PAGE FOUR
atEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, EEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1934.
Medford Mail Tribune
"Enryont tn Southtrn Ortgoa
Hud Iht Hail T.linn.''
Dallf Bietpt Satimliy
"The Incident Is Closed"
PiiblWwl by
HEIKOKI I'lllNTINO CO.
25-31-30 N- Kir 8L
HUblHl W. UUHL, Editor
An Independent Newtptptr
Knitted u i4nd elm mittff it Medford
Oregon, under Act of Mired tf. mm.
tjlBHClIll'TlON UATta
Rv 11.11 in Aittu.
n.iiL. A ,,.r 15.00
DeJiy, ! niLiiitbJ
Dill, dm Bonlb 60
Br Purlw In Ad rine Medford. Asbltnd,
J.vkftowllle, Central Ptlnt, I'boenU, Went, Oold
WII md on UlKrweri.
i)&ll, om rr. ................ .100
Daily, ili month! 1-25
Daily, one montti 60
All urmi. eh to adianea.
OfflcUl paper of the City of Medforl
Official paper of Jackson County.
BlKMHKII OK TUB A8WJCIATEII Pit BBS
IlrMlrlna Kill I Leaned Wire Benlc
The AitocUted Preti It eiflushelj entitled to
the us. for ptiMlriilon of all newt aupaienea
credited to It or othenrlse wed led Id tht papa
and altu to the lora! new puMUhed heelo.
All Uhti for puMlrJtloD of apeclal dlipatcliet
serein are life reaerred.
MKMUKIt OF UNITKU PKfcHS
ITEM HK II OK AUDI! lUHtKATJ
UK CIRCULATIONS
AdrsflUlrtg KeprestnUtltea
fct. C. MW.ENBKN k CO Ml' A NT
Office In Nw York, Clilrago, Detroit, 8u
FrancUoo Lna Angelet Brattle Portland.
MEMBER
M 1MB
Ye Smudge Pot
By Ann or Perry
The general Idea this year seems
to be more "Merry Christinas," and
less "Merry Hell."
Jacksonville miners report a good
yield of gold lost. week, and a Med
ford merchant reports the receipt ol
a man-sized, full-grown calendar
the first since 1030, when the so
called Depression began to Ret In
Its dastardly work. All concerned
screamed: "Eureka!"
"SPIRIT OF TIIK TIMKS"
(Atlnntlc Mtmthly)
Another little atory Illustrates
the subtle poison hidden In the
public trough. It was of a do
mentlc who resigned to go, with
her husband, to the World's Pair.
In Chicago. After their return.
she said, they would go on re
lief.
TO SWAP Bonus early spring wea
ther for winter variety.
The Orange contest to determine
the beat rural cooking In the valley
Ahould be followed by one to deter
mine the star eater of rural cook
ing. A lively tusslo Is anticipated be
tween thQ(Engle Point fried chicken
and the Ruch area salt-rising bis
cuits. The Legion Is getttng ready to
present "Ten Nights In a Barroom,"
or "Hurry Up Ilc-rova the State Sa
loon Closes.
O! VKIIY WKI.U ITEM.
(Hrpimrr Ore.) News)
Tales about are that some high
school boys hearing about wild
hogs at the head of Skinner
creek, decided to get them some.
Starting out In the Adam Blahm
ranch on Skinner they came to a
nice fat sow at the ranch and
not knowing what constituted a
wild hog, they decided this might
be one, so they shot It. Well,
Mr. Blahm had other Idea a and
that waa that.
The first Mae West story since
September 1 1 showed up Mon, and
spread faster than a He, nobody
wsnted to believe.
Dewey Hill, the Prospect hlll-bllly
and hired man. has launched a
movement for a basketball squad.
"We play basketball like we play
baseball." said Mr. Hill, "and teams
who can't bent anybody else are In
vited to play ua and taste victory,
and no telling what cImj."
e
Flaunterny Daredevil, Jr., with baby
brother, 3, on the handle-bars, re
turned home unscathed from a bi
cycle ride In the midst of Main Stein
traffic yesterday. Our hero forgot the
head of lettuce his Maw originally
dispatched him for, so both Flauute
roy and baby brother are shy vita
mins. e
The export who fixed your corr's
typewriter has. so fr. e. neaped cap
ture, to also be fixed. The victim
li sn L. C. Smith Broa. product,
and absorbs punishment tike a
wrestler. Midway of every sentence
it balks, and every cure has been
tried but building a fire under It.
Older Olrls have been flocking to
the O. Hunt nuwtc lantern show,
where they enjoyed the best Indoor
cry In several funerals.
e
in in: ( omi m thk .hoom !
The gronm whs faultlewnly ap- i
psrelled in a hhie serge suit with
trousers and vest to match, a
starched shirt with plested bosom I
and a striped red and blue tie. while I
his only ornaments were plain gold
cuff-butlona and a gMd watch chain
with a charm. 1'nder his riiiht arm
TIIK official report from the attorney general's office in
Salem that Governor Meier will take no action on the Banks
pardon plea, comes as most welcome news to the people of Jack
son county.
The Governor's attitude is precisely what the Mail Tribune
expected it to be. No other action was conceivable. But the
reports from upstate of the danger of a contrary outcome, were
so numerous, and from such responsible sources, that a feeling
of uncertainty and alorm, was only natural.
Now the cause of nil anxiety has been removed, and another
painful incident, in this amazing case, can be regarded as
CLO.SKD.
. ,
TTIE chief lesson oE this experience, Is similnr to those of for-
mer experiences along the snme line. For some inexplnin
nblo renson the attitude of the people of Jnckson county toward
Tj. A. Banks, is not clearly understood by the rest of tho state,
and we sometimes doubt if it ever will be.
The feeling in Jackson county that the slayer of George
Prescott, after a FAIR and IMPARTIAL trial, should receive
the punishment the law provides doc NOT proceed from any
spirit of vengeance. It only proceeds from the feeling that
justice should be done.
It is not a feeling grounded in any unthinking or malevolent
prejudice, against tlie man; but a thorough UNDERSTANDING
of him gained through years of tragic experience.
United and unyielding opposition to any executive clemency
at this time, docs NOT proceed from any indifference to the
value of mercy, and charity, toward the unfortunate, WHEN
conditions justify; but the realization that in this particular
case, NO such conditions exist, nor have any at any time exist
ed, and such action at this time would be nothing less than
a ghastly travesty of justice.
pvURTNG the excitement of the past few days, it was clearly
apparent that in other parts of the state the impression
still prevails that when it comes to the Banks case, the people
of this community somehow can't think the thing out clearly or
rationally, that a condition of hysteria and panic immediately
ensues.
This is not only untrue, but the exact REVERSE of the truth.
The people in this state who DO fail to grasp the true signifi
cance of the Banks case, the threat it contained, not only to
the maintenance of law and order, but to the very foundations
of the government under which we live are those who didn't
live in Jackson county during that perilous period, who safe
and secure themselves, liked to dismiss it as just a petty local
squabble, "somewhere else."
It was never that. And the people of Jackson county who
went through that endless strife and turmoil KNOW it. They
want no repetition of it and they arc determined to HAVE no
repetition. That is all there is to the alleged "complex" as
far as southern Oregon is concerned. Had any county in the
STATE suffered the same experience, the people of THAT
county would feel precisely the same way about it.
....
DUT no other county did. Because they never did, it is they
"J" mid not Jackson county, who have failed to understand,
and still fail to understand, what this Banks case really means,
and what any repetition would mean to any community that
suffered it.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D.
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis
ease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Or. Brady If a stamped
ielf-addresecl envelope li enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In
ink. Owing to the large number of tetters received only a few can be an
swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions
Address Or. William Brady, 26A El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal.
ANf.OLA KEC'OItbS ONE VOTE AGIN DOC BKADY
A while ago a reader, noting 01'
Doc Brady's agnosticism In respect to
the occurrence of rabies In man, kind
ly reported a
casts of reputed
human rabies in
Angola, Africa.
and a u g g e ated
that the physi
cian, a mission
ary there, would
give me the facts.
I wrote the doc
tor, and have re
ceived a reply
from h.lm. It 1
lengthy and I
shall quote only
enough to Indi
cate the opinion of the doctor.
The victim was a white woman who
was bitten oy a tabid dog thai at
tacked her In her garden one morn
ing as she cut some flowers. The
dog made six wounds on her right
arm. She went immediately across
the street to the government h
pltal, where a nurse dressed the
wounds with hot bichloride com
presses and strong tincture of iodln.
Then he went to the government
doctor, who did nothing, as he in
sisted there waa no rabies In the
province. But my Informant felt thp
Pasteur vaccine should be given, and
the vaccine was delivered by airplane
from Cape Town 12 daya later. The
doctor gave the first injection of tt?
vaccine at once and repeated the In
jections at 16-hour Intervals, so that
the patient received the fourteenth
dose the twenty-first day after a'ne
was bitten. On the twenty-ninth day
the first symptoms appeared, tingling
and then pain In the wounds, and
"the usual symptom of hydrophobia
following during the next six daya."
death coming the thirty-sixth day
after the dog-bite.
In closing his letter, my Angola col
league observes:
"Any patient of mine who has bee.i
bitten by a reputedly mad animal
will receive strenuous local sterilis
ing treatment and a complete series
of anti-rablos vaccine aa soon as I
can secure the vaccine. Only by eurh
procedure would I feel tht I had
done Justly by a patient who had en
trusted his llfo In my hands."
That ia precisely the attitude id
opinion I formerly held. But todav
I should hate to Inject Pasteur virus
Into my own body, and I should be
still more reluctant to Inject It Into
the body of a patient who had en
trusted his life In my hands.
When one who has been bitten by
a reputedly rabid dog receives Pas
teur treatment and does not develop
rabies, we can draw no conclusion,
for unquestionably many who have
been bitten by a dog reputed to have
rabies have not developed rabies, re
gardless of the nature of the treat
ment. On the other hand. In half of 15
cases of alleged human rabies In the
Los Angeles county hospital in a re
cent 10-year period, the patients re
ceived Pasteur treatment beginning
a day or ao after the dog-bite, out
the Illness, whatever It was, termin
ated fatally In all 15 cases alike. We
can draw no definite conclusion from
that, either, but if Pasteur virus pre-1
vent rablea, how come it failed In
100 per cent of those cases?
No Pasteur virus for mine. If you
pleaee. If I am bitten or wounded
by an animal presumed to have rabies
I'll rely on thorough surgical dlalii
fectlon of the wound, an lmmedlp.ie
prophylactic injection of antitetanus
serum and a second prophylactic in
jection of antitetanus scrum ouc
week lapf.
QUESTIONS ASnANSWKRS
Put Horse Before Cart.
This last summer I returned from
ed. I am doing fine, so far, but the
thing that worries me Is that I m&y
catch cold this winter, and the
drummed It into our heads at the
sanatorium that a cold often means
relapse . . . J. B. V.
Answer What they mean is tha
relapse often purports to be a "cold.
It is not too late even now for you to
learn your lesson. Send a dime (not
stamps) and a 3-cent stamped en
velope bearing your address, for book
let "Call It Cri," con It well, and
you'll worry le&s about the "cold"
bugaboo.
Tough Hide.
Please give Instructions how to get
rid of calluses on the feet. C. R.
Answer Callus under ball of foot
suggests flat transverse arch, and
thick beveled pad of felt or s-:t
leather about size and shape of callus
should be worn under the sole or
attached to insole, to support the
arch. To remove callus paint It daily
with the standard corn remedy solu
tion of 30 grains salicylic acid In
half ounce of flexible collodion. Alter
a week or two callus or corn softens
and can be wiped away.
(Copyright, 1934. John P. Dllle Cx)
Comment
on the
Day's News
Meteorological Report
Ell. Note: rersons wishing to
coimminlrnte nltli Dr. Brady
shmiMI sriul lettrr illrrct to Dr.
William Urad.v, M. D., '.'CS El
Camlno, llcverly Hills, Cal.
"pilE people of Jckson' county arc not bloodthirsty. They are
not vindictive. There is nothing personal or partisan in
their attitude whatever. They ask nothing but common justice,
the maintenance of law and order, and the right to work out
their destiuy in their own way.
Moreover with the conviction of U A. Banks after a fair
and impartial trial, they believe the Banks case has ceased to be
a local issue and has become a state issue; his future fate has
ceased to be a local responsibility, but is now n state responsi
bility. All this community asked, or asks is that he should be
treated, as ANY OTHER MAN, convicted of a similar crime in
the state should be treated, and the laws of this state, the
courts of this slate, should in his ease, as in every other case, be
impartially, fairly and rigidly upheld.
THE GRANGE
Joint Installation of officers or ten
subordinate Oranges of Jackson
county, held at Central Point Orange
hall December 3, was a very success
ful affair, with 133 orflcera out o."
140 elected Installed by Mrs. Ger
trude Haak. county Installing officer,
and her efficient team, sicklies be
ing the cause of all absent officers.
This Is an unusually fine record.
A plwwlng Incident of the cere
mony waa presentation of a beautiful
walnut gavel and block to the InatAtl
ing officer, Mrs. Gertrude Haak, by
her team, as memento of apprecia
tlon. The Pomona team Includes t:tt
following: I. R. Kline, master of
ceremonies; Mrs. Grace Walker, chap
lain: Mr. EIMe Hoover, conduct re;
Mrs. Krtythe tit f ford, assistant to te
conductress: Mia. Mildred Ward, flrjt
emblem bearer; Mrs. Emma Congtr.
second emblem bearer; Mrs. Beryl
ltlckwin. first regalia bearer; Mrs
Luella Kline, second regalia bearer;
Mrs. Mable 8lms. pianist. I
Officers of the Pomona Grange will'
be installed at the regular mectlrg,
December 15. nt d p m.
Entfle Point and central Point su
bordinate officers lll be Installed
leoemoer lfl. at 8 p. m.
A complete roster of all Orange of
Pumpkin pie. sandwlchea and oV
fee were served after the meeting.
On December 4. ,the last regular
meeting waa held, with quite a num
ber of visitors present from Centr.il
Point and Phoenix Oranges.
The lecture program consisted of
an old-fashioned school, members
coming dressed as school children in
the day of long ago. carrying their
school lunches. Mr. Violet Spencer,
as an aged, old-fashioned school ml
treas, presided over a very badly dis
ciplined schol. There waa plenty of
rollicking fun.
School lunches and coffee were
served.
Interesting yearly rcporta wvre
given by the Home Economic and tne
relief committee and by the Home
Economics club secretary of the ac
tivities of the club, all showing a
splendid ycar'a work.
Persist
i
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
up Is as comical
Jingles.
as some of his
NEW YORK. Dec. 11. Memories:
The blazing crumpled newspaper on
top the stove to singe chicken or
turkey . , . Im
portance of the
boy who had a
Job after school
, . Football
teams with skull
and crossbones
on sweaters . . .
"Icing" the wat
ermelon In a tub
of eltcrn water
in the cellar.
: Ore en apples
4 and horse salt
i . . . The art of
J eating around a
apple , . . Using
walnut hull Juice to paint up as
an Indian . . , Sink sand In the
lamp to keep the oil from explod
ing , , , Sucking Icicles . . . Stick
ing pennies to the frost on the
window . . . Cracking nuts on a flat
iron. The boy who got his tonmie stuck
to the Iron pole the morning It went
18 below . . . Sweet Caps . . .
Mothers who waved aprons to signal
anyone , . . Kneeling on the side
walk to peck under saloon doors , . .
Puncture proof goo for bicycle tires
that never worked . . . Making slip
bark whistles.
Shirts with printed horseahoes . . .
The new milliner from the city who
was labeled "fat" . . . The smell ,
from the lanyards on a foggy night
. , . Prnlrle schooners going to new I
h Elites . . . The champion tramp, I
A. No. 1, who left his mark on
culverts . . . Marble topped tables tn
the ice cream parlors.
Ladles are excelling In preparing
pulling advertising copy. Especially
where the feminine viewpoint must
be stressed. Several In New York are
averaging $25,000 a year. Kenneth
Collins, one of the ace ad men, de
clarea In a book on the subject that
women 05 times out of 100 prepare
the snappiest ads.
Jack Dempsey's restaurant on the
site of the old Morning Telegraph
la likely to become a robust hall
fellow spot In the Ronrlru; 40'a and
a successor to Jack's he -food empo
rium on Sixth avenue. No beanery
has quite topped Jack's, although
Dlnty Moore's la a runner-up In
worldly clientele. The Dempsey cafe.
In American Colonial design, 'seats
500 and has open hickory fires, as
well as open butcher shop and a
wl ne cooli ng room . Dempsey is not
the first ex-champlon to become a
front man. John L. Sullivan had a
place on 42d; Jim Corbett at &3d
and 6th and Kid McCoy's cellared
hooplat was at Broadway and 39th.
By FRANK JENKINS
A HEADLINE tells us: "Harmony
i Reached In Balkan Controversy,
Leaders of the League of Nations an
nounced from Geneva that Jugoslavia
and Hungary have reached an agree
ment, "In principle," for the settle
ment of their dispute.
WHAT does It mean?
Well, first of all. It means that
the nations of Europe, no matter how
much they would LIKE to, CANT AF
FORD to fight.
That Is about the long and the
short of it.
BY WAY of pouring oil on the trou
led waters, Nicolas Tltelescu, for
eign minister of Rumania, tells the
League of Nations council, as pub
licly as possible, that Jugoslavia's ap
peals against Hungary In no way
questioned the NATIONAL HONOR
of Hungary.
ATIONAL honor 1 What crimes
have been committed In Its
namel ,
If the nations, especially the na
tions of Europe, had a little less
honor and a little more common
sense. It would be a grand thing for
the common, ordinary people of the
world, who have to do the fighting
and dying after the diplomats have
started the wars.
THIS question often occurs to peo
ple who are reasonably gifted
with horse sense and not too seri
ously handicapped by fool notions
about national honor:
If the diplomats, who make the
wars, knew they would have to be
among the first to endure the mud
and blood and horror of the trenches,
would there be ao many wars?
Probably not.
4-4
ANOTHER glaring headline: "Al
cohol Death List Reaches 21."
The alcohol was denatured alcohol,
and was purchased and consumed by
a lot of poor devils of derelicts and
transients in Portland's "North End."
which la the name they have down
there for what New York used to
call the "Tenderloin."
Make's one shudder to think of It,
doesn't it?
December 11, 1934.
Forecasts.
Medford and vicinity: Cloudy with
occasional rain lata tonight or Wed
nesday. Slowly rising temperature to
night.. Oregon: Cloudy tonight and Wed
nesday. Occasional rain In north
west portion and late tonight or Wed
nesday In southwest portion. Slowly
rising temperature In east portion
and tonight In extreme southwest
portion.
Local Data.
Temperature a year ago today:
Highest. 55; lowest, 31.
Total monthly precipitation, trace.
Deficiency for the month, 1.20 Inches,
Total precipitation since Septem
ber 1, 1934, 6 23 Inches. Excess for
the season, .98 Inch.
Relative humidity at 5 p. m. yes
terday, 66; 5 a. m. today, 97.
Sunrise tomorrow, 7:30 a. m.
Sunset tomorrow, 4:40 p. m.
Observations Taken at 5 a. m.,
HO Meridian Time.
Is
ft
z9
u
IB
Si
W"
H OM shall we blame for this har
rowing tragedy?
Back in the old days, we blamed
PROHIBITION; which, we said, shut
off the supply of pure, legal liquor
and so compelled people to drink any
kind of poisonous or filthy stuff that
might be peddled by unscrupulous
persons Intent upon bootlegging
profits.
But poison liquor is gone, and still
the poison liquor racket endurs
APPARENTLY we'll have to blame
the Ignorance and stupidity of
those who bought the liquor and con
sumed it and the greed and rapacity
of those who sold it. ,
There seems to be no other way
out.
Boise 36 24
Boston 20 6
Chicago 62 12
Denver 56 34
Eureka 64 4B
Helena 18 "
Los Angeles - 78 66
MEDFORD 49 30
New York 28 14
Omaha 16 8
Phoenix 76 54
Portland 42 38
Reno 62 22
Roseburg , 48 40
Salt Lake 38 24
San Francisco 64 52
Seattle 48 42
Spokane 30 26
Walla Walls - 32 30
Washington. DO. 24 20
.08
Cloudy
Clear
Clear
Clear
Clear
Clear
Cloudy
Clear
Clear
Clear
Clear
Cloudy
Clear
Cloudy
Clear
Clea'"
Rain
Cloudy
Cloudy
Cloudy
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson County
History rrom the files of The
Mall Tribune of 80 and 10 Year
Ago).
TEN YEARS AfO TODAY
December 11, 1024.
(It waa Thursday.)
Dr. Marlon Talbot of Boston. Mass.,
reports "the corset has gone the way
of Lord Fauntleroy suits for boys."
Rlgue river fish bill and prohlhi
tlon laws main Items before next
session of the legislature.
Valley la blanketed in heaviest fog
In years.
Two more coyotes bite the dust in
Sams Valley district.
Willow Springs district will hold
community Christmas tree.
Local pugilist Is Jailed at Roseburg
as robbery suspect.
Increased msll and business In
stores shows signs of Christmas business.
TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY
December 11,' 1914.
(It was Friday.)
Five thousand acres of land sought
for beet sugar cultivation to lnsura
establishment of beet sugar factory
here.
Police "beseech parents to keep
their children from roller skating in
the streets, as there have been sev
eral near-tragedies."
Hunters report ducks and gey.
scarce on the "desert this year."
Allies claim victory in battles on
both the east and west fronts.
Chilliest day of the year In -Vails
Judge Kelly appeared In his bearsk i
overcoat. A heavy fog rests over tr.e
city.
Extensive work has been eompleted
In the Roxy Ann coal mine, ard de
velopment will be rushed. '
4
beings when they know that an In
justice Is being perpetrated. Those
who think correctly know there is a
cause for everything. Therefore the
best way to correct an undesirable
condition is to remove the cause. Let
us suppose Medford were confronted
with an epidemic of typhoid fever.
It would' be no more ridiculous and
unscientific to pass an .dlnance
making the contraction of the disease
& felony than to expect to stem the
rising tide of discontented men and
women In this land of abundant sup
ply by passing vicious laws.
I hope you all recall T. V. Williams'
splendid communication In the Tri
bune of Nov. 15. The ironical "Glori
ous Privilege of Trial by Jury" pic
tured the spirit the undersigned saw
evidenced at the Pugh trial.
One way to retain the fragment of
confidence in our legal procedure
would be to wipe from our statute
books fool laws like Oregon Criminal
Syndicalism law which It Is Impos
sible to Justly enforce because an un
prejudiced Jury can not be found.
BERT HARR.
Jacksonville, Dec. 10.
B
uncom
Communications
BTJNCOM, Dec. 11. (Sp!.) A box
social will bo held at Sterling school
house Dec. 20. Everybody Is welcome,
Jack Mathews of Portland arrived
here Saturday and will have charge
of the Aurora mine. Mr. Mathews
i operated the Sterling mine several
; years ago and all are glad to welcome
.him back.
Little Joe Genet who has been a
: pstlent at the Sacred Heart hospital
j for some time is now at home.
Lee White of Coqullle, Ore., has
been visiting his brother, Elmer
I'rges Repeal Syndication Law
To the Editor:
Oregon has among Its statutes
law known as the Criminal Syndical- j White, for several weeks,
Society's sartorial arbiter elrganto- jni Th" stflta nfts made several cilnt Roundtreo of Applegate spent
rlum he's word beagling again! convictions, Jackson county one in the week end with Mr. and Mrs. P. A.
la William Ooadby Locw, son-in-law the case of Kyle Pugh, and the end j Hulse and family.
of George F. Baker. His turnouts are j is not yet. j Orville and Ivan Goodman of Jack-
last gasps of tailoring in New York By the interpretations of the court aonvtlle, and Miss Lucille Stearns of
and London. When aa wed-off white in the Instructions to the Jury deltv- I Griffin creek were Sunday callers at
vests for full dress recently curli- ered Saturday evening In this partlc- j the Rolund home,
cued into a creation of bluntly ular case there Is but one conclusion j Miss Elmlna Hulse who has spent
rounded points, he was first past , to be reached, vie: the existing form j the past two months with relatives tn
the post. As he was when the single ot government ana ntnety-nve per Jacksonville returned home FridnY
Diacx peany stua oecame a nesign t cent oi an tne peopie are gumy W1 I for a few days.
Sams Vdiey
of the evening.
Among the astonishing spruce-
uppera was that familiar figure of
Paris, Prince Andrew of Greece. I
beheld him one morning on a turn
ing of the Vendome: black coat
with Shepherd plaid trousers, wing
collar, polka dot bow and low bowler.
I Uckety-spltt to the outfitters and
some time later sauntered forth In
similar getup. But ' no dice. A hall
block and an oily burzarrt sidled up
with: "Guide, mister?"
SAMS VALLEY. Dec. 11. (SpJ.)
The entertainment given by the
Ladies' club Friday night waa well
attended and brought in a substan
tial sum for stage equipment to be
used in the auditorium. The pro
gram consisted of. two one-act plays,
songs by a ladles' sextet, two read
ings by Mrs. E. W. Empey and two
songs by the club chorus.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Dodge and
children of Medford visited relatives
here Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gresham of Mc
Mlnmille spent the early part of last
week as guests of their nephew, John
Hall and wife.
Sams Valley high school basketball
team defeated the Phoenix team
there last Tuesday, but lost to the
Rogue River boys on the local floor
Saturday.
Mrs. Jim Crawford, retiring lec
turer of the Sams Valley Grange
will give her last program December
15. for which she has planned a
Christmas tree, among other inter
esting features. Each member Is re
quested to bring a small gift for
the affair.
Friends of Earl Bigham were sur
prised to learn of his marriage Wed
nesday to Miss Gladys Stevens of
Grants Pass. Earl has spent the
greater part of his life in this com
munity, where his many friends ex
tend hearty congratulations to the
happy couple.
Luther Wilson of Antioch visited
Sunday with the O. T. Wilson family.
The second buymanshlp lesson put
on through the county extension ser
vice will be given Thursday at the
school house by Mrs. Dick Straus, t
who has been instructed on testing
hosiery by the demonstration agent.
Commemorating the birthdays in
October, November and December of
members, the Ladles' club was. enter
tained on Thursday afternoon by
Mesdames Will and Dick Straus and
Mrs. Mike Roger. The club ladles
made flowers until refreshments were
served, at which time a program was
given consisting of birthday greet
ings extended the honored guests.
PEUSIST, Dec. 11. (Bpl.) Mr. and
Mrs. D. E. Hutchison were host and
hostess to a large number of friends
and relatives Thanksgiving, A conven
tional dinner of turkey was served
to 18 guests.
Friends In this community extend
their congratulations to the bride
and Broom. Mr. and Mrs. Adolnh
neera will be published before ine Larson.
new year. Lowell Ash ta staying with hit par.
lenta at Trail, this week, working for hum . . . Rubbing the dampened tip
laile iitinl (irance. hts father. of a sulphur match on the nose
r-HK.r mini, urnim rnjoteo one oi u . - Vlsltlnr relatives I and nlavlna flreflY hv runninu alont
And: Yanking the hair ribbon o!
The tllrl while walking home from
school . . . Slates with red felt bor
ders . . , The aroma of a slate
sponge . . , Roasting potatoes utterly
black In bonfires . . , The Henty
books . . . Harry Clay Blaney In
"Across the Pacific" . , . Two rajie
for hats off In the gallery . . , The
picnic sp.-t known as "The Grove"
. , . The fellows who chipped tn for
a hack for the hi dance . . . Rib
bon shoe laces . . . Stock . , . Four
dent hats . , . Fringed topped, phaetons.
Also: flti.-kliig a match through the
blue of a :a flame where It wouldn't
in.-. imr.rsuiiR meeting ot it m Centralis. Wash.
I vat nnvrmiirr zu wnen oincera nr.fl
lie carried a natty hat of Ihe latest ""mufl" l1 " "k uranne m Wfre ln Medford shopping De-
style and weave with a marine blue ' cmf ln DOdv ,lf1 Charge of0fmN.r 8
Flossie Psrkrr and Kdn Hutchl
hatband. He was clean shaven and
recently trimmed, while his frnturen
reflected deep thought. His feet were
clad In wril-polished Flomhelms
which Juf.1 meirty showed black Hole,
proofs. A solitary cnt nation with
fern spray background lent the fin
ishing touch to the correc'.nen ot
the groom's ensemble. (Exchange I
Radios oid. or nidio new. thf -!
their bc-it when we u1 i:u.;u'
"Prultt s cn do It." I'hune U.
me meeting lor tne evening me Uttle Hawl Hutchison snt Thurs
otfieer iky n pled the vrlout chairs nttht wltn hfr wtuMn oienn
and conducted the meeting, and tne .nnmer.
lecturer presented r rrmsrkablv fli
and envyab'.e program, well d I veri
fied and each mem tier a gem. includ
ing son, instrumental music, moiu.-I-Xue,
kllft. recitations, etc.
take Creek (traiwr not only h.
Si-me very fine t.0rnt but a spleivf.i
pint of cooperation We thank t'.ie.n
ine.iriuy iUl hope it tr, not be lou j im-tuesa trip ' to Medford September
before tne win come agnm. 30. -
The Mountain Lumber Co. Is saw
Itv this week.
Flotisie Parker expect to leave
Sunday for her home In Idaho. She
plurs to spend the hoUda with
relatives there and stay Indefinitely,
as her mother Is in very por health
Mr. and Mrs .Vs (lather made a
the street at night , . . Dinner palls
with a Hat container on top for the
coffee . . . Answering the "Get Big
Mall" ad . , . Tie first cement
hitching post . . . Scum on the dill
pickle barrel . . . The sudden shift
ing ot hard coal In the coal shed
ith the nuitui up and R-g-gh-ghosta
everywhere.
the Bible as well as much other
printed matter which is In general
circulation In the state.
The Jurors In the Pugh case were
disposed to give but a few short min
utes to Its consideration. How were
! they able to realize that they were
(sending to prison a pitiful specimen
of humanity for a crime of which
they themselves are guilty? I wonder
If that greAt grand Jury, the public at
large, could be prevailed upon to
pause ln their mad scramble for ma
terial things to give It serious consid
eration. We suggest that those who are
chafing under the burden of taxation
get busy and see that our next legis
lature repeals this unconstitutional
criminal syndicalism law which will
continue to cause no end of trouble
and expense while It is In force.
Perhaps some may contend that we
need such laws to keep down re vol u-
Imwnlrd in prlvt t- oth.r h. ""7 P'. r .inram oi j
violating tnu maun, using ine mint Mrs. Hllma Randall vllted with I
interpretation uie Bible la aynaicaiu- Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Coleman In Med
tlc and aa one evidence of proof I i ford Sunday.
refer yotl to Joel 3;. 10. Under Ore- Mr. p. A HulM MlM Mvrs Hulse
gon Syndicalism law an honeat Jury and Percy Beard made a business trip
would be compelled to convict any I to Medford Saturday.
one cnargea wnn tne aistrioution oi
I 1 I
Nmys
(Contlnueo f. jm page one)
The proof is ln the wear.
Buy your HOSE at
Ethelwyn B Hoffmann's.
Cse Mall Tribune want ad.
UJ
popping day
Chritma
How To Keep Colds
UNDERCONTROL
"l find It very hard to shcot at
moving target "
; latton or torture can forestall human
Cole Porter '.a now comping his
tunes and w rtting his g I oast Uric
In a niche of one of the Waldorf's
highest pestks. He begin after mid
night In a lengthy cathedral -like
room surrounded by pianos and
a ymo shirt with wute belt. Hia get-
A priceless new paper clipping Is
the one quoting Comptroller O'Con
nor as saying tn effect, after his de
feat for the governorship of Nortn
Dakota many year ago; 'l can get
more votes from women than frvm
men. which proves t:at w.men nav
more sene than men" Which prove
alo that Mr. O'Connor shouM bo tn
the diplomatic corps.
In Bottles...
or on fop ...
ol oil BETTER
deolars.
TRY IT!
CHRIS l'MA GIFT FRCIT - Ft'L!
PACK. Pears and tied aretut
lv selected from the vs.;-? 3 'til Ai
vour rovers or call a:ter Jon'!
4H-U
I V
BLITZ
WXINHAAD
Mm
mm
THREATEN
Irritation." . .ri.ly
t:.&w'
W'" ... ...,.r.
intnc""-'
STRIKES
yl .aRc throat
At bedtime. . :
nd ew " ... ...ndby "
Rub. wc... n;.ht long.
e.tir, cows. " , ,i8B.
by.timu.-on." ie,
v.noRub onw
To Build Ba.ltl.rw:. to Coldu Follow the ru Df health that
re twrt ot the clinically tested Viclcs PUn for Better Control
ofColda. (The Pltn it fully uplainrd in each Vkks packar.)