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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 10, 1934)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORR OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 1931 T PAGE TWELVE Medford Mail Tribune "Enryom in Southtrn 0fo Rtioi thi Mill (rlbunt ' Dally Cxccpt SaUmUj PublUiwd M HKDKOKU PBlttlNU CO. KOHKU. W. BUHL, Wit Ad iodeptMkot Nmimw toured h Mcood elaaa autut tt tUdfortf Ortgoo, oodaf Act Uifcb t. UTfl. AllbSCKlPTION RATES 0uy. om iar IJ-OJ Dal if, ilt nwnu DfUj, om oootb BU Br Carrier to Adraoet Medford, Ajhlaod. JicUoDTlUt, Central Point, Pbotnll. Itleot, Cold BUI tod oo Blgtuajs. Dallj. on tr 2 aa uanj, ! " - rt.ii. mi manto. ..... All Una, taih Id adfauea. Official papw or tht City of Medford, Official paper or Jaclwo County. MEMBEB Of TUB ASSOCIATED PKEM Becelrlnf Iftill Utd Wtrt Barries .i.iui PfHi u i-tuiiilt tntltlad tfaa om for pubUeatloo of all oewi dUpateMi credited to It or otberdM credited to tht paper and alM Co UM Ineal wn published herein. All rlHU for puMleatloo of ipedal dlaoiliDt berelo are alar reamed. MKMSiEH Of UNITED Pit EBB MEM BE It Or AUDIT HUBEAU Or CIRCULATIONS Adfertlilnt Kepreuntalliea M. C MOtJENBEN COMPANY Wntm lo Ne York, Chlcaio, Detroit, Ban rranclseo Loi Angelet Buttle Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. The city of Salem, to pep up civic gumption li offering a 60 price (or lederai fundi, it la hoped no cltizenregardlcss of party, remain loyal vlll be so ehlftleee. as to fix up hi own home, with his own money. ' Tuesdsy's newapapera printed Itema about Conatance Bennett, the movie actress, who receives i2,000 per week, and a Weat Virginia coal miner, whoae enumeration la 32 rente per ton for ahovellng coal. The coal miner got up at 3 a. m. to get to work In time It waa four mllea to the mine, and three mllea In it to where he left hla ehovel. He could ride in a atreet car. but If he did he could have no lunch. The movie queen gets up when she feela like It. Should she feel like doing no acting that day she doea not. Owing to the depres alon, Miss Bennett only worked (aa It ia called) a week leaa than three monthe taat year, therefore earning only 20o.000. Aa yet, there la no re. port that Uncle Sam haa atarted ault to collect her Income tax. The coal miner worked about the aame length of time. for. the same reaaon. receiv ing approximately 48. By no atretch of the Imagination, la the entertaining ability of Mlas Bennett worth 35.000 a week. Aa a matter of fact many film tana feel, after aeelng aome of her picture, that what the miner geta for ahovellng a ton of coal, would be a fair and Juat wage for her. No doubt the humble worker, with $29, 000 per week would be far more In tereatlng both on and off the screen. Be furnlshea labor, and ahe deals In art, and besldea Is a blonde, and pass ing fair. The difference between the mlner'a measley 33c per ton and Mlas Bennett's munificent (39.000 per week la what the efficiency experts call a "prohibitive differential." and the Soclallsta designate aa "industrial In equality." Savants aay It la situa tions like the above that are kicking the pins out from under civilisation and there la need for a snappy re adjustment. THE VSIA.. DRAWBACK, (llrppner (Ore.) News) J. O. Turner, program chair man, gave an explsnstlon of what Is termed a revolving old age pension plan which Its advocate, a Long Beach man, clatma would completely solve all thla country'a economlo an dflnanclal troublea. The operation of the plan would be very simple, provided It would work. s An Equestrian Society, composed of folka "with a deep-seated attachment for the horse." Is being formed. By the way some of the prospective mem bers squst In the saddle. It Is well that their attachment Is deep-seated It won't be long now until all the candidates will be quoting the Bible, and net mean a word of It. Agitators, who have been having a fine time In the cities rslsing hell during the longshoremen's strike, are now heading for the amslter apota. This will give the metropolitan press a chance to tell the rural regions how to handle them. TEI I.1NO T.M, (Health Hint toll C. N. writes: I have corns or ral lusea under both feet and am cer tainly gclng crarr, so I wonder If you wouldn't prescribe something for me so that I will be able to get rid of them? REPI.T. Why go crary when there are so many better things to do? Wearing broad shoea ta better. So la applying mrleskln or adhesive. ... Recovery has reached the point wliere It Is easier to count the j.''1 car than the new ones on the high- Mr. Itniitetelt Hal!'.. I.A HAVRE. Prance. Aug. 10 i,T) Mrs Jsmes Roosevelt, the mother of the President, sailed for home today on the s 8 lie de France, after a monlh'e visit In London and Paris She waved her goodbye to a cheering crowd with a bunch of violets. 4 Great? THE Jackson County Chamber of Commerce is to be con gratulated upon staging one of the most successful wel coming banquets, ever given in Southern Oregon, when Robert Fechner, director of the C. C. C.j A. B. Cammerer, director of National Parks; and Colonel C. 0. Thomson, former superiu tendent of Crater National Park were honored guests, last night, at the Hotel Medford. There were two outstanding features of the gathering. First, the good taste, displayed by those in charge of the banquet, under the personal direction of Ben E. Harder, president of the chamber and toastmaster, the absence of long-winded introductions, the elimination of tiresome IMPROMPTU speeches, the injection of good humor and cordial hospitality throughout, without the introduction of inappropriate horse play, and finally, the refreshing speed and clock-like -dispatch, with which the performance was run off. Second, the underlying note of genuine appreciation and deep sincerity which ran through all three responses of the honored guests. esse THEY were not "speeches" in the accepted sense of the term. There were no attempts at oratory, no table thump ing, not even a suggestion of political appeal, nothing but straightforward "talks," concerning the departmental work of the speakers, but, in all of them an expression of interest and affection, for this valley and ita people, which could not fail but make a deep and lasting impression on all the men and women, who crowded the hotel dining room to its doors. Such gatherings are decidedly worth while. They don't make banners on the front page. But thejr do contribute materially to better feelings, not only locally; but a better feeling and clearer understanding, between this section of the state, and those in positions of authority and power in the national government. Honest Business Needn 't Fear ORESIDENT Roosevelt declares bis administration purposes "no injury to honest business" but a growth of material prosperity in which all may share. This, in a few words, Bums up the essential meaning, of the New Deal. It is the real reason why so many thoughtful people, leadership. They believe there SHOULD be no injury to honest busi ness. They believe the servant is not only worthy of his hire, but the business man is entitled to the profit, his industry, skill and initiative, justify THE other hand, they believe, as the President clearly implies that there SHOULD be injury there should as far as it is humanly possible, be elimination, of DISHONEST busi ness. They feel that the phrase from the inaugural address that, "the money changers should be driven from the temple" still holds. They not only believe this, because the get-rich-quick financial practices of the past were WRONG; but because if persisted in, they are convinced this country as we know it, will not survive. They, therefore, regard President Roosevelt, not as Wall Street regards him the one great menace to the so-called capitalistic system but as its chief defender and its greatest friend. im For as they look at the country and the world, this capitalistic system is on trial. It is facing its most critical test, in modern times. And unless it can be so modified, so modernized, as to withstand the stresses and strains of new social and economic concepts, it will go down; and what we know as civilization, with it. ""PILAT'S the situation in a couplo of Andy's nutshells. It es- plains the fundamental purposo behind the New Deal, and only those who can't seo this fail to understand why Pres ident Roosevelt's popularity with the people still holds, even though the initial popularity of man.M. of his measures, has declined. The people that is a ;ast majority of them believe there should be a new deal, believe there should be certain radical reforms, and regard the President as the only man in sight, who can accomplish them. IF ONE wishes convincing proof of this, let him look over somo of the Communistic literature that is being circulated hereabouts. Or let. him attend a Conimunistio meeting, , as a newspaper man in Los Angeles did a few weeks ago. The Communists of this country hate Roosevelt more bit terly than Wall Street, if such a thing is conceivable. Whyt Simply because he is gumming their game stealing their thunder as it were. They want the capitalistic system over thrown, and they believe that if it is not radically reformed, if nnturc is allowed to tako its course, conditions, will become so intolerable for the rank and file, that it WILL be. But if Roosevelt can so reform the capitalistic system, that we have once more a contented and prosperous people living under it, communism will fade out in this country just as the Greenback movement faded out, following the Civil War. CO THE Reds are out to got F. I). R. and Wall Street, which J can never see anything further than the North River, is out to get him too. Both believe they are aoting in their own self-interest. Hut only the Communists, who are dangerous birds but far from stupid ones REALLY are. "For confidence in this country," said the President in this same Wisconsin talk, "one must look to the AVERAGE citizen." One must I And it is the AVERAGE citizen, who souses, if he doesn't entirely understand, the gravity of the present sit nation; it is the average citizen who is making constructive ;,ri)gresf possible in the New Deal today and is the best hope of t'le preservation of the form of government under which we now live, against the forces of selfishness and greed which threaten it. Makes fine ratch Dick Slngler. em ployed at the postofflce here, was suc cessful in landing four steeltieart, and one pscq salmon the first of the meek, reported. Success to the present Boosevelt To Visit Here Betty Wetthers of Spokane. Wssh , snd Nellie Bowles ,t Vancouver, Wah . are existed In Medtord tin week-end to vlalt their later, Mis. Harriet Allen, Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to d la ease dlagmls or treatment will be answered by Or. Brady U a stamped selt-addreased envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written to Ink. Owing to the large number ol letters received only a few can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Addreaa Dr. William Brady, 369 El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Cal. POPULAR FALLAC IE8 ABOUT FAT. A correspondent sayi that he drank milk by the quart under the super vial on of my learned colleagues, yea, by the gallon, In a futile attempt to gain weight, but hla weight dtd not Increase. However, since re peal he haa been drinking about a quart of beer a day and he now weighs about whet a man of hts age. height and political faith should weigh. He has gained 33 pounds since he switch ed from milk to beer. Another sophisticated layman as sures me that any one who wishes to reduce can lose weight rapidly by Just eating a lot of lemons. First let us dispose of the beer and then the lemons. As I have explained here several times, a pint of beer yields 240 calo ries If we assume that all the alcohol In it la oxidized In the body and uti lized in place of food to provide heat or energy. Certainly If an odor of al cohol or aldehyde Is perceptible on the breath of an Individual who nas taken a pint of beer, not all the alco hol haa been utilized by the body In plac of food. But granting that the correspondent who thinks he grew fat on a quart of beer a day la capable of oxidizing and utilizing the ounce of alcohol in that much beer, he gets only 480 calories & day from the beer. He could get 480 calorie from only 1'4 pints of milk or from one-half pint of cream, or from a moderate helping of pancakea with syrup or from a nut fudge sundae, any of which would be easier for an indi vidual with a normal capacity to take than a quart of fluid. In fairness we mut credit the beer with increasing the appetite, in some Individuals. This stimulation of ap petite may have caused our friend to take more food than he would have taken ordinarily, and that, of course, would bring about gain In weight. Beer doesn't have this effect in every Instance, however. In many instances It appears that the drinking of a glass of beer at or near mealtimes rather destroys the normal appetite so that less food la taken than the body needs to maintain health and vigor. In the earlier stage of cirrhosis of the liver many heavy drinkers have appeared bloated If not healthily fat. and no doubt this bloated, water NEW YORK DAY BY DAY by O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Aug. 10. Thoughts while strolling: Never see a barefoot boy even in the slums. Rudy Vallee haa the look of Just stepping out of the shower. Those bonneted ladles with high laced shoes and black bags. Jo seph P. Day does n't even wear an overcoat with evening clothes. One word de scription of Vln- i cent Lopez glis- teny. What be- j came of Jerry 3 the Greek? Pler- re'a should have a gay looking dining room on the park aide. Two hotel menus list grapefruit Mclntyre. Half a grapefruit centering a thimble of Worstershire. And very tsaty. One of the last of the patricians. Crelghton Webb. They say Billy Rose la on hla second million. No one blends aloofness with condescension like a frock-coated floor wolker. The crepuscular gloom of those dlme-a-dance halls. And the rat-faced youths loitering about the entrances. Roscoe Peacock and Alfred P. Slow look alike. Never see Nils Florman around. Everybody mixes Howard ind Hnrry Acton. WUUam Lyon Phelps among the 42d street commuters. Old boys who lunch at clubs with neph ews and ask family questions. And surest Chekov's man who did not eat but partook of food. Ons of my favorite people Daniel rrohman. Mayor LaQuardia'a cigars are fiercer than George Jewel'!, No more picturesque hotel man like John McE. Bowman. In fact there's not much of anything any more. Still what we had waa heaps of fun while It lasted. Broadway still mtw W. C FMeld's gnome-like stooge. Shorty. He was not only the comedian's handy man. foil and valet but best friend and se verest critic. At his passing. Pield walked the street dry-eved for three night trying to Ret hold of himself. Snorty, as his name implied, waa a sawed-off runt with cap abaft, out standing ears and no.ed like Punchi nello. One of those flotsam hangers on around the ste door who at tached himself to Fields and would not let go. Fo apanlel-like ws hla worship he made himself Indispens able. In stave days. Field used him a comic relief in all hi gorgeous torn-foolery. A chlrky mite, peeking at crumb. Shorty wa the sparrow that fell! Almost every theMre used to have its Shorty who came out of the no where and. like a floating barnacle, made attachment and by sheer mek new be.-ame a rrt of the personnel Short v. rarely on the pav-rotls. re sponded to everybody's "Her you", working like braver for the entire oa.t from star lo property man. They mausjted somehow lo be clothed and fed but their b.g reward wa stmd- VV b - i, LastsAatsriBa. ItVlal.T',. M WJ y" l$ti s . Brady, M.D. logged condition weu assumed to be fat and the assumption led to the popular fall Icy that beer la tonic and fattening. Ai for the notion that lemons cause reduction, that is too silly to consider seriously. Lemons yield 205 calories to the pound compared with oranges which yield 240 calories or boiled po tatoes which yield 440 calories per pound. The vitamins and minerals In orange or lemon might help to prevent craving which makes so many "break training" when trying to re duce. It has been plausibly suggested that the deficiency of minerals and vitamins in our customary dietary Is responsible for the craving which makes us eat too much and grow fat. tn actual practice, however, orange or orange Juice proves more effective than lemon Juice or grapefruit Juice in a rational reduction regimen. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS A SHIy Notion. Do you know the name of a moder ately priced children's specialist In my locality? My son is so languid at times, I'd like to have him examined by a specialist to be sure he hasn't anything tlse besides acidosis . . , . (Mrs. T. H. T. Jr.) Answer I can assure you from this distance that If the child has acidosis he must have something else. But I think It would be silly to go to a so called child specialist. A family physi cian can do better than any such spe cialist can. If there Is some extraor dinary factor In the child's condition, then your physician may wish the counsel of a real specialist. Close to Ground. We hare moved Into an apartment that la about three feet above the ground. Does that fact make It un healthy? (Mrs. A. H.) Answer No. Even if living rooms or sleeping rooms seem damp, that Isn't Injurious to health. Milk for Babies. A layman who writes and sells books on health says milk Is not a proper food for elderly persons, but good far children, as it Is a bone builder. (L. L. A.)- Answer If an elderly person likes milk, it la of course an excellent food. Perhaps It Is true to say milk Is more essential for infante than It Is for ma ture adults. Older folk should use all dairy products freely. (Copyright, 1934, John r. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Or. Brady should send letters direct to Ur. William Brady. M. P., 263 El Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. lng outside the stage doOr woth a fat cigar and being the target for af fectionate halloos of the company while the crowd gazed on. Nearly every sport room of a news paper, too, has a Shorty, slick and shining like a cicatrix. They have soaring ambitions but little talent. amiable in declensions and content to perform the Inglorious chores. Their idols are usually the top sport writ- era with a by-line. Damon Runyon has one. So has Bill Corum. They give strangers the idea of vast Importance and generally have an Inside tip on the fourth at La ton la. Private yachts have become a sym bol of grandeur owners try to hide, Most palatial barques were used only for a short trip or so thla season. Not more than a dozen made sustained voyages and such cruises were made with a soft pedal on publicity. Yachts do not blend with passed dividends. Yet yachts are no longer so expens ive. A few worth 100.000 have been sold for as little as 95.000 and there Is. of course. Earl Carroll who, at the end of last season, presented his barque to the crew, with love and kisses! And they are still wondering what tn the world to do with the darn thing! For psychologists: In the mall so fsr this week have been lettera from a dancer with a torn tendon, a alnger whose voice has become a whisper, a painter who was off for Vienna to consult eye specialist and a writer prostrate from twinges of neuritis in hts writing arm. The thing most great ly fesred, etc. An there was Orock, the clown, who lived almost wholly on applause and grew atone deaf. I Just rushed into the other room to explain I thought I had heard someone moan. "Don't worry.' said a familiar volee. "You still hav all the moaning Tights." (Copyright. 1P34, McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) Eagles, Auxiliary Social Dance To Follow Meeting A social dance will be held tonight by members of the Eagles' lodge and the auxiliary following their regular meeting, tt was announced today. The Oregon Lumberjacks will fur nish the music and all Eagles and their wives and friends are Invited to attend. At the Eagles' meeting tonight a final checkup on the progress of the membership campaign will be made. The campaign will end next week and It la expected that the new plans to be developed tonlcht will be re sponsible for many new applications for membership brought In before the close of tht present membership drive. Fmplmes Wore Overcoats. SALEM. Ore (IT) While much of the ret of the nation sweltered tn heat, state employee here donned coat and sweaters to keep warm. The rea son wa that the Pacific Coast long shoremen strike caused supplies rf fuel oil to be exhausted. Oregon t cool slimmer weatrr made the state office chilly. Use Mall Tribuu anl ads. Comment on the Day's News By FBANK JENKINS THE death toll from the heat wave in the Middle West la far past the thousand mark, the headlines tell us, and and new deaths are re ported aa a result of the latest re currence of the wave. j DONT take these reports TOO se-; rlously. i It 1 highly probable that among the thousand or more reported caau- j altlea of the heat wave are many 1 deaths that would have occurred any-! way that merely HAPPENED to oc- cur while the weather wa exceed ingly hot. Back In the day of the "flu" epi demic, you remember, nearly every death reported waa a death from In fluenza. MENTION of the "flu" epidemic, Incidentally, serves to remind u that ALL the good old days to which we now look back so longingly were not such good days. Things got pretty serious In those years when the influenza was rag ing. IT'S Just as well yu know, to re member that there have been troubles in other times. If we get to thinking that all the troubles the world ever saw are bunched on us RIGHT NOW, It give us the glooms. And when people get the glooms they're not much good. THE latest strike to get Into the papers 1 at a distillery back In Illinois, where clashes with pickets have resulted In a considerable num ber of broken heads. Just offhand, one would be Inclin ed to say that If there la any place where strikes, with their consequent reduction of employment and limita tion of production, won't do TOO MUCH harm, tt Is at a distillery. If we had to get along with a" little less hooch for a while, It would not damage us Irreparably. BY THE way, a man who professed to know what he was talking about informed this writer the other day that, according to the best avail able figures, beer consumption in Southern Oregon Is running around $2 per month per person. That's a lot of beer. IP YOU'RE In business, selling gro ceries, or hats, or shoes, or dresses, and perhaps kicking a little because business isn't as active aa tt might be, you'll be Inclined to wonder Just how much of that beer money yqu'd have got if it hadn't been spent for beer. AND, of course. If you're a lawful seller of beer, you'll point out that a lot of it would have gone into the pockets of bootleggers. There are always two sides to an argument and there'st plenty of op portunity for argument in connection with the liquor business. PERHAPS, in your newspaper, you saw thla headline the other day: "Socialist Party Candidate Announc ed." It was on a page far back in the paper, burled among a lot of oth er unimportant Items. The Socialist party, you see, haa become so hopelessly conservative In these rushing days of brain trusts and uplift and social experiment that It doings no longer rate a position among the live news. 45 SEEK JOB AS L ASHLAND, Aug. 10. (Spl.) Forty flve candidates eagerly seeking a posi tion carrying mall out of Medford, crowded the Junior high school to take a civil service examination for the position Thursday. The Ashland civil service board. Don Spencer and Bill Allen, supervised the examination. Choice of a man for the position will be announced later. 4 "Hamburg" Itald foiled. PA1NESV1LLE. O. (UP) Two men shot and killed a young heifer, then were rustled a they attempted to pack It into big sedan. The men were frustrated from their "ham burger" raid when a neighboring far mer saw their ravage on the S. M. Crawford property where the young animal was pastured. . "Mothers ppoll Bcm. CLEVELAND. UP "Mothers don't mean to spoil their boys but they do. They are too easy. A grow ing boy needs a father's guiding hand." Common P'.ea Judce Alva R. Corlett gave this advice as he sen tenced a 19-year-old youth to the state reformatory. Banned as Landing Held. SALEM. Ore. (UP! The use ot ocean beaches as aviation landing fields wa denied by the stste high way commission. The danger to bathers waa the reaaon. A previous highway board had allowed airplanes to land on Oregon beaches. Divorce In Mexico llnal tn a few dais. o resilience: No puhlliltT. Mev Am. Ha mo, Box ?xw, Hollywood. Cal. Public Links Winner 'X. ' David A. Mitchell (above), Ind lanapolla atoker salesman, won the national public links title In Pitts, burgh by defeating Arthur Arm atro, 17-year-old Hawaiian sensa tion, S and 3. (Associated Presi Photo) E ONCE CAST OFF FR LOS ANGELES SQUAD LOS ANGELES ( AP) In the midst of the Chicago Cubs' battle for the National league pennant Manager Charley Grimm may have a few Idle momenta to consider what might have been for Bob Johnson. Connie Mack's latest home run sensation who once tried out with Los Angeles, a Cub farm in the Pacific Coast league. Johnson, a Glendale, Calif., fire man, showed up In the spring of 1928 to take his fling at organized baseball with the Angels. He amazed the management by hitting the ball over the left field fence frequently, but he couldn't hit a curve ball. Anyway, the Angels had for an outfield, Wallie Berger, Wes Scnul merlch, James Moslof and Forrest Jensen, all of whom later were grad uated to the big leagues, so Johnson didn't last long. In fact, the Los Angeles manage ment Just gave Johnson to Art Griggs who was running the Wichita club of the Western league. The next year Portland purchased him and he Im proved so much the Philadelphia Athletics bought him In 1932. Courthouse News i Furnished ov the Jackson Count 4 bat race Co. 121 B Sixth Streeti Marriage Licenses James Allen Clark and Evelyn A. Ringer. Marie Beretonne and Jean Gibson. Forrest G. Jones and Marjorle Rice. William A. Thomas and Doris E. Peterson. Floyd Peery and Winifred Mohr. John W. Cunningham and Thelma 1 F. Gentrv. t Walter S. Jones and Lucile Gorden. John M. Porteous and Rosalie A. Duncan. Circuit Court Dulcle C. Beebe vs. Carl A. Beeve. divorce. Southed n Pacific vs. J. R. Morris, et al. foreclosure contract. Alice Shepherd vs. John Shepherd, divorce. 1 John Brenner vs. W. D. Taylor, et al, to quiet title. Estate of Ella Medynskl, deceased. Probate. Real Estate Transfers Clyde L. Smith, et ux. to Wlllard A. Grim, et ux. WD. eiO.OO. Lot 11. block 3. Siskiyou Heights Add. to Medford. Cecil R. Morgan to Cora B. Morgan. WD. J10.00. acre in Town of Phoe nix. L. Pennington, et ux, to Scott E. Brill, et ux. WD. 1130.00. Land in Sec. 36. Twp. 33 S. R. 1 W. W. M. Lee Phlpps to Victor E. Nelson, et ux. WD. 200.00. 1 acre in D. L. C. 40 Twp. 37 S. R. 1 W. W. M. Anna P. Reed, et vlr, to Richard A. Noonan. et ux. WD. $1.00. Lots 1, 2. 3 & 4 of Donnegan Orchard Tracts in Sec. 13. Twp. 35 8. R. 3 W. W. M.. containing 40 acres. J. F. Cook, et ux. to Irvin A. An derson, et ux. WD. 10.00. Land in Blk. 3 of Pierce Sub.. Twp. 37 8. R. 1 W. W. M. W. E. Peck, et ux, to F. K. Redden. WD. 110.00. Pt. Lots 7. Block 2. Mlngua Subdivision. Medford. Winifred Rader. et al. to J M. K a li st rom & Olga E- Anderson. QCD. 11.00. Land in Sec. 18 and 19. Twp. 38 S. R. I West. WINDOW OLASo e sell clndoa ;:asa and will replace your broken windows reasonably Trowbridge Ceo. met Works Coal and Wood Fuel Oil HaJW 9 i FEEDS and SEEDS tVHOI,l.1.E F. E. SAMSON CO. 2C9 North Phone 833 Flight o Time (Medford and JatKsoo Count) History from tbe flies ol Itte Mall Tribune ol u ana 10 Keaia Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY August 10, 1024. (It waa Tuesday.) Pear eannera of Pacific coaat bid high tor Oregon fruit. Roaeburg dry agent held for trying to shoot hotel clerk while drunk: "Weat Main atreet la a racetrack," resident complain to city police. Fishing In Rogue river improve. John W. Davia, Democratic nomine for President, launches campaign wltn attack on Republican administration. The Democratic battle-cry will bi "Turn the raacala out!" Committee named to Investigate local dancing reporta "The moonlight dance haa nothing on the wildcat whirl, or whatever they call It." TWENTY YEARS AFO TODAY August 12. 1914. (It waa Wednesday.) Belgian troopa continue to check German advance at Lelge; British war. ships lurk in North Sea, hoping for battle with German fleet. Mule buy er for French government arrives In Rogue River valley. It has been a month alnce rant fell In Jackson county. Censua shows more mill tollers than farmers In Oregon. Increased cost of loodstuffa to b probed. . T. E. Daniel returns from a deer hunting trip In Curry county Am. thA recent raid on the Cht nese laundry on Riverside avenue, the denizens thereof have been extremely wary of the police. Investigation show ing that they have Chinamen look outa In the front and back yards, and on both aides. The raid also put a damper on the visits of Ashland and Yreka Chinese to this city. 1 (Conttnueo iron) Page One) B&mndl No longer can the Justice depart ment keep a test case from going to v court. ' t The board Is so Joyous that some suspicious souls believe it had a hand In encouraging the filing of the suit. The big bosses of the NRA have been conferring, furtively and almost continuously, In the back room for the past week or more. The reason is supposed to be very much of an Inside secret, but something more than cigar smoke has filtered through the doors. It Is considered almost a certainty that a reorganization Is imminent; possibly, also, a retrenchment, a cut In staff and a new commission to run things. Odds have been offered at 3 to 1 by those In the know that General John son will figure that his Job la com pleted with the completion of the codes. Long 'Sore At Him fey vk B-1 Gov. O. K. Allen (above) of Lou isiana said Senator Huey Long waa "sore at him" because ha would not dismiss the national guards h called out In the fight between Long end Mayor T. Semmes Waims ley of New Orleans. (Associated. Press Photo Slmpklns lo rortland Archie Slmp.V kins, discharged CCC member, left by tram for Portland last nht. Notice. TAKEN UP 10 HEAD CATTLE Cows, steers snd calves. Some marfcM crop off right ear, swallow fork left. Owner may have aame bT paying "o dsmsres and advertising. L C. Riisho. Eacle Po:nt. Orccon. Inquire B i Osk Service Station. Transfer and Storage Fertilizers AMI UtTUL River-ide Medford, Oregon