PAGE FOUR
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORI), OREGON. MONDAY. DECEMBER 3.. 193?.
'Iedford Mail Tribune
"Evtrjront In Sou t htm Otigon
Rtsd. Ihi Mill Trlbuna"
bally Eieept Baturdif
Publhhed bf
MEDrOftD PltlNTlNU CO.
-JT-39 N. frlr BL
KOBfcHT W. ilCIIL, Ullor
AO IndcpcDdcnt Niwipspw
Why Not in Medford?
K YEAR bko the Mail Tribune commented upon 0. S. C
exneriinents in pear branrlv anil suggested that the mnmi-
PersDnal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D.
entered as iHood elm natUf at Medford
doa, under Act of Marcb 8, 18T.
HlliHCHIITJUN BATES
'v Mall In Aritanca
Dally, on rtu
Dilly, ill month 3.T6
DaJIr. on ffionUi 00
Bt Carrier Id Adu M'flford, Aabland,
-kwnflUe, Central Point, Phoenii, Talent, Uold
. II and on Irlctiwaja.
Dill), one rrar 1 100
Dally, all month! 9. So
Dallr. one BODtti .60
iU Urn, cub to sditnes.
Official paper of the of Medford.
Official paper of Jackaoo Couotf.
MKUBKH OV THK AHH'H'IATED PUCKS
Heceltlnt Kull Uaed Wire Bertie
Tt A(orlaled Pre la tictuihelf entitled u
-e uaa for publication of all onrt dlpalclea
i edited to tt or other In credited In thli paper
..td alau to la lore) news pufilUhed nerein,
AU 'litiU for publication of ipedal dlipatehea
vein era vsi reirned.
MKM11KH Or UNITED PIIK88
aI;.MHKU UK AUDI! KOHKAU
U8 CII.CUUTI0N8
Adnrtlilm Itrpfeatntatltei
It C. MIHJKNBKN A COMPANY
Office In Ne York, Cblrato, Detroit, Bad
rrancUeri Ue Angeloa Beatll Porlltrid,
MEMBER
Ye Smudge Pot
By Art not Perry
expeninents in pear hranr v and suggested mat the manu- . ' " i-.-... . k...... ......... ..... ....... ..-.
1 ' . , ril:,.m.l. nr IrMtm.nl All! h. Bn.wrrf h llr. Rrnil. If . .tj.mn.ll
facturc of such a commodity in the Rogue River valley was : .eil-addreued envelope Is enclosed. Leiien mould be brlec and written In
e . j. ; i .; I lei be. Onlng to the large number ol letters received only ft few can be an-
worth careful consideration. K pJ cmn "b( m9de quttlM not c,,,,,,,,,, lnstructlon,.
We now observe that a group of Hood River buxhiPM men ; Address Dr. William Brady, 28J tl Camlno. Beverly llllli, Cal.
has decided to establish a distillery for such f purpose, as has
another group across the river in Bintfen, Washington. A third
distillery is being considered at The Dalles
WIIFRR DO VOU GET THOSE "COLDS"?
Four yeara ago, It la quite needless
tor the correspondent to remind me,
It appears to this paper; that as the largest production center : company wa compelled to protest
...: : 4i. ..... Ar..ifj i... - " '
ill! .wind Jlcma ill me ;uiiiiutT( .nnuuiu linu n uclhtcu nu.nu-
tage over these other communities. Under the new pear code,
disposal of cull fruit, is a more serious prohlem than ever before.
The 0. S. C. experiments indicated that not only pear brandy,
but a pear champagne might be manufactured profitably from
fruit that under present conditions, is going to waste.
Here is a proposition that certainly warrants the most care
ful investigation and study.
If Hood River can make a success of pear brandy, Medford
could with its greater resources, make even a greater success.
Certainly NOTHING would benefit the local pear industij
more than to turn the wholesale waste of cull fruit into a profit
able income.
Lest You Forget
P0NT forgot to vote in favor of the sewage disposal bonds
tomorrow 1 At a previous election these bonds were en
dorsed by a lnrfre majority. We are confident they will be
endorsed by a similar majority tomorrow, IF anything like a
representative vote is cast.
The only danger, as we see it, is public indifference. Oppo
nents of the bonds can be depended upon to vote 100 they
always do. Unless those in favor of the proposition take the
trouble to go to the polls and mark their ballots, a necessary
civic improvement that a majority of the people favor, may, as
a result, go by default.
So mark your memorandum pad NOW, to iimke a vote for
the bonds your first order of business tomorrow. The polls will
be open from 1 to 8 p. m. All the polling places will be centrally
located.
Don't let Oeorgc do it. Don't assume that because the bonds
The National Economy League, hM
declared wnr on "the mad apendera."
autna apent. but with no information : passed before they will pass again, whether you vote or not.
on what the apentiora ara mad about, j,;V(M.y vof0 wjj ,e necded. The larger the favorable majority,
A number ot cltlaena, who mourn
fully predicted tW neither them
aelvm nor the nation, would make
tt through the Hast five wlntcra,
have atarted having doubt about
merging from the current one.
Prtzea will be given for the moat
perfect aquoah; man. applo. potato,
nut, family, liar, carrot, cabbage
jusd cake. (Lone Pine Itema. Eu
gene Newa) Wherein the ao-called
"Lord of Creation" cornea upon aome
3nd string competition.
The you.hfil shooter In a sensa
tional New York murder, slew his
bride and a cleric. Ho now avttra
'everything went blank" everything
but the cartridge In his pistol.
e
T. Wahl of the Del detehell bank,
enjoyed ft dny off last week, due to
tonstmis, lmtcnd of observance of a
Holiday.
Many outdoor glrla are now qulp
ped with fashionable aktlng ensem
bles, a slight drawback to the wear
ing of anme, being the deficiency or
enow on the side of adjacent hills.
British Communists, through their
newspapers, said a number of mean
things about the marriage of Prince
Oorge and a Greek prlncesa. The
venom spewed "nettled English roy
alty, and allocked the man In tha
street." prcsa reports say. The nup
tials of a nephew of Andrew Mellon,
billionaire, and a divorced former
Vaaaar graduate, as predicted, should
result In a few unkind comments.
In a spirited manner, from Ameri
can Communists.
The BON8 of Ashland claim the
tallest banket bull squad on the Pa
cWlo ooast. Odd Hughes, ft. a in.,
of this city, Is a member, and Is
called "Shorty.'
Ttit abominable ahlvaree, or social
lynching by alleged friends of the
newly weds Is now on a higher plane,
and much of tne prejudice against
frying the victims on the hood of a
flivver has been eradicated. The Los
Mall no correspondent of the Chlco
tCallf.) Enterprise denlnnatea the of
fense as a "pep visitation," which Is
deucedly clever.
e
Many townspeople are still feeding
on the Thanksgiving piece de resiat
anc. and several hnds of households
are as weary of turkey as a World
War veteran Is tired of beans.
Wert a man to wear a little pan
rke hat over one ear he would be
drunk. (Toledo (O.) Made) Ish
thaa Bhowl
e
Potato growers are being charged
with tht up-todA(e crime of placing
spuds In "unlnuelcd sucks," Instead
of putt inn all the little potatoes
In the bottom of the sack
A smoking rom for co-eds has
been eetablUhed nt Ore.-nn State Col.
lege. The Cooa Hay Times surmise
this Hep "can be taken without
fear of political re percti sMons." The
co-ed smoking room. In other edito
rial comment. Is listed as "keeping
eten with the times, and feminine
tendencies." A few yenrs back, a
tUrU Pistol club flourished at OPC.
but has apparently succumbed to the
depression. The members are prob
ably In the smoking room. Instead of
on the pistol rsnce, llcsldes a co-ed
could never shoot with
trl-ger finger. However.
chance the city will have of securing a $26,000 gift from the
government instead of $22,000.
The improvement is not only needed to protect the health
of the city, and eliminate the expense of damage suits, it is
needed to supply work to the unemployed during the winter,
and to serve notice that this part of the state does NOT re
pudiate the Koosevelt relief program.
So don't forget to vote, and the earlier you vote the better.
1 1 teachings. I
remember It, all
right. Then, If
he recollects, and
no doubt he does,
there was some
further oorre
spondence on the
same aubject last
year, and my dis
position to amend
the error had
gratified the
whole organiza
tion . . i. matter
of fact. I had no choice out to amend 1
x suit the company's wishes or else
In view of which It now gives tno
correspondent great pleasure to In
form me that In the post two years
In their plan they have been i
fcllowlng out the teachings in my
jooiciet -call It Crl," which the com
pany physician heartily approved, and
they are all convinced that the plan
of battle I suggest la the most effec
tive way to deal with this problem
oi cne so-canea "common cold."
problem which demands thoughtful
consideration from every large em
1 loyer. He la happy to say that thlj
company's experience Jn the two years
Indicates that my plan keeps ab-
ftnteeiAm below their rate for oi
innny years as they have kept rec
ords. So. now, notwithstanding any
references of viewpoint in the past.
r.nanxs, et cetera, et cetera.
While my now friendly enemy was
composing his letter, or maybe ga-s-i.itjf
at the scenery while he made up
hlr. mind just what to dictate, likely
w not some big executive In another
line Is scheming how he can put th?
screws on me for teaching people how
to avoid the crl. There la a lot of
good business in supplying nostrums
rcr the dozen or more conditions
which dumb folk call "common cold '
In the arly stages.
What do I mean CRI? Call it kree.
I mean any Common Respiratory In
fectio none happens to catch, in tha
earlier stage of the Indisposition or
inness. when one can't know Jujt
what It wtll prove to be, yet the In
fection is most likely to be spread.
Just an application of the golden
rule of hygiene call It Crl and give
everybody fair warning that you doa t
Know yet what It Is but they should
p'fy safe and keep outside your range.
lour effective range Is up to 10 or 13
feet If you're a boor and neglect to
cover nose and mouth when you
cneeze or cough.- The range Is not
ever five feet In quiet conversation
And do remember, whether you're
on the receiving end or the sending
end, the first few hours of any acu:e
inspiratory Infection, from measles to
pneumonia, diphtheria or Infantile
paralysla, la the time when the dls
ease Is most readily communicated to
other persons. That's why It la sel-
f.ah, even criminal, for any one, no
matter whether of low or high order
cr position, to keep at work, at school
or at special activity involving meet
ing or close contact with other por
tions, while he or she has what Igno
ramuses end scoundrels call "a little
cold."
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jack too County
Hlatory from the files of Tht
Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 f eart
Ago).
QI KSTIONS AND ANSWERS
Pilonidal Cst.
Does & pilonidal cyst sometimes
l.i to cancer? What harm is there in
:javin? It alone for a period of yeart?
I have had such a cyst for nine year.
Sometinies It bleeds, but otherwise
gives me no trouble. O. H.
Answer The term pilonidal means
the cyst or tumor contains hairs.
Oidlnarily it does not harm, but the
ract that it bleeds indicates there Is
rome irritation, and prolonged slight
irritation is a well known predispos
ing cause of cancer. Why not have
me menace removed?
Basement Bed room.
Plan basement bedroom in new
house on hillside. Walls and ceiling
painted, Ire window space. Would
such a bedroom be objectionable'
VY. F. 6.
Answer It Is as healthful as a
locm of similar size and windows
would be on any other floor.
Infantile Paralysis.
Young man had infantile paralysis
when 13 years old. and it left per
manent weakness of his left arm and
.'and. so that arm and hand are
shorter, smaller and thinner than thej
other. Is this anything that would be
inherited by his children? B. M. j
Answer No. The paralysis left by:
scute pollomyeltltis (infantile parat- j
ysisj is not heritable, nor does It In
any way effect the victim's mental'
citpacity.
Copyright, 1934. John P. Dllle Co,)
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Dr.
WIIMiim Brady. M. !.. 265 El
Camlno, Beverly Hills. Cal.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
I
NEW YORK, Dec. 3. The roman-lc
career of the former Josephine Arm
strong la almost fulfilling the Laura
Jean Llbby title,
hii . ' W i ciuln to Royalty.'
She la a Wnsh
ington, D. C
lrl who began
displaying clothes
at Peggy Hoyt'a
and was selected
by Jean Patou
for hla rue Fl ir
entln establishment.
It was tht re
s she met and
married the
1 blond and popu
lar Iwokin ci wyime. Kftrat nephew of
the dowager Mrs. Vanderbltt, and
leader of the young American sot.
While their marriage went on the
rocks, they remained friends. He
came to America and she went to
London,
fllie la now being discussed In Lon
don society columns as the prospec
tive bride of the Earl of Dudie. a
widower with two sons, great wealth
piio one of the finest yachts in Medi
terranean waters. The Earl of Dudley
!a a companion of the Prince of Wl?j,
often his hoiute truest.
Mrs. Owynne is tall, thin, and her
abundant crop of rust-red hair la re
sponsible for the nickname "Foxy."
hy which she Is known In London
nU on the continent. Dressmakets
say no otie of her time knows so w?ll
how to wear clothes, especially even
Itig go niis.
The most conspicuous of New York's
wealthy bachelor girls Is the tM,
blonde Doris Duke. Her wardrobe is
ifputertly most extensive In the upper
circles. Rarely la she seen In the
saint evening frock twice. And she
tines several different motor cam for
nay and a variety for night.
Charlie Chaplin has not visited New
York In many moons. He used to
make one and sometimes two visits
year. His constant companion on
these excursions was the latt Ralph
Barton, artist, who was also a fre
nuent visitor at the Chaplin home
It so happens the comedian has not
been here since Barton's passing.
flub should he revived. Thev might
come in handy if the Brat Hoisheviku
of "Old Orepon" rear up.
TtXKH AHlHO(;li V
We par It out in tsxes. get It partly
b-k. and then
Roun dromes the tnx collector, ano
we pay It out a-cin
We're alwav in the treadmill wher er
we tli I nk we're hound;
We fan'V we're pi-fTs inj, hu! - Tr
going round siifl round
tltuial Journal)
Chaplin and Charlie Judela hve
the most astonishing gifts of ltnHul
mimicry. Each can simulate almost
any langia,re, although actually they
MHk only English. But Chaplin rus
a nicotine to be eaiu-ht In one of those suddenly
the pistol ' elterves.x-nt moods, and when he Is
he has. time after time, turnrd
conventional dinner party Into mul
titudinous all-n'eiMt lark, holding th
Moor until sunup Mrs Pat tamp
bell. shy of social functions, will re
s.Hind If a.vnred Chaplin will bu
tt? re.
Jack's, Joel's and Rector's. There wan
a aide room where reporters gathered
to fprtlfy themselves against assign
ments and to freshen their spirits
pfter it day of inqulrendoes. The fa
miliars of Doo Perry's Included Frank
Ward O'Malley. Irvin Cobb. Joseph
Jefferson O'Neill, Don Clarke and
Herbert Swope. Doo Perry's had a
luoyancy. dancing persiflage and loy
alty for the fallen reporter that often
saved his Job.
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS.
A RAY of hope:
Homer Smith,
foreman of Buck
Williams' Yamsey ranch, where these
words are written, has Just taken a
squint at the seemingly cloudless
sky and reports a ring around the
sun.
"Storm coming," he says. "I've
nover known It to fail."
MAYBE we'll be snowed in yet.
Boy! What a place this wouia
be to be snowed In for the winter I
OMER Is an old-timer,
010-
There is alluring content alone
erowded streets of the lower East Side
aicund dusk. The furious boll has
become a simmer. Those Incredibly
old men with long white beards, long
block coats and hands folded behind,
move slowly along, lost In the pensive
flowering of meditation. The vener
able women, bundled In shawls, move
out to backless sidewalk chairs, pre
occupied by the same contemplations.
One wonders If the new world la not
still strange "your ways are not ur
ways." There Is about them .he
vagus gaee of caged animals, strain
ing perhaps for some rustle, some far
away cry, some signal of the tribe.
Thingumabobs: Joseph Hergeeheim
era first literary sale was an article
on cabbage soup . . , Alice Roosevel.
liongworth had the firat residential
smoking room for ladlea . . . William
Powell Installed the first heated
swimming pool . . . Every one of
Charles Hoyt'a plya began with "A"
Walter Trumbull is Oene Tunney's
chief confidant among newspaper
men . . . VI Vienna- Segal's press agent J"81 quote some auch prediction to
came west In 1900 and got out here
into the great open spaces shortly
afterward. What he doesn't , know
about this region Isn't really worth
bothering with.
f
THE INDIANS, Homer says, are
predicting a warm, wet winter,
with LOTS of snow.
If you want to see a stock man
grin clear around behind hu ears,
saya the actor uses up an 8 bottle
o rubbing cream for every dally mas
sage.
I've Aeen him three times In two
dayt before a gaudy window of haber
dashery In my erea. A mousey, tttt
uppy little man in sombre clothes. I
know tha symptoms, A dollar to a
cook it he aches to bust out In one
of the Venetian awning ties,
(Copyright, 1934, McNaught Syndi
cate. Inc.)
Conn ted Chicken Pent tier
DEERINO. Mo. (UP) Students at
Deering high school know how mam
feathers a chicken haa because one
of them. Vernon Davis, made an ac
curate count. The question of a
chicken's feathers arose in a class
room session. Guesses ranged from
10,000 to 100.000. Davis killed a
chicken and made tht count. He
said It was S .537.
him In the late fall, after dry
year. Warm, wet winters, with plenty
of snow, mean water going Into tne
ground, and water going Into the
ground means GRASS.
nplUS YEAR, by the way, isn t
1 doing so bad, so far.
The water year begins on October
1, and In the two months since that
time we've ,had nearly TWICE the
normal prectpttatlrn.
Not only that, but It has come on
unfrozen ground, which means that
tt has alt sunk In. It's the water
that sinks In that makes the grasa
next summer not tht water that
runs off a frown surface.
-
AL note at this point:
he government weather sharps
don't take much stock In these
goose-bone and fur predictions ot
the Indians, and they're not too not
about rliifTs around the sun as fore
casts of what may be coming.
Better go In and check up ou
Homer with the barometer,
SHVCKSI
The darned barometer Is acting
like a band of honker gie flying
over the duck snnmp high a:io
hmitthty. About as much chance
getting snowed In here as of
rich uncle dying the dy before your
note at te bank comes due.
Poor old Homer t When he sees the
barometer, he U Just about curl up
and ri:e of embarrassment over th;
sun-ring prediction of his.
Alr-Mlnried PoR Bead
ANACONDA. Mont. (UP "Gyp
sy." a friendly little water spaniel,
attained national fame as the most
air-minded dog in America. In her
10-month life she crossed tht conti
nent four times by plane, v tatted 40
states by air. Recently Gypsy was
killed here by an automobile. She
Is burij in the center of the local
a 1. port.
Ciinnnn Ball Burled In Tree
THOHOt.D. Out. il'P.l An old
cannon ball was found Imbedded In
the heart of a tree here It Is believ
ed the ball was fired during the War
of isia As the tree grew. It was
completely hidden by the bark. It
was found when the tree was cut
down and sawn Into pieces.
Doc Perry' fAnuvi dnwr store in
the old World bu'.Mlng. hone evn
,f: inc ni a mourned by an ol jt r
i :vnrth F.tsre. U to he revued in a
'.tth..ir in yn hi s snulle; w
ll was as m.KU of an nut.luuou i iat. U mas ratal
ivrr
Rattler Broke laM and Bird
RAUCIUH, N. C. (VPI "Pete
rattlesnake on ehibit at the State
"lM'fiim here fattavl fur vr II
his lonit last with an enormous 1 I
ponies.
A good cow pony, It appears' from
what Is said. Is worth money. How
much? Well, about whatever the
owner sees fit to ask for it depend
ing, of course, on how the buyer is
heeled. But up around 150, anyway,
and probably more.
Good cow ponies are scarce and
desirable, nd whatever Is scarce and
desirable comes high.
THIS question arises: Out of
given dozen horses, how many
will turn out to be really top cow
ponies?
About oa many, it seems, as out
of a given dozen human beings wilt
turn out to be really efficient and
competent and SUCCESSFUL at their
Jobs.
Rather Interesting. If you get the
point.
FRIDAY, and tha morning alter.
Eaat rosy with the light of com
ing sunrrse. No hope. Might aa wen
turn over for another snooze.
AN HOUR, later.
Rosy light gone. Cold, gray wan
of cloud aweeplng down from north
Passing barometer on way to kitchen,
note It has taken a nose dive, which
began about midnight or a little
earlier.
Swirls of snow begin to fill the
air.
-
HOMER waiting in kitchen. "Toici
you there was a storm coming,
didn't I?" he chuckles.
These government weather sharps
and their smart cracks aboxit the
goose bone and the sun ring pre
dlrtersl If they'd get out and talk to
a few wise old-timers who've spent
their lives observing the facts of na
ture and drawing conclusions from
them, they might learn something
to their benefit. ,
(Which, by the way, goes for ail
this government crowd that's tell
ing us what to do and where to
head In these days. If they'd pay a
little less attention to the pure the
orists and a little more to the wise
and practical old-timers whoTe
watched things happen and drawn
conclusions from what they've seen,
we'd get farther and faster with this
New Deal.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
December 3, 1924.
(It was Wednesday)
President Cooltdge, In address to
congress, "stresses the need of econ
omy." and advises "congress to spend
less money."
More rain la predicted for tht vat
ley: the moisture a hampering de
layed fall work In the orchards.
City council to buy Stuts fire
pumper for the fire department.
"Republican Service Men's league
of Jackson County" files report on
campaign expenses, and reports It
owes Cole Holmes 93 83,
Tourist la fined S20 for speeding
on Main street at high noon.
The "Klan Klavern of Jackson
County" gets an ultimatum. It will
be "expelled from the Inner Circle"
unless back dues are paid. The "Im
perial Jurisdiction of the Furies of
the Province" was withdrawn as "a
warning."
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
December 3, 1014.
(It was Thursday)
Krupp munition plant at Essen
bombarded by Allies' planea.
Steps taken for the securing of
a beet sugar factory hers.
Carl Y. Tengwald is arrested for
speeding on Main street. He was
carrying a loa dof pumpkin pies, to
be served at the Horticultural So
ciety luncheon.
, Five citizens hailed Into court for
having no lights, fore or aft, on
their autos.
Livestock.
PORTLAND, Dec. 3. AP) Cattle
1350; calve 125; 25c higher; steers,
good common and medium, S3 a 6.25;
heifsra. cood. common and medium
12.7605.25; cows, good, common and
medium. 2.25e4 00; low cutter and
!cutter, 5l.00e2.25; bulla, good, 3S
3.W: vealers, good ana c-ioice, en ow
it s an? enii. common and medium,
45.50; calves, good and choice, 55
$ 6.50; common and medium, $2
4.50.
, HOGS 2000; 25c higher; lightweight
good and choice 6.256.50: medium
weight, good and choice, 5.7S8.&0;
heavy weight, good and choice. 5 25
5.86; packing sows, medium and
ffnnri as 754 .as: feeder and stocker
pigs, good and choice, 53.75$ 4.25.
SHEEP 3700; strong to 25c Wgner;
lambs, good and choice, 95.25 6.25:
common and medium, 64.00 a 5.25;
yearling wethers, 3.25 4.00; ewes.
fffwl and choice. 15.00 6.50: CUll.
common and medium, 62.00 a 4 50.
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Dee. 8.
(AP) (U. 8. D. A.) Cattle 000; ac
tive; steers and she-stock steady to
15c higher; 2 cars top good 1047 lb.
fed California steers, 6.50; load good
885-lb. fed yearlings 66.25; fed betters
6.25. -
SHEEP 2800; fairly active; lambs
and ewes strong to 15c higher; dou
ble deck, medium to choice, 83 lb.
wooled Nevada lambs, 66.65; Oregon
lambs unsold.
Federal Reserve act hailed by Dem
ocratic leaders as "guarantee there
will be no more panics."
Copco will advertise the valley at
Panama-Pacific Exposition at San
Francisco next year.
Cowboy who rod hts horse Into a
front street saloon la told "to go
and sin no more" after fine of 61
is paid in police court.
Street beggar, .searched at police
station, has 9400 sewed In his under
shirt.
.
CHICAGO. Dec. 3. (AP) (TJ. S.
D. A.) Hogs 29,000; active, 1015c
higher; better grade above 200 lbs.
6.15-25; top 96.26; sows, 95.75-90.
CATTLE 16,000; not much done on
steers, asking higher, sales steady to
strong; top strictly choice ateera,
910.25; best light atoert, 9.4S; year
lings, 99.75; bulk run of quality to
sell 98.00 downward; she-stock firm.
heifers. 10-15c higher: bulls 10-15C
up: vealers steady; native stockers
dull.
SHEEP 14.000; very little done; fat
lambs In rather broad demand, HTtn
undertone strong to 25c higher on
both fat and feeder offerings; larger
interests bidding steady or upward
to 97.00 on good to choice wooled
lambs: asking 97.25 and better:
nothing done on clipped lambs and
yearlings; sheep firm: slaughter ewes
92.00-75; good to choice feeding and
shearing lambs upward to 96.00.
Let Us Not Be Forgotten
. h Tktoda Hart Stockholm
f
IIMff?li
Let at not ba forgotten, wa
who wait
Sad-ayad and willful, chained
to a lonely hed.
Rille, from life hy tbil mad
jeJt of Fate,
Weary with loit dream., w
the liriog-dead.
Send ni then toraa email
token, only aay
We are remembered, that
aomewhere heartt atill yeara
At oar lonj absence, aa day
- by weary day
Grow into monthi and yeara
ere wa return. '
We will fight on then imilinj,
knowing life.
If we be not forgotten, in the
end
I worth the lonely hour, o!
pain and atrii
While love abidea, and we
have yet a friend.
For the paat two yeara Mlaa Stack
houae haa been a ahut-in. Her caae ia
typical of thousands of tuberculosia
patienta who are "taking the cure
in hundreds of sanatoria today. She
had tuberculosis as a child, but had
almost forgotten the experience ia
the excitement of acquiring an edu
cation, the hectic rush of newspaper
work, and the absorption of writing
fiction. She waa well launched aa "
writer when a aecond breakdown
forced her to enter a sanatorium ia
her native atate of Oregon. Her medi
cal history illustrates why tuberculo
sis associations, with tbe help of
Christmas Seals, strive to impress
upon the public: "Protect children,
from tuberculosis."
Communications
B"
REAKFAST over, and it's snowing
plenty, in that steady, persistent
way that means business. Homers
sun ring has done its stuff.
Rut It's the day after the ru May,
and stern reaU'.y shatters the warm,
bright Illusion that perhaps one
j0,ir I might p:de-step pressing responsibili
ties by getting snowed In In this
heavenly stxit.
SO, WITH Homer breaking the raad
in a husky truck, it's the back
tMtl to the sv.d srind
- -
onf rsaiion turns
to COW i
But It ws
lrt'ed
a b::(rl'.t i:'.u:on while
Vt sla.i T.i&uu want i
Favors Sewage Bonds
To the Editor:
The first and principal objection
that all tax payers have to voting
additional bonds is that It will in
crease the tax levy. In about ninety-
nine cases out of a hundred this is
true. In the case of the present
'sewage bond issue It Is not true.
Why? Because 15c per .month de
ducted from each Individual water
user's monthly bill wtll produce suf
ficient revenue to take care of both
principal and interest on the sewage
bonds. Based upon present rate of
water revenue collected this deduc
tion will not Jeopardize either princi
pal, interest, or sinking fund require
ments of the outstanding water
bonds.
The federal government Is offering
the city of Medford an outright gift
of 922.000 on this 9100.000 sewage
project thereby reducing the city's
cost to 978.000 with an interest rate
of 4 percent.
Should Medford citizens ref'.ise thte
offer it will not be long until they
will be compelled by the state board
of health to comply with the law in
the matter of sewage disposal, at
which time we will in all probability
have to bond ourselves for the full
9100,000 and pay an Interest rate of
not less than 8 percent.
Medford 's sewage system has al
ready been condemned by the state
board of health. Citizens have sued
the city and have obtained Judgments
for damages. Other citizens are
threatening to sue unless this faulty
sewage system ia corrected.
Weighing this whole problem, based
on the facts. It appears obvious that
to accept the federal government's
offer at this time is to the best
economical interests of the tax payer.
M. N. HOG AN.
Medford. Dec. 3rd.
Portland Wheat
PORTLAND, Dec. 3. (AP) Drain
Wheat Open High Low Close
May .83',4 .831 -83H .8314
Dec ,81 .81 .801,4 -80V4
Cash: Big Bend bluestem, 89 V4:
dark hard winter, 12 per cent, 94;
do 11 per cent, 87!4: soft white.
hard winter, northern spring and
western red, 80'i; western white,
1814.
Oats: No. J white. 33.50.
Corn: No. 9 E yellow, 143.35.
Mlllrun, atandard. $21.50.
Today's car receipts: Wheat, 32:
barley, 3: flour, 35: corn, 1; oata, 4.
Portland Produce
(Continued t.m page one)
Apparently the whole new deal wnt
tack to New York over the Thankt
gllng holiday week-end: that la.
those who were not already In Wa,-m
Spr'niw- The capital waa rlrtual'.y
vacant.
General Parley la (letting a ride now
for. Mesllrut tne poatal aurplua fig
ure,, where aa an act of congress
passed In 1930 requires him to handle
I'.le flauree that way. Hla Republican
predeceeaor did the same thing, e'Jai
Inatlng from calculatlona all the cou
'., aubsldlea which. If calculated,
would ehaiv. Mr. Farley'a 19 minion
dollar aurplua to a 92 million do!!r
deficit.
Although the president left out -ld
fe penAton. hla aocla! security com
mittee will Include that aubject brief,
ly In Ita coming report.
PORTLAND, Dec. 3. (AP) Butter
Prints. A grade. aW'ic lb. in parch
ment wrappera. 84 lb. In cartons:
B grade parchment wrappers. 3214c
lb.: cartons. 33'4c lb.
BUTTERPAT Portland delivery, A
grade deliveries at least twice weekly.
33(i 35c lb.: country routes, 33 w 35c
lb.; B grade, or delivery less than
twice weekly. 33 ft 34c lb.: C erada at
market.
EGGS Sales to retailers: Specials,
31c; extras, 29c; fresh extras, browns,
20c: Rt.nrinrrt. fro.h .utii,m.
(25e: medium firsts, 3.1e; fresh pul
lets. zc: on firsts, 2lc; checks, 34c;
bakers. 20c dozen.
EOGS Buying price of wholesale,
fresh specials, 26c; extras. 23c; fresh
extra hrrjwns IHf .rr. rH- o..-
extra mediums, 31c; medium firsts.
inc; pullets, 8c; do firsts, 18c; under
grade. 18c dozen.
CHEESE 92 score, Oregon triplets.
15c: loaf, 18i,ic Broken will pay 14c
below quotattona.
MILK Contract price. 4 per cent:
Portland delivery, 2.20 cwt.; B grade
cream. 27'4o lb.
COUNTRY MEATS KeMtno n-..
retallera: Country killed hogs, best
uuwjners, unaer loo lbs., list IX4c
lb.: vealers. fanev. onti ik .
and thin. 87c: heavy, 4c lb.; fancy
lambs. II 1114c lb ; ewes. 438c lb.;
cutter cows. 4 ! 5c lb.; cannera, 3c
id.: nuns. 4'!(rt.5c lb.
LIVE POULTRY Portlnnrt ri.llv.ra
buying prices: Colored hen, under
8'4 lbs, 13t14e lb : dn ml
lbs., 13 !4e lb.: leghorn fowls, over
tot., noise lb: do under 3 lbs.
ll12c lb.: colored snrlnff. 11:
3 lb... 14I5c b.: broilers tinder 3
10s., lort? ue lb.: roosters, 5c lb.; Pe-
Kin oucas, tac lb: do colored. 11
13c: geese. 10 11c lb.
ONIONS Oregon. aisn1
Yakima. 1 251 so.
POTATOES Oregon Burbanks 80
9 90c cental; Deschuiea Oema 1110
allS
WOOL 1934 Clin nomln.l- trii.
lamette valley, medium. 20c lb,: fine
or n.it 0100a. aoc lb: lamb, 18c lb.;
eastern Oregon, 1730c lb.
HAT Buying price from nmi......
Alfalfa. No. I. new crop. H6 50)
17.50; eastern Oreron timnth. .tun.
eate. 913 ton; vetch. ,13 ton: Wil
lamette, valley timothy. is 50 ton:
,lu'". . ton, ortland.
FOG, PILOTS BANE
TO BE CONQUERED
BY BLIi FLYING
Instruments Tested by Bu
reau of Air Commerce
Show Practicability of
Use in Commercial Planes
Ch icago Wheat
CHICAGO, Dec. 3 (API Wheat:
Open High Low Close
Dec. old,... 100, 100', .091, .991.
New 10O, 1.00, .99, ,99H
Mv 1 001, 1 00!, 951, j,9,,
July 941, 941. .931, M
I
A local new-paper figures that 73 - an rrnitriri Hutterfat
OC0 people, one in every seven M SAN FPANCfSCO. IVe.
Wahmton. are on relief and that 71 First g-sde butterfat, s$c, f o b., San
pr cent of them are negroes. j Francisco.
Notice. I Miter.
The under'.ffned will not be re-1 NEW TORK. Dec 3 (AP( Bar
irvnMb'.e for any bills without the Mlver steady, it l,ier at 54V
euthor!?ed requisition. !
VTrrERANS Or FOREIGN WARS . I WINDOW OLS-Wi sell winds
!. and w::i rep'.aoe rout brotrj.1
1 MHKtU re.Mireo sno recover , wlrd.s r.onas,y Trowbridge Co-i
ed. Medio.'d Cycler? . 23 N. Ir. met Work.
Mjler'a Son Mars on Gridiron
8i. JOUra ftTP, Ths mm. of
Georse Slsler, once outstanding name
In baseball. Is belny Identified with
another snort in m fj-m! nrcs
Slsler. jr.. son of the former elugetng
first baseman of the Browns, is star
ring. In football with Burroughs
high school.
Musie for any occasion. Phone 788.
Use Mall Tribune want ads. v
ATONIC FOR THE BLOOD
v
r
WASHINGTON. (TJP) Elimina
tion of the aviator's greatest enemy
fog la foreseen by the bureau of air
commerce after completion of tests
showing the practicability of adapt
ing blind flying Instruments to com
mercial transport
Eugene L. Vldal, director of the bu
reau, has tested conclusively muitl
motored transports operation while
using blind flying devices, and has
made tentative plans for Installation,
of equipment along a transcontinen
tal air route for commercial service
tests.
Army System Tsed
The U. 8. army air corps blind
flying system was used throughout
the tests. More than 150 unassisted
"hooded" landings vJith a- trl-motor-ed
transport plane have been made
by bureau pilots using this system.
In each test flight the pilot sat is
the cockpit completely covered by a
hood which prevented him from see
ing outside the plane, forcing him to
rely entirely on the Instruments to
land his craft.
The most important element In
blind landing, according to the de
partment. Is the radio compass.
Operation Explained
Chester A. Snow, Jr., in charge of
these tests for the bureau of ssir
commerce, explains the operation of
the compass as follows:
"The radio compass operates In
conjunction with any broadcasting
atatlon within Its power range, en
abling the pilot to fly directly to
ward the transmitter from any direc
tion. The ground equipment of the
army air corps blind landing svstem
consists of two landing transmitters.
Each Is a low-powered broadcasting
station, compactly mounted on a
small automobile truck.
"In addition each truck Is equip
ped with a small secondary trans
mitter which, operating in conjunction
with another Instrument on the
plane's Instrument board, causes a
light flash as the airplane paws the
ground station."
By means of thew two small trans
mitters an experienced pilot la able
to bring his plane safely to the
ground.
His "(.h.t"watkcd In
ST. LOUTS mPt U.-..-M alaaoHnn
commlMlnnn intimate tvnt Tim.
my Miller. Justice of the peace, had
ouu -gnosi" voters registered In his
ward, he loadrd the 300 persons to
trucks and took them Wm- th
commission. They were put back on
the rolls.
V
V
If you're nirdwrt. rr
tws," sir Moid
prhip t.vnrh dir",
in.-i:fE-tion or C"
take TV. pierce Goica
en
M-lk-aI Dtvm-ery. K'a
J th:s- Mrs. W. J. PfT.'fS
4... f of SP Sa Hth 8o;e.
Dr. rime's CoM-n W-
ifa! It-ovrrv V" J
ft tnd fcMiH It trt i very helpful to bid
up i riift-'lcw-n nt'n It it s fine blood
tw tue. Ubku vu., liquid 9100.