt not only encourages overeating but re tains more water In the tissues of the body, which makes you loggy or flabby and easily tired. Everybody : needs a little salt dally. Persons ex posed to extreme summer heat or artificial heat should consume salt rather freoly on their food, even with their drinking water. Ordinary folk should either add no salt In cooking or else have none on the table. (Copyright, 1034, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to should send letters direct to Dr. commanlrate with Dr. Brady William Brady, M. D., 263 E. Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Cat. AS LONO a the chief Interest of the great nations In disarma ment conferences Is to-pass the buck and do nothing, disarmament plans will be futile. Disarmament will only come about when the antlons WANT to DIS ARM. RS. OV1XLA DIONNE, of Cornell, Ontario, In Canada, gives birth to five baby girls, all of whom are still alive after several days, and thereby gets onto practically every front page In the world not to men tion the radio news reports and the movie newsreels. There are many ways to win fame or notoriety, if you choose to look at It In that way. Giving birth to quintuplets Is at least more com mendable than some of the ways that are tried. (Continuea trom Page one) itinerant photographer near the gate and sent them inside to the presi dent in the custody of the sub-master, with a note: ."Waiting at the gate." Senators usually arise and speak without warning or provocation, but the dignified senator, J. Ham Lewis, of Illinois, recently established a crficedent bv Mndlns a formal an- nnnnrmn( et hla tntrt lin ti-t ths ! senate press gallery In the following language: "To the .Gentlemen of the Press: "May I Inform you that at the conclusion of the Austin speech, I will address senate on the reply of debtors as to payments of Interna tional debts. "Very sincerely, Lewis, HI." It brought a crowd. Communications Answers Old Settler To the Editor: In reply to "Old Settler's" request to know how many old timers can 1 recall the circumstances that led up ' tn tha tlmn In Orepnn when w hut j tw0 xh.mcgMng d.y,. i what yearj and who waa president, and who was I governor. If my memory serve aright it was In Clevelsnd's Isst admlnlstra- 1 tlon In 1894 and the governor wss ! Sylvester Pennoyer, same year. What I I led up to the event, I think, wss thst Governor Pennoyer would not go to meet Cleveland at the California line and escort the president to Sslem and welcome him to Oregon. 1 do not recall the exact dates ot the years, but It wss In 1694. 40 years s;o J. A. McLEOD. Medford, Oregon. Avoid False Teeth Dropping or Slipping You needn't tesr false teeth drci ping or slipping It you'll sprinkle little Fasteeth on your plates e morning. Olvea sll day comfort teeth hold tight, rvodorines. No g;' mv. pasty tsste or feeling Get Ki teem bom four diujjist. Three toes, Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the Fllei of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Veare Abo.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY June 7, 1924 (It Was Saturday) Special Prohibition Agent Sande- fer raids an Eagle Point still, and nebs trio. President Coolldge declares "extra vagance must stop," and vetoes the bill Increasing pay of postal workers. Jackson County Republicans hold rousing session, and issue call for state convention. Speakers, in a hu morous vein offer reward for "ai able-bodied Democrat, outside of Judge Canon, his son Verne, Moae Barkdull, or Frank Wortman." Paving of Jacksonville highway completed to Lozier Lane. May was the driest May since 1019, and only .IS of an inch of rain fell. The Ku Klux Klan issued proclama tion, "they will name the Republican nominee for vice-president," and "crush alien and domestic crimin als." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY June 7, 1914 (It Was Sunday) The vice president of the Southern Paclfle is the guest of the Country club. The divorce suit of Mme. Schuman Helnk creates a sensation In land, as love letters of mate to another, are read In court. Citizens of Trail plan to hold Fourth of July celebration. District Attorney Kelly advlstu. "wives whose husbands won't work, not to work either, or cook meals. They won't come home If there is nothing to eat. Hottest June In 40 years in the ea..t. The Old Channel mine near Gallce is sold for $100,000. f TOLD IN EFFORT 10 BREAK WILL NEW YORK. June 7. (AP) Old Isaac Singer, who Invented the sewing machine back in 1851, must have squirmed in his grave today If he knew what was said about his daugh ter, Florence In New York's surrogate court. Florence Adelaide Pratt was 78 when she died abroad In 1932 and her estate, currently worth more than $5,000,000, Is being disputed In the court. In her later years. It Is as serted, Mrs. Pratt entered into a psy chopathic period described as "mental night." Mrs. Pratt's sister, Mrs., Margaret Alexander of London, is contesting the will, contending her sister was mentally unbalanced when she af fixed her signature to the testament in 1931. In 1924, according to the evidence, Mrs. Patt's husband was seriously 111 In Monte Carlo and the doctors said he could only be given sponge bathi no tubs. But Mrs. Pratt made the nurse put her husband In the tub and then turned on scalding water, at torneys said. When the screaming man had been rescued, Mrs. Pratt opened all the windows In the room. Her husband died three days later. Mrs. Pratt, meandering over Europe, brandished pistols in hotel lobbies, threw focd at her maids, danced in the nude before guests, refused to pull up her bloomers when they drop ped about her ankles In public and mashed potatoes with her fingers at fashionable dining places, the contest ant declares. Attorney Corbln said the sewing machine heiress hired thugs to beat up her secretary and fairly chortled when she received word that he was In a serious condition In a hospital. Mrs. Alexander Is contesting the will because she was not given a penny of her sister's fortune, which was be queathed to three other relatives and to various trades people In Europe. Mrs. Pratt was Inclined, It was brought out in court, to insert the name of casual travelers and acquaint ance In her will, but due to a "mons trous hatred" for Mrs. Alexander, re fused to leave any of her money to her sister. Winifred Lamb, a London secretary who witnessed the last will, testified today that Mrs. Pratt seemed "per fectly rational" at the time she signed it. Oregon Weather Partly cloudy tonight and Friday: unsettled locally: slightly cooler In east portion tonight: rising tempera ture In Interior Friday; gentle north west winds offshore. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE WITHOUT CALOMEL And YonU Jump Out 0f Bed In (he Morning Rarin to Go j B f soar and sank and tlx- world leoka Dunk, don't (tvallow a lot of talta, miBr1 wmlr, oil, lnaqrtj cmnrty or fhwrinc pun and tip than to mik jroq niddaly w uq duojtuji tad full oi tunaJuoct, For Uwt can't do it. Ttwy only morm the J mw Tnient doenn't grt at Jfi"?' for your down-nd-ot Iwilnf it your tlTtr. It should pour oat two pound of liquid btlc Into your bowtts Uilj. ff tWs M U not tWinf bvtij, your food ogfmU It jam dyi in tfa bowti. and roar brwto U lonL 1o often brfga out in blrmishr. Yoar boad awhea ind jmu ( down ind oaL Vow wboU wytutn poiMfd. IittiixVJTbtT d CARTER'S 1 J TTt J. LI V Ml PILLS to frt th two poradi of btlc IWpi frvHy and tnaJc yoq it "up end op." Tly contain woodftrhil. ' Tnl. tri nvuhltj Mtnirta, aouudni uhM It cctnts to majQDf h tula flow (mty. Ptn Wt Mk for Htt pill. Ak ror Cartvi . ttu Urn V.H. lxok for th mma Carfr't UtUt Lin PilU on I ha rtd lW. Rvnt tabatitaiu. lit at all atom, 0 1M1 CU.C OFFICES CLOSE UP TODAY IN JUBILEE At a regular meeting of the city council held last night, a holiday for city employes was declared for Thursday, June 7, for the observance of the Diamond Jubilee. It waa an nounced at the council meeting that the county court had agreed to close the court house all day Thursday also. An ordinance for the licensing of dispensers of alcoholic beverages was laid over until the next meeting. Fred Scheffel, city superintendent, reported that the federal lease on the municipal airport had been newed for the ensuing year, and also read reports on the progress of S. E. R. A. projects and the work of city departments for the month of May. The S. E. R. A. report stated that the Prescott Memorial park road Is being widened, and that a trail, not yet completed for the first 2000 feet, is under construction from the spring to the peak. The progress of the work on the Bear creek project Is com plete to the north line of Merrick camp ground, the report showed. Due to the encountering of considerable hard rock In the East Main street curve elimination project, all funds for the work have been used, the paper said, and application for more funds has been made. The street sign project Is 80 per cent complete, and when finished will provide signs for all streets in the city. All the 8. E. R. A. projects have been carried on through the month of May with balances left out of the approved funds. They are as follows: Roxy Ann road, 914,037.44; Bear creek, $12,057.25; East Main curve elimination, $17.81; street signs, $39.84. The report for the various city de partments showed a thorough con struction and malntainance program for the month. , Anderson Creek ANDERSON CREEK, June 6. (Spl) Mrs. James MacDowell of Johnson Prairie spent the week-end with friends In Medford. Mrs. Hulda Hamilton Is visiting at the Mays' home this week. Ralph Green ta falling timber on Johnson Prairie. Mrs. Holtman spent Saturday eve ning in Medford. Steve Lunak and A. Donlca are WASHOUT 15 MILES OF KIDNEY TUBES Win Back Pep . . . Vigor . . . Vitality Medical authorities agree that your kidneys contain 15 MILES of tiny tubes or filters which help to purify the blood and keep you healthy. If you have trouble with too fre quent bladder passages with scanty amount causing burning and discom fort, the 15 MILES of kidney tubes need washing out. This danger signal may be the beginning of nagging backache, leg pains, loss of pep and vitality, getting up nights, lumbago, swollen feet and ankles, rheumatic pains and dizziness. If kidneys don't empty 3 pints ev ery day and get rid of 4 pounds of waste matter, you body will take up these poisons causing serious trouble. It may knock you out and lay you up for many months. Don't wait. Ask your druggist for DOAN'S PILLS . . . a doctor's prescription . . , which h:is been used successfully by millions of kidney sufferers for ever 40 years. They give quick relief and will help to wash out the 15 MILES of kidney tubes. But don't take chances with strong drugs or so-called "kidney cures" thas claim to fix you up in 15 minutes, for they may seriously Injure and ir ritate delicate tissues. Insist on DOAN'S PILLS ... the old rellablo relief that contains no "dope" or habit-forming drugs. Be sure you tH DOAN'S PILLS at your druggist. Copy righted 1934, Foster-Mil burn Co. WORLD'S FAIR plus A FREE TICKET through C735 COACH R0UN0TRIP iggso TOURIST ROUNDTRIP Here's the formula for a teal vacation. Travel to the Chi cago World's Fair or to almost any other eastern city through California for exactly the same summer round trip fare as via direct routes. Stopover in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Return on a northern line. Summer roundtrip fares are in effect every day till Oct ober 15. Return limit October 31. Southern Pacific i. C. CABLE, Atfllt Tfl. .11 working for Bill Schnelr of PhoenU this week. Jas. Maya and family and Mrs. Hamilton were In Ashland on busi ness Saturday, Frank Casey waa out to the valley Sunday. John Cantor was on the creek Tues day after wood. J. 8. Foster was In Ashland Bat urday. RECREATION SPOTS MAINTAIN EXHIBIT Offering a complete recreational headquarters for Diamond Jubilea visitors, the Rogue River National for est, the Crater Lake National park, the Lake ot the Woods, Diamond lake resort and the Oregon Caves are maintaining an exhibit on East Main street In the former quarters of the Maaiill drug store. The exhibit is in charge of Senior Ranger John Grlbble and Ranker Russell Andrews. The latter la of the park service and the former Is con nected with the forest service. Quits a large number of visitors have been received during the past three days, including a large number of out-of-state residents. WINDOW GLASS We sell window glass and will replace your broken windows reasonably. Trowbridge Cab inet Works. ANYTIME CHILDREN lOo Tonight and Friday Grand Comedy There's the devil to pay when they start to play for they've learned the secret of luxury without worryl with June Knight Neil Hamilton Sally O'Neill Dorothy Burgess Mary Carlisle ALSO Mickey McGuire in "Mickey's Minstrels" Kiddin' Hollywood-News Dally Mat. 1:15. Ere. 6:4.1 California 86 STANDARD ROUNDTRIP 20c ' 1 3 u