V,
PAGE SIX
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORI). OREGON, SUNDAY, JULY 22, 1934.
Medford Mail Tribune
"Ewyont ,B Ssutatrn Ortgoe
Ruai Uif Mail frltum"
Dstli Biecpt tatunUf
Publlihsd or
MKDPOHD PKLYIINU CO.
35-37-30 . fit St.
KOKKliT W. BUHL, KcltM
Ao independent Ntinpapr
Sotered u wecod eiui msttcf at Medford.
Oregon, under Act of Mireb 8, 19.
rfUBHI HIlTiUN SATES
R Mill in Adtioea
Dtlij, ooe rev ,.$5.00
Dsllr. flii Bonltw 3-75
Dally, one month 80
Bt Carrier In Attunes Hwroro. ajDisno,
JackaooriUt, Central Point, Pboeoll, latent. Gold
till) and oo mghwara.
Dill), one rev IS. 00
Dally, elt months SB
UaUr oor mftnth , , , . 00
All term, uufr Id itJuw).
Official ptper of tlx. City of Medford.
Official paper of Jackwo County.
HEMRKH Oir THE aMOClATED PKE8B
Beeeiiim rull Leues Wirt Serrteo
lbs Ancdaleo Preta la ticlwlttly entitled to
the uta for publlcatloo of all oewt dUpaUbei
eredltH to tt or othenlie credited In tola paper
tod also to the local new puOllibed herein.
All right for ouhllcatloo of pedal dlapaUbt
herein ere Use reurM.
MEMiiBH Or (J Nil ED PkKM
ftfEMHRH OP AUDIT BUKEAD
UP CIRCULATIONS
Adiertlilng KepreaeoUtlTM
U. C. MOliRNBEN A COM PANT
Omcea In Nee Tori. Chleaco, Detroit, taa
PrancUco Loe A net lee Bui lie Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
Opportunities to be "misled" again,
have been offered citizens, with a few
hardly able to wait until they can
be "misled" again.
3Sf
Th. leave, of th. vin. maples in. blocks down the street. Talk about legs, say I figure it out
rro7rrn.tl'iB w.y-it th. I., of eornpen,ation-the pi.ident"cn't use
tied tight both unfailing signs of j his, so his wife supplies the leg power for both of them. AVhy
an early fall and a hard winter, ac-ithe woman is not only tireless, he isn't human. If her uncle
cording to justice Bin coieman. t. R. was 80 horsepower, she is 800. I covered her once before,
Portland police have been swooping j "" if s1'9 couldn't beat Cavalcade in a 100 mile endurance
down on radical nests, but aa yet! trot my nnme is Lydia Pinkham. But you know how it is.
have
not got around to the city.micr an i nave to hold my job and when the boss says cover
l. The people have bowed the president's wife, why that's what I do or try to' do.
council,
their necks and want the government
turned back to the government, with
no back talk from Moscow, USSR.
The 3 -cushion billiard champion ot
the world defeated Peoria Bill Gates,
with the aid and consent of the lat
ter. Del Oetchell, an eye-witness,
stated that he was amazed by the
cuemanshlp of both.
Jim Bates, the ionaorlaliat. hu re-
turned from 10 daya fiddling around
the Paclflo ocean.
malcy. Then. or. ow,l.J TTn RJZTV1 " e0"t,,- BH f Dr' Jek-V"
the orchard., than on the Bill Gore ,nnd J'r- J,y(1- Tak a Mich Boule" bus, from 12th street to
corner. Lincoln lark, and you will decide you have seen one of the
Atty b. Newbury hurled a diatribe I "J"8'. in the world. Take a hike to Halt-tend
at all awnings, in defense of mal.istret or wft of ,the 10I or in certain parts of the south side,
kyscrapere last week. The people !"nd you will decide you have seen the cheapest, most squalid
should be given the right to vote.jand degraded chunk of L on earth, this side of the Infernal
wneuier tney want anwmngs, or in. .
long-shanked abolished,
t
Thursday night was cool, and it
looks line the annual blanket sale of
Bui Boig would have to be called
Off. for lack of record riant, or h
off, for lack of record heat, or be
held under suitable climatic condi
tions, next month.
a
Agitators have resumed their darn
deat. The public haa decided to do
their darndcat ftidt, and save approx
imately (09.000 of county funds, and
a lot of lying.
Jim (Purewater) Owen and J.
(Power Octopua Tentacle) Thompson,
are townsmen who originated on Fri
day the 13th. Neither looks It.
Quit.
number busted loose In'
mid-week, and shook the festive hoof
in Der Blergartcnplatc.
The youngest Bob Hammond boy
Is all agog about going to the Chicago
fair In Augiuit. He will see every
thing but the fan dance.
Not much U heard of Bandit No. 1
John Dllllnger. or the candidates for
governor. The lasue will probably be
law and order, Instead of free electric
lights. The farmer U ahowlng signs
of doing his own thinking In Novem
ber, Instead of via Portland politi
cians, as In May.
...
H. riewher, the demon baker, la
getting primed to lead another rough
and ready safari. Into the wilds be
tween the dude ranch and Mt. Pitt.
Members of the safari ar. concentre'.. ;
v. ,inri!,K n i in reaay oy Labor
Day. six weeks hence.
A speed Idiot whined ui the Msln
Btem (Shlvsree Alley) S2 mph Wed.
vng. It nude not the slightest dif
ference, it he never got to the place
he thought he was going.
One of the R Mam boys was down
town Trl pm. His face) looked like It
had not been washed tor is minutes.
e
S. Morris, the T-Kock. tic., tiller
f.ci osriey isst wiek. Ilia water
. , ..,U(,t, iriMj ior HI
atreet tools to steal.
Tlie Brown Boys of K. Pt were in
town the lt of the wk. oo what
they call bu.-tlntv.
A it room of lavt October was audited
by h:a mite tut evening, and reported
the hr-nrwl tn mfd la now a flaw-
Icm mule.
Highland, N. C. ituou fet above
sen level, ti said to have the highest
altitude of any Incorporated town
emit of the Itovky inuuntali.a.
Ouy Porock. author, once launht
both the Prince of Wales and the
Duke oi York. I
Editorial Correspondence
CHICAGO, Illinois, July 21. Too bad I Both "Washington
and California have attractive exhibits at the Century of Pro
gress; Oregon has nothing but a sign on double doors which
are locked and the glass pasted with soiled and weather beaten
newspapers. According to the guard, Oregon made a reserva
tion which accounts for the sign, but never followed it up.
A visit to the state exhibits confirms the soundness of a
suggestion made in this column when the question of an Oregon
exhibit was being discussed throughout the state. An air con
ditioned layout, emphasizing Oregon's great outdoors, the last
stand of the sportsman's paradise would have been nothing
short of a knockout, and for comparatively little monev would
have given the state a publicity investment that would have I
paid cash dividends for years.
Unly those who have visited
appreciate the passion there is
for a cool retreat an escape
sufferable heat. Quite true air
it would have been worth all
atmosphere guaranteed, a few
grouse hunting, a camp by a
moving pictures of Oregon's great outdoors, would have been
sufficient to have packed 'em in. No exhibits of products would
have been necessary or to our way of thinking desirable.
That sort of publicity has been done to death, and the products
of one state are seldom strikingly superior to those of another.
But in fishing and hunting, in its woods and mountains, in its
shaded and unspoiled wilderness
In failing to have such an
Fair, Oregon we believe, lost a
Mot an old newspaper friend
of his years had been assigned to cover the recent visit of Mrs.
Eleanor Roosevelt to the Century of Progress.
He is still sore, particularly
that he had never left big city
a little weekly somewhere in
could have done and thought
which he can t do now. He bates Chicago, detests the heat and
dirt, looks young enough but says he feels 90 years old and
would like a job on the Mail Tribune. He is a clever feature
writer and that is why he was put on the job of trailing the
First Lady of the Land, on her recent flurry in the Windy City.
"Imagine putting an old decrepit fire horse like me on such
an assignment" said he, "it was simply criminal. I haven't
recovered and probably never will. If Eleanor had just fixed
things up with the big boys before she arrived they would
probably have agreed to leave her alone. But she didn't. She
jukv Boi urn oi ner airplane ana
or nare ana nounos. one was
we were the hounds trying to
the traffic, scuttled up the
seconds flat, came out n sidr dnnr nnd in fton lonn. wo ti,a
Most oi the other boys were either young or in training, but I
was neither. Finally I hopped a taxi, but the taxi had to mind
the traffic lights and Eleanor didn't. She didn't mind anything
not even the heat or the rubber necks who tried to follow her.
She had a grand time, but no one else did. Talk about your
bunion derbies, I haven't taken a step without flinching since,
and my heart beats liko a clock without nemlnlnm Who,,
I the First Lady comes here the
,'thrt rlnv hefnt-n unA if iha M, ;
f " -L " -I 1 ""' ,,ul' 1,10 rous
jfr where is it you live Medford, Oregon and for Pete sake,
. pal, give me a job !"
ic 0... Wfl have ,)nnn hnth
" , ' - -
beauties don t it is difficult to
because we went slumming last.
lifobcauties, pleasures are difficult to recall and live over
sh0cks, sorrows, terrors aren't. w I? '
Jv-
Editorial Comment
Sales Tax Experience In Illinois
Th. Illinois sales tax law. which
Is approaching th. and of Its first
year', operation, Is commending Itself
to th. publlo on several oounts. Im
portant among which are revenue
volume and low cost of collection.
According to the Chicago Herald and
Examiner. It haa - produced thirty
millions of dollars and Is realising
th. prediction mad. earlier In the
year that It would wlp. out th.
stat. tax on land. Th. stau director
of flnanc. puta the total first-year
revenue at S38.00O.OO0. Th. coat of
collecting th. tax Is very low, a t
per cent as compared to the 11 to
40 per cent rang. In real Mtat. col
lections. Th. Illinois experience bean out
th. low-coat collection claims made
for the proposed Oregon law by
members ot th. stat. tax commis
sion. This results from th. spon
taneity of th. merchants' response
to the collection featur. of the law,
who are rallying voluntarily, for the
moat part, to th. respontlblllty. Aa
Director Ames says: "We m collect'
in. ' ,k. ... ..,
that Is due th state. We have filed
a number of suits against those who
hive been unwilling to pay. It Is an
easy tax to coHwrt.'
Not all the retailers redponded at
the start, but 0O0 of them volun
tarily added their names to the lint
of taxpayers during March. April and
May. Observing this trend, the Her
ald and Examiner says: "At thla re
maittahle rate of Increase, It would
not b Ion before every retailer In
. imiuw ni'uiu un iii own wivn
a regular monthly remittance of the
u n tat
Evidently, the Tit I noli law Is work
ing satlsfactrtTlly. At any rate, tt is
helping the property owner. Oregon
Ian. Communications
Itarr for "I'slr riav"
Tu the Editor:
Th? mrrchanu, doctors, lswyer
mid b utters consider it to i no
'crime to oiKsnlEe their respective
buslttese under the well known bur
sssocistion. medical association, etc
Each of these imposes upon 1U mem-
the Middlewest this year, can
particularly among visitors,
from this muggy, oppressive, in
conditioning is expensive, but
it cost. With n cool rcfreslnnc
trout in a pool, an exhibit showing
mountain stream, and perhaps
Oregon is supreme.
exhibit at the Chicago World s
great opportunity.
in newspaper row who in spile
his feet. He bemoaned the fact
newspaper work and purchased
the western country which he
of doing before the crash but
acciaed 10 put on a little game
the nare, and what a hare! And
keep up with her, s she dodged
steps of the Art Institute in 3
next time. I am anina f id,;
f;,. . I 1 .1.- ,
Th. Wm... 1. ....
-.s. ..".it'. .j ru(lil-(llMY BUCK WIU
recall them. Perhaps that is
Then again it may be a law of
bars and the general publlo certain
restrictions. Take for example the
recent action of the associated
banks of Jackson county governing
their various services. I challenge any
one to prove that the demand of
the longshoremen was not Just as
reasonable, It embodied a principle
for which the NRA contended snd
under which the CWA operated.
Why then were these demands not
gratified? Because the shipping com
panies far It would Interfere with
their profita that they love so much
better than they do the public wel
fare. If the striken are depicted as
being adamant how In Justtre can
the employers be described? Why
then did not the government come
to the rescue as efficiently as when
an emengency confronted the banks
a year ago?
X am not a believer In etrlkes;
there la a better plan. But the long
suffering public still prefers strikes
and turmoil. Under exutlng condi
tions what Is the poor laboring man
to do when the police, the army,
and the presa which controlla public
sentiment are all with the employer?
Other groups of workera struck to
lend force to the longahoremen's
argument. Surely time now for the
powera that be to wake up and do
something. And what did they do?
They called out the militia, the tank
and gas bomb, machine guns and
other hellish parsphenalla supposed
to be reserved for foreign enemle
Invading our sacred soil and train
them on our fellow citlwna who
are merely demanding that ship
owners employ the longshoremen IN
TURN and hire only union men. And
yet we call ourselves an Intelligent
and patriotic people, a Christian
i.nttonl GOOD NIOHTI
Not an alien, nor a too per cent
communist, but a "nut who likes
to aee Ult play.
BKRT HARR.
Jacksonville, Ore, July 31.
Seek Re-OrganlraMon
PORTLAND. July 21. (.Author!,
ty to file a petition for corporate re
organization under the bankruptcy
act was granted in federal court herj
"V ' ' """" ,""
i k i V i
hlch there has been filed pet it
of luwluntnry bankruptcy.
Andrew Redmond, olet-tims tramp
printer, better known as "Muskotr
Red." recently celebrated his 70th
birthday anule;Mry in Uaiion, Kaus
Personal Health Service
By William Brady. M.D.
Signed let ten pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis
ease dlugiiukli or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady It a stamped
self-ad dressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In
Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be an
swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions.
Address Dr. William Brady, 203 El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Cai,
VOIR OPTIMA L BODY SIZE
Tables purporting to give the "cor
rect" weight for persons of different
age, height and sex are scarcely
worth consulting
In any circum
stance. The fig
ures of such ta
b 1 e t represent
only averages of
the Individuals
examined no
matter whether a
thousand or ten
thousand ot each
age-height class.
Well that ought
to give a fair
idea of what Is
normal, you may think But I can't
agree with you. It may give a fair
Idea of what was accepted as nor
mal a generation ago. Remember, the
measurements on which these tsbles
are based were made twenty, thirty,
forty or more year ago.
The old gray mare ain't what she
used to be, nor la the woman today
so weak, sickly and frail as her
mother was. Records of many thou
sands of college girls prove that the
height, weight and strength of the
modern girl are all Increased over
the figures of college girls a gener
ation ago.
80 don't take the 'coTect', weight
tables seriously.
Even for two persons of the same
age-sex and height an arbitrary "cor
rect" weight does not necessarily ap
ply. In the first place, one person
may be fabby, soft, weak, from neg
lect of physical education; the other
may be firm of flesh, athletic or well
educated physically and should
weigh more because muscle la heav
ier than fat, though It takes up less
room.
Then, too, the type of build or
framework must be taken Into con
sideration. The length of limb and
breadth of shoulder, the capacity of
the thorax or the vital capacity may
vary considerably In persons of the
same sex, age and height. These fac
tors cannot be ignored In estimating
what the individual's weight should
be.
Ideally the "correct figure might
be determined by measuring the in
dividual's specific gravity. That Is,
put him In a tank and compare his
actual weight with the weight of the
water he displaces from the tank.
In measuring metabolism It Is cus
tomary to compute the rate by esti
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK, July ai.To the ladles!
It's long past time to swirl a gallant
cape for their good sportsraansnip
during the de
pression. Most
I know spend
their time talk
ing about the
y a c h ts, stocks
and bonds tuey
used to own.
While the ladles
sre out In the
k 1 tchen, sleeves
rolled up. laugh
ing It off.
No opiate Is so
deadening as
memory, fogging
reality with use
less dreams. Women have shaken off
the Jlttera long ago, plunged in to
buck up their own men, still the
whimpering. The history of this eco
nomic upset will show it has not been
mastered by codes and cabala but b7
feminine courage.
In a word, the ladles, have been
magnificent. When the back-trek be
gan from grilled mansions and pent
houses the men could be found brood
Ing over the club high-ball in the
despslr of anxious thought. The wor'.d
was finished. Everything was alxes and
sevens. Nothing could be donel
All the while the women were copy
ing up some walk-up flat Into a su
burban area r la. starting the men off
mornings with encouraging pats and
receiving the discouraging moans In
the evening with uplifting cheer.
They refused to resign themselves to
mutual pas&lveness.
Not alt credit goes to the hspp'.iy
married. Single Isdtes and fonorn
widows have displayed amazing pluck.
A young widow I know has gone slid
ing down the social scale f:om a Fifth
avenue duplex to Sond avenue
hall room. She is cashier now In
milk depot 113 a week, gives a dol
lar a week to charity and has never
chucked her arr.lle. That sort of cour-
ege tskes Spartan spunk.
There' a telephone lady. too. A wid
ow with three youngsters, one an in
fantile paralysis victim. She makes
53 a month, mostly night work. How
she hss. head-up. kept her little brood
together during tsutness of the
world's most desperate strain ts an
achievement wrenching the heart. For
live years ago she rode the crest a
beach home at Rye. an apartment In
town, a trust fund, now worthless,
thai furnished 113 00 a year.
In the linen room of a smart Park
Avenue hotel Is a white hatred Isdv
rtf enormous serenity snd charm. Sev
en yeara ao her daughter msde her
detnit in the hotel's big dining room.
The lady herself hss occupied a S:x
roim sul'.e there. The crash, a hus
band in ft sanltsrlum. an Indifferent
daughter and there ah. ts beached on
the tragic shoals. She works eutht
hour. . day checking linen end three
nights
wees is hostess at a slum
mission. If she isn't happy. .i u cne I
ot the world a greatest actresses.
There u an old philosophy th.t
deep sorrows are dumb. Yet the m-s:
exquisite and articulate comment
about the crack-up of millions oi
ho;vs 1ms co-.ie from
wornn ti ,
sudden: UvoiiU no Uuit oi lhJ
Li J
mating the area of the patient's total
body surface. The mere weight of
the patient Wwuld not give an accur
ate result, because, as already ex
plained, the weight gives no definite
Idea of the relative proportion of
stored, Inactive, slacker fat.
As accurate as a table Is the simple
formula for estimating what the
weight should be: Multiply the num
ber of Inches of height above 5 feet
by fl!4, and to that add 100 for wom
en, 110 for men. If the height Is less
thsn 5 feet, multiply the number of
Inches below 5 feet by 6',i and sub
tract that from 100 for women or
110 for men. Figure your weight from
your own height by this formula and
you will fix the formula In mind so
that you can estimate what any
body's weight should be.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Worry and Nutrition
Statistics Indicate that the public
haa had better health on the poorer
quality or diminished quantity of
food these past four years. In your
opinion would not the worry over los
ing homes, lack of security for the
future, etc., causing high blood pres
sure and other Ula, offset this? (W. O
C.)
Answer. Worry Is diluted fear.
Pear Is a harmful emotion and is
quite likely, to Impair nutrition. I
should say this untoward factor more
than offsets the theoretical benefit
derived from restriction In food.
Sort Hearted
I am very soft hearted. I cry over
every little thing. I wish there were
some cure for it. I am disgusted with
myself. (Mrs. S. P. R.)
Answer. So do I. I'm quite a
boohoo baby too. Let's promise to
share the remedy In case cither of us
ever finds It.
Maltreatment of Child
Is It Injurious in any way to leave
rubber panties on the baby all day
long, taking them off only when he
goes to bed at night? (Mrs. E. E. s.)
Answer. Yea. Causes eczema and
predisposes to Inflammation of blad
der. Better to put two or three dlap- 1
era of absorbent diaper cloth on. If
the baby must be neglected like that. 1
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letters direct to Ur.
William Brady, M. D 265 El Ca
mlno. Beverly Hills, Cat.
own suffered the bitterest and most
continuous defeats. Not from them are
hurled the destructive threats of the
soap boxes. Or the calamitous proph
ecies of Idlers taking advantage of a
situation to collect without effort
Every lady I know, frosted In the
bllht. is hopeful of the future. They
sr. taking It on the chin. Pollyanis
perhaps. But not in the history ol
any living person haa humanity so
needed the Pollyana mood. After all
th. world was not brought to desohi
tlon by the Pollyanas and the Bab
bitts but by the merciless blusterers
who often laughed and sneered at
them.
. The triumphs of feminine forbear
ance thread every highlight of history,
floating for an Instant in the public
eye like a smoke ring and sifting
apart. Soon forgotten. In the blackest
hours of life, you and I and every
man turn Instinctively to woman
wife, mothei, sister or sweetheart.
And Invariably find solace and aoumt
advice.
Cecil Rhodes once declared every
great scheme of empire building ha-1
1U genesis In the encouragement and
supreme optimism of some modest
woman whom the world never heard
or aaw. And so It will be when the
horror of these past four yeara ha-e
vanished beyond Time's horizon. The
women who sustained man, brushed
him off, adjusted his Ue when he
fell and conditioned him tj win the
battle will never be known. They w,ll
be entirely too busy snyway getting
ready for the next crop of grumbling
bunglers.
(Copyright, last, McNaught Syndi
cate, Inc.)
"Awful rsln." h. remarked good
naturedly, shaking th. water off hu
coat.
"Oeema to me." sh. replied as
she recognlred the handsom. brain
truster, "a little mud wouldn't do
you any harm."
E
Next Tuesday evening. July 24. the
members and families of the Phoe
nix Orange will picnic at the Jack
son Hot Springs. This Is In place
of the regular meeting. Ice cream
and cake, also coffee will be furnish
ed, Evh person must bring their
own table service. Dinner will be
served promptly at 7 30. followed by
gnmes, swimming and a general goxxi
time Bring your bathing suit a
mt
appetite, and come.
Vse of Kthylcne gna or loownlug
walnut hulls from the kernel will
save grom-frs thla year about 250.0OO
usually lost through damage to the
kernel.
ICuntlnueo trom Pag. One)
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
THIS welcome headline meet, the
eye:
"GENERAL WALKOUT ENDS."
THE general atrlke committee at
San Francisco advises all unions
on sympathy strikes to return Im
mediately to their work and pledges
all its resource, for the successful
ending of the maritime strike by
means of arbitration.
Calmer counsel, you see, DID pre
vail. WHAT happened?""
Well, It seems probable that
leadership of the strike, both the
original longshoremen strike and
the later sympathy atrlk. of other
unions, fell Into the hands of radical
agitators communists and others.
Recognizing this, the American
Federation of Labor, whose patriot
ism and forthright support of Ameri
can institutions cannot be question
ed, withdrew Its backing and the
general strike collapsed.
This, of course. Is only surmise,
but It seems a reasonable surmise.
AT ANT rate. It Is pleasing to
know that the general strike has
collapsed.
Strikes In Individual Industries are
probably Inevitable from time to
time, for the atrlke Is the weapon
of laat resort for workera whose le
gitimate demands have been refused
by short-sighted employers and such
things have happened In the past,
you know, and undoubtedly will hap- '
Den azaln. !
To refuse to the worker his right
to strike Is to deprive him of his
most effective weapon for betterment
of his own condition.
No fair-minded person wants to
see that done. i
i
- -4 t
BUT the general strike Is another!
matter.
It la directed not merely against a
stubborn or short-sighted employer. I
htli: .mini, th. VMTTDV DITOIW t. 1
purpose is Intimidation. That Is to j
say. It la designed to make living :
so uncomfortable, or even ao hazard-.
ous, for the public as a whole that
that the public will bring pressure
to bear upon the employer to grant '
the demands m'.de upon him, regard
lea of wheth-jr these demands are
Just or UNJUST.
As General Johnosn said so forci
bly In his speech In Berkeley the
other day, the general strike falls
little short of open and violent re-!
belllon against the constituted gov-'
ernment. j
THE general strike, In times such i
aa these, when people are auffer- 1
Ing from acute economic disturb- i
ances and so are not thinking either '
as straight or as sanely as they do
under more normal circumstances, Is
ft dangerous enterprise, loaded with
potential dynamite.
It strains authority, and lnvltea
vlolence Indeed. It Is only one step
short of outright civil war. It pro
vides an Ideal field for the opera
tions of the whole lot of agitators,
radicals, res, communists call them
what you will whose purpose, frank,
ly declared, Is the overthrow of Amer
acan Institutions.
If these dangerous crack-brains,
taking advantage of the disruption
unavoidably connected with ft gen-1
Starts Adults ?S23jSl& m
tty 20c oyjj
3 Days Anytime vlM M a I Hf
' K.JrW !rrTHE8wi
'''VeVBnsnKflBnBsHMBVHBBWMHHHUKKSIl
The WONDER SHOW of the CENTURY
The greatest of all the star-gemmed musicals! Today it
bursts in a thundering cascade of wonders! Made to top the
biggest! Created to top the best!
1
la om IWthtaf PsfMSt ol erwa,
V iw Brc fcriBf o lStf tft.
IM fXTiH IV.tW WKtMfll
ALSO COMEDY CARTOON
eral strike, should SUCCEED in thlr
purpose and OVERTHROW the In
stitutions of this most enlightened
democracy on th. globe, the price
that would be paid by all of us
would be a terrible one.
-
SO. you see, there ar. plenty of
reasons for being thanxful that
the general strike here on the Pa
clflc Coast, which might conceivably
have spread all over the country, baa
been brought to an end.
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson County
History rrom the Flies ol The
Alall Tribune of til and 10 Year
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
July S3. 1024
Louis Ulrich and wife return from
a trip to east.
Ashland homes are threatened by
huge brush fire. '
Traffic officers start war on "Pet
ting parties on the highways."
Petition seeking the abolishment
"of all taxes" circi'lated In city and
county and freely signed.
Over 170 cars per hour pass the
fairgrounds, a check shows.
Women of city adopt the
hair fad."
Trial of Nathan Leopold and Rich
ard Loeb, "thrill killers" starts in
Chicago and the rich youths lough
as death sentence Is demanded, for
their slaying of boy.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
July 2?, 1914.
(It Was Wednesday)
Rogue river at lowest point
years.
Judge Gay says that the prosecu
tion of violators of the water ordl-
nances will go on with vigilance. He
K54T
POp Anytime 1 gW AW A
WU Children 10b liF M ft.
'm TODAY
KpiS and MONDAY
V T fe Her Beauty was like
''''3sPJ a diadem of brilliant
f I J k-'d stars
. W. te:f,f0
portllghf. -March of lnfiT ?flI3
the t hainplon" i V 1 V IS liCA'd.
ti""f""nf ir$t m M$!$$m
ronllnuo,,, sl,os tttrniM,i&-S'Aii'
m,n,ia, i to 11 i &&M K4-tmii
pSS Kiddies Contlnnon, t
I L U J 10c ToDAY I
rfStsa Anytime 1:45 10 11 'M f-
says that sT.ce the last wholesale
fining the pressure has Increased,
and h Intends to :tamp out unlaw
ful Irrigating so that good pressure
will continue. "The next man
brought up before me for violating
the water rules will be fined the
maximum", he aald.
Dakota street to have a new sewer,
council orders.
"Demon Rum" at the Star; "Billy
Is Found Guilty" at the Isls, and
"Once Is Twice Too Many" at the It.
Out of 1631 applicants In the state
at large Albert C. Joy of Jackson
county was one out of 13 to receive
life certificate to teach In Oregon.
Building Debt Lowered
SALEM. July 21. P) The debt in
curred by the state when the ne v
state police building was constructed
here In 1929 Is being steadily lowered,
the state treasurer reported yester
day. CCC Workers Drown
PROVIDENCE. N. Y., July 21. (iP)
Five CCC workers from a camp at
Speculator wsre drowned In the Am
sterdam city reservoir today while
crossing the lake In a boat. Three men
in the party were saved.
Mexico la making a concerted ef
fort to attract tourists, and work Is
being rushed on the Pan-American
highway which eventually will run
from Maine to lower South America.
at
I
LUMBER CO.
PHONE 1
-T.yt
says 'Hi ';' ji
mmiaw
I i nf fcirt by ronivwpri
t "41 Street" ana "Ofi's
D'erert,". . , m Klie-ll"tf
firli' . . . CtrtntK: B nt ftrtWe
h Ipevtirtet! . . . Hundred 4
other ivrpTiirt in ictne ,fct
estiva, tad MKmo4! . . .
NEWS
'l.i'PL!.W'lTtV-' - " '