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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1934)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OHEGON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune "Everyoni in Souttiarn Orifloa tad tha Mall Trlbuni" Dally Eitapt Saturday I'ubllfDed by MKDHIHI) I'itlNTlNU CO. 18-IT-Ifi N. Fit 8U Pna IB HUBKU1 W. 11UHL, Bdltor Ad Independent Naeipapar Kntafcd a aecood elu matter it Medford Orecon, under Act oU Marco . 1879. HCHRCItltTION BATES R Mit In ArHutc n.ti ...r Ift.OU Dally, all month! Daily, om OBonlti U By Carrier Id Adranca -Medford, Aibland, jartaofmue, uenirai roini, rnuenu, IJ ill anI nn Itlirtiaivt. Dill), ona feu fj Dally, all montha. . , Dally, ooa moult) .80 All terms, eauh id MraJie. Official DBt of the City of Medford. Official paper of Jacktoa County. MEM h Kit OK THK AHH'ICIATKD P11KS8 tlMtlvIni (full Leaaed Wlra Bertie Hit Ajaoclnted I'ress la tieluftliely entitled w the use for publication of ail oewi aitpaicnw credited to It or otlierwue ereonea id mu pitm nit lieu to the local neve oulillnhed herein. All 'iRhta for publication of ipeclal dlapatehe hereto are reaenwi. MLMUFCH OF UNITED PltKSB afEMHKU OK AUDI1 KUUEAD M CIIILUUT10N8 AdrerllilnR Urpreaentatlfea U. C. MOIJKNRKN COM I' A NT Office In Ne York, CIiIuko, Detroit, 8ar fTranclaoo l Ancetea Hraltla Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot By Artb ni Perry, Tomorrow la Thanksgiving Day. Though the world' atorehousea groan with plenty, a mnny will dine on hamburger sandwiches a munch the drumstick oi a turkey. "Whipped prune cordial" Is on tap. Though defeated, thla concoc tion. If swigged Injudiciously, want to fight some more. An avowed Communist of Portland, who essayed the role of a "one-man revolution" last summer, and de utred by word and deed to overthrow the American form of government, has been sentenced to seven years In state prison. This la a long-time to separate his temperament from his perch on a soap-box. He Is now thor oughly disgusted with the American system of Jurlaprudence. The Jury in !hla trial recommended leniency, but in the ruggednoaa of his hellralslng, and, while under the delusion he was a martyr, he declined It. The court unexpectedly obliged. It caused this fiery advocate of communism to inquire what had become oi Democracy. He Xprgot that only under a. Democracy could he and hts ilk nourish outside penitentiary walla. . TO YE OHM) HQ U AH. Victory Is always gloriously sweet, And defeat tastes like wormwood bitters, Bo play, as if calmly painting a barn. And don't get the confounded Jit ters, WANTED: 3nd hand windmill. Box 47, care Times. (Coos Bay Times) How would one of the numerous defeated air-flow candidates suffice? O. Strang, Wis pioneer pllllst, la recovering from the removal of a rising on hts neck, T. Far low, the Lake Ork, cowman, towned Tues, He reports that the late rains that fell alike on cow pastures and Main street, should use a little Judgment, and do more sinking Into the ground, and leas running Into the creeks. at As for the song the California rooters sang the Stanford Dally re ferred to It as an -'obnoxious porno graphlc ditty In an unexpurgated version of one of the vilest songs on record." iPreaa Dispatch) Higher education In low-gear. Local Nipponese report that D. Cupid has a Jiu-jitsu hold on one of their countrymen, and It may be necessary to celebrate the conclu sion by forcing htm to set up the rice, after which brans will be thrown at him and his mate. HIGH SCHOOL GUILS OUTSTRIP BLIZZARD. (Headline Monteruma (Nev.) Clarion) And barely made It. . io:i ohmi;hs. Should you expire this very night. Your grand, ambitious task undone. Before you had diffused your light To us who only know the sun, This wicked world mould roll along In its accustomed vicious way, Singing a ribald, sinful song. Jviat as It did in Noah's day, But should you lite for fifty years. Endeavoring with tongue and pen. With law and threats, with smiles and tenra To elevate the minds of men. This wicked world would roll along In Us accustomed virions way, Pinging a ribald, sinful song Just as It did In Noah's day. (Plilla. Knqutrcr) Go to It, Team! WELL hcre'g the bent of luck to Med ford's High School football team in their "big game" of the season iu Port land tomorrow I The modern game of football is a very uncertain sport. Lady Luck plays an important role in the majority of contests. A little "break" here, or a little "break" there, may in a few seconds, completely change the 'character of the struggle. So it is foolish to set one's heart too strongly upon a certain reBiilt, or fail to accept whatever the result may be with good grace and a certain equanimity. However, win, lose Or draw we are certain the members of this year's team will give an excellent account of themselves. They have in a superlative degree, what it takes to win football games, the proper fighting spirit. We don't mean so much the traditional willingness "to (lie for dear old Rutgers." We mean rather, the determination to fight hard all the time, and enjoy themselves while doing it, It is this quality, the characteristic of the "Happy Warrior," that in our opinion has distinguished this year's team through out the 1934 season. ... . "VN the field or off, this year's squad has been a happy, rarin' to go bunch. They have not only played heads up football, they have thoroughly ENJOYED themselves in the process. There has been no drudgery about it. Everyone has had a swell time, which when all is said and done, determines the ultimate value of any school or college sport. The send-off given the boys this morning showed them clearly that all Medford is behind them those unable to go to Portland, will be in front of their radios tomorrow, rooting hard for the local lads to win. And here's hoping with a capital "II" that they do. But win or lose we know the M. II. S. team of 1934 will give everything it has, and the members and their coach can have the satisfaction of having made possible one of the most successful football seasons for southern Oregon in many years. Personal Health Service Signed letter ease dtugnoili oi aelf-ad dressed eirn. u-i -..j ink. Owing to the iu. ...... .hi u, tetters received only, a few can be an twered. No reply ran be made to queries not conforming to Instructions Address Or. tYUtlatn Brady, 265 1 Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cal. omment . .Jews THE BABY OSAWS OS WOOD The War Goes On TOO bad ! Too bad this war against criminal gangsters couldn't pnnPni'm tn ilio mnlnHi'fimnhn nrinninlp tlinf Ihn liorn nlwnVM wins. Sam Cowley and Herman Hollis, were heroes of the Dillinger and "Pretty Boy" Floyd "run ins." It even appears that Cowley was the man who finally put the former on the spot. But last night near Chicago, the only surviving big shot of this notorious gang, Baby Face Nelson, turned the tables on tho federal operatives. His car run to the curb, by Cowley and Hollis, Baby Face nnlimbercd his machine gun, shot down his purpsners and apparently escaped unharmed. THE fortunes of war! And as has been frequently stated in lllin nnlmmi thia fnrlprnl rlrivo nirninst TT fit crnnirctnra TCJ war. The deplorable feature is that for so long, it was war only on the side of the criminals, and only routine law enforcement on the part of the government. But with the advent of tho Roosevelt administration, all this was changed. ' The criminal declaration of war, was met by a declaration of war on the part of the government. Shooting on sight was the policy adopted by both sides. . IT now appears from press reports, that had Hollis and Cowley been sure the occupants of the car they pursued included Baby Face, they would have opened fire first and investigated afterward. But they were only working on a clue, and couldn't take the risk of shooting down innocent and perhaps unoffend ing parties. - Gangsters aren't so meticulous. They mow down whatever stands in their way, including the innocent bystanders. So Baby Face has made his getaway and avenged the death of his leader. But his days are numbered. When Undo Sam starts after a man, he gets him. The next time and we predict it won't be long the sole surviving member of the Dillinger gang will sing his swan song, all right thinking people will rejoice and this country will be the better for it. V.VK Please tell me what I oan do, asks mother. I have a baby one year old and. she chews paint all the time, on chairs, crib, win d o w sills and anywhere she on reach. I have tried everything to stop her from doing this, but nothing does any good. Mrs. O; E. M. A baby about the same age wm brought Into the hospital for treatment for a progressive, mys- erioua weakness which presented the picture of marasmus or malnutrition. But the Investigation of the pati ent's history showed that he had been breast fed and had received adequate vitamin and iodln rations, to the beat of our Judgment, The blood exam ination gave a clue. Besides the an emia (diminished number of rel cor puscles and diminished proportion of hemoglobin) stippling or a peculiar spotted appearance of the red cor puscles was noted. This is indicative of lead poisoning. The baby also r-resented some puzzling signs of en cephalitis or inflammation of brain or brain membranes, as do many of these victims of lead poisoning. Tne diagnosis of lead poisoning was con firmed at autopsy. Many babies are In the habit of .'nawiin? on wood. If they have only clean wood to gnaw on it does no harm. But painted furniture or tos which a baby may put to his mouth are a menace to the baby's health and life. White nursery paint and enamel are generally lead, but bright colors used on children's furoitunt and toys are always injurious. The baby's crib, high chair, toys and even the nursery window sills, ought to be of unpaln ted "wood. Such furniture comes cheaper In the first place. After the baby has outgrown his taste for wood, ashes, sand, gar den soil, flower pots and wall plas ter, then some one In the household can have a lot of fun painting up the furniture whatever bright or har monious hue may seem appropriate. Incidentally, housewives who like to paint should bear in mind that tho harmful effects of turpentine, wood alcohol, gasoline, benzol, anllln. nitro benzene and other poisons used In paints, enamels and lacquers are com paratively harmless unless Inhaled. So It is always wise to make sure of free ventilation when applying finishes in doors. 1 The fact that the diagnosis of chronlo lead poisoning In the cae mentioned was confirmed at autopsy suggests what is true, that when lead poisoning goes on for a considerable time It is difficult to remove the lead from the system. The character of the diet has much to do with tie retention or excretion of the lead; for Instance, a high calcium diet (plenty of milk, cheese, eggs, bearu, peas, nuts, greens and fresh vege tables), together with plenty of vita min D and sunshine on naked sk:n or ultraviolet ray treatment, Is often prescribed in chronic lead poisoning to keep the lead stored more or leu safely In the bones. Later, perhaps, it will be safe to change to a low oalclum diet which Increases elim ination of the lead. In most cases of chronic lead poi soning among adults, the lead t in haled In the form of dust. Painters seldom suffer lead poisoning unless tiey are much exposed to dust of scraping or sandpapering old painted surfaces. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS No Change. I am 43 years old. When will the change of life start? What cire should a woman give herself at that time? I drink three or four cups of coffee a day. Is that too much? Mrs. S. A. Answer There is no change of Ufa Life goes on without & ruffle, as lo:ig as you take care of your general health and follow the rules of hy giene regardless of sex or age. Only persons who are very active physically, at play or work, can take so mu;h coffee profitably. If you do all your own housework, as a live woman should, three or four cufuls of cof fee dally would be all right. Send stamped envelope bearing your ad dress and ask for monograph on menopause, which Instructs about care. , Rheumatism. I believe you do not agree thit there Is such a condition as chronic rheumatism, but I am practically d;s abled by whatever It Is some doctors call rheumatism or rheumatoid . , . L. L. S. Answer Ask for booklet "The Ills Called Rheumatism" and Inclose (a) 10 cents In coin (not stamps) and (b) 3-oent stamped envelope hearing your correct address. Corresp,n dents who omit either (a) or (b) need ex pect no reply or acknowledgment. (Copyright, 1934, John P. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brndy, M. D-, 2(13 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. - NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre INSURANCE FIRM BAN TO WAIT LITIGATION SALEM. Not. as. (A-) Rrf(ttw iHl of the order of iniumnc Con. rnlwloncr A. H. AvrlU, ,upcnUli th llceiwm li. Orron of th Ovn tm Insurance company of AnwrKv Srattlc. unit IU unt. ll be tielu up until mixtion trtel wsliut ' order hM been settled, it wm, -in-nounced here todnjr, F AT CITY'S T PORTLAND, Nov. 38. (AP) A farm boy, dreadfully afraid of city traffic, who had never been out oi the county where he was born, won a postponement In federal court to day of his sentrhce for possessing an unlicensed still. The boy, Roy Morris, whose father located on a homestead on the Orande Ronde river near La 'Grande HO years ago. was convicted last week by a federal court Jury. He waa up for sentencing today, before PVdcral Judge James Alger Fee. Leland Mess, hts attorney, told tne court that Morris had never been out of the 1 Orande valley until h came to Tortland to plead not guilty. Hens sa!d Morria waa frightened to tenra by city traffic, The boy sobbed all through the court scaMon. Judge Fee ordered a parole ana aald an invest (gallon of the case wmild be made. Attorney Heiw said Morris may have been protecting other member of hts family in standing trial for posM!-.lon ot the dismantled still and three gallon ot whiskey found on the homestead. CONVICT TRIES TO BOMB MANSION OF GOVERNOR NO. 6 AUTO TO L SALRM, Nov. 98. John L throp Dou frail of Wolf Creek will have Oregon automobile license No 1 for 1935. His name waa the fl-V. drawn by Governor Fred K. Kldle at the secretary of state's office today. About 1,000 name were drawn from the Hat of 10.000 persons who have already made their applications for the new license. License plates bearing the number 10 will go to Charles F. Truscott of Baker; Olive Stapran of West Salem will receive No. 13; Andrew Lilly, Cor vallls. No. 35; Alice M. and Le-e Ma son, Portland, No. ftO; Leonard M toan. Portland, No. 100, and AWin ""tenakow, Imbler, No, 33. Other names dran today included Fred Amport. Mull no. No. 3; tJfn H McClure, Marahfield, No. 3; Euge.ie Hvk. Jr.. Portland. No. 4; M. W. Man ning. Boaverton, No. 5; Maggie S Morse, Ashland No. C; Oeor W Ramsey. Kstacada. No, 7; Bertha IC Rich. Delia. No. 8. and H. P. Rt-e Myrtle Creek, No. 9. WINDOW G188W sell wind: glsss and will replace your broke:i windows reA-sonablv. Trowbridge Cad inet Work. CARSON CITY. Nrv. Nov. 38 - (API The unexplained attempt of i a paroled eonvtct to bomb the gover- i nor" mansion at caron City last Friday nlRht was disclosed here to-' day by sheriff Joseph stern and State Prison Warden Matt. L. Pen- rose. j Bear Hide riShf,1 ,M pound SILVKHTON, Ore (ITPi Five men swear the following bear story la true The bear was ahot In a deep canyon. ReachlnK the animal after dUtu-u;t climb, the party found the animal too heavy to move. They brought b,uk It htdftj which weighed nearly 50 pounds. NEW YORK. Nov. 38. Pleasure seVkers, Jaded by repetitious tld-bits in tne cafes and on the stage, have been regaled by a surprising burst of new, young and vibrant tal- k ent this season. rZn&ZL- J And It ha given F-'-H f- ' 1 1 fresh vogue to trl ' K - "J n I g h t clubbing I y ? - s fl nnd up l& a1 IB &11 amusement Pi ipf' I endeavors. VV Perrons the 4i moat notable of y,v s-S the conquests it 1aji Mrs- 8m- Ingion, a member ot the socially prominent Wadsworths, whose supper club chantys have brought the or chided and ermlned carriage trade on , the gallop. Then the two sing ing Franceses Langford and Maddox. D wtght Fiske, whose ditties salted smart parties on Long Island, has so broadened his sphere via the radio. In the dancing division Louise Brooks and Darlo threaten to recapture the furore of the Castles. Miss Brooks Is also of the socially elect. Oladys George Is a grand new legitimate star, TV.e feather-footed Paul Draper, young and blonde, Is a rival of Bill Robinson. On the stage. Jane Wyatt nnd Lillian Emerson, comely and ot the blue-bloods, have been pluck ing heart strings with emotion and song. And there is the mama's boy. Milton Berle, whose Impudences tickle many. The proof Is In (he wear But your HOSB at Elhelwyn B Hoffmann's Citlffm.it lmirlU lead SALEM, Ore. (CPt California tourists far exceeded other In Ore gon during September, with 8.0M iwn -resident permit out of 10.1M going to resident of that state, of(l ctals announce. In Harlem, atayeuts have been flocking to behold a floor show of a cellar cabaret where every high yellow "chorus girl" turns out to be a man. It Is the moat flagrant of the androgynous antics, more flag rant Indeed than the shocking ex hibitions of the Petite Chaumlere of Montmartre memories. Probably the first of the New York night clubs was Jimmy Kelly's on Sullivan street, on the lower East Side. It waa a back room, sawdust carpeted. In rear of a plumber's shop and. refurbished, la still catering fun. There Tommy Lyman, pale and mieptclouMv bright-eyed, billed as the "tubercular tenor." first wan dered from table to table whispering his laments, which he called by the now stmtdgtly vague term, "torch one" Kelly's wa considered a slum mtnn Jaunt, and from It humble begin ntnr, spread more pretentious clubs. Texas Oulnan, then In a six shooter cowgirl vaudeville act. used i to be dropper-ln at Kelly s and j t!iee visit were likely inspiration of her later invasion of the field. a sedate deacon and wife at a church social. Their daughter left them comfortably fixed. When the night club furore swept uptown the gem of the galaxy was "The Little Club," presided over by the Follies eyeful, Justine Johnstone, now wife of Walter Wanger. It had the first postage stamp dance floor and that suffocating intimacy that became so popular. This was followed by Bustanoby's Domino Room, fea turing similar stuffiness In black and white, that snapped into delir ium around 9 a. m. And always In tne d' o'clock sun glare Jubilant could be seen debouching from Bustanoby's to waiting conveyances at the curb. New York has an army of approxi mately 100.000 antique collectors. The biggest colony lives around Washington Square, but they are scattered all over town. Florence Ryerson and Collna Clement call the mania Collectlvltus Furnlturlbus and apparently there is no cure. One starts off admiring a Chippendale. Sheraton or run-down fiddle-backed horror, and winds up snooping through musty warehouses for a Sa lem cobbler's bench or a Windsor honey. And over In Jers-py, tra, la, two plants reputedly turn out an tiques by gross lots. Oene Fowler dedicates his Msck Sennett biography to his friend. W. C. Fields. As naturally as the pine springs to the sun. these two mean dering merry Andrews have found a rollicking camaraderie. Loose on the boulevards, their Jet of cut uppery must be distracting even tor a community that made the inno cent skush of a custard pie smack in the face high art. (Copyright, 1034. McNaught Syndi cate. Inc.) By FRANK JENKINS. THE American Conference of Mayors in session, in Chicago, adopt a resolution asserting that "the na tion's cities are in the strangulating grip of the money lenders' and or ganizes a program seeking practical abolishment of interest rates on mu nicipal debts. Mayor Walmsley, of New Orleans, says: "From the excited expressions oi those present, I am sure that every delegate li In favor of the pro posal." CERTAINLY. Who wouldn't be? If you could find somebody who would lend you all the money you wanted and charge you no Interest, wouldn't you be heartily In favor oi ItT IT SOUNDS grand in print, and un doubtedly goes over big with the v'qtera back home. The trouble with the scheme la that If the cities don't pay anything for the use of the money they bor row, nobody will LEND THEM MONEY. SUPPOSE, for example, you had a hundred dollars, and somebody tried to sell you a. $100 city bond that PAID NO INTEREST. Would you buy? Of course you wouldn't. The only reason ANYBODY saves up money and lends It la to GET INTEREST. AT THAT, It might be the beat thing that ever happened if ALL the cities refused to pay any more Interest, and so were unable to borrow any more money. One of the things chiefly wrong with us now Is that In the big boom years, when ANYTHING went, our cities all borrowed too much money to pay for things they could have got along without. SPEAKING of resolutions, the Na tional Orange, in session at Hart ford, Connecticut, adopt one op posing an Increase in railroad freight rates as detrimental to agriculture, and URGING uniform regulation for commercial motor vehicles. This writer, whose opinion doen't matter much one way or the other, agrees with the front end of" that resolution and disagrees with the back end. RAILROAD freight- rates, under GOVERNMENT REGULATION, have become so high as to lay a heavy tax not only upon agriculture, but upon ALL business. Government regulation has in creased the cost of operating the railroads. This Increased cost ha been passed on steadily to the con sumer tn the form of higher rates. After years of this passing of the buck, railroad freight rates have be come so high that shippers are turn ing to the trucks for relief. e NOW let's get this: If GOVERNMENT REGULATION which haa heavily Increased the costs of the railroads, and so has resulted In burdensomely high railroad fretgnt rates. Is extended to the trucks, the result will be that TRUCK RATES ALSO will be sharply Increased, ana we will have nowhere to turn for relief. Government regulation ha caused us added expense enough in the case of the railroads. Let's not pass It on to the trucks and so destroy our last hope of reasonable transportation rates. scheme have aroused hope which cannot possibly be fulfilled. Through their a-ctivitie they have Increased the difficulties of getting sound legis lation." The warning words of the president. It 1 widely assumed, were directed at the Townsend revolving pension plan and similar scheme that do not take due account of national resouroea. Mathematically, as pointed out by George Creel In an article In the Saturday Evening Post, the Townsend plan proposes to take approximately one-half the present total income of the people and give it to the other fl per cent of the people. Ten mil lion people would be eligible, under the Townsend plan, to pensions to taling 24 billions, yet the present to tal income of all the people I only 45 billion dollars. Were It true that thia vast sum de voted to pensioning fl per cent of the people would, under the compulsory spending provision of the plan, stim ulate business and employment auf ficlently to make everybody prosper ous, it would also be true that the average family would have to spend at retail over $8000 a year in order to yield sufficient sale tax money to pay the pensions. But money, before It Is spent, must be earned. Townsend plan sponsors, themselves, say that average wagea would go up to 97 to $10 a day. Brief ly, the amount of business necessary to support the Townsend beneficiaries could be done only if wages and the price of necessities wen tto unheard of proportions. The $200 a month pension would then in purchasing power be no better, probably worss, than a dole for poor relief. The very plan would defeat old age security. Portland Oregonlan. ' 4 Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson Counts History from the files of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 fears Aro). TEN YEARS AGO TODAY November 28, 1924. (It was Saturday) The valley is blanketed with a cold wet dense fog, accompanied by chilly weather. Crime epidemic hits Portland. Miss Roslna and Francis Gallatin of Jackson county, the state prune bread demonotration team, are at tending the National Boys' and Girls' Council at O. A. C. Federal testing of Jackson county cows tq start next week. Miss Rowen Gale of this city, a student at the University of Oregon, la slightly injured by a fall from' a horse. nnv scout week is observed In city, with great enthusiasm. Federal government lists Crater Lake as "a major attraction of the land," and urges the annexation of Diamond lake. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY November 28. 1914. (It was Saturday) Ralph Bard well, a director of the Drama league, reports. "The esprit de corps of the organization Is boiling. Carl Margerlle of Rogue River, a boy farmer, wins prize as best boy onion grower, and Joe Davis of Soda Springs for raising the soundest head of cabbage by Boy and Girl Club heads. Movement started to establish "co operative lumber plant" to provide payroll for city. Russians report another great vic tory over Germans on Eastern front Village cut ups. who for several weeks have been tampering with autos left standing In front of the Page theater, resumed operations again last night, stealing several bat tery keys. Auto owners are advised by the police that it is a good policy to keep this important adjunct to their cars in their pockets. Fantastic Pension Plans Deplored (Continue f.om page one) Phone ot J Well haul nway you. relus. City Sanitary 8emoe. j Miss Onlnan's white-haired pr fiits. Incidentally, art stilt occasional Wsitom to the bright sort of pl-e over which their daughter queened j Trey used to be at Tet'a aimowt iexery nijjht. sitting, as they do now. Ion the frlnee of the crowds. Incon gruoiw and bewiUiered t.inires In the M.wic ioi tnjf ocasion. FUom Ui Manhattan maUiif-s. They might b SpevisS Joe turkey or Italian dlnne ; ' Duri:!ici:o's, Thanksgiving ty SI NEW TURMOIL VIENNA. Nov. 38 .API Austrian student today attacked the Crecho slovakla legation In reprisal for recent anti-German rlota t the University of Praha. capital of Czechoslovakia, but were repulsed by police who bat tered them with swords and club. Vienna was thrown Into a fresh turmoil by the demonstration. The student rained bricks and stone at the Czech-controlled news paper. Dcr Tag and Die Tunde. smashing almost every window in the plants, wreck tne the Interior of the offices and terrorising the editors and printers. Then, several hundred strong, the student marched to the Crech lega tion shouting: "Down with Zecho alovakla; revenue our fellow students in Praha." They found the Czech legation en circled by police who charged into them with their slriearms flailing. This newspaper share the recently voiced hope of President Roosevelt that "In time we may be able to provide security for the aged a sound end uniform system which will pro vide true security." But, and here we again quote the president of the United State. "Or ganizations promoting fantastic ter probably will be worked out on general lines outlined above. & a a rht.Ar Devls' sTjeeche advo cating discontinuance of scarcity Idea were snowed under by farm de mands for continuance of existing government suosiuieo iw ment. The farmers have won for the present. Moat returning congressmen favor . M-tntrrPuiinnai investigation of re lief and public works administra tions, not as a gram nuuw u .ur. ffnrr. to develoo the best policy for those two agencies. An In vestigation IB ineviiauie. Alio wumc iatration may take hold of it, so the opposition cannot conduct It. The only new aeai agency mosmg the commerce depart ment cafeteria. About once a month It deducts a dime from all luncneon checks In order to keep from piling up a surplus. One major Tennessee valls-y prob- i 1. th. removal Of 5.000 graves In the path of the dam under con struction. Each pave muai. do pno Am.nnv.a, thrM. times so It can be placed In the same relative position elsewhere. It tanes a new u w move heaven and earth. A. A. A. Made In Medford. Suit that will please you at $30.00 to 44.00. Klein the Tailor, 128 E. Main. Upstairs. TOMORROW Thanksgiving TURKEY DINNER Also Dinners at 60c and 50c Dow's Cafe FLUHRER BLDQ. TO PORTLAND One way Roundtrip SQ59 $1125 Next time you go to Portland, try the train. Ride in a big, com fortable coach on the Shasta a daylight trip arriving Portland 7;35 p.m. OR OVERNIGHT ... or leave here at night 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 berdi. Similar service returning, Southern Pacific J. C. Carle, Agent. Tel. 84 Thief Mole op I'lMol NORTH ANDOVF.R, Msss i.VPt j fVr boldness. John DtUtngff dldn t j hare a thing on the thief who walked into the police station here and stole Patrolman Houghton Farnham's aerv-' let revolver. Don't Miss the Big C. of C. Benefit Ball TOMORROW NIGHT 9 till 2 Jacksonville ine uance Hit ot tne season LEO DAVIS "The Colored 0uy Lombardo" AND HIS ORCHESTRA 1 1 COLORED MUSICIANS 1 FAVORITES FROM COAST TO COAST DREA1UID SATURDAY, DEC. 1 Mn40c Ladies 15c