MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD,' OREGON'. MONDAY. JANUARY 7, 1935
PAGE FOUR
Medpord Mail Tribune
"Cterym M Southirn O'm
U Hill rrlfcunt'
Dally Kiwpt Saturday
Pubtlfiwa by
MKIMIKI PKINTINU CO
ILSMV N. fir St. Pboa t
ItUBKM W. tt'JBL, editor
Ad Indcpmleat Newipp
Suttred u iwjod elu oatUi at Madron!
Offfofl, undat Act of Much I, 18TB.
3lbMKIPTI0N HATES
ft Mjii 'in Adianea
Dally, not ftif tt.W
Dal);, iU nuoUu
njl. oh month -00
E Cxrrn in Atlranra Hertford, kubltri,
JeUomllJa, Cantral I'dnt, IttaenU, Talant. Uold
IJ1 and an Wtnuaya.
Dtib. on rtti .00
Dally b onlM "
Ualli. oat month .0
Ail teraa. cah Id adianea.
Official papa of tha City of Medforo.
Official papti of iwUao Couoty
Mf MHKH Of TI1K ABS'lCIATTU PHEW
umt.im ih.il ihu.4 Win Marina
1t ArwelatM lrcaa la aielusltfly antltlaa w
tfaa uaa for iMt'Mcatlon of all o dlipatebai
artdlttd to II vmrrwua erwuiw id uw m"
ted aJao to IB toeai newt punnuwo ocrio.
AU l(DU for puniicaiioD or
terete ira tK timed.
vitiiKKH or uniti-u PKtas
HTMHFII OK AUDI1 HUHKAU
Of CIUCUUTION8
Adforttilnt ttcpraatntattfta
M. C. MW.ESSK.N A COMPANY
Wheel in Nf fort. Ctrlraio. Deuolt tar
rranclten Lm Antl Krattlr Portland.
MEMBER
ie Smudge Pol
By Art trni Peirj.
Newspaper photographs of femin
ine bcautlea. acanUly attired, ptr
adlng the aun-klaned California and
Tlorlda beachhea, are now competing
with pictures of men, who went
swimming In ice-caked Midwest
rlvera and lake on New Year's Day.
In many Instances, the male con
tempt for pneumonia Is further
tressed, by hugging a cake of tee,
while standing up to their middles.
It Is the concensus of opinion if
the men don't know any better. t
serves them right.
There are 13,000,000 horses and
500,000 mulea In the land, according
to the Department of Agriculture
reports, "awaiting return to Sum
work, tout they are out-aged." An
ffort will he made to rehabilitate
them. This may mean that by the
spring of 1030. the vendors of fliv
ver InviRorators, will then be on th
Tacant lots selling spavin cures.
People should be allowed to make
money during a war, but they
shouldn't be allowed to keep It.
(Statement by Bernard M. Baruch).
Thle would be fine, If poople able
to make money, In sizeable lots,
did not have njrm confidence in
their ability to retain It. and ready
to have another war to do so.
Helen Kane of vaudeville, screen,
and boop-a-doop fame, seeks a di
vorce on the grounds of "Incom
doopaboopablllty." As long as the
lady had made up her mind to
commit a wise-crack, she mlRht have
railed It nlncomdocrboopablllty.
There hae been some cussing of
the taies. to camoflauge the pur
chase ot a new auto.
"I.OHD OF CltKATION" ITKM
,nd Bluff. Calif., News)
A modern miracle took place
this morning. Two hours before
our tegular rising time the
sweet young thing next door
was up and went out to gt
her car. It wouldn't start and
my husband leaped out of bed.
Jumped into his clothes and
hastened out and started the
ear for her. I could hardly be
lieve he was the same man who
lies abed so long every morn
ing and csn't be persuaded to
get up. O. O.)
The overage payment for Old A
Penalona is SO 87 per month. A na
tion able to deluge a radio soprano
with 87160 per week, ought to do
better than that.
A Colorado convict paroled 18
times, was released last Tuesday,
, and was back In his old cell In
seven hours, as the remit of a poor
Job of burgling. Hr has been so
badly mistreated hy orpnnlwl soc
iety, that he lacked the moral cour
age to wait for another parole.
All the collegians who think they
are Communists hsre returned to
Kugeneogrsd.
A miner towned Saturday, and
pulled two gold mines out of his
hip-pocket at the mention of a
mythical railroad to the coast.
The forthcoming leglalstiire pro
pose changes in the proline tax.
the Knox liquor control act. and
the state police. There seems to be
nothing wrong with any of the trio,
except tht they are highly efficient
and prod tiring revenue.
Meilfiinl VUllnra Mr. and Mrs 0.
N. Yokum of Ewfetie sre spending a
few dsva In Med ford, having avrlvt-rl
this morning on the Oeonian T'.iey
arr giienta at the home of Mrs Yo
kum' brother and tute r-ln-law. Mr
anrl Mrs I, J Hnl'mxtk.
Tim in Ore. nnrt'il -Tie Crater L:,e
:nn-l pirk office mcl the off!Y
H:Ttie River n.tlonsl forest h
'i'l-ct ionn'i!rt fort l'.r. : '
' ? . c ,(': I Citv B.
" n 1 -oni;, v id or
i
i.j.-e, ht io
An Epoch Making Pact
AN example of preventing war, not by preaching the beautbs
of universal peace, but by using common sense, can be
found in the recent agreement between Italy and France. In
fact this Laval-Mussolini pact, signed in Rome, promises to be
the most important diplomatic achievement in Europe, since
Locarno.
Instead of talking about the virtues of peace and the horrors
of war the Italian dictator and the foreign minister of France,
talked sense, and got to work on the important business of
eliminating the causes of war.
The agreement provides for three things. First, maintaining
the integrity and independence of Austria; second putting an
end to international intrigue and political agitation in the Little
Entente (outlawing the practice of one little nation meddling
with the internal affairs of another); and third, allowing Italy
a free hand for expansion and colonisation in northern Africa.
"piIE last item is by far the most important. For as long as
France and Italy were at lovgerheads in the Mediterranean
all talk about peace in Central Europe was futile.
Italy is overcrowded, and short of raw materials, particularly
iron and coal. In northern Africa she could find room, markets,
and increased trade. ' As long as France disputed her expansion
in this direction, as a threat to her own African possessions.
Italy was bound to oppose France diplomatically on the conti
nent.
And as long as Italy opposed
lini was forced to play the game with German; and what is
eft of Austria-Hungary.
Therefore the war-like spirit
stantly stimulated, for with Italy as an ally, Hitler might risk
a war of revenge; without the hope of Italian assistance, any
such military adventure would
....
BY the terms of this new agreement of course, Germany again
in ifinlnttwl. Itjilv trots wlmt Khr wnnts in northern Africa-
Franco gets what she wants in
However if the plebiscite in
and the recent Franco-German
mines, is amicably fulfilled we
time since the Treaty of Versailles, the countries of Europe,
can't get down to business, forget their ancient grudges, bury
their racial hatreds- and enjoy a warless interlude, for at least
another decade.
This may be a somewhat optimistic prediction. But at least
this Franco-Italian pact, gives the best promise of a lasting
peace in Europe, since Slresscmann and Briand shook hands and
smoked the pipe of peace in Locarno.
Why Not Japan?
IT seems to us, that in this Franco-Italian pact, there is a very
important lesson for the United States, as far as the Japanese
problem is concerned.
This country is being fairly flooded ut the present time with
books pointing out the menace of Japan to peace in the Far East.
War there sccins to be regarded as inevitable. And most stu
dents of the problem appear agreed, that in case of war the
United States would inevitably be drawn in.
....
WHAT does Japan want! Well Japan wants what Italy has
wanted, more room, more raw materials, more markets
of her own. Japan is more overcrowded than Italy far more
in a territory about the size of Texas she has to find room for
between 65 and 70 million people. She has some raw materials
but she needs more. Most of her needs can be found in those
districts of China, where she now maintains a semi-military
control.
Why not ALLOW Japan to expand '.n this direction just as
France has allowed Italy to expand in northern Africa!
....
THHEKE is ample precedent for this. The I'nitcd States once
"expanded" at the expense of Mexico. Alaska once be
longed to Russia. This country purchased this vich territory
outright from the Czar.
Why couldn't there be some international agreement, whore
by Japan could purchase territory in China, and have it as her
own? The cost would be but an infinitesimal part of what a
war of conquest would cost her. And this is totally disregarding
what such a war might cost the rest of the world.
....
DREACHING the beauties of pencil to Japan will do no good.
Depicting the wickedness of war will profit nothing. If
Japan can't get the room she needs to survive as a strong and
growing nation, by PEACEFUL means; she will get it by WAR.
And who will point at her the finger of scorn and sny that any
other world pewer, faced by a similar national situation, would
bow meekly to its fate, and be demoted unresistingly to a third
rate power!
In other words, why can't reason and common sense prevail!
Japan's demands for more territory, we regard- m perfectly
legitimate ones. It is foolish ami cheap chauvinism to maintain
that because Japan wishes to expand she also wishes to compicr
the United States and dominate the western world.
Japan wants her place in the East, and her possessions not
thousands of miles away, but near home.
Isn't it possible to allow her. without another great war, 10
II AVE them!
AT least such a solution of the problem, appears to us, as
worth v the most serious consideration
why whiit Franco nml Iliily Iwm
lc done on a Iiircer our!
L
t" nrrn OA or
U L L I UflUL
W I, Stewart, storrkrepn ot th
Esut i-rerk district, charged with t:-.
I i If o !ntoxsi'l!ni liij'.ior to A min
J has been ordered bound over to swm
i-j..ti.n itf t:ir tjtr.ind Jur. u JuM
Pe.ire ft ;!l:.im It
:;n::,- it
br.n m-ul in .tn.r .u.
France on the continent, Musso
in Central Europe was con
be suicidal.
Europe.
the Saar is carried out peacefully
agreement regarding the Saar
see no reason why for the first
V sv no reason
tlonc
on a Mtinll senU CAN'T
await reorlpt of a birth certificate
of the complaining witness.
Stewart nlUxedlv sold beer to a
CVC worker, sinod to a nciu:iy
crtinp. The outh represented him
"" ''"' ' ."
mn ! t vor out
rhen nuk-
testlfied
.'lit drftMifv showed by witnesses
j Unit the same blind of brer as alleg- !
filly sold bv strwwrt was for sale ;n I
! t!ie CCV ''sn'oninent. which Is unoer j
the rrtlr-al rcjjnHtior. permitting ic
vIr of 3 1 per cent bvr Vnder Ore- J
won uw t:r u rortiuuim to miners.5
nhuh a ' no h.LU that a minor ml.- j
!;tt ;n : v - ( n ;c
.IU
mil) is c.icliilcd in Fco.'U:.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M. D.
Signed letters pertuliilnf to personal limit h and hygiene not to dls
case dlugnokls or treatment will be
Btlf-iridrened envelope Is enclosed.
Ink. Owing to the laige number of
ivered. No reply can be made to
Address Dr. William Hrady, 265 El
COOKS, Ql ACKH AND
MTKITION A
Spinal curvature, high hip. low
shoulder, round back, weak ankles,
flat feet, night blindness, dry eyes.
obesity, decayed
teeth, knock
knee, p h y a 1 cal
stale nesa, prema
ture graying of
the hair, myo
carditis, anemia,
chionlc arthritis,
multiple neuritis,
f u n c t lonal Im
pairments of the
reproductive or
gans, rigid brittle
nails, finical ap
petite, voracious
appetite these are frequently mani
festations of nutritional deficiency.
I could extend the list to a fright
ful length were It fair to Include
mention of the many vague disturb
ances of the health which we know
are often due wholly; to hypovita
mlnoua diet that Is, lood which sup
plies Insufficient vitamins for the
requirements of eutrophy, perfect
nutrition, top condition, buoyant
health. I prefer not to suggest such
symptoms.
The entities I have mentioned will
Illustrate the importance of nutri
tion. And right here let me remind
you. Mr. and Mrs. Wiseacre, that nei
ther the best cooks nor the bright
est young saleswomen nor the most
expert dietitians nor the most fa
mous "food specialists" are compe
tent to advise what any invalid or
near-Invalid should or should not
eat. Indeed, many cases of the va
rious conditions enumerated hnve
been brought about or aggravated by
the popular practice of following the
advice of unqualified persons In the
matter of diet, particularly in
children.
The wiseacre mother of a 10-year-
old child who had pronated fpet
(weak ankles, the potential or first
staee of flat feet) took the child
first to a "foot specialist" clerk and
permitted this charlatan to fit some
kind of trick shoe. The trouble grew
worse. Then the moronic parent had
the child's spine adjusted by a fad
healer whose promises were rosy, but
whose performance proved disap
pointing. Next she afflicted the un
fortunate youngster with arch props
on a line of reasoning similar to
that which formerly caused mis
guided mothers to encase y o u r. g
daughters In freak corsets which
the wise saleswoman Bald were quite
necessary to "mould" the figure. At
last, only by accident, the child came
under the notice of a physician. Just i
V YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre.
NEW YORK, Jan. 7. In the man
ner of Arnold Bennett's Journal:
Dean Cornwell told me today he gain
ed 25 pounds af-
i1 ter quitting cig
arettes. And I
car young Jack
Howard has lei t
Indianapolis tor
a Wash 1 n g t o n
post. Palaver over
brcakln-st coffee
as to what writer
turned out most
stuff. I
Arthur B r 1 s- I
hane and Lowell I
1 Thomas were
$ WlPCtlPIIA. But
the late Yxx Wallact was llkrly
most prolific of all. He knew the Lon
don underworld ber'-T than any per- !
son of his time. Jack Lalt, who also ,
knows life's seamy side, la hlph up
In the list of those producing prod
igious copy.
After several days of slogging, 1
turned out a magazine piece in one
hour, 40 minutes. Argued with my
self It was goodlsh arid won. At the
bureau de tabac, whither I acquire
current rending, the proprietor told
me he looked at nothing In the
papers save Ripley. Damp, clasping,
cold.
A tady down Charleston. 8. C. way
writes the Mason-Dixon line separ-
atea those who say "you all" from
those who say "hadn't ought." Ina
Claire, so coolly glacial looking,
seems constantly headlined in a tor
rid love affair. Dielser invites me for
an evening soon to "sit, sip and talk
about things." ,
M. and I were enurcwed bv three
smartly dressed whtU-halred ladles at
a Schrafft's. smoking goldltlpoed cig
arettes chain fashion. Not one In
haled but blew precis smoke rings
and discussed Mne West and Harry
Richman. All left without tipping.
The new do came to battle with thr
established one today, fur ftcw and
both are in Mvlu-Mon linking sores. A
draw, I should saw Oenc Crawley
tried to lure me from my devoirs with
extrvrtpn7B for a new Mtckrv
Moue. but by sheer clench of vill re
mained at my typew rlter. s p wot
saddened by the tragedy of Ma-y
Harrlman Rumwv. wIhxm a9. were so
delightful in Paris.
A publisher's scent was here with
a whip stitch electric, with lltrra-v
bur-Mu Hlh licht. Rr ivurh
has stirred up a hornet.- nest by s'v
natured proddtnc of exnemive mrd;-
cos. They are most sensitive of Ml
professions to criticism. All publish
er are nn glint: for another book fro;n
Elsie Robinson. The short, slmrt Mnrv
la in bis demand In the fcuitloton
and mot difficult of a!l net Ion t
write. A X remember, the most ab
sorbing t ever ren.l were by Ryio
i'ooop- and cvtavus Roy C.hen ft
I lquor affects U-.o-r no u.l to i'
Hti itKi1!) IU k Rcrl.n iv;i. tell. ni
a tlr voted l".o.bsnvf who it nui.-'i u
mi downed t-o
catching tiii utia;U.ui Lain. All a;
antuered by lr. Hrady If a stamped
Letters should be brief and written In
letters received only a few can be an
queries not conforming to Instructions.
Cumlno. Beverly Hills, Cat.
.MKKCIIAM S AltE NOT
I THOHi mS.
a plodding old family practitioner,
but one who was well abreast ot the
progress of his profession. He put
stop to the hocus-pocus and saw
that the child received a suitable
diet, including an optimal ration of
vitamins, and In a few weeks the
foot trouble was cured.
Someilmea I think it Is unfortu
nate that victims of this nutritional
defect pronated or potential Hat
feet do not suffer more "rheumatic'
or "neuralgic" pains and lame back
or feel run down, anemic or ner
vously exhausted, for even the dumb
ones with these symptoms are likely
to take It Into their heads to obtain
medical advice.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
HI crouch
Husband had hiccoughs Incessant
ly for five days. The doctor was un
able to help him. I put two tea
spoonfuls of flaxseeds (sometimes
called linseed) in a Jar and filled
It with hot water. When It cooled
enough he drank It, and did not
have a nother h lecough . ( Mrs. J
J. H.)
Answer Anyway It Is harmless
enough. Inhalations of carbon dloxld
are the best emergency remedy for
hiccoughs I know. Let the sufferer
hold a paper bag snugly over nose
and mouth and breathe into It and
rebreathe the air from it for a min
ute or two.
Fish and Milk
Impression that fish and milk or
even canned salmon and milk at
same' meal poison. How, the-., can
cooks prepared creamed fish or how
can they fry fish In cream? (Mrs.
J. J. A.)
Answer There is no ground for
the quaint notion that fish and
milk at the same meal will prove
poisonous or In any way injurious.
If one likes such a combination It
is perfectly wholesome.
The Charcoal Bimbo
What is licking In the diet of
a l!i-year old boy that makes him
try to eat such things as charcoal
and soft stone? (Mrs. W. O. L.)
Answer Eating "dirt" or other
things than food Is not an Indica
tion of any deficiency In the diet.
Many babies have this habit, called
pica," and they get over It in a
year or two, and no harm done, as
long as they don't eat polluted
things.
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
commnnlratc with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Dr.
Utlllnm Hr fitly, M. I).. 265 61
Cnmlno. Beverly Hills. Cal.
once he began to sob, "I Just remem
ber," he choked. "I've forgotten to
tako my wlfcday a birth present."
But my favorite tipsy tale Is the old
one Wilton Lackeye so often repeated.
The weaving husband tlp-toelng In at
3 a. in. In the hall he upset the
gold-fish bowl with a crash. His wife
at head of stairs: "What was that"
He mumbled: "I'll teach those dern
gold-fish to snap at me!"
Earl Carroll was a cicerone for a
back stage siesta at a Bowery bur
lesque Ladles of ensemble glggily
self-conscious but not brazen. The
strip girl from Denver, a waitress.
With an O. Henry sort ot twist to her
story. Supports two children and a
husband In a high-country sanitar
ium. We sent out for hamburgers all
around. The only good hamburgers
are those "sent out for." Will Hays
set off with his son Bill the other
day to hunt cougar with that fellow
that lassoes them In the movies.
High up In the Rockies somewhere, I
believe.
I think It was Meredith Nicholson
who counseled me to read Marcel
Proust as one who could garland the
Inconsequential and make It exciting.
Proust was a neurasthenic who
wound tip in a sound -deadened, air
fouled room. All neurotics have
astonishing flair for mlnutae. Vide:
Wells, Bennett, Walpole. I am draw
ing away from Wells. His Marxist
strain hnj become too brilliantly
ruby, the same carmine streak that
runs through a group of high-brow
magazines, particularly the American
Mercury since Mencken left.
A hideous etching of life under a
span of Brooklyn Bridge the other
midnight. Around a rubbish fire a
pot au feu brewing. Silhouetted In
the half glow a legless beggar, an
enormously headed hunchback and
shriveled crone whose claw-like hands
held a cigar stump. Adele R. became
swimmy and falnty. Hardbolled K. L.
wept. We hurried an ay. Why should
such things be? ,
Wins Peace Prize
The Nobel peice prlie for 1934
rtrit awarded to Arthur Henderson.
British president of thii world dl
irm.in-.fnt conference for hi "un
'Ting work t.i ceite uni-t.inrtinq
nd good wi'l between nations."
(Associated Press PhotAt
" ' ...
if V ;
Mx. hi
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
PRESIDENT Roosevelt tells con
gress that If It passes the sold
iers' bonus bill it must also levy
new taxes to PAT IT.
f -
WHETHER you are for the bonus
or against It, you must agree
that this is true. If the government
la to contract big bills. It must
levy taxes with which to pay them.
Otherwise It must start the print
ing presses, and every nation so
far that has started In to pay Its
bills with printing press money has
gone broke.
LEVTINO taxes with which to pay
government's bills, especially
when the bills are vast in size. Is
PAINFUL. Prom time to time, gov
ernments seek to ease this pain by
paying their bills with printing press
money.
This process la called inflation.
TAKING Inflation to ease the pain
of taxation la exactly like tak
ing morphine to ease bodily pain.
Increasingly bigger doses are required
to get the desired result, until in
time the taker la destroyed.
YOU read in the papers these days
of the Saar plebiscite. These are
big words and perhaps you may be
hazy as to their meaning.
"Plebiscite" Is a Journalist's word
for what a plain, working news
paper man would call an election.
The Saar plebiscite means that on
January 13 the Saar basin, which
was taken away from Germany by
the Versailles treaty, will hold an
election to decide whether It will
stay with France or go back to
Germany.
The Saar basin Is rich in coal and
Iron, so both sides want It badly.
T EING a plain, more or less
U straight-thinking American, liv
ing In a country where common
sense still has a certain value, you
may be Inclined to ask:
"What difference does It make
WHO owns the Saar If France
wants the Saar's Iron and coal, why
can't she BUY them, Just as we buy
what we want from Canada? Why
can't Germany do likewise?
You miss the whole point. It
isn't Just the coal and Iron of the
Saar that France and Germany want.
It is CONTROL of these products
In time of war that they are after.
It Is self-sufficiency in time ot
war that France and Germany arc
thinking of, and war and common
sense have little in common.
(Contlnueo f.om page one)
You will not find it among the
published figures of the natural
resources board, but the board has
a definite breakdown on Its ten
year program expenditures as fol
lows: Federal public works 3.5 bil
lions: state public works 9.7 bil
lions: city public works 7.6 billions:
county public works 300 millions
and low-cost housing 500 millions.
It makes 31.5 billion dollars in all.
Of course, the federal government
would have to lend most if not all
of the money because the states,
counties and cities are In extremely
bad financial condition generally.
Some people grumbled because the
president did not mention the 18
or 19 millions on relief, but grouped
them as five million heads of fam
ilies. The five million figure Is cor
rect, and from the New Deal stand
point. It srnmds better The accept
ed method Is to figure one head
of a family for every four persons
on relief.
The only b'g point which failed
to draw applau.e as Mr. Roosevelt
read his message the other day was
the line that care of the one and
one-half million permanently unem
ployed la a local responsibility.
Tliere Is no question about the
.-plritua: recovery around Washing
'.on. Nlcht clubs are springing up
as thickly ns In New York, although
this never was a night -life town
before. Waiters raise their noees at
anything less than a quarter tip
and personal services are getting
i slipshod again. All of which are
unmistakable signs of returning pros
perity. HOLLAND HOTEL CAFE
BE
The Holland -afe. In the Hotel Hal
land bui'dirve here Is closed for re
pilrs. but will open acaln In a w-wk
or ten days, as a modem coffe- shop,
with new dishes, silverware and dec
orations, pivtng Medford one more
iip-to-date cafe.
The new shop w.:; be tinder t:-.'
'rr-na: mn.ment of Mrs T.Y.. C
'A.erlti!id. m.i:ia.;er anrl aerator . f '
-. ie II Me: H.-r.snd J
- -
Use Tr.ur.e want ads i
Leads Farm Women
jKf' v v
1.1. -M ,1
i rM
i J.Ut
1
Mr. Abbie C. Sargent of Bed
ford, N. H., was elected president
of the first national organization of
rural women, formed at the Farm
Bureau convention in Nashville,
Tenn. The organisation will be
known aa the Associsted Women of
the American Farm Bureau federa.
tion. (Associated Press Photo)
World's Best Liar .
Tells About Mule
Verne Osborn, 25, of Centralia,
Wash., was awarded the weld's ly
ing championship of the Burltngton,
Wis., Liars' club with his story of
how his saddle mule was so welt
trained when they tumbled from a
cliff, Osborn had only to yell "whoa"
and the animal -stco'ied in the air.
'Associated Press Photn-
Calling The Roll
In Lindbergh Case
John Perrone (above), New York
taxi driver, Identified Bruno Haupt
mann as the man who sent dim with
a message to J. F. C. (Jafsie) Con
don shortly before fie ransom
money was paid, and is expected
to be a witness in tne Lindbergh
kidnaping trial. (Associated Press
Photo.
I
j CALL MUSIC TEACHERS
j TO TALK LEGISLATION
j Member of the Oregon Mi.ic
Teachers" aojiatloii have been not:
! fled that a special meeting tias st-n
I called by the association at the Con-
tral Public Ubr.irv In Portland. Jan-i.
: ary 10. for th purpov of co:-sltie;ijV!
proposed :cv-i.":,n:oii for t'.-.c betto:
, ment ot muMc tcacocrs in C:veon.
The proof Is in the wear.
Buy your HO.S2 at
Ethehvyn ?. Hoffmann's.
When H comes to nci:os. rc:r.emr
Pr.ntt s can do It " rho:ie 22
EN OF ALL AGES
l .-. vf votn-
on uhn smirr i
from m null I -,-pains.
In-.i'l.u'i,-or
s-'!c niiic. ninl
vo!n,-n of mi-Mlc
ace wlin niii'Vr
from lic.-it !l.i;!-c
llcprl the n-i c
effect of Dr.
l'"T.'i I-'.n..ril
i ' r . c r i p t i o ii
, In I v. ii.it Mr.
' - -I A...
1 7:J-K
'p0;y.
I
4
WOM
i
T n r
i i. - i. ( ,.. '.
Flight, o Time
(Med lord and Jackson County
History trom the (Ilea of the
Mall Tribune of 50 and 10 Vrara
A50).
TEX YEARS A(iO TODAY
January 7, l&'tv
(It was Wednesday.)
No revision of etate gas and auto
license tax llltely by next session of
the legislature.
Traffic officers start roundup of
autolsts who have no 1925 license
t.-s.
Cross-word puzzle craze continues
oer country. South Dakota resident
quits paper he tookor 24 years, be
cause they are too hard.
Fire department Is called to home
of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Perry, 911 Reddy
avenue, to extinguish a small fire
caused by a defective fireplace. The
fire laddies were presented with a box
of fine clears for their quick work,
by Mr. Perry.
Medford postal receipts show nine
per cent gain over last year.
President Coolldge will oppose plan
to ftnsnce wheat growers with fed
eral funds. If the wheat growers are
able to do It themselvea.
National citizens' committee calls
upon "all officials to talk like they
drink."
TWENTY YEA KS AOO TODAY
January 7. 11)15.
(It was Thursday.)
Medford W. C. T. U. cornea out In
favor of new city charter.
Negotiations between landowners'
committee and Rogue River Canal
company for establishment of irriga
tion in valley starts.
V. S. U'Ren. "father of the Oregon
primary system." to oppose any effort
to change it. Growing sentiment that
law-permits too much leeway as to
qualifications of candidates.
French report capture of another
town In Alsace. Allied fleet hammers
at the Dardanelles, and Turks plan
moving of capital from Constanti
nople. A strong wind swept over the city
and valley, blowing down signs and
woodpiles, and "causing embarrass
ment to women pedestrians."
Wheat goes to $1.394 on Chicago
Board of Trade the highest in 30
years.
Transient Is given 30 days in coun
ty Jail, for theft of a garden hose
belonging to Judge W. E. Crews.
Elks lodge holds its first regular
meeting In their new home on North
Central avenue.
Guess What This Is!
Geneva Mitchell, film actress. Ii
i wearing a newly created atyli
which matches the surroundings of
her favorite 'jport, horse racing.
This jockey hat is black and white
with an elongated bill worn smartly
over one eye. The trim Is In black
I patent leather with a tuft of the
same material decorating the top
aau-.ioicg rress Knoto)
ASHLAND RAILROAD
VETERAN RETIRES
ASHLAND. Jnn. 7. (Spl.) Jame
E. Thomas, resident or this city for
the past 20 years, was retired on
Januory 1. 1935. from service for the
Southern Pacific railroad.
Mr. Thomas has been employed
with the Southern Pacific for the
past 44 years, first as a brakeman, but.
for the largest part of the time as a
passcn,rjer conductor, working out of
Dunsmuir during the entire time.
m ready a
Ex? T)
WHEN" YOU NEED E
READY CASH, you will -find
our prompt, confiden
tial service and our liberal,
o :onvenient terms mon
helpful. Loans un to J300
made on your own signa
j tures without endorsers.
I A stale licensed and state
reetilated service interest
chareed only on unpaid
balance.
Oregon-Washinrrton Mortgags
Company
1.1 smith Crntrnl. i.lrrn.. n. s.:,J
K. Ili.Miin., .Mur.
mm PANS
" -a