PAGE TEN
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 193.
Medford mail Tribune
"EnryoM In Southirn OrtgM
Riadi thi Mill TrlbunV'
Diil Biccpt Siturday
Publish ty
MtDKORD POINTING CO.
15-JT-J9 N. Fir St. I
BOBF.BT W. BUHL, Editor
Ad IndcpcodtDt Nenpaptr
Entered u teeotd elut matter at Medford.
Oregon, under Act of llarcb 8, 18T8,
BOBSCBIPTION BATES
By Mall to Adracee
Dally, 004 year ,,,$5.00
. Dally, ill month. 3.TS
Dally, one montli 60
By Carrier In Adtance Medford. Aibland,
JaekunriUe, Central Point, Pnoenli, Ttleot. Gold
huj and oo uizhvan.
Dally, one year , ,.,16.00
' DaJly, rii months,. , 8.3B
, Dally, one month .60
All terms, cash tn idranca.
Orrielal paper of the City of Medford.
Official Pipw of JaektoD County. -
MEMBEH OF THB ABS0C1ATED PHE8S
BecelrlDK Pull Leased Wire Settle
- Tot Asioelated Press ti eicluslrely entitled to
the use for publication of all news dlipatcbea
credited to It or otherwise credited In this paper
ud also to the local ns published tierein.
All rlfbt for publication of inedal dispatches
Derein are also rescnea.
MEM3EB OF UNITED PBE88
MEMBEH OF AUDIT BUBEAO
OF CIRCULATIONS
Adrertlilni Bepresentstlm
M. C MOOENBEN COMPANY
Offloea In Ne Tori, Chicago, Detroit, Bin
Francisco Los Angeles Buttle Portland.
U.S.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur ferry. -
INDIAN WAR VETERANS' JUBILEE.
The Indian War Veterana' Jubilee,
commemorating 76 yeara of chasing
and lighting Indiana, will be held
next week. The scalped and the un
calped will attend. A week ot tea
tlvlty and firewater will prevail. The
governor has promised to come, . but
as be la not running this year for
lection, the gamblers at the Little
Nugget bar are betting 8 to 8 he will
not be able to make It. .
....
The committee In charge decided
not to have an Indian Village, aa
moat of the population have eeen all
the Indiana they want, and do not
care bow they live, If at all, : :
. a
Several who helped ehove redaklna
off of Table Rock object to merabere
of the committee, who only lanoeo
here In 1863, telling the hardened
Indian fighters how to commemorate
their battlea with the redaklna. They
call them "Indiana," not "Injuna,"
Not a member of the committee waa
ever wounded by a polaon arrow. ;
a
It waa also voted to put a little
tp Into the celebration and compel
all the menfolka to shave. It will be
a relief to aee a smooth-faced male
again, after the morass ot whiskers.
Citizens need not be alarmed. They
mil have 40 or 60 yeara to grow
beards for the celebrations they will
attend when they grow up Into, hardy
ploneere.
Another feature will be the roaatlng
ef an ox. near the courthouse, and
tame will be aerved at ye noons. Set
tlers who have been subsisting on
deer, bear, ducks, grouse, and other
wild time, since they took up a dona
tlon land claim, will have a treat to
get their teeth Into a piece ot tame
meat, The ox to be the piece oe re
latance haa made tour round trips
across the plains, 7 Td la now ripe to
be barbecued.
A log cabin refreshment parlor will
be erected near the north edge of
the settlement, with a floor, for the
execution of the quadrille, achottlscha
and polka provided. Several future
old-time fiddlers will be on hand,
see
a Our enterprising, conservative, and
widely known banker haa consented
to let his red-wheeled buggy head the
parade, on condition the committee
washes the mud oft the wheels, and
put It back In the loft ot his bem.
This la a public-spirited concession,
as Isst Hallowe'en the buggy. In some
manner, waa hoisted to the steeple of
the Methodist church, and difficulty
waa experienced In getting It down, ,
' s a
The Grand Parade will be headed
Wr the United Oregon Indian flghtera.
Cure are aeveral hare who have
enased, and been chased by all the
leading tribes. They tell soma till
tales ot their battlea wltb the red
aklna. All are personally acquainted
with Bitting Bull, and have taken!
friendly ahota at him many times.
The parade will be a review ot early
New England tlmea, and depict eoma
of the hardships suffered by the early
eettlers there. In the evening there
will be a pageant entitled t "Why
Did I Ever Get West ef the Missis
alppl." a a a
Oliver Applegate haa returned from
Intern Oregon, where ha haa been
fighting Indiana all aprlng.
Paddack Named '
Agent for Home
Beer Dispenser
la. H. (Paddle) Paddock haa Just
been appointed district representative
for the distribution ot home draft
beer dispensers, according to an
nouncement made by Ralph Oorton,
president of United Sales e Bervlce
Co. ot Portland.
Mr. Paddock will handle southern
Oregon and northern California fori
this new and novel Invention, which
haa gained wide popularity.
Mr. Oorton will remain over a few
day visiting old frlenda before re-
turning to Portland and California
territories.
II
v caitoriaj vorresponaence
KOCKFOBD, 111., June 4. Drought, drought drought!
That has been Topio No. 1 since we left Billings, Montana. It's
the same here, where it's 100 in the shade and 100 per cent
humidity. Yesterday, near Galesburg, Illinois, clouds suddenly
gathered and there was a miniature cloudburst for about five
minutes. It must have done a lot of good in that part of the
state. But while it was cloudy on our arrival here, and heat
lightning was dancing all over the heavens, there was no rain.
It hag been threatening all day today, but still no rain. We
can't imagine anything more exasperating than to have
weather like this, with all the appearances of a storm, and
yet the hours go by and no storm develops. Talk about your
million dollar rains, a couple of inches in northern Illinois
would be worth a billion, when not only the crops and stock,
but the farmers' feelings are considered. Just as this was writ
ten there was a drop on the windowpane, perhaps before we
finish the deluge will begin.
That Burlington train we took at Buffalo, "Wyoming, was
an hour late and by the time we reached western Nebraska
was over two hours late. The reason was simple enough there
were four cars of strawberries taken on at Billings which had
to be iced en route. No railroad can mix freight with passenger
traffic, and maintain such a schedule as the Burlington recently
put into effect for the summer tourist travel. The train was
well loaded with passengers too, and most of them were going
to Chicago. There appeared to
tions with the C. B. & Q.'s crack flier, the Aristocrat, at Omaha,
and when we got up Sunday morning and found we were two
hours and a half late all hope was abandoned. But we. will say
this for the Burlington, they
service as promised. Although
the passengers for destinations
three cars and a special train made up. This train took a cut
off, that missed Omaha entirely, skirted along a muddy little
river across the Missouri south of Omaha and caught the Aristo
crat at Paoific Junction, leaving there only a little over half an
hour behind schedule. This was
by the time the Mississippi river was crossed at Burlington,
and then as luck would have it, a hot box developed and the
half hour lost again. However, the passengers had a fine time,
walking up and down the track watching the perspiring train
crew put out the fire and pack the axle again.
Compared with Wyoming and- South Dakota, Iowa and
Illinois looked like the Garden of Eden. Piejd after field of
green corn, from six to 18 inches high revolving like the
spokes of a giant wheel, as the train roared by. Corn can stand
drought better than grain, for once sprouted it sends its roots
down deep after the moisture. The few ."elds of grain we did
see, looked promising enough.
a rainy summer, we venture to
losses will be far out of line when harvest time comes around.
How different fishing is in this part of the country, than
out on the coast. Yesterday when the train was shunted along
the bank of that muddy stream near Omaha, it was only about
7 sOO a. m., but the Sunday fishermen were already on hand-
literally hundreds of them. There they stood and sat, with long
cane poles, patiently waiting for we presume a catfish to
bite. We saw no sign of a fish or a bite, mile after mile, but
no doubt before the day was over, there wore both. We saw
one sensible fisherman, his pole balanced over a rock while he
puffed his pipe and scanned the Sunday funnies. Out in
"Gawd's country," if you don't
least don't have to take along
plenty of exercise.
Had lunch at the Noonday club today, which might be
termed the Union League club of Rockford. At least we could
find no one with a good word for P. D. E. and most of the
conversation dealt with various phases of the new deal in what
might be termed an obscene fashion. Here too, the drought
came into the remarks considerably,, the chief reaction being
one of grim delight that the worse the drought the harder
for the Democrats in the Pall. A former member of the Illinois
state legislature was particularly vituperative and was filled
with amazement and ohagrin that the newspaper man from the
Far West, honestly believed P. D. had done rather well.
"They're pretty Bolshevik out on the Pacifio Coast anyway
I suppose," was hit biting rejoinder. ." ..
As a matter of fact Roosevelt is trying his darndest to save
the eapitalistio system, these big business men, are convinced
he is trying to tear down. But it will probably take a ton of
dynamite, exploding somewhere in the neighborhood of the hip
pocket, to convince them of the fact. .
No deluge developed but there was what might be termed
a trace of rain. A trace of rain on this baked soil of Illinois is
like throwing a grain of sand into the Paoifio ocean, as far as
any material results are concerned. However, it is still cloudy,
and olose, typical thunderstorm weather, though the young
lady in the party thinks it is probably getting ready for a
cyclone and rather hopes she is right. She has never seen one
and is taking this trip into the effette East primarily to see
the sights.
R. W. R.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
BY O.O.McIntyre
LOS ANGELES, June . At Winnie
Sheehan'a the dinner guests included
the Werner Baxters, the Bob Kanea,
the Sidney Kenta,
Prank Lloyd, Ja
net Oaynor, the
Raphaelsona and
the Cobba. The
approach toShee
hen A n gelo
Drive estate aug
g e a t a Pennsyl
vania avenue
with cypreaaea.
An Arabian Ava
lon transplanted.
Herded Into the
modernlstlo bar
for an aperitif.
barkeep out of the Gay PO's rubbed
his hands expectantly. His over
Niagara mustaches and froeen wave.
X
be no chance of making connec
make every effort to maintain
two hours and a half late all
east of Omaha were put into
cut down tp the vanishing point
If, as some predict, this will be
say, the present estimates of
get a strike all day,, you at
your "specs," and you do get
let hair' In Uon-tamer'a roach were
supplemented by a gatee-ajar collar,
a throat-cut red tie and a Montana
diamond that rivaled the headlight of
the Empire express.
Cobb, who used to accept assign
ments with Sheehsn from Chspin In
the braw old days ot the Evening
World, thought soma former World
man of such aftuence should Install
a replica of Doo Perry's famous drug
store. It was a hang-out of the
O'Malley'a, the Hills, the Clarkea and
other Pourth-eetate nobles. .
My dinner partner waa Miss Oaynoa,
a slim mold ot Dresden with a coif
fure ot rich auburn and artiatlc hands
that would give tbe two Helena
Menken and Morgan a twitch. Her
eyea are copper-flecked and ahe Uvea
in terror of those pigmentary lapses
called freckles. Even decollete, she
suggested a aunbonnety awing on the
garden gate.
In the coffee room, showing a
quietly artiatlc taste. Sheehan haa
Remington's moat celebrated bronae.
along with hla famous -Last of the
Buffalo" canvaa. We coaxed one story
a Charlie Russell dandy Inspired
py to Remington treasures out of
Personal Health Service
By William
signed lettera pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis
ease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by pr. Brady U a stamped
Mlf-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in
luk. Otrlng to the Urge number ot lettera received only a few can be an
swered. No reply con be made to
aaaress Dr. William Brady, 26S El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Cat.
A LITTLE KNOWLEDOE OF BACTERIOLOGY
IS CANKEROUS.
By a little knowledge I mean what
the wisecracking layman knows. If you
stop to think where the wiseacre lay.
man gets his knowledge you will un
derstand what I mean, all right.
Two Items, the
petrolatum and
ol' doc salve. In
the Medicine
0 u p b o aid (the
,jlat of it will be
given in a book
let under the ti
tle "The Medl
cine Cupboard'
when the present
series la complet
ed) are In collsp.
slble tubes. Not
b e c a use collap.
are more expensive or
finer than Jars or 'boxes, but becaute
collapsible tubea preserve their con
tents from contsmlnstlon. Jsrs or
boxes of salve are hard to keep un-
contamlnated after they are . once
opened and some of the salve taken
out.
The popular custom of keeping a
box or Jar of petrolatum (usually un
der some proprietary trade name) In
the house and dipping Into It when
ever any of the unguent la needed, la
altogether bad. This salve, like many
others that may have remedial rlr.
tues, permits bacterial growth If the
bacteria are planted In It, even If It
does not serve aa an actual culture
medium. And only a physician or a
nurse trained In aurglal aspects or
the principles of aurglcal or sanitary
cleanliness, knows how to remove
ointment from an open box or Jar
without contaminating the ointment
left in the container.
The wiseacre layman haa a half
baked Idea that a daah or a whiff or
a mere mention of some "powerful'
antiseptic or germicide constitutes the
essential part of what he calls, "anti
septic precautions." Hla shallow mind
la easily Impressed by white enamel,
nickel plate and atrange odora.
In modern aurgery some antiaep-
tlo may be used in preparing the field
of operation, or for the first aid dis
infection of an accidental wound, but
after that the ekllled surgeon or
physician rarely usee any other anti-
septlo thsn plain soap and water.
Likewise in modern medical practice
the physician and nurse trained In
caring for patients 111 ot communi
cable germ disease rely wholly upon
plain soap and water cleanliness plus
special knowledge ot the technic of
asepsis. '
The repeated application of antisep
tic liquids to the mucous lining 'of
throat, nose or mouth la of doubtful
advantage In any case and is certainly
Cobb. It offered a sharp contrast to
the Jacobean dignity of the room. So
awlftly did It purge the decoroua
amenities that Sidney Kent made It
to the motorway In nothing flat to
get rid of ankle deep whoops that
could be heard In Catallna on a clear
day
Every time I've seen Warner Baxter
on the screen I've been tempted to
send my New York tailor a yanh, yanh,
yanh. 8o I was glad to see him In
closeup. KIs sartorial accomplish
ments are no photographic trick. He's
an 18-karat Brummel whose resem
blance to Ronald Coleman la the most
striking likeness In the Industry; De
spite keen Interest, my wife told me
all the way home, all the way home
she did. that I persisted In calling
him "Mr. Williams" and hie lovely
wife "Mrs. Williams." Even after ahe
scratched off a warning on her place
card. Senility, my masters.
Later I had to tote my sunburn
home the rest of the guests went to
Sheehsn'e eunken projection palace,
a floor below, to watch newa reels and
a full length film. Moat residences
of ahomna have thla touch. And
always you will hear the apologetic
murmur for lack of what la known
aa "audience reaction." Viewed by
a handful, every film, no matter how
superb, falls rather flat. Fruitcake
without the nuta.
There are myriad scientific won
ders In the studios. But I think
among the greatest la an Instrument
that artificially spins cobwebs so
realletlo that they seem real a few
steps away. Thus' arl old attic or
dingy dungeon may be- flossed up In
a Jiff. The same phenomena are
manlfeat In the. spreading of a light
Scotch mist or a soupy London fog,
Then there Is the inglorious Job filled
by the "stand In." He or ahe standa
lr the glare of the scorching lights
while the cameraa are focused. It la
a hot spot, but the substituting saves
the stars from wilting during their
scenes.
Prom my bedroom window early X
watched the sun sift its splendor on
the clusters cf red-roofed white houses
thst are Los Angeles. A ralnbowy
sheen bloomed and withered on the
orange and palm treee and the red
taaeled acacia. In the background
waa the grim rim of barren hills,
Ivy St Market
Free Delivery-Call 1064-J
U. 8. Govt. Inspect. Meats
Saturday Special
FANCY ' '
HENS
ZV, lb,
ea. 48c
Av
W. C. STRAHAN, Prop.
Brady, M.D.
querlea not conforming to instructions.
a detriment In many cases. Of course
no auch antiseptic can have any in-
fluence on the germa which are
actually established In the tissues aud
doing the harm, and It the antiseptic
remqvee or disposes of sny germs that
may be free In the secretions of nose,
mouth or throat, what of It? The
germa -there are not harming the pa
tient anyway. The antiseptic may
possibly lessen the chance of passing
the dlsesse on to other persona, but
don't tell me anybody bothers about
that.
The repeated or constant appllcv
tlon of antiseptics to wounds, burns
and other lesions only retarda the
natural healing process'. Once tbe
wound haa been disinfected or ren
dered clean the best treatment la a
careful let-alone policy. That Is by
no means a simple matter, but often
taxes, the ingenuity of the best physl
clsn and aurgeon. But the aenalble
layman can beet follow this policy by
avoiding unnecessary re - dressings
snd avoiding the use of "sntlaeptic
and healing" nostrums. A protective
dressing of petrolatum from collsp.
alble tube, or perhaps ol' doc salve If
the wound Is painful or Irritated, or
flexible collodion, or dry gauze and
bandage, or adhesive plaster, la much
more conducive to prompt healing.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Pimples Are Good for a Boy.
I have a eon 16 yeara old who la a
perfect boy In every respect but has a
face so full of ugly pimples that I am
heartbroken about It. There are many
blackheads-. . . (O. L. O.)
Answer Blackheada and pimples
(acne, aa doctors caU It) ere almost
normal In youth. A reasonable
amount of pimples are rather good
for a boy.. and sometimes for a girl
too. Keeps 'em from getting too vain
Send a stamped envelope bearing your
address and 1 11 send you or the bny
instructions for treatment of tho
trouble.
Senegamblan In Woodpile.
My wife has a blind brother whose
mind la not normal. His mother
thinks she marked him, and that is
all the reason ahe can give . . . (fl. W.
L)
Answer The marking myth win
not do. Meningitis In Infancy la not
rarely the cause of such blindness.
Your wife should consult a physician,
who knows the family, for advice
about heredity.
(Copyright 1934, John P. Dllle Co.)
Ed Note: Readers wishing Co
should aend letters direct to Ur.
communicate wltb Dr. Brady
William Brady, M. D, 266 B. ca
mlno, Beverly Hills, Cal.
bass note In the exquisite tremolo.
It waa aa though Nature had plumed
a beautiful dewy rose In an ugly dry
hollow.
I find Arthur Brisbane about the
most eagerly read of the dally com
mentatora on the Pacific coast. At
rare Intervals there, epeaks up the
damner with faint praise, but bis
audience la almost 100 per cent en
thusiastic. He comes to town fre
quently aa a visitor to San Simeon
and these Journalizing Jaunts add
cubits to hla professional steture. He
has an alfalfa ranch on the desert,
which some say, ehould he ever re
tire and the possibility Is remote
will be hla favorite retreat.
We motored out to the famous Hon
farm today. There was a majestic
and sullen male, aloof from hla fel
lows, that utterly won the Boston.
His eyes were for nothing else,
stretching full length on the ground,
his nubbin of a tall aquiver. The
idiot aeemed in a glddyap mood and
wanted to play horsie or aomethlng.
(copyright, 1034, McNaught Syndi
cate, Inc.)
. VANCOUVER, Wash., June 8. (AP)
Max Eagle, son of Mrs. T. W. Rum
mela of Carson, Wash., was killed
yesterday when a falling snag struck
him near the Lookout Mountain CCC
camp In which ha waa working.
"
PORTLAND, Ore., June 8. (AP)
Alexia Cardinal M. Leplcler, one of the
greatest scholars of the Catholic
church, win attend the first Marian
congress In the United States, to be
held In Portland, August 13 to 16.
J this iter realty J
iheitwtidet?
Tha Beer of
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
AVIATOR heading casually
A",
northward from Sacramento the
other morning had to make a forced
landing In Southern Oregon.
Why?
Well, If you must know, he forgot
to look at the tank before he atarted
and RAN OUT OF OAS.
These airplanes aren't so different
from automobiles, after all, are they?
nuT that Isn't aU.
D He'd forgotten to look la his
pocketa before he atarted, so when
he landed he had to borrow breakfast
money and wire back home for gaso
line money.
Hla little coupe they call 'em that,
In these days travela at a apeed of
around 166 mllee an hour, and It had
got him so darned far away from
home so darned quick that he had
passed beyond his ordinary circle ot
acquaintance.
THIS fast airplane travel, you see,
brings problems ot lta own.
If you're going to drive an airplane,
It will pay you to keep a ten or a
twenty dollar bill sewed Into your
vest or your underwear, or parked In
the beel of your shoe.
You'll never know when you're go
ing to need It.
THIS particular coupe la what la
known aa a two-seater, and the
seate are located aide by side, up In
front not one behind the other In
the utterly ridiculous manner In
which they used to be placed.
The pilot sits at one aide, and hla
passenger sits right beside him.
CLOSE UP.
Does that auggest anything to you?
P NOT, how about thla?
This two-seater coupe, with tbe
two seats placed aide by aide, close
together, la equipped with a atabll
lzer. A stabilizer Ja a device that
practically handles the plane when
It la well up In the air and on a
atralght course.
That la to aay, the pilot can let
go the stick and take his mind off
his driving and the plane will look
out for Itself at least for a reason
able length of time.
BACK In the good old days, when
grandfather waa a young fellow.
he could wrap the lines around the'
whip, and the horse, If It waa any
kind of a horse at all, would look
out for Itself. ,
They never yet have been able to
make an automobile that will do
that. The Infernal things have to
be DRIVEN all tbe time. If one takes
hla hand off the wheel, he never can
tell what will happen or where he
will wind up.
But Invention and progress ' are
moving along. Defects In the auto
mobile that never have been reme
died are being taken care of In the
airplane. .
STILL, even the ' airplane has lta
drawbacks or has had, In the
past, snyway.
Thla particular pilot haa been In
the game since away back In 1S17,
and aa souvenirs ot these 17 yeara
of flying he has a silver plate In the
front of his skull, a set of artificial
ribs In hla left side, a built-up Jaw
and a cheek bone that Isn't the one
he had when the stork left him.
Nothing, It seems, la perfect In thla
sinful world not even the airplane.
Jackson Pinions
Trout Odd Fall
PENDLETON, Ore., June 8. (AP)
Bulldog Jackson, 158 pounds, of
Portland, took two out ot three falls
from Sailor Trout, 160 pounds, of
San Pedro, in the main event of a
wrestling card here last nleht.
Mickey McQuIre, 168 pounds, West!
Salem, took two out of three from
Harry Hill, 161, ot South Dakota.
You htr ttut vtrywhtr thtt'i
th reason Rhinlindr h tho evor
whelming ftvorito downtown or in thi
homo tt'i Ustitr. Whirtvir imtrt poo
pi aathor locttlly you'll find Rhoin
Undor. m wouldn't wont to bo without
o ciio la your homo.
the Century . , ,
Flight 'o Time
(Medford and Jackson County
History from the Files ot The
Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Veers
Ago.)
TEN YEARS A(iO TODAY
June 8, 1824
(It was Sunday)
Preacher la fired tor auto wreck by
justice of the peace, who also gives
lecture to 14 speeders.
Copco official tells Klwanla club:
"Community aid should be given the
transient tourist who meets with
hard luck. Give him food, shelter
and a helping hand."
National Republican conventions
opens In Cleveland and Coolldge song
la Inflicted. Senator Burton, In key
note speech. Bays "The nation looks
to Prealdent Coolldge, not senate, for
help."
Governor Pierce la flayed by W. O.
T. U. for "dry law mess" and faUure
"to cut the taxea In two."
Lack ot
crop.
rain cute Oregon wheat
Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb,
rich Chicago youtha. bid for life
terma for alaytng of boy "for thrill."
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
June 8, 1814
(It waa Monday)
Vance Colvlg ("Pinto") haa re
ceived a new engraving outfit, and
la getting ready to draw cartoons as
soon as the -machinery la set up.
Vance plana to make a systematic
campaign of the developing of hla
native ability along these lines.
Pinto'a campaign for the develop
ment of hla native ability" was suc
cessful. He works for Walt Disney
and drew the wolf In "Three Little
Plga."
Miss Onm, Ttin, rafra n.H.u
Pankey) returns from a trip to Grants
The Seventh company Journeyed
to Jacksonville In full dress regalia
Monday night to lend a military air
to the mass meeting boosting the
proposed military school In that cltv.
Many of the company labored under
the apprehension that a banquet was
to be served and came back fuller
of fight than If a call to war had
been Issued. - -
Communications
It Was Pennoyer
To the Editor:
An old settler wants to know how
msny still remember when Oregon
had two Thanksgiving days and who
waa governor at the time.
I was quite young at the time. But
I still remember hearing my father
and mother comment on It.
It waa Sylvester Pennoyer who was
the governor who Issued the procla
mation, and Grover Cleveland was
president at the time. '
I think It was in the early spring
of 1893 when the American Railway
union under the leadership of Eu
gene V. Debs were in strike against
aU the western railroads. Oregon Buf
fered good and hard. ..... . ..
Cleveland sent federal troops to
Chicago to preserve order. And at the
time the strikers blew and tore jp
the S. P. tracks at Ashland, Oregon.
And also did a lot of damage to rail
road property In Portland.
So when President Cleveland wired
to Gov. Pennoyer to preserve order,
he wired back for the president ti
mind and tend to his own business.
Announcing The New 1934
CROSLEY
ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS
ji S j
ti L a
Everything
wished for
Sensational
Just Look at these Outstanding Features
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Phone 300
Medford,
And that same fall Gov. Pennoyet
set a separate day from the president
for thanksgiving to show off his la,
dependence.
LOUIS N. GENTNER,
Medford, June 6, 1034. .
To the Editor:
Back Orer the Oregon Trail.
About two weeks before Erxa
Meeker waa going back over the traU,
the old man brought hie rifle to me
when I was In Tacoma for me to
overhaul It for him. It waa necessary
for me o cut off the end of the bar
rel. aa It waa worn larger than tha
inside of the bsrrel, which would
prevent It from shooting accurately.
I have that piece I cut off, Just one
half Inch. If I had thought of It
I would have put It on a card and ex
hibited It at the Jubilee. Old people
can't think like young folks, so I did
not get to do It. I will be 86 yeara
old if I live to see the 6th of Septem
ber. I used to gun smith for E. W,
Smith and Sons in Des Moines, Iowa,
52 years ego.
CHARLES E. C. EDEY.
Medford, Ore., June 8, 1034.
See Us For
BINDER TWINE
and
GRAIN SACKS
F. E. SAMSON CO.
229 N. Riverside
TOOK PILLS FOR 30
YEARS, THEN CEREAL
BROUGHT RELIEF
Mr. Forsythe Endorses ALI
, Bran for Constipation-
If you suffer from headaches,
loss of appetite and energy or any
other of tha frequent effects of con
stipation, read this voluntary letter :
"After taking- pills and tablets
for about thirty years for consti
patioji, I started to take your All
Bran three times a day according
to directions. Today I can eat
cheese, and that is binding, and
certainly feel fine." Mr. Ed. For
sythe, Box 219, Youngstown, N. Y.
Science says All-Bran provides
"bulk" to exercise the intestines,
and vitamin B to further aid regu
lar habits. In addition, All-Bran;
is rich in blood-building iron.
The "bulk" in Ail-Bran is much
like that of leafy vegetables. Inside
the body, it forms a soft mass which
gently clears the intestines of
wastes.
Isn't this pleasant "cereal way"
far more healthful than using pafc
ent medicines so often haoit
forming? Just eat two tablespoonf uls daily.
In serious cases use with each meal.
If not relieved this way, see your
doctor.
Get the red-and-green package at
your grocer's. Ma.de by Kellogg in
Battle Creek. S
Come in and see
the new Shelvador
and Tri-Shelvador
Models
that could poS9ibly be
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TEMPERATURE
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Ore.
131 West Main