Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 20, 1934, Page 8, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
Medford Mail Tribune 1
"Enryont In Southirn Ortfloa
Runt Ihi Mall TcIium'
Dallr Btwpt ealurds?
Publlttml bt
MKDPOKI) raiMiNo CO.
SS-2T-S9 S. Fir 8U
KOI1KKT W. ItUML, Editor
Ao independent Newspaper
Entered u strand class mitter it Medford.
Oregon, under Act of Mirrb 8, 18T9.
SUHHCK1IT10N BATES
Rv Mill In AdiiMl
Daily, one rear 9&.00
DiIIt. ill aontb a. io
Dill, one monta GO
&$ carrier in Aartnct weoioro, aidisdo,
JiektonrllU, Central Point, Pboenix, Talent, Gold
Bill and on Ulghvars.
Dally, one rear 1800
Dally, ill month! 8.S&
Dally, one month .AO
All terrai. cast fn adrance.
Official paper of the City of Medford.
Official paper of Jackson County.
HEM R Kit OK TUB ASSOCIATED fHBSfi
Hpirtn iTtill Leued Wire Berries
The Aitcelated Press U iielmlrely entitled to
the use for publication of all new dUpatches
credited to It or otherwise credited In this paper
ud alio to toe local neti published bereln.
All rlghU for publication of ipeelal dispatches
herein are alio resmea.
MKMBKtt Of UNITED fUEfiS
MEMBKH OP AUDIT BUKEAO
OF CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Representatives
H. C HOUBNSEN COMPANY
Offleei In New York, Cbleajo, Detroit, las
Francisco Los Angela Seattle Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
The Governor of North Dakota baa
been found guilty of endeavoring to
defraud the US. government. The
r'i SZTrn
approximately lo,000,ooo In financial
hide from Uncle Sam. Tha aovernor,
In his political career, waa hell for
tha farmera and honesty In public
office, but waa caught at It.
The Jackson County Democracy,
Ilka Osul, now seems to ba divided
Into three parte: Old Demoerata,
Young Democrats and Mad Demo
crats. A member of the fourth squad ot
TJofO. Bolshevlkls Is suffering from too
much etudy, and telling everybody
what Is right with Russia.
'
Our burgomelster resigned yester
day, after giving the city an adminis
tration In keeping with his first name,
which la Ezra. Though he assumed
office In the era when everybody waa
a scallawag who possessed 15c. ha was
never accused of hiding a .nigger In
the woodpile.
e a
"Dry cleaners' delivery boys, drlv
Ins at 80 mile per hour, give an In
prcaslon the customer Is waiting In
a barrel." (Kansas city star) Tne
' boys are laggards. They are 30 miles
slower than the associate hostess of
a bridge party, making up lost time
on the Main sum.
Formation of a Sunrise Club Is con
templated. The purpose of thla or
ganisation Is to get up and see tha
sunrise. The members will drink In
tha beauties of the dawn, and It Old
Sol experiences any difficulty In mak
ing It over the mountain, will ba on
hand to render what assistance they
can. Very few people know the
grandeur of the southern Oregon sun
rise, aa generally at that time they
are doing their best anooalng. They
are urged to Join, and get up before
the farmera claim they do, and be-,
hold the Impressive panorama. The
sunrises will have to be beautiful to
offset the sleepy homeliness of cltl
acna who get up at 4 a. m. to watch
them.
DON'T BE BILLY ITEM,
(Congressional Record)
Mr. B I a n t o n. Theoretically,
every good American haa taken It;
but for a techer, who Is a public
official and who Is getting part
of his pay from the United States
Government, to refuse to take tha
oath of allegiance to this gov
ernment, he la a sorry kind of
teacher. He la a traitor to his
country, and he ought to be run
out of the country.
REMARKS ON WHISTLING
We do not know when man first
discovered that he could whistle, but
there la no doubt that the chap who
first did It probably by accident
must have been considerably aston
ished. No doubt ha whistled again
with amnaement. Since then men
have acquired the art without much
trouble.
In early jeara one longa to be able
to whistle 'Ike father, and therefore
ally flnda oie can whistle even worse
than father.
Oenerslly speaking, whistling
meana that the person who Is whis
tling Is cheerful. The chief practical
use to which whistling can be put
Is to convey that we are quite happ;
and unembarrassed. When you hare
been made to feel extremely foolish,
for lnstai.ee. and know you are look
ing It, you atrlve to ahow that you
are neither feeling foolish nor look
ing foolish by whistling in a non
chalant manner; whereupon you look
TXZL hannv m.J8PrnK i1!0 never
to whistle. When the millennium
arrives and we are all happy, the
noise win be frightful. For thla rea
son on la glad to think the arrival
of the millennium probably will ba
delayed. (Boaton Transcript).
'
Justice, which haa been ducked by
playing tick, had a new wrinkle
created in it horn lasi week, when
an fiiieRfd malefactor pleaded he had
to go home and milk. The moral La;
A cow It cheaper than a lawyer.
Editorial Correspondence
PRINCETON, N. J., June 17. The best stand of corn we
have seen since leaving Medford is between Newark and Eliza
beth, N. J., about 100 acres, which 'as the Pennsylvania train
rushed by wag being cultivated by a tractor. It was nearly
waist high, a rich dark green and in a few weeks should be
tasseled out. No doubt on a clear day the man on the tractor
could see the top of the Empire State building.
. .
Our last visit to Princeton was nearly 30 years ago at a
Yale-Princeton football game. We can remember little about it
except a man by the name of Dewitt played a star game and
Tale won. How Princeton has improved since then! Perhaps
a wet spring and a warm summer had something to do with it.
Princeton undoubtedly has the most beautiful natural setting
of any college in America, The buildings are most attractive,
stately, venerable, ivy grown, huge elms meet high above,
thick green grass below, it looks just as a great and ancient
college should look.
Unlike Harvard and Talc, no large city has grown up around
the college, to spoil it. Princeton is still in a country village,
without subways, street cars, or traffio cops. The place has an
atmosphere of quiet contentment, and pastoral exclusiveness.
It was class day and the campus was deserted, as everyone had
gone to the Princeton-Tale baseball game. It was very hot and
humid, the walk from the railroad station necessitated frequent
moppings of the editorial brow, and aroused a terrific thirst.
There wai a cool and inviting tap room at the Princeton Inn,
but alcoholic beverages did not appeal. We had to walk half
a mile to find an ice cream soda.
.
The colored population of Princeton must be very large.
There were colored mammies and top-knotted pickaninnies
much in evidence. At the coffee shop where we finally found
an ice cream soda all the waiters were black and real southern
blacks, too not the New Tork
mile to the baseball field, but while the one village cop we found
said there were taxis to be had, we never found one. We had to
walk.
What a contrast to that football game a couple of decades
ago. Tber -were probably 15,000 people at the baseball game,
a sea of straw htta, parasol and white linen suits. And there
they sat in silence, whil Tale garnered 4 runs in one inning,
knocking the Tiger twirlb out of the box much to that gentle
man's disgust and Princeton proceeded to get a run in each
of the four next innings to tie the score. There was a little
scattering applause, but no cheering and no cheer leaders. As
far as we could determine Tale was not represented at all except
on the field. We walked completely around the side lines, and
the only enthusiasm detected
'!?'; ,rBt!':.co,0"!,' wh
tne leu Iieia IOU1 line, iney were rooting lusiny ior me iisjer.
Princeton has changed for the better in. outward appearances
but certainly not in basebaJJ playing or in baseball enthusiasm.
Imagine 8 Princeton baseball crowd walking out on a team that
had tied the score 4-4, and continuing to walk out when Tale
knocked another Nassau pitcher out of thu box and garnered
9 more runs I This was a class day game, mind you, and a Talc
Princeton game to boot. During the lust two innings there
were not 50 people in the stands, including the town band.
Everyone had gone over to the Palmer stadium to wait for the
big invitation track meet to begin. (Just fancy THAT, doctor!)
e
Our advice to old Nassau is to drop baseball as a major sport.
The final score was Tale 15, Princeton 5. True, the Princeton
boys couldn't play ball, but what team could, with support like
that I' We met one Princeton grad with a '00 hat band on his
Panama, and asked him for an explanation.
"Oh the kids that go to college nowadays, don't know any
thing at all" said he, "the only exercise they indulge in is
cocktail shaking and the tango l '
It was class day, and as above mentioned very hot and humid.
The old grads were thoro in the usual carnival costumes, dating
back to the class of '74. There were African hunters in pith
helmets and white shorts, Scotch Highlanders, coal miners,
pink pajama cuties, French poilus, and one class in sack cloth
marked "NRA." We concluded they had been having a gay
time, but the parade came a little late on the program, and for
the third time might wo mention it was very hot. So hot that
many of the old grads were overcome by the heat and dropped
out of the parade to lio down and go' to sleep. Others staggered
as they walked, and while there were several bands no one
appeared able to keep time to the music. The casualties indeed
were appalling. Several little colored boys followed the pro
cession. Near the gate to the Palmer stadium two of them,
black as coal, exhibited a collection of bottles of all shapes and
sizes that would have filled one of the Eads brothers' trucks.
After the ball game, which we sat through, we walked across
the field toward the stadium. In the shade of tho score board,
still showing Tale 15, Princeton 5, three old grads were stretch
ed out fast asleep, one ot them with a beard had his mouth wide
open. A young man from the class of '24 came along a glass
of beer in one hand. Apparently he knew one of the prostrate
alumni for he stopped beside him and poured the glass of beer,
slowly and reverently, on the upturned face and forehead. If
he expeoted this ceremony to waken the sleeping graduate, he
was mistaken. Fortunately there are no flics in Princeton. At
least we saw none.
We did not travel to Princotbn to see the Class Day parade
or the Tale baseball game. We went to see our old friend Ben
Eastman of Stanford run the half mile against Chuck Hornbostel
of Indiana and Bill Patterson of Columbia! also Princeton's
famous milcr, Bonthron, tako on Glenn Cunningham of Kansas
and Gene Nenzke of Penn, It was an invitation track meet,
between the greatest cindor track stars of athlotio history. There
were 25,000 people in the stands, it was a beautiful warm day,
and the races were broadcast over the radio from coast to coast.
Everyone went hoping to seo world records broken and they
were not disappointed. The fastest mile and half miles ever
run by human feet, wcro chalked up on tho record books during
the afternoon.
We had a seat in a group of Princeton undergraduates
nice, clean-out, attractive youngsters they were there to sec
Princeton's track hero, Bill Bonthron, hang up a new world's
record for tho mile. Coming from tho coast wo were naturally
for tho entrants west of tho Mississippi and invitations to back
our western pride with cash were accepted just to add interest
to the gala occasion. '
sees
We had seen Eastman run before and knew what he could
do. When they lined up on tho mark for tho half milo however,
tho ex-Stanford star as usual looked liko anything but an ath
lete. He is thin, pale, peers wanly through gold rimmed specs,
like a student, who had spent the past few weeks burning the
midllilht oil. With tllft nranlr nf tlin (vim liAwnvnr Kiwlmnn
iiivnc luga ui ins nrruicu nuhuiicu 10 n imHMiHU.sin u CM H (Mi (HI iroiu
the upper part of tho body, ho seemed to be (titling down,
calmly unperturbed. tvhilo that pedal engine did tho work for
him. He didn't pound around the track, he skimmed over it
This Hornbostel, never before beaten in the half, is a beautiful
runner too. and lit mmlo n pnllnnt. unnrt in tliA final 1W1 vorle
i. i. - - i .it i. i
AiAainM k. ... .....
n,:"" 1 i u V ulIt 3l"ul ' V I m. '
yth men hroko the world s record. hiiatmnn s time 1.40.8. The
crowd nave him a tremendous ovation, as he trotted baok.
- , - . ,
la Bpue pi Joeal pride, we found ourselves wishing Bouthrou
MEDFORD MAIL
type at all. It was another half
.
was in a group of uniformed
wera lyin? on the grass near
relinquished it. As of yore,
. .1 : i. i
...i... i.. . .
TRIBUNE, JEEDFORD.
would win. He is such a fine looking chap, has such a youth
ful winning way, and he was there to do his job for the Prince
ton crowd. A victory would mean so much more for him than
anyone else.
But it wasn't to be. This chap. Cunningham from the corn
belt, ran his race just as Ben Eastman did, with no regard for
the others. He knew what he could do and was there to do it.
We have scon many mile, runs, but never such a final quarter
as the Kansas star put on. He simply ran away from tin field,
finishing a good forty yards ahead of Bonthron. To be beaten
in such a race was no disgrace however. The time was 4.06
another new world's record. But the Princeton boys were in
consolable. To have Bill beaten by 40 yards that was not
right! However Bonthron has
ot tne tiger track team in 1U30.
Coming back on the train, the boys in the press car got word
that California had won the boat race at Poughkeepsie, with
Washington second. It was a great day for the Pacific coast!
Personal Health Service
By William
Signrd 'lettcra pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dU'
ease diagnosis or treatment will be
iclf-addressed envelope Is enclosed,
Ink. Owing to the large number ot letters received only a few can be an
swered. No reply can ba made to queries not conforming to Instructions,
tddress Dr. William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly HIUs, Cal. -
MALARIA SPREAD
In New York city the chief medical
examiner did autopstea In 10 caeea of
fatal tropical malaria In a period of
four months last year. Tho malaria
-yrvy" was of the- trop
leal (estlvo-au-tumnal
type.) in
every Instance
the victim had
been a drug ad
diet.
I call thla epi
demic of malaria
part lcularly to
the attention of
fed healers and
cultists who do
not believe in
germa or mlcro-
organifms as the cau of disease. It
would be Interesting to hear such
"doctor" explain, these cases of trop
ical disease in a northern city.
In every case the drug addict In
jected heroin Into his vein what Is
called a "main-line shooter" In tne
parlance of the dope world.
Nearly all of the deceased addict,
It was discovered by detectives, had
frequented the same lodging houses.
Many of them had never been outside
of New York, but a few had been to
the Tropics.
It appeared that the heroin addicts
Improvised a syringe from a medicine
or eye dropper Inserted Into a hyp
dermic needle. They call this con
trivance the "spike." It waa frequent
ly used by a number of addicts In
quick succession, for Injection of a
dose Into a vein. When the needle i3
inserted into & vein a small quantity
of blood nearly always flows back Into
the syringe. Thus some malaria para
sites in the blood of one of the ad
dicts who had been Infected by malaria-carrying
mosquitoes In the Trop
ics got into the syringe and was Im
mediately transferred to the veins of
the next user of the- 'spike." He in
turn became a carrier of malaria, In
oculated with his heroin.
Such an odd mode of Infection has
been reported from several other, parts
of the world. Thus there have been
outbreaks of malaria among drug ad
dicts in E&ypt, In Omaha. New Or
leans, in Chicago and at Fort Leaven
worth Penitentiary, all traced to the
same agency.
A freak or cult healer would have
you believe that malaria Is due to
some waste matter or rotten product
of metabolism which the body is
striving to "throw off", and that the
logical remedy Is fasting, and all that
hackneyed line Which so strongly ap
peals to the great Wiseacre popula
tion. v
Sensible folk now understand pretty
clearly that malaria Is naturally con
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
BY O.O.Mclntyre
NEW YORK, June 30. No enter
tainer seems to retain the hold on
typically Broadway crowds as Harry
Rlchman. He goea
Inland time after
time for long
stays and returns
for the same
brand of enthu
siasm. Other per
formers, after
such lapses, have
to re - establish
themselves with
press agent build
ups. But Broadway
scema always
ready lor Uichnum. He puts over a
song In a masculine way In the same
fashion that made Nora Bayes so last,
ingly popular. His songs taunt with
a contagious energy. Each one haloos
"Boys, this will be my greatest tri
umph I" Egotism riding rough-shod.
Rlchman appeals to the minstrel
In every heart. When he sings, every
man In the audience la mentally out
there singing and strutting. Eddie
Leonard and Bill Robinson achievo
the same effect with dance steps
Like Rlchman, they never, give a
sloppy performance.
There are Harry Rlchmans In all
lines. Their secret Is simple they
love their Jobs better than anything
else In the world. Not alt have extra
ordinary talents. But whatever they
do, they are likely to sweep in off
our feet by sheer force of fervor. So
many of us negatives like the posi
tive. New York's nearest approach to the
Cafe de la Patx la the clutter ot table
flung along a St. Morlte corner side
walk, The town ! gradually or ei com
ing its shudder at the leisure required
for the correct alow sipping of drinks.
Speakeasies caused everybody to bolt
libation In case of the raider's axe.
Even now they still sit on the chair
edge expectantly.
Joe Zclti Is making a third effort to
j transfer a so-called "Parisian atmoa-
Iphere - to the rccai scene, zein has
OREGON, WEDNESDAY,
another year and will be captain
R. W. R.
Brady, M.D.
answered by Dr. Brady It a stamped
utters should be brief and wrltteo in
BY THE NEEDLE.
tracted only thru the bite of the few
species of mosquitoes that carry t;e
parasite or Plasmodium from person
to person.
In this New York outbreak the
"spike" used by the drug addicts
served to carry the makings of the
disease from person to person.
Pot persons visiting or travelling or
living In malaria country a dally dose
of ten grains of quinine, provided one
can take that much without un
pleasant ill -effects, la the best way to
prevent the disease. That la personal
prophylaxis. Of course mosquito con
trol measures must be carried out to
prevent malaria from becoming ac
Impediment to Industry and social life
in the community.
QUESTIONS AND AN'SWERS
Consult a Phrslclan.
Nose specialists say I have swollen
turbinates. One says they should be
clipped out by an operation. Another
says they should be removed by ele
trie needle. The third said they shou .d
be shrunken with chemicals. Will ap
preciate your advice. (J. C.)
Answer You had better be guided
by the advice of your physician. Gen
eral hygiene and aystematlc treatment
will correct such trouble in most
cases. You may find some helpful sug
gestions in the monograph on "Ca
tarrh" which will be sent on request,
if you Inclose stamped envelope bear
ing your address.
The Old Army Game
I am suffering with nerves and
stomach trouble. Two doctors say that
la what is wrong with me. I am on a
diet, do not eat fried food of any
kind . . . (S. P. C.)
Answer which la enough to Indi
cate the doctors are Just stringing
you along. Whenever a doctor forbids
"fried food" of any kind you may
be sure he doesn't know much about
what, if anything, alls the patient.
Anyway a diagnosis of "nerves" Is al
ways the bunk, and so Is "stomach
trouble" as a rule. "Nervee" or "stom
ach trouble" may be all right for tlie
patient to complain about, but no
honest dlctor will perpetrate, any such
trick diagnosis on an Intelligent per
son.
Carriers of Disease
Is contagloua disease spread by the
handling of mail, papers or money
that haa been handled by one with
the disease? (S. G.)
Answer-No. There Is no evidence
that disease la spread In that way.
(Copyright 1934, John F. DUle Co.)
Ed Note: Readers wIsMnr, to
should send letters direct to Ur.
communicate with Dr. Bradj
Wllllom Brady, M. !., 265 B. Ca
mlno, Beverly Hills, Cal.
been wise In his way of appealing to
finishers on the last lap of a night
out. His rue Fontaine harum-scarum
waa long a dawn atop In the Mont
I martre hoop-la. But that was before
a settled sedatenesa came to cafes In
Paris and elsewhere and Zelll'a lan
guished and died. The world, It would
seem, has put on brakes and the Zellla
must catch the muted tempo, one
fears, to survive.
X ran Into a small bit fool of the
movie shorts today. He Is a larrikin
whose Job la to guffaw at his own
clubfooted puns and continually
speak out of turn. To me he haa
alwaya been somewhat a nuisance. In
real life he is quiet, self-effacing and
a devout disciple of Walt Whitman.
Indeed, the only comedian I recall,
as funny off as on, la Chaplin.
The greatest disappointment , to
fans, I Imagine, In close-up, was the
late Ring Lardner. He 'convulsed the
world with his humor, yet not even
among such intimates as Grantland
Rice, Harold Ross, Percy Hammond
and Jack Wheeler, waa he very laugh
provoking. Now and then some tight
lipped drollery might escape In sudden
blurt. But as a rule he was glum,
owlish, abrupt. He liked to listen
with ears so capably attuned to the
great American comedy, but conversa
tion had to be dragged from him, a
few syllables at a time. Lardner, In
cidentally, left a 100,000 In insurance.
Restaurants Interest me chiefly as
a looker-on. A rabbity little man
with a round walnut face toddled In
with two heavy dowagers, all in even.
Ing dress, at the cream colored Colony.
He ordered In aside dry Martinis all
around and a bottle of Chablla. He
was going to have himself a time.
But hla companions were teetotalers
and passed the drinks to him. And
you should have seen him as they
hurried to tha theater. Waa he
crocked!
Lyoline which sounds like a new
sunburn cure la the latent couturlere
to catch the Parts fancy. She Is a
dark-eyed Russian whose hobby Is
singing pre-revolutlonary madrigals
to the thrumming of a guitar. Her
recent arrival tn New York Is Indica
tive of the new style trail, Paris dress
makers now come to New York and
Hollywood for Ideas and patronage.
For decades It waa the other way
around. So you won't pay!
1 stopped witb Courtney Cooper to
JUNE 20, 193'4.
watch acrub nines croas bats on a
sunny Central Park meadow this
afternoon. And In a flash ot Juve
nile exhurberance, when a fly popped
my way. I tried to plant myself under
It. It plopped two feet away from
outstretched handa. The young
catcher whose path I had evidently
blocked, sneered: "Atta athlete I"
(Copyright, 1934, ' McNaught Syndi
cate, Inc.)
Comment
on the .
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
WA. SELL.WOOD, assistant man
ager of the Klamath Falls tran
sient relief bureau, presented an ln
tereatlng picture of Russia to the
members of a Southern Oregon Serv
ice olub the other day.
It was Interesting for two reasons;
because It represents firsthand obser
vationMr. Sellwood spent several
years In Russia and because It was
fair.
Re Is able to see. both the good and
the bad In the Russia experiment.
IIHAT really happened In Russia?
" Well, 175 million downtrod
den people finally reached the point
where they could stand It no longer
and turned against and destroyed the
five million who were treading them
down.
That is about the long and the short
of It, as Mr. Sellwood puts it. '
DID they achieve Tiberty by doing
so? . . ,
Not at all. What the masses of the
Russian people have now, after their
revolution, -'doesn't even faintly re
semble liberty, as we of America know
It.
But It is better than what they had
before.
CONSIDER thlsVlcture:
Within the boundaries of Rus
sia, you could put THREE United
States of America, with plenty of
room for them to rattle around.
Russia, you see. is vast.
ANOTHER picture""
On some of their great state
farms there Is no such thing as rug
ged individualism In Russian agricul
ture they start out In the morning
with a tractor pulling plows, harrows
and discs, and by the evening of the
FOURTH DAY this tractor haa com
pleted ONE ROUND. That is to say,
it has gone once around the piece of
land It Is working on,
That is another picture of vastness.
RUSSIA has timber. It has oil. It
has almost every known mineral.
Including gold, silver and platinum.
It has staggeringly Immense areas of
rich soil.
It has a climate extending from the
frozen Arctic to the sub-tropics.
A ND listen:
It has 175 million people whose
leaders are bent upon raising them
from semj-serfdom to a modern stan
dard of living comparable to that of
America.
DOES that frighten you. It fright
ens a lot of people.
But it SHOULDN'T. ,
Russia, raised out of barbarian to
modern civilization, will provide
vast market for things we have to sell.
Don't be afraid of progress. It has
made the world steadily a better place
to live In.
It will continue to do so In the case
of Russia.
A ND now a final word:
Does Mr. Sellwood, who palr.tr.
this Interesting picture of the world's
most Interesting country, admire Rus
sia and wish the United States were
like It?
fJEAR him:
"I wish everyone who Is dlscon
tented with conditions In America
could see Russia could live there lorn
enough to become familiar with It
If he could, he would spend the rest
of his life giving fervent thanks th:tt
he lives In the United States of Amer
ica." SMEMBER, please, his statement
that what the Russians have
doesn't even faintly resemble liberty.
as we of America know it. It Is merely
better than what they had before,
They have a long, long way to go
yet, and many generations must be
born and die before they can hope to
reach the point where we are now.
4
rE UNITED STATES of America,
you see, la still the greatest coun
try on earth, with more of real lib
erty, of comfort and happiness and
satisfaction for the common run of
humanity, than any other country on
earth.
So turn a deaf ear to the malcon
tents and the disturbers and the
apostles ot destruction who try to tell
you that things in this country are
in a terrible way, with liberty ded
and hope gone.
That is the advice of men who, like
Mr. Sellwood, know other countr.es
as well as this.
It Is good advice.
Warrant Call
Notice Is hereby given that there
are funds on hand for the redemp
tion of School District No. 60 war
rants Nos. 234 to 300, inclusive. Pay
able at Farmers and Fruitgrowers
Bank. Medford. Oregon. Interest to
cease June 18. 1934.
MRS. HAZEL G AN FIELD.
MRS HAZEL G AN FIELD, clerk
School District No. 69.
Find Child's Body
Cremated In Field
The partially burned body ol
four-lear-old Leah Minerva Dllley
(above) waa found In a field near
Bharon, Pa., 12 days after aha dis
appeared from home. Police quoted
Homer Sandera, 42, aa aaylng he
took the child's body to the field
and set It afire. (Associated Preu
Photo)
Eagle Point
EAGLE POINT, June 20. (Spl.)
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Robertson have
moved to Ashland for the summer.
Mrs. L. K. Haak attended state
grange at, Roseburg last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Kallna and three sons
of Ontario, Cal., visited at the Clar
ence Meyer home for a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Fry, former residents
of Eagle Point, were calling on
friends here Thursday.
Mrs. Stella Van Scoy and son,
Bobby, of Scotia, Cal., visited rela
tives here for a few days. They re
turned home Friday.-
Civic Improvement club will meet
June 21.
S. K. Barnes of Crescent City has
been transacting business In Eagle
Point.
Mrs. Don Brlttsan and children are
visiting relatives In Medford.
Grange H. E. C. club will hold Its
regular meeting June 27 at the home
of Mrs. Beryl Hlckson.
Don Brlttson attended the boat
races at Klamath Falls Sunday.
Irene Kingery, who attends school
In Salem, Is home for the summer
vacation,
Mrs. fiam Coy, Lucille and Sammy
Coy a--u Alice Walker spent Sunday
at Climax.
At ths regular annual school elec
tion held June 18, Ray Harnlsh was
elected director for three years and
Edith Wledman was re-elected clerk
for one year.
Mrs. Ray Harnlsh was pleasantly
surprised Sunday evening by a group
of friends, the occasion being her
birthday. Those present were Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Wrh. Perry, Sam Harnlsh, Mrs. Price,
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Holman, Henry and
Mary Ellen Holman, Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Coy, Sammy Coy, Mr. and Mrs.
Nick Young and Beryl Hlckson and
children.
Butte Falls
BUTTE FALLS, June 20. (Spl-)
Gerald Ting went to Marsh field Fri
day to spend a month with his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Burk
hart. Horace Geppert waa hired as Janitor
at the grade school for the coming
year. Al HUdreth will be Janitor at
the high school.
There will be a 4-L dance next Sat
urday at the Woodman hall. A large
number of members from the valley
are expected.
Mrs. Walter Stone and five children,
Francis, Charles, Dona, Jack and
Roland, lert for Crescent, Ore., Sun
day afternoon where Mr. Stone will
meet them. They will spend about
two weeks there and then continue
to Adel, near Lakevlew, where they
plan to make their home.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kohn recently
visited Portland, Eugene and other
up-state places. They visited Mr. and
Mrs. George Stewart and family In
Springfield.
Negro baseball team of the CCC
camp played Butte Falls team last
Sunday. The score was 20 to 7 In
favor of Butte Falls.
Morrell Patton has returned to his
ranch at Lake Creek, after spending
several months working In Los
Angeles.
Jack and Don Kllngle of Lake Creek
have spent two weeks visiting their
grandmother, Mrs. Gus Edmondson.
Mr. and Mrs. Putney are living at
Page's hotel. They have charge of
Kobn's store during his absence.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kohn are vaca
tioning at Lake of the Woods.
There will be a Children's day pro
gram at the church Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Weaver spent
several days In Grants Pass last week
with Mr, Weaver's parents.
Mr, and Mrs. Olga Abbott spent last
week-end with Mrs. Abbott's father,
Lee Edmondson.
Mr. and Mrs. Al Hildreth and Mrs.
Margaret Patton spent Monday In
Medford.
Hustler's club met with Mrs. Bolls
last Thursday. About twenty-five
women were present. Mrs. DeJarnett
assisted Mrs. Bolls in the entertain
ing. The annual school meeting was held
June IB at the grade school. Bob
Flemmlng was elected director and
Rev. Smith clerk.
All' kinds of tag, olanks for sale
for rent, no hunting, no trespassing
and other cards for ale at Commercial
Printing Dept. of Mall Tribune.
THE W c T. U mil hold a rummiwe
sale on Friday, and Coo Pood 8:c
on Saturday In the Odd Fellows
building on th St.
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson County
History from the Filet of The
Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 rears
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AUO TODAY.
June 20, 1934
(It Waa Friday)
Fifteen officers raid a house oq
West Second street, and arrest a worn
an with five gallons of home-mad
beer.
B. M. Wilson sustains injuries In i
auto accident.
Effort to make Jackson street school
a Junior high school falls.
Two blocks of homes in Hilt, Callt,
destroyed by fire.
. In the auto races at the fairgrounds.
Jack Ross of Seattle averages 734
miles per hour.
Mr. and Mrs. Miles Can trail of Ruclv
drove to town this morning.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY.
June 20, 1914
(It Was Saturday)
County signs a contract for a frurft
expert, and move meets protest.
Councilman George Porter lnspeoai
the water system, and reports, "we
sure need a new one." ,
"The Perils of Pauline"-at the Isis;
Mary Pickford In "The Good Little
Devil," at the Star; and "Hell to Pay"
at the It.
"Ish ka blbblel" the new slang
phrase sweeps the city, and everybody,
including women are using It.
The fancy black trotter owned by
C. E. Gates broke her right foreleg
Tuesday night In a runaway. Mr.
Gates put the animal In Mr. Mar
snail's care the first of the week, to
take her to his ranch in the Central
Point district. Marshall had driven
to Medford and was returning whtn
the accident occurred.
1
(Cununuea irom Page one)
(Rockefeller's). It would extend tha
time for divorcing security affiliates,
but would not relinquish public safe
guards against old practices of affili
ates? Most of those on the inside
thought It was all right. The other
Bulkley amendments were drawn by
the federal reserve board crowd.
The funniest picture In congress
is the face 'of Senator Carter Glass
while Huey Long is talking. The
Glass mouth droops with taut dis
gust. Everyone else may titter and
smile at Huey's Jokes, but Glass never
lets a wrinkle bend.
When the Nor r Is constitutional
amendment was adopted, eliminating
the fixed adjournment dates for con
gress, It was said the usual confu
sion at the close would be eliminat
ed. What prevented it from being
true this time 'is the fact that Mr.
Roosevelt wanted to get rid of con
gress as fast as possible and virtu
ally fixed the adjournment date. .
The corn-hog checks were delayed
because of technical admltnstrattve
difficulties, but they are beginning
to go out to the middle west In soma
volume now. It should mean better
retail business out there.
A certain religiously inclined gov
ernment adviser has devised a Bibli
cal Bronx cheer for General John
son: "Job vli:2, "How long wilt thou
speak these things? And how long
shall the words of the mouth be tike f
a long wind?"
Girl's Heart Resumed Beatlnc
ADA, Ohio (UP) After her heart
had stopped beating for four minutes
during a chloroform anaesthetic for a
tonsillectomy. Dorothy McElroy. 18,
daughter of Judge and Mrs. Isaac Mc
Elroy. returned to physical normality.
Adrenalin was Injected as a stimu
lant and artificial respiration and
oxygen restored her breathing. Then
the operation was resumed.
Oregon Weather.
Partly cloudy tonight and Thurs
day: probably showers in extreme east
portion; slightly warmer In northeast
portion tonight; moderate northwest
wind offshore.
Kidnaps Iowa Trio
Joe Palmer (above), 32-year-old
escaped convict wanted In Texai
for murder, was captured near St.
Joseph, Mo., after he released a
Davenport, la., policeman and two
other men he had kidnaped In ef
forts to avoid Identificallon ni
arrest (Associated Press Photo)