Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 06, 1934, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD. OREGON. TUESDAY, NOVMfBER 6, 1934.
Medford Mail Tribune
"Ertrrona la Soutntra Oraeas
Unit Uu Mill Tritun,"
Dslli Blript fltlordtf
PubtUsad M
MIDKOIID PRINTINO CO.
11-tT.lt li. Hi BL Hum t
EOBEUT W. WJUL, Mltcc
IB IndaptodtBt Nlwapapar
tViURd u KeoaH dm rutur tl Mor4.
Own. under let of Uiee) (, 1ST.
STBUCHIPTION KATBB
Br Mill in AdTlnH
Dallr, on iur I;J
nail, all aonthl......... l.f.
Dallr. OM BOOtil -SO
Mm farrier In AdMAefeUeoYoro'. iaBllM,
JvUoorllli, Ccnlril Point. Prroaoli. Talent, Uold
Hill utt oo mr.tn.irl.
IIUI), ena nil 0(1
Dtllr. id booU Mo
Dtlli. oo moDtb a 10
All tar mi, cub In adrar-
Orfldal oatxf of the Cllr of MaeyorA.
Officii) P PC of JtektoD Couotl.
MEMBCH Of THE ASSOCIATE!! PUEM
Ucralrlnt Kull Leaked Wirt Sarrlct
At Alioelated PreM y txeluslrelf OOtltlad U
aba um for puMleatlon of til Uawa dltpatenaa
endlted to It or otbertrlM credited Id toll paper
tad alio to Lbe local newt pulillsbed bereln.
AU elsbU for publication of pteltl dispatch.,
urelD tra siu, referred.
MKMBKB OF UNITED I'llESI
MXMBICIf or AUDIT BUUIAU
OF CIRCULATION!
Adrertlilnt KeprttenlatlTaa
M. c. moiiensen a company
Ofrietl In Ne York, Cnlcuo, Detroit, Bin
Francisco Lot Angelea Baaltla PortlarHL
-tKr
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Parry.
Now for Something Real
IT ii pleasant to turn from politics, where unanimity and good
will are imponsible, to an activity where both are or ihould
be inevitable. We refer to the transition from the campaign
which ended yesterday, to the Community Chest drive, which
starti tomorrow.
Here is a movement behind which people of all parties and
factions should be able to unite. Conditions are better than
they were a year ago but the need for a well filled Community
Chest ia, if anything, greater.
The reason for this has been officially pointed out by Fresi
dent Roosevelt and his leadcs in federal relief work.
The government has been extremely generous in its financial
aid to the suffering and destitute of this country, but this gener
osity can not go on forever. Good business demands that the
national budget be' balanced and that monetary inflation be
avoided. If this is to be accomplished the CONSTANT DRAIN
ON THE FEDERAL TREASURY FOR RELIEF MUST BE
CURTAILED.
a a
'T'HERE appears to be an improssion in some quarters, that no
Community Chest is needed because Uncle Sam has taken
over the work. Nothing could be further from the truth. From
the outset the federal policy has been to supplement local relief
not supplant it, take care of those who CAN'T be cared for
locally, not for those who CAN be. And as the president pointed
out, the imperative need in the country today, is for more local
relief, not less.
So we not only endorse the Community Chest drive, most
heartily this year as we have in the past, but we urge all people
in Medford, to give all they CAN AFFORD to give, to prevent
suffering and destitution on one hand, and to continue the
necessary work of reconstrnction, and relief, on the other.
This is not only a civic duty, but it is also this year, a
patriotic one. So when the solicitor calls, give ALL YOU CAN
AFFORD TO GIVE and give it gladly, for it not only repre
sents a duty to your community , but a service to your country.
Personal Health Service
By William tirady, M.D.
Signed letters pertaining to per aunt) health and hygiene not to dte
ease dtugnoiU or treatment will be aniwered by Ur. Brady If a (tamped
eU-addreued envelope l enclosed. Lettere ihould be brief and written In
Ink. Owing to the large number of lettera received only a few ean be an
twered. No reply can be mrule to querlei not conforming to Inttructlona.
Address Or. William Brady, 263 Kl camlno, Beverly Hlllt, Cal.
REAL HEALTH BDICATION.
Why Vote?
Readera of the want-ad depart-
.. r netaaniruiri reDOrt that
once again people have etarted losing
Russian leather pocaeiDooaa conutm
lng money, after many month! of
nothing muting but fancy bulldogs,
and groceries left In rear aeat of
outoe, while the owner attended the
jnovlee.
e
Auto aocldsnti and fatilltlea con
tinue to mount denptte the vigor of
"Let's Quit Killing" campaign. The
doad and Injured Hat aervee notice
that eomethlng mutt ba done to curb
the ipeed Idiot. Many feel. If a
reck leu driver, could be educated
to approach a human, or an auto
of hit elze, with the aame car and
caution, that he doet a cow or a
mountainous truck, there would be
Um work for the coroner. A spesds
ter will alow up every time for
contented cow, of which there are
many, apparently oontented no place,
but on a highway. This la dua to the
construction of the cow, with a leg
on each corner, and an unwinding
mam In the middle. Several local
a peed ldlota have contacted a cow.
at 80 per. The Impact left their ve
hicle of no further uie for Inst
traveling and caused occupanta of
the front aeat t5 go through the
windshield, and the back aeat occu
pant to emerge through the roof of
the car. The cow waa unimpaired,
emitting aught but a mournful bleat
and proceeding to the other ilde of
the road. At a result, It It generally
known that a cow la harder to knock
off the road, than locomotive oft
the track, and It la not being tried.
Furthermore, the average bovine on
the highway la quite Indifferent to
what happena to Itielf, or the ap
proaching ipeed Idiot.
e .
DEPRESSION HEROINE.
(Pendleton Kast orcgonlan)
"I -once visited Ruth at her
lovely home," ahe laid. "It acemed
to me that ahe had everything.
Then came the craah, which in
cluded financial trouble. I next
visited her at Coulee dam; I wai
directed to her little two-room
o a b 1 n by aomeone who aald
You'll know the houiei It'i the
only one with a lawn around It.'
And there we found her: I went
feeling aorry for her; I came away
reallrlng that her capacity for
happlneta and for Intereit In the
whole universe had not failed
her. For Ruth told me with the
greatest enthusiasm that ahe waa
faaclnated with the Idea of liv
ing In a apot covered with Paleo
nolc aand, for ahe wal offered the
greatest opportunltlea for study
of the Paleosolo era.
Blr Klngsford - Smith luccesifully
flew the Pacific ocean between
Hawaii and Oakland, Calif., Sunday.
He carried a ulcelele to play, but
didn't. Besldei demonstrating that
tin flight could be made, there Is
one leas ukelele In Hawaii.
a a
It eeemi that several College Com
munist! will never be salltfled until
they spend a couple of eemestera In
a capitalistic calaboose.
a a
The -toed cat presented to the
Elks lodge by Leon Hnsklna has dis
appeared. It has not been definitely
determined at yet, whether the cat
waa stolen by some fiend In human
fnrm. or Bro. Hssklns rescinded his
gift, and took the feline home.
.
The Toattmaatrn' club, (nee Pub
lic Bpeaklng class) It making a se
ries of e-mlnute speeches, with no
time out for clearing the throat, or
drinking a glasa of water.
o
Tit. Bradley haa resumed the wear
ing of headgear, after bring without
his hat, off and on. since 1 Bill . By
renouncing the nudity of nil top
knot, Mr. Bradley ceases to flirt with
pneumonia and a poem by Del
Oelchell.
PORTLAND. Nov. 6 ( AP) Funeral
service will be held here tomorrow
for Pred O. Miller. 65. vice president
and general manager of the Miller
Mercantile company. ojreratore of
stores In .nsny cities of Oregon and
Washington. He died here Sunday,
Um stall Tribune waul 101.
SO this is election day. If you haven't already voted don't
think of doing so. Let George do it. After all what is
another election more or less! What difference docs it make
who is elected governor, or judge, or congressman t As to the
initiative measures why bother about themt One vote can't
make any difference anyway. Far better sense to stay at home
and listen to the radio or go to the movies, or, just do nothing.
Election days are the hunk. The banks are closed, business is
quiet, the smart boys go into tho hills with a gun, or spend the
day fishing.
o a
'T'lIERE, perhaps that will bring the late voters and stay-at-
homes to the polls before they close at eight o'clock 1
For many, many years the Mail Tribune has editorially
urged everyone to vote on election day, put that primary duty
of good citizenship before every other. Rut except in a few
instances from 50 to 80 percent of the voters have stayed at
home.
Perhaps telling them NOT to vote, will have the desired
result, and there will be a record breaking total vote by eight
o'clock tonight. AVe hope so. For from the standpoint of the
permanence and success of this democracy, just HOW the people
vote is fnr less importnnt than that they DO!
Mu thU purport to be health
education in our oommon ecboolc U
aheer hooey. How c&n any one wlih
a modicum of
PtV-V ' r,--r common sense
Imagine a youn?
woman who has
been trained to
teach geography
or arithmetic can
take charge of
the class In phy
lology and by
glene If she hap
pens to have i
vacant period?
That la the way
physiology and
hyatenc or health
is handled In the average elementary
or nign school.
In Lansing, boyn and girls enter
ing sophomore grade In high Achool
attend a serlas of lectures by phy
sicians on sex matters. The lectures
Illustrated by sketches and lantern
elide, trover the problem frank?,
thoroughly, practically. The boys in
one room, the girls In another, listen
to different lectures. At the first
lecture, two boys among a group of
bix hundred, were shocked and they
fainted. What do you say about that,
old pruders? I think It was a for
tunate thing that the two hoys faint
ed. Even if they had nothing to get
alarmed about, that waa a small pritt
to pay for the boon of such educa
tion of hundreds of boys who would
otherwise go out Into the world smirt
a leek and suffer far worse thin
shock as a consequence of their Ig
norance. One of the teachers In this Lans
ing high school Informs me that the
rt-sults of this fair deal to the pupils
or students haa been encouraging:
"A gap, which formerly existed be
tween students and teachers and doc
tors, haa ben bridged and boys and
girls are quite free In their questions
and discussions both during and after
the lectures."
The same teacher goes on to ob
serve that In a pamphlet entitled
"The Problem of Sex Education In
Schools,' Issued by the TJ. 8. Public
Health Service. Washington. D. C, in
1019, appears this view:
"Certainly all teachers are not
fitted to engage In direct sex
teaching. This task Is for a few
teacher only and In a few sub
ject only. These few teachers
must meet many requirements.
They must hava an accurate and
scientific knowledge of the facts i
to be Imparted ..."
But In practice our educators waive
all that. They look down upon
health education, physical education,
sex education, as something pretty
low anyway, and from that attitude
they readily comply with the prac
tice of designating any teacher who
has the spare time or who will accept
the Job. to dish out the hooey which
aane people demand In the name of
health education.
The boys and girls are quit free
in their quentlons and discussions,
during and following the sex lec
tures. Prudes will pretend to be mor
tified by that Honest folk know the
young ones discuss things amont,'
themselves anyway. Far better that
their questions and discussions be
founded on facts than that fairy
tales or romantic stories should lead
the youngsters astray.
It Is significant, I think, that thla
Lansing high school teacher says, "I
cannot agree with you that the 'world
evidently prefers to reel along a Is
and not give future citizens a break.' "
Comment
on the
Day's News
Why I Favor
The Chest
WESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Iron.
What foods contain Iron? A. A. L.
Answer Egg yolk, unmllled wheat,
beans, lean beef, peas, spinach, dried
prunes, lettuce, oatmeal, asparagus,
Bruels sprouts, cauliflower, claim
liver, oysters, cabbage, peanuts, brown
rice, almonds, pecans, dried figs, old
fashioned molasses, olives,. rye bread
Boston brown bread, graham bread,
celery, chard, green peppers, radlshei
raspberries, turnips, tomatoes, straw-
berries, winter squash, parsnips.
pumpkin, oranges. These are the
richest In Iron.
Growing I'p In the World.
Michigan department of health,
Lansing, Mich., Issues a reprint of a
fine pamphlet copyrighted In 1932
by the Massachusetts Society for So
cial Hygiene, Inc., Boston, and en
titled "Growing Up in the World To-
day." Teachers and parents who wish
to give good sex instruction should
read this pamphlet. Other authori
tative pamphlets dealing with this
vital subject are Issued by the United
States Public Health Service, Wash
ington, O. C, and by various pro
gressive state health departments.
The problem of Sex Education in
.Schools," "Keeping Pit." Another by
Drs. Howell and Keyes, "The Sexual
Necessity" Is published by the Society
of Sanitary and Moral Prophylaxis.
New York City. Others of value are
"Sex In Life" for adolescent boys and
girls, and "Child Questions and Their
Answers," published by American So
cial Hygiene Association. Inc., New
York City.
(Copyright, 1034, John P. Dllle Co.)
Ed. Note: . Persons wishing to
communicate with Or. Brady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady, M. D.. 26A El
Com I no, Beverly Hills, Cat.
"Hold Up" Companies
TpiIB Mail Trihune hopes the recent order issued by the state
public service commissioner, divorcing Copco from its east
ern holding company, will amount to something. So many of
this department's orders have not.
Theoretically, perhaps, holding company "set-ups'1 have
some value. But in practice they have come to be little mora
than a racket a devious method by which a few insiders manip
ulate securities, pyramid values, and mills small and perfectly
sound organizations, for their own selfish benefit.
The Instill tragedy is a perfect example of the holding com
pany abuse, on a large scale. There are scores of others, less
sensational in character but no less destructive in their effects.
Not only would tho elimination of holding companies (or
their radical control) benefit the consumers, and the stock
holders, but such action would do more than anything else to
Tut the harassed and hnrd-prcssed light and power industry on
its feet.
(Continued t-om page one)
berd. If you compare Rlchberg'a
calming speeches with the kind Ttig-
well used to make, you will grt the
new campaign pitch sounded by the
new deal organ grinder.
both parties have spent less than
SOO.O0O.
The republican strategists were
somewhat baffled by Mr. Roosevelt's
Indirect support of certain Indepen
dent republicans. It placed him on
their side In some states and left no
opportunity for direct, clear-cut dem
ocratic and republican shooting.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK, Nov. J. One of New
York's most conspicuous celebrity
haunts Is the Inconspicuous East
10th home of the
William H. Hnm
11 tons. The place
was a stable and
house In
when
If everything Is as one-sided as the
democrat think, the conclusive re
turns should be in before midnight,
THREE HOLIDAYS FOR
EMPLOYES OF STATE
Tin most reveallna story of Mr.
Roosevelt was told In Arthur Krocs'a
column In the New York Times re
cently. Mr. Krork said that ex-Dlrec-
tor of the BiidRct Lew Douglas once
became excited In arguing with Mr.
Rooerrelt about one of the presidents
propotala- Hsld Dnuglss pointedly:
"The ressonlnft behind that proposal
la th, thinking of a sophist."
Mr. Roosevelt took no notice of the
remark at the time, but, dava later,
he called Douglas on the telephone
about another matter and atarted the
conversation off by ssylng:
"Now Lew- aa one old aophlst to
anothei- "
Mr. Douglai Is supposed to have
related the Incident later to a friend,
adding: "How csn you get sore st a
fellow like that!"
In the Harding oItcitr ejunpsl,;.
about 13.000,000 wai tpeut. Tim year,
3ALKM, Nor. 6. (API State off!-
clalt and employe, today enjoyed th,
first of three utra holiday, during
thi month of November election
day, Armlsttc day net Monday and
Thanksgiving dsy.
State liquor store wen also closed
today and will bl closed the other
two datea. It waa reported by the
headquartera hen.
ration Horns 10 Vote Judg, W. H
Cinon. registrar of th, federal land
office In Roseburg. Is a Medford vla
Hor today, nturning to his home to
mark a ballot In the election
and great hit old friend,. Judg:
Canon waa mayor of Medford for
many yeara and Is regarded at on, of
the shrewdest polltlclsns In th. Dem
ocratic party.
4
B correctly corseted La
n Artist Modi by
Cthelwyn B Hortmtnn.
f3Js
fT-v. L m the Broadwiv
Central featured
gutter chairs and
Sutton Place was
a Jungle of dwarf
willows.
But Inside Is
the r e c a ptured
. y S i chnrm of a lost
tJLLA lera. Stairs with
while picket id bannisters, little dark
closets, an open fire flickering on
a Corot, a centered garden with
brick walls and a Dutch, handover oi
gable ends. A library with auto
graphed Kipllngs, hn Oscar Wilde,
Maugham and Michael Arlen.
To intimates the Hamlltons are
Anne and BUI. He was a banker with
gumption to quit In middle years,
an expert linguist at home In world
capitals. Anne, although a vibrant
modern. Is hep to the Victorian
graces and when ahe sounds the cha
made everybody comes on the run.
There's no effort to entertain at
the Hamlltons. The Invited drift
smoke-like Into chattering groups.
Lawrence Tlbbett mny sing. Paye anl
Bragiottl may play. Myra Klngsley
may discuss the stars. Irvln Cobb
may tell a Padueah honey and Ike
Marco&sen a travel experience. Alt
are of this Ilk.
Broadway was saddened by the
passing of Billy Emerlch, Some time
ago, before he and Billy Scemr.n
married and settled down they were
a play-boy pair who did much to
add to the gaiety of the town. Emer
ieh's bachelor duplex on Weat 67th
street was a haven for Imnortants
of the stage and screen world. About
six years ago he went to California,
married the former Mrs. Norman
Kerry, and Brosdway saw him no
more.
For MODERN KVRU OIL dellr.)
Phone SAi, Rlnkin$ Trucking Co.
Use Mali Tribuue waut ad.
Damon Runyon, among the nattier
of the natty drewrs. goes In for
slate gray shirts and a tour-ln-hand
of same shade with a barber pele
streaking of dull red. Runyon Is a
spectacular drenaer but a master at
times of sombre shades Often he
features a black silk hamlk.rchlel
In his breast pocket, cuff links of
black onyx and ebony tpats.
Henry Sell Is another with a tasty
touch in gent's wear with an occa
sional flair for the btrarre. After
suppressed periods he may burst
forth in polka dot suitlnpn. gray
rtpeckled with brown, tan with black
and one lulu In deep blue flecked
with white dots aa big as rubber
rrds of a lesd pencil. Lucius Bbr
would brat his breast at a mere
S'.ance of it.
New York rtuciy ncr te fl 't
maids of the smart hotels. The)' are
a great city's moat obscurely well-to-do
living on the roofs. Their pay
is not more than $30 a month but
board la free and their tips and
Christmas gifts run into important
money. There Is the legend that one
is the mother of a famous dancer
and one morning, quite by accident,
walked Into the bedroom of the suite
her daughter had Just taken. She
nsked to be transferred to another
floor. The daughter never knew.
Before the unbooming. a head por
ter at hotels such as the Ritz, Bllt
more and St. Regis often wangled
bigger Incomes than the managing
director. One Indeed paid $15,000 a
year to maintain his post. But to
day the hend porter has to hustle
to make a living. Biggest tips are
for airplane reservations.
Nothing so distinguishes a fastidi
ous dresser as the tilt of his hat.
Acton Davies once wrote that John
Drew's chnrm was not in the lift of
his eyebrow but the slant of his
derby. English fashion scribblers are
forever decrying the American's slop
py headgear. They have the Prince
of Wales t And hatters agree no one
can act off a hat like young David.
Across the channel in Paris, Jean
Patou achieves a chapeau Jauntlness
that only a practised stylist masters.
Count Salm, who married the Rogers
girl, also had a flair for the correct
angle, and King Edward's hatter,
Gelot. Is said to have made Salm's
hats free for years. But we are not
without our native hat experts. Few
achieve the dash of Adolphe Menjou
with a silk hat. Warren William and
Warner Baxter of the screen almost,
but not quite, acquire the soft hat
brim dips of the ace hatttst, Cllve
Brook. And New York, of course, haa
its dudey Jimmy Walker. Or had.
A barber discovered a small wen
on Bugs Baer's head while trimming
his hair the other day. The humorist
departed for his surgeon to have it
removed, but on the way changed
hla mind and went to his office in
stead. "I might think with It." he
explnlned.
(Copyright, 10M, McNaught Syndi
cate. Inc.)
ALEUTIAN TEMBLOR
FELT IN WASHINGTON
WASHINGTON, Nov. 6. ( AP) A
moderately strong earthquake was re
corded st Georgetown university las.
nlKht, beginning at 6:14:00 p. m..
rechlng a maximum at 6:46 and end
ing at I p. m. The distance from
Washington was 4900 miles In a
northwesterly direction, probably in
the Aleutian Islands.
C?e Mall mbune want ada.
By FRANK JENKINS,
WLARINQ headline:
r "Germany Charged with Euro
pean War Plot."
"Former British Chancellor Warns
That Germans Are Rearming se
cretly. Illegally and Rapidly."
A Berlin dispatch adds: "A semi
official German source, answering re
ports that France Is preparing tor
possible occupation of the Saar ter
ritory, warned today that 'Prance ts
playing with lire'."
mrQU'VE seen, perhaps, a half docen
A small boys standing In a group
taunttng each other. One says: "Don't
you dast hit me." Another puts in:
"Better look out, or you'll get into
trouble." And so on.
Strangely like Europe these days,
Isn't H7
-
A GENEVA dispatch tells us:
J "A special session of the league
of nations council today waa called
to meet November 21 to discuss the
problem of the Saar territory ptebls
cite
The league of nations also dis
cussed the setaure of Manchurian
territory by Japan, but all It dia
was to discuss. It did nothing to
STOP It.
It can do nothing to stop whatever
may be going to happen In Europe.
TXOWAGER QUEEN MARIE of RU-
mania and her daughters, the
Queen Mother Marie of Yugoslavia
and Princess Ileana, are 111, one hav
ing Influenza, another gallstones and
the third suffering from a high fever.
Royalty, all of them. Kowtowed to
by everybody. Set apart from ordi
nary human beings as something
very special and particular.
Yet influenza, gallstones and fever
attack them with aa little ceremony
and as little respect as they would
attack the commonest commoner oi
us all.
When a bullet pierced him a abort
time ago, King Alexander of Yugo
slavia died Just as readily as a ditch
digger would have died.
M
HUMAN BElNGti, weighed down
by precedent, blinded by centu
ries of habit,-' look upon royalty as
something fearful and wonderful and
mighty.
Nature KNOWS BETTER.
MORE headlines:
"Guards Walk Campus at Uni
versity of California at Los Angeles."
"Husky Athletes Called to Quell
Radical Trend.'
f
WHAT la a radical trend?
About the best answer to that
question Is that It Is a trend toward
something different from what we
have been USED TO before.
If Washington, for example, couia
see the country he founded, he would
be quite certain that It Is sunk in
radicalism of the deepest dye.
Yet Washington, In his day, waa
regarded by conservative Europe as
a radical of the most dangerous sort.
REV. KABELE SPEAKS
IN PHOENIX WEDNESDAY
Rev. Geo. P. Kabele of the Medford
English Lutheran church will apeak
In a conference on "The Christian
Home" Wednesday evening in the par
lors of the Presbyterian church at
Phoenix at 7:30 o'clock.
There will be a short devotional
service preceding the tnlk. and a
round-table discussion will be held
afterward. All Interested in the re
ligious problems of the family are
invited.
A
. . .'. ' Jt'Jaa.
?k Vrt ,ii I
f , J. a.
Is-,. .afv iw -
Again this year there li an urgent
need for generous support of Med
ford', Community Chest, and again I
am turo that Medford and Rogue
River Valley people will meet their
obligation to their leas fortunate fel
low citizens. The seven participating
organizations are deserving of com
mendation for their splendid work
during the past year and the whole
hearted support of the chest this year
will mean the continuance of this
worthy work during the coming 12
months.
The Community Chest presents a
practical and more convenient means
of raising funds for charitable and
character-building activities and I
heartily urge Its support. You will
find a lot of personal satisfaction In
giving to a worthwhile and highly
Important cause. C. E. GATES.
C. Ti. Gates Auto Company.
Ye Poet's Comer
THE LIVING DISABLED
In Flanders Fields, there Is no woe
A and serene where popples blow
And Flanders Fields la far away.
In us, who are but living clay, j
Remembrance fades and .sorrow go.
Remembrance fades, we here today
Live busy lives we work, we play,
And War and Hate aoem far away j
As Flanders Fields.
Let Flanders Fields be eulogized.
But stop and think some paralyzed
By shot and shell came back.
And suffer still, still wracked by war.
Pay them some reverence and awe.
Yes, Flanders Fields Is far away.
But here among us. day by day, -
They carry on.
Hns memory of their glory gone?
They are as great as those who lie
In Flanders Fields.
Americans, what have they got
To show we care, and care a lot?
One day each year let's pause and pay
Them tribute: fire a kindly shot,
By wearing a Forget-Mc-Noti
FLO STUTZ.
f-
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson Counti
History from the files of Th,
Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Year,
Ano).
l"1
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
November 6, 1 024.
(It was Thursday.)
Worst storm In five years sweeps
Crater Lake national park, with heavy
rain in the valley.
Butte Falla Is hopeful of a rail
road extension to the east.
Democratic leaders saaert "Presi
dent Oollldge will make entire nation
aa dry as Kansas."
Odd Fellows will march In Armis
tice day parade, also the Crater club.
Youth paroled five times In local
court, la arrested In Sacramento for
gas theft, and not granted a parol 9.
Mah Jongg Interest revived locally,
and a "Mah Jongg" club Is proposed.
Southern Oregon sportsmen to urge
passage of Rcgue river fish bill by
next legislature.
Eden Precinct
EDEN PRECINCT, Nov. 6. (Spl )
Mrs. L. Noah Lyons of Medford
was calling on several of her Phoe
nix neighbors Sunday.
Mrs. Anna Simpson of Medford
spent Sunday with her daughter,
Mrs. Noah Chandler, south of Phoe
nix.
Louie Colver of Phoenix has been
ill the past week. Mrs. Ray Benham
Is again able to be up. end expects
to assume her duties as teacher in
North Phoenix school soon.
Mrs. Bert Stanellffe of Phcenlx was
calling on some of the Woodcraft
members on the highway south oi
Phoenix Sunday.
Oregon Went her
Clotidy, rain northwest portion to
night and west and extreme north
east . portions Wednesday; moder
ate temperature; fresh southeast and
south wind off the coast.
I IB
I 3 S-S-.W
I 1 1.1 1 a 1 H
Try our new
AMERICAN
CHEESE ROLL,
A pan of
eight delicious
tasting Dinner Rolls
io
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
November 8. 1014.
The hobo question la becoming a
menace to Ashland, as a result of
feeding them soup last year. Now
every wanderer In the northwest
thinks he will be fed when he reaches
Ashland, and strains every nerve to
get there. The city council last week
decided to use a white flag to call
all citizens to help the police load
the undesirables on freight trains.
Bashful blonde forger victimizes
local to res out of $200.
Horse and buggy left standing In
front of Nash disappears.
Prices of meat advance In east; gas
oline on the coast.
Police are called to the Chinese
ladndry on South Riverside to settle an
argument.
BIG PINES
LBR. CO.
PHONE
rtJ'nsi
1 r'UM
tit toon- ai" -rr
Free
Plan .Lmii$ DiliM,-
Book, M1"".
Plan
No. 4
TO
PORTLAND
One way Roundtrip
$1J 25
Next time you go to Portland,
try the train. Ride in a big, com
fortable coach on the Shasta a
daylight trip arriving Portland
OR OVERNIGHT
. . . or leave here at nipht on No.
330, arriving Portland at 7:55
next morning. For only a few
dollars more, you can sleep as
you ride in a roomy standard
Pullman berth.
Similar sert iet returning.
Pacific
J. C. Carle, Arjent. Tel. 34
f. ' .IVY M
m
Now I Eat
App!e3
No Tpaet aiiornach
Thank, to Bell-ana
Quieter HrJ fcarinaa It DISSOLVES la
wat.r, rmic-.f! atcma.h rMdy lo tel. Sui.
K..JC. l.n.. 1,91 .nJ Trial la Prod 1C.
FOR INDIGESTION cjsi aU.
TURKEY SERVICE
By
JACOBS, MALCOLM & BURTT
L
San Francisco
Thank'shlnf, quota now hettif arm n ted, Kor putlrulam see
HOl.T WARIH1P. 71 t M Rt:i. ST., ASHl.Wtl, ORE.
This terlce under pen.on.il supervision of
WALTER V. FRIEDRICHS, FIELD MANAGER
IIP
Convenience and Economy
Stop In OAKLAND
Hotel San ahlo offent
Comfort
without t,travaffnnc
Central Location
RATK8: $1.00 to $1.76
FREE OtRAflB
MODERN COFFEE Slior
Direction! to Hotel: Sla on
Matn lit eh (San t'aoln
Avenue) ilrertly to iuth St
Management
RRRV II STK4SO
Is 11. a