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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 3, 1934)
PAGE TWO MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOIIP. OREGON, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1931 Medford Mail Tribune M Cm rent Hi Southern Orrgee Run U HUH frilum'' Dill) Btetpt auurdt) Publlttm) by MrUKOHO PHIMINO CO. SS-SMI N. iru L kOKMfl ft Ul'UU Editor AO iodtpmdeM NmptW Bnurw) M txcwl etm uttet it Utdloti Orefoo, under Act ol sUreto , isTS. sUUSOtlPTlON BATES Milltil Aritarc Pali, aot n 00 Dally, lis tntt...... '6 nail nna mtinlii... " By CarrLtr la Adnata Medford, AfbUud. iicuoonuf. central roiot, rootou, tum. Rill and on tUahaan. Dalit, w rear 0" Dally, rit ewDthl I SB DiUv our nontb '0 AU .craw (o attrinee. Official oiptr of u citi of Mdford. Official patMt of lerlton County. UEMBKH 07 Tilt AfUOCIATKD VHKU BMlrtDf full Lum4 ira Serrlea ItM aiKdaUd Frra tl nclualttly oultUed U tho uh for mMieatioo of ui otet aumiow credited to tt or otbrretta ercdltad Id U.W Dpw tod alas to (so local area poMUhed tnrtta. All rlsbta (or puMlattoo of ipedil olipiUlM twain tra Up rwnta. MEMHEH OF UNITED fkEBB UEMBEB or AUDIT HUKEAD Of CIKCULAT10NB AdwIUInt KepraMtrtatlteo M. C. MOdENBEN COMPANY Orrteat lo Net Tori. Chicago. Detroit, lea franelMO Im Arde Buttle Portlirta, Ye Smudge Pot Br Artmit rtny. ANSWER THE QtESTIONI The esteemed Com Bay Times, with admirable originality, and great faith in tht loquacity of politician!, hat propounded 55 questions for candl datea for Governor to anawer, which It has fired point blank at them, by registered mall. The paper further announce,, that until the queatlona are anawered. aa far aa It la con cerned. It will not know there la a gubernatorial campaign underway, or to be held. To date, the propoaed examination haa resulted In nothing but alienee from the target,, but ha knocked edltolrata, pro and con. out of all tho leading periodical, of the state. It Is hoped none of the candl datea fall to pass the examination, and. thereby flunk before they get In the state house at Sslem. The intelligence Test for Oubena torlal a.plranta Is headed: "The Coos Bay Times Aaka for Light." The word ing may give a clue that the queries are a power trust plot. They may even, refuse to anawer on the grounds that while equipped to give Informa tion, they are not wired to furnlah electricity, and this defect must not be construed to Indicate they are op. posed to the Bonneville Dam. All confess they are "dynamoe of energy." except one, who admits he la more at home around a barn, than a power plant. . . Aa a result of all the questions, the common voter will be the chief auf ferer. and get caught In what the political writers call the "backwash." Instead of answering the Coos Bay Times questions, the candidates will ask each voter 56 questions, about as follows: How Is everything stacking up with you, John How long haa It been elnce I seen you, and how long have I known yout I, any of your children old enough to vote? What kind of weather have you been having? Tou aay you are 68 years old, and ask me If I am In favor of a MOO per month pension for persona over BJ yeara of age? Tou are old enough to know the anawer to the queiMon. By the way, how does your wife keep from growing older? I am glad ahe Joined ua. Will It be all right If t now ask myself a queatlon? What will I do about (he Portland police force? I think the main ob jective of a police force Is to prevent crime. Irrespective of which side In the hellrslslng has the moat votes? . Do you think the world vlli come o an end Sept. 10. a, predicted by Vollva. or the first Tuesday after the first Monday In November, if I don't get elected? How do you stand on drunken driv ing? I don't get drunk, or I don't drive, so I will hsve to consult my lswyer. Let me ask myself some more ques tions? Have I answered all my own quea tlona. to your satisfaction? I hsve been cross-examining my self for two hours. Hsve X bored you? FOREST FIRE FIGHTER BOIKK. Idaho, ept. 8. Jp Ray mond Ledvlna, 17. of BolM, died tt A h oa pltal here yesterday of Injuries suffered 8a turd ay night white hs tu fighting the Bollln Spring forwt fire near Oarden Valley. Information In the hand of Pal ette national forest office at Cascade Indicated tht youth' skull was frac tured when he wa truck by a limb from a burning tree on the firt line. 4 . PORTLAND, Or. Sept. S API Dr J, Hudson Ballard, head of the department of philosophy and religion at Occidental college. Lo Angeles, ha been Invited to accept the pastorate of Ftrt Prwhvterlan church In Port land. The Invitation was confirmed here today. His MaU rrlbuu, iut ada. MEMBER Labor Day and Labor Walkouts rDAT it Labor Day, a national holiday, devoted largely to a celebration of the growth, achievements and'righti of organized labor. The celebration this year, has more justification and signifi cance than usual; for during 1933-34, organized labor in this country has set a new high record, for rapid growth, increased prestige, and greater power. A new high record has also been set for strikes and walk outs. Since the first of the year scores of walk-outs have been ordered, and tomorrow a country-wide strike of textile workers will get in full swing. e a nPWO main reasons are given for this Increased labor unrest. First : the return of better times and the Insistence of organized labor that it participate in the returns of an increased prosperity. Second : the sympathy with organized labor and its aims, shown by the Roosevelt administration. The general accuracy of this diagnosis is almost universally accepted. Material conditions ARE undoubtedly better than they were a year ago. The Roosevelt administration HAS shown a strong sympathy fos and interest in the welfare of labor. e e e e OUT whereas the administration haa shown a determination to uphold the LEGITIMATE rights of organized labor, (which is the right to strike) the administration, as evidenced in its action in the longshoreman's strike, has also insisted upon organized labor observing its DUTIES, where the equally leg itimate rights of this country and its people are involved. So when a general strike was threatened, General Johnson, representing the administration, took a firm and outspoken stand against such action, wag the cause of the failure of the general strike, and as shown at the recent state labor meeting in Portland, brought down upon himself and the administration the condemnation of the radical labor leaders on this coast. e ASA result the Roosevelt administration is now between two fires. It is being blamed in Big Business circles for a policy which resulted in labor unrest a policy which they maintain caused the strikes; and it is beiug blamed by the labor leaders for throwing its prestige and power against the final success of the labor program. Nevertheless in the opinion of this paper, the Roosevelt administration is exactly right. Organized labor should NOT be denied the right of collective bargaining, for without that right, its perfectly legitimate interests cannot be protected, On the other hand, to extend that strike from the purpose of correcting specifio grievances it FROM limits of a specific industry, to ALL industry, IS, as General Johnson termed it, nothing short of revolution, and should be put down by the united forces of organized govern ment, like any other form of revolution. TXTIIICH brings us to the point we wish to make regarding " Labor Day. "We wish there were less emphasis paid to the glories and rights of organized labor, on thia national holi day, and a little more to its obvious DUTIES AND OBLIGATIONS. After all, this is a united of ita people ALL ITS PEOPLE should take precedence over every other consideration. Where the selfish interest of Big Business or Little Business, Capital or Labor, the claur, that works with its head or the class that works with its bauds, CONFLICTS with the interest of the people AS A WHOLE, that interest SHOULD be subordinated either voluntarily from within or forceably from without, That isn't 2crely a pretty sense; it isn't impractical idealism, it is the most practical and necessary thing in this country or auy other, genuine pat riotism. So that is what we would one and those to come. A little on the part of the eloquent labor PATRIOTISM. For that is what labor, from self-interest needs, that is what est in it needs a little less stress benefit this class or that a little MORE, upon what ia going to country AS A WHOLE I NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O.O. Mclntyrc NEW YORK. apt. S Diary: Out and came upon Frank o. O. Menke, who visited my town. OelllpolU, late ly. And found It flrat rate. Then to a restaurant and at a tabl the KaUer'a nep hew, Prince Per tllnand, was por rklglng with the Journalist, Walter Trumbull. At an other table the helrea,, Doris Duke. Home and a Russian post ca-d from Will Rog ers, a note from Dorothy Btone, Chic Aale, Bob Rtpley and Deao Ayles- e-orth. Also a graphic account of a fly Into Alaeksn wilds by young Tom M. Kiater. And, trying to work, fell to wondering whlrh had the most deeply lined fsce. Bud Kellsnd or Louis M How,. To dinner with Will Hays and talk ed to two celebrated redheads, Joseph P. Kennedy snd Herbert Bsyard Swipe, thence dropping Hays at Roy How ard's. 0o home and a fxl!y crowd had popped In and much hanky panky. And after they left turned to E. Phillips Oppenhe'.ms lateat ahock er. Pat Rcvney seems sbaut the IsM tin with standard vaudeville ecus that on,-e knew no lsroffs or split weeks. He csrrles on. eager snd mm b.J. aith hi, son. pat Roouey 111, do- within an industry, to extend country, and the better welfare any one class, whether it be to the welfare of all. . figure of speech, it is common like to see on Labor Dav this less pride and self glorification, spokesmen, a little more REAL the standpoint of its enliehtened this country and every inter on what is going to selfishly more in fact a great DEAL benefit the people of this ln the aame flashy dance routine to the same tune, a smooth soft-shoeing stippled with the rat-a-tat of up-ln-tha-elr heel clicks. Ha haa executed this sort of salterello so consistently audlecnea aspect It and will not let him do another routine. Rooney. on the sttge 41 year,, haa led a cle.n life, domestically and profeaslonally. and la likely the slurril.it performer tor his yeara In the business. The bleakeat nlfht the New Tork ahow business ever knew from the standpoint of audience reaction mws the one following the Wall Street orackup. Lines that alwaye convulsed feu with a faint pllnk In the ghastly huah. Playera labored aa never before. Cven such an applause stirrer as Har ry Rlchman found the customary thunder a fleeting hand-clap. The worat aufferer was Lupe Velea. Just launched with tremendous three sheetlru: In a tlegfeld p'.ay. every ef fort met froeen quiet and the final curtain saved her from the screem Wf Jeeblee. A Broadway cabaret-restaurant has a monocled waiter, probably a pub licity sst-up. But smpbuisln the spread of the single eyee'.aas. Fifteen rears ago the oily wearers were An dre de aVuroU, singer, snd Jules Bach, banker. At the opening of a race meet this summer 1 counted nine. A fashion magarine lists 87 in tSe etty. Personal nomination for the mr auttalned sve.ienoe on the screen that of Lionel Berry more. fteine and Morris Oeet hare been rememberlne? the friends of David Be Ueco with little mementoes that sur rounded him so Ion on his mammoth desk in his office in the Be'.asco the at:. E. try thin wa there in disor derly array from ivory elephants to Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal bealtb and hygiene not lo dis ease dlugiHAls or treatment svUI be answered by Ur. Brady 11 a stamped trlf-addressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in Ink. Owing to the large number ot letters received only a rew can be answered- No reply can be made to querlea not conforming to Instructions. Address Ur. William Brady. 2tU el camlno, Beverly Ullla, CaJ. ' ANGINA PECTORIS OR HEART PASO. Anemic young women and neurotic young men commonly complain of pain in the left a'-de of the chast wrtilch they are prone to refer to the heart. Only rarely la ueh pain In ft peraon under middle age due to any heart trouble. In tobac co hoga (male or female) it la like ly to be cauaed by heartburn, hy peracidity, gaatrlc ulcer complex KauraLgta of the lutercoAtala, . nervsa aupplylng the muacles and nkln between and over the rlba, la the usual cause of the pain In anemic persona. Angina pec tor La or breaat pang la sometime called "neuralgia of the heart", but that ia misleading, for there are no aenaory nerve In the heart or aupplylng the heart, and ao there can be no sense of pain In the heart. The exposed heart, In case of gravo wound, haa been found with out aenaatton. Sir Jame MacKenzte aaya In ht famous work on heart disease: Angina pectoris u not. a disease; it is merely a group of symptom which afford no clue aa to the real nature of the heart' complaint. But whatever the nature of the complaint may be. Mc Kenzle believed exhaustion of the muscle of the heart the essential cause of the attack of angina. The pain If felt usually in the area to which the four upper left dorsal spinal nerve are distributed. In chest and left arm- Sometimes the pain may be felt aa low as the distribution of the sixth dorsal nerve (epigastrium) or a high aa the seventh and eighth crevlcal spinal nerve, ( little finger border of forearm and hand.) Perhapa the moat effective emer gency remedy for the relief of an at tack of angina la a tablet of nitro glycerin, which will doMolvt in tne mouth and produce lta effect within a few momenta, quite a rapidly M It could If given hypodennlcally. Sometime victim carry with them a pearl or little glass ampoule of amyl nitrate, which may be taken by crushing the glaaa pearl In a hand kerchief and Inhaling the volatile liquid. This, however, haa proved leas satisfactory than the more convenient tablet of nitroglycerin. As for the proper dose of nitroglycerin In such tablets, that la a matter which the patient's own physician should decide. Nitroglycerin (glycerll trinitrate) la gold Jewel boxes from Cathay. The great producer when not tugging at hi forelock liked to finger them. No other office was ever like It, with Its heavy Gobelins, smoldering incense and dim-lit air of breathlessneas. It was packed with the tensity of a Broadway drama. Winnie Sheehan, the movie chief tan, knows and love New York more than most folk who have to endure Isolation. On each visit from Holly wood he goe forth with the thrill of the old colonial who haa been peg ging down the flag In some tagend of the globe, returning to hia beloved Strand. She linn attends no dinners. and rarely the theatre here. He miy artM at sun-up to visit the water front or wander through the Bowery and hla old stamping ground, Park Row, late at night. He often drop into an obacuro Hell's Kitchen coffee pot and on his most recent visit ac tually walked across Brooklyn Bridge. Bagatelles: Dlgby Bell used to aend his collars to a San Francisco Chinese for a special slick . , . Frits Krelsler walks out on a beedle-favorlte clown . . . Jimmy Walker has learned to twang the like . . . The Champs Elys- era has gone Broadway with cheap- John atores. This has been such a hectic every-thing-wrong day I'd like to turn back the clock. And alt again on the first cellar step In the cool of the evening looking sad and forlorn. Just a l did when I worked grandma for a pe.iny after a day of cutting yard grass. (Copyright, 1934. MoNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) ' Bgffilnd ICvntiuueo iroro case cue) Labor Secretary Perkina knew she had a lot of Ph D.'s In her department and started Investigating one particu larly unawumlng employe whom everyone called "doctor." Yea. she found he was an equestrian physician Pioneer Attorney Passes In Arizona PORTLAND. Ore.. Sept. 3 (API Samuel White. 74. one-time chairman of the Democratic state centrvl com mittee and former circuit Judge tn eastern Oregon, died Saturday at hippie barracks. Preecott, Arlrna. Born In Georgia. White cams to Oregon as a young man and opened his first law ffflre in Grants Pa.-. Apol'.o Piano stud:;.. IJ6 No. Holly St. Improve your piano technique Correct foundation European Con tervatory methods. Harmony taught. Class leaaon for beginners. Enroll now. nirvni-s We pay cash for ued bikes. Medford Cycle. 33 N. Fir. tse Mall itibuna aant sua. very volatile, and consequently tablets lose their potency on long standing. The patient who carrle a supply In hi pocket for emergency use should carry only a few. In a tightly stop pered vial. Phyalclane who have had consider able experience with angina pectoris aay that better results are obtained where the patient is supplied with the proper tablets and allowed to take them at his own discretion, instead of taking them at short fixed Inter vals. Furthermore they observe no harmful effects from the frequent lib eral use of nitroglycerin in this way. In fact angina patients showed a greater measure of improvement on nitroglycerin ao used than on other methods of treatment. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Yellow Spots on Eyelids. Some time ago you told what to do for yellow spots on the eyelids. Our doctor aald It would cause a scar to remove It. . . . (Mrs. 8. P. R.) Anawer Usually a physician skilled In such treatment can obliterate the spots by means of electro-desiccation or electrolysis, without producing aoar. Modern Treatment of Hemorrhoids. Please give some Information about the ambulant treatment for hemor rhoids. My doctor gave me to under atand It consist of Injection of some kind of salts, magnesium sulphate, I think and la extremely painful . . . (C. S. D.) Answer Your doctor ha quaint no tions of modern methods. A physician skilled in the technic can successfully obliterate hemorrhoids by Injection treatment without causing any pain. Indeed. In my Judgment, this method Is always preferable to crude surgery, provided your doctor is trained In the modern method. Dinky Utile Pathy Can you and will you give me -he address of a High Potency Homeo pathy of the Hahnemann Theory? (K. R. E.) Answer Gosh, I hardly know what It mean. I am always glad to recom mend a good physician, surgeon or specialist, when I can, but I hope none of the doctors I recommend wquld be ao narrow as to be found by the tenet of any dinky little pathy. (Copyright 1934, John T. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Or. Brady should tend letters direct to Ur. William Brady. M. D.. 266 El Ca mlno. Beverly Hills, Cat Communications It's "Lone pine" To the Editor: We who live out the Buckshot hill road on the lower slopes of Roxy Ann, would like to educate the people to the uae of the correct name given this School District, which 1 LONE PINE, and not the undignified "Red Top", as it Is so often designated. If you care to print It the enclosed poem may help them to remember. Respectfully. MRS. IRA LUMAN. Medford, Aug. 31, 1034. Lone Pine Tnll tree that atands lone sentinel And guards a school-house door Alike unmoved by summer sun Or e'en by tempests roar. Example of true constancy. Both landmark, thou, and friend A living lesson all may read From He who gave thee life, Far towering over mighty oak And puny human atrlfe. Tho duty call ua far away From, this dear favored land In years to come we'll see thee still Dark sketched 'gainst Roxy Ann's Fair peak above the Vale. And this, dear tree, will be my prayer: "Tho other scenes may fade May there alwaye be a school-house there And children In thy shade. May the years with thee deal kindly. As thou hast to me and mine. And may thou stand a thoussnd years. Thou stately, lonely pine I" -Mattie R. Luman , Oregon Heather. Fair tonight and Tuesday, but overcast with fog on coast; cooler In terior west portion Tuesday; moderate changeable wind offshore. e Phone 843 Well naul away youi refuse city Sanitary Service. BirVCLtS We pay cash for used bikes. Medford Cycle. 33 N. Fir. NOTICE To Our Patrons and Friends . . . The Medford Electric Const. Co. is compelled to go on a CASH BASIS beginning September 4th, 1934, and will pay you a liberal CASH DISCOUNT Trade with ui for cash and SAVE MONEY Our workmen will be furnished with price sheets and are authorized to receive payments. PHONE 90 FOR BETTER SERVICE B. M. Bush, Owner Medford Electric Construction Co. Office and Shop in the Basement of the Medford Bldg. KILLED WHEN CAR TURNSFUP-FLOP (Continued rrum page one) (f.va Un nitfn Waa at.tll tinCOn- sclous In a Roseburg hospital late last night. First of the auto deatha came at Raymond, Wash., a beach town, when Mrs. Winona Sanford, 23, of Salem, waa Instantly killed as the car In which she waa rldlne left the high way early Sunday morning. Her hus band, Raymond oaniora. waa unin jured hut Mis Mildred Suntalnger, of Raymond, received a broken leg. and Andrew Briney, a no or me -lngton city, received minor hurts. At sbout the same hour. Mlas Helen O.avea, 34, of Centralis, Waah.. waa killed, and Dr. Lee Powers. Mineral. Wash., was badly Injured as their car fell 40 feet over an embankment near centralla. Vance A. Thomas, about 4S. of Port land, waa the drowning victim. A ' mlnutee after resculnar his smalt Milthter from a crab hole. Thomas died In the surf at Long Beach, wash Fishing Boat Grounds. Th. mntt. anartacular SunJav acci dent occurred on a sand bar off Ne tnrts, near Tillamook, where 30 pas engera and the crew of the deep sea flrhlng boat Jerry B. clung to the half-aubmerged hull for four hours ' ifore they were rescued. Tne cran went aground on a bar. Henry Olson. Katarta roamed 10 Of thB OSrtv In a notorboat. and Clarence Kdner. Ne- tsrts, took off others In a rowboat The crew of the Jerry B stayed aboard and managed to bring her In safely. Five Are luckv. In Portland, loss of a front wheel . rtrivan hv Alonzo Fanning skidding 40 feet down A street before It overturned. Five persons, inciuamg Fann'ng. received slight Injuries. At Bend, ralph Hlggms. seatue -Mm and T. o. Ward. Reuo. Nev.. were In a hospital recovering from tniurtaa received in an auto crash late Saturday on The Dalles-Callfornls highway near crescent, niggins nao two fractured ribs, a bruised larnyx ana a M.f tai-a WarH'a elbow W8S dislocated, his scalp cut and hli knee cap broken. Tnetr car was suuca uj i cr driven bv Jay Barrett. Klamath Falls machinist. . Courthouse News (Furnlabed by the Jackson County abstract Co. 131 B Sixth Street! Marriage License Oeo. H. Danford and Jessie J. Dll Uan. Harold F- Rossell and Hazel F. Austin. Circuit Court Jackson County Building and Loan association vs. Virginia Clark et al, to quiet title. Jackson County BiUldlng A Loan association vs. Ralph K. Koozer et al, foreclosure. Charles H. Totton vs. Lllllsn N. Totten, divorce. Hary J. Norbury et si vs. Wm. J. Llpscomt et ux, foreclose contract. State of Oregon vs. Robert W. Shore, grand larceny. O. M. Roberta tr, vs. Milton S. Klirwltn et al, strict foreclosure con tract. Real Ritate Transfers W. F. Bauer et ux to R. M. De- Mllle et ux. W. D., lot In Sec. 14 Twp. 39 S, R. 1 East. R. M. DeMUle et ux to A. L. Wallls et ux. W. D., lot In Sec. 14 Twp 39 S. R. 1 East. Mrs. H. Q. Pech to Louise Dahlke. Q. C. D.. lot 3 block 3 King Add., Medford. Anne Jane Wakefield to Roy W. Wakefield. Q. C. D., lot 4 block 9 Imperial Addition Medford. J. M. Knllstrom and Olga E. And erson to Orvllle C. Pslmer et ux. W. D.. lend In sections 18 and 19 Twp- 38 S. R. 1 West. Earl 8. Tumy et ux to James W. Hamlin et al. Q. C. D.. land In D L. C. No. 37 Twp. 38 S, R. 1 and 3 W. W. M. Walter J. Olmscheld to Talent Ir rigation District. 8h. D lot 3. sec tion "J" cont. 7.74 acrea In Rogue River Valley Orchards Co. Tracts 38 S. R. 1. E. Orra w. Wilson to Norman F. Wil son et al. W. D.. southwesterly por tion of trsct deeded by A. D. Hel man and wife to N. F. Patton In Vol. 58 page 54. C. F. Tllton et ux to William A. Flackus et ux. W. D., part lots 30. 31. and 33 Miner's Add. to Ash land. R. E. Cowle to James R. Clary, W. D. '.4 acre In Sec. 8 Twp. 39S. R. I I. W. M. Fred Rapp et ux to Flret National Bank ot Ashland, Q. C. D. 3 acres STRIKE TO COVER WIDE AREA J f-"; " 'p3Tggo"j ( 541000 " jtp'!1'" . $' "! 1 1.755. 000 ..-VeIS1" VST A ' ALA. ': J V I I 2 96C 000 This map shows the concentration of the natlon'a cotton textile mills In southern and eaatern states. The figurea In atate shaded by dots indicate the number of "spindles" active In those statea aa of July (the average la 60 spindles per worker). The mora heavily shaded atrip extending from Virginia to Georgia la the "Piedmont," the south', most highly Industrialized area. The two black dota are Gas ton county (North Carolina) and Greenville county (South Carolina), two of the largest concentrations of the textile Indi-atry in the world. D. L. C. 63 Twp. S8S. R. 1W. W. M. George C. Steven, et ux to Charles S. Jacobs et ux, W. D., land In D. L. C. 43 Twp. 39S, R. 1 E. W. M. Oscar O. Alenderfer et ux to Berifa E. Field et vlr, deed, lot 3 block 1 Humphrey Knight Add. to Medford. , Meteorological Report Forecasts Medford and vicinity: Fair tonight and Tuesday; cooler Tuesday. Oregon: Fair tonight and Tuesday, but overcast with fog and mist on coast; cooler Interior Tuesday. Loral Data Temperature a year ago today : highest 88, lowest 40. Total monthly precipitation, .00 Inches; deficiency for the month, .02 inches. Total precipitation since September I. 1934. .00 inches; deficiency for the season, .03 Inches. Relative humidity at S p. m. yes terday It per cent; o a. m. today, 47 per cent. Tomorrow: sunrise 5:39 a. m.; sun et 6:40 p. m. Observations Taken at 5 J 120 Meridian Time 5 & ! S 3 cire S $ s a 3 a S ; SV "3 3 5 I 9 ig . B ! Boise . 84 00 Boston .. 68 58 .00 Foggy Chicago 70 68 .48 Cloudy Denver 58 40 .14 Clear Eureka 63 56 .00 Cloudy Helena 74 48 .00 Clear Los Angeles .... 88 64 .00 Clear Medford 104 65 .00 P Cloudy New York 74 64 .00 Cloudy Omaha 76 50 .64 Clear Phoenix 106 80 .00 Clear Portland . 06 66 .00 Clear Reuo 83 58 .00 Clear Roseburg 104 63 .00 X'lear Salt Lake 78 56 .00 Clear San Francisco 66 54 .00 Cloudy Seattle 90 60 .00 Clear Spokane .... .00 Walla Walla..- 88 63 .00 Clear Wash., D. C 78 63 .00 Cloudy 1 To Join Mrs. Kelmer Mrs. Irene Wells, superintendent of the county home, and Mrs. T. P. Hansen of Ash land, left yesterday on the Shasta, for Portland, where they will Join Mrs. F. C. Relmer of Talent in a trip to Chicago, to visit the World's fair. Mrs. Wells will visit in Centervllle. Iowa, and .Mrs. Reimer Is going to Atlanta, Ga., before returning to the valley. EFFICIENT and distinct ive funeral service is appreciated by every fam ily during a period of sorrow. . . . That is why OUR service is so satisfactory ... all details so difficult to .discuss at a time like that are handled with sympathy and under standing and with minimum trouble to the family. CONGER FUNERAL PARLOR WEST MAIN AT NEWTOWN Solicited For Membership In Order of Golden Rule and Declined 222 Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson County History Iruro the Files ol 1'he Mall Tribune ot .0 and 10 gears Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY September 3. 1934. fit Was Wednesday) War breaks out in China, and K'.aa battles at Kerrin, 111., increase In In tensity. Times are so good that It Is adver tlsed "a dollar bill will be given away every 15 minutes at dance to be held at Jackson Hot Springs.' 724 cars of pears have been ship ped so far this season. Housewives complain that files arc more plentiful than In years. Thunderstorm strikes valley, with, no damage to fruit. Council orders new sidewalks con structed on East Jackson street. Fall opening at Mann's scheduled, for end of week. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY September 3, inu. (It Waa Thursday) Moonlight fete to be held In "Mc Clendon Grove" by Willow Springs people. French troops forced back by Ger man drive on Paris: censors stop flo of news from front: resident of Ap plegate, who saw a Zeppelin, three weeks ago. report they saw two Zeppe lins the first of the week. Council hires an extra fireman ta enforce water regulations. President Wilson proposes more tax es, and "elasticity of silver." Repub lican national committee chairman states: "The Democrats are up to their old ways of tinkering with th money." V. J. Emerlck and family hare re turned from a 3000-mile auto trtn through Idaho and Montana. THE CATHOLIC LADIES extend ait Invitation to the public to their card, party Wednesday night at 8 o'clock t Parish Hall. Price 25c. Help Kidneys If poorly functioning Kidney and Bladder make you offer from Gettioar Up Night. Nervousneas. Rheuraatle Pstns, Stiffness. Burning1. Smartinr, 9 Itching, or Acidity try the guaranteed Doctor's Prener1ptionCyata!aiSiMtexl . 4 a w Mint fix you up or money UfSZeX tack, 0al7?5Sat drugguta. Tt ) M , V