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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 24, 1935)
PAGE EIOTTT MEDFORD MAn. TRP3UNE. MEDFORD, OREGON. THURSDAY. JANUARY 24, 1935. Medpord Mail Tribune "Ewyttnt in Southirn OrtM fltii (hi Mail Thbunt'' Only tutpt Baturdar MtDHiRII I'RI.NTIMl CO. 15:.2? N fir 81. Phi T& KOHKHT tt. HI ML, Editor An Independent Nepipef Entered u mti elii nattr it Medford. Orrcun. undrr Art of Marrti 8. 1870. SI IWl IIJI'TIOS HATK8 ft filt I In AiMm-i rH), one trir fVflfl Hilly, iti iBnitln 3 T4 Pailj. n moniti Br (arrier m Aliane iororn, fliniina, jmsornille. Central Taint, I'hotnU, TlJt.it, Cold Hill and on llliljuiti. ruilv. or jfir 1.00 lull), li nu-nlhi 3.25 lUili'. om month 60 All terms, cih In irfuntt. offirial paper of the fily of Hfdford. Off trial papr of Jiekwin Countjr. MKMBKR F THE A8HO('IATEl PRESS Herthlnz Full Uawl Wirt Benlft The AnflatM l'rei U wlmhely entitled to tht .. for publlratlm of all newi di.palehtt eredlted to tt : oltierUt credited In thli paper and alti to the loral nei pi)Mlhtd herein. All fight fir ptiMlration of ipecUl dlipitcbet herein are also rtierted. HKMBER OF UNITED VRKH6 MKMtfKR (IF AI'DIT HI RE A U OK (IRCLLATI0N8 AdiertMrtf Represenfitlfei M. C. MO(.KN8ES k COMHANT Orrirti in N' York, Chlrun, Detroit, Sao Frarlec lw Angelei BealtU Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry A bill before ths legislature pro vider (or the creation of the office of lleutenalit-Rovernor. There have been times In the pat when citizens generally felt the governor was too much of a lieutenant. t J. CurtU Barnes, the wrltlngeat writer of them all, has written book, explaining his plan to provide a Job for every man, along with new national currency. People who have read the book report It ha much of merit, but doubt the Barnes Jobs for Everybody will make much headway against the Huey ling scheme to make everybody a mil lionaire and a king at one and the same time. Peoole who were amazed, when a 65-year-old mother was killed laat week while aiding her kidnaper-ban. dlt son, resist the law with machine guns, can koep on with their amaze ment. While attempting to arrest Alvln Karpls, current No. 1 dospersdo of the land In Philadelphia, federal aients during the bombardment wounded Mr. Karpls' girl friend. Press reports rcsd: "The Donnelly woman, an expectant mother, was hot In the leg." A phone pole that neglected to Jump out In front of pop usvra motor In time, by fast work managed to fall upon the same one day last week. There Is a widespread demand for an early aprlng, so people can get rid of . the flu, by calling It the spring fever. a Some of our farmers have com menced butchering hogs. Mr. J. O. Polly and Mr. U. M. Cilrder being among the number. (Oerber (Calif.) Items) O my goshl note. The kids have been libelled again. An upstate editor describes the cspers of the legislature, as Doys play" HE 1VOII.I) (lAMHl.El (Lung Creek Jottings) When supper wss announced the guests drew numbers and matched them tor partnera. In this way every one found a very agreeable partner except one un fortunate leas favored by the chances of rate, who was forced to est with his own wife. The county unit plen of school administration. If the recommenda tions of the governor are heeded, will be Invoked In this slate, and l cnslblo enough to be the reuse ol Intensive spring fighting on all rural fronts. Its chief vlrtuea are effic iency, economy, and elimination of school directors. It Is largely a rural question, so Portland nolltlclsns. who advised the farmers how to vot on the 8le Tax (no- badly needed) wi:i make another sacrifice for their own gain, and come rushing to the rescue. Uo not be surprised. If the county unit plan turns out to be snolher Wall street conspiracy "Income tax blanks hsve rslsed their ug'.y heads." (New Yorker) Plcs&an. thought for the day. A California millionaire, srgulng the old age pension plan, doubts his anility "to spend saoo per mouth." InaMnuch as lie Is a millionaire there is no argument that he has. netsll clothiers ef Amertce, meet ing In Chicago Tueadey. announced that uext summer men. not to he outdone by women, wilt go In for shorts "on a big scale." This Is a fine Ides, on the grounds If the men do. the women won't. There la slso the poMiihillty that the fair and f.xy sex hsve not forgotten how they used to look In khaki trousers l.uiulieriiirn to Meet. SEATTLE. Jan. 24 41 Despite 110.x! conditions, the annual meet Ingr of the stockholders of the West Coast Lumbermen's ssoclatlon will be held st Tscoms tomorrow, officials announced today. "Trsrie promotion" will he the main t-vlf of rhscusalun -Ore slail Trisuue a tilt ad w $50 per "SCA1 CAB WAGKS!" was the epithet hurled in congress today. rcprebentRtive from Massachusetts thus characterized the administration's proposal to pay workers on emergency re lief $j0 per month "Subsistence wages," would be a more polite, and more ac curate, term. Moreover this minimum wage is a necessary element in l'resident Uonscvelt's new relief policy, which is to work toward LESS federal, and MORE state, responsibility, in assumption of the financial burden. Relief employment is not and should not be regarded as a substitute for normal employment. It is not designed to allow the worker a profit It is solely designed to give him necessary food and shelter. Fifty dollars per month will do this. In the general accep tance of the term, it may not be a "living wage" but it is a SUBSISTENCE wage. And under this new "New Deal" that is all the government intends to do. To our mind this is a perfectly sound and accept able policy. A FTER all the government's credit ISN'T inexhaustible. Uncle Sam isn't a Santa Claus, though many people would like to so regard him. It would be very nice if the government could continue its former policy of paying 50 cents per hour for common labor. But it simply can't be done. As President ftooscvclt stated in his recent message the time has come when the government must do less in direct relief and the states and local communities must do more. The minimum wage of $o0 per month is the keystone of such a program. Uncle Snm will see to it that no one starves. But above that level, the responsibility becomes that of the 'state and of private business. That cry of "scab wages" was certainly not in order. More Face -Lifting "TIIE face-lifting process recently imposed upon the esteemed Orcgonian tins apparently been extended to its editorial columns. For certainly no one will recognize our former palladium of ultra-conservatism,- in a recent editorial entitled, "The right of petition." The Oregoniim not only opposes a bill introduced in the state legislature to reform and improve fers a stroko in tho contemplation of it. The meiisiiro is pictured as "intolerable", an effort to ham string the "initiative and referendum", which the "legislature will fail in its duty if it docs not kill," etc., etc. t t JIY, my myl What are the provisions of this iniquitous proposal? Very simple. Merely .compel the signers of initiative petitions to go to the court house tor the ceremony, instead of being panhandled by professional petition circulators on the street. "Might as well repeal the initiative and referendum entirely" cries the outraged champion of the onec bitterly assailed Oregon System. TTIE Oregoniiin's extreme perturbation is the harder to under- stand- for in the same editorial the editor admits such "direct legislation ought to be invoked only in emergencies" NOT as a substitute for representative government,' but as a safeguard against its abuses. . , This is absolutely true. But can the Orcgonian picture a GENUINE emergency existing, and yet the proponents of direct legislation, refusing to sign the necessary petition, because it would entail a walk, or ride, to the nearest court house! The percentage of signatures retiiired would remain a small one. If tho people of a county cared so little for the action proposed, that a small minority would not visit the court house in its behalf, would not one be justified in concluding that no such emergency existed, that the proposed legislation did not represent a genuine popular demand t XE think so". This paper certainly would not favor the impairment or repeal of the initiative, referendum and recall. But it would and docs favor their improvement, and the correction of obvi ous abuses. Under present conditions, signing up petitions, particularly initiative petitions is nothing short of a racket. Any danger ous or half-baked proposal can be initiated, for so much per head. In many cases the initiative is used as plain hold-up, a handy weapon for political blackmail. The proposed bill would do away with this sort of thing. On tho other hand as wc see it, it would not, by any stretch of the imagination, cripple or prevent direct legislation, when as the Orcgonian points out, an emergency existed, and the contemplated action enjoyed the support of an aroused public opinion. If the forces in the state favoring constructive and rational reform of the Oregon System, can't unite behind such a com paratively mild measure as this, then all hope 0f reformation, might as well bo abandoned. I N0gs sljlpHwIil (Contir.ueo t-rr page onei published- are: Pyramiding of operat I in companies through holding com- pantea; excesslre management fees charged by holding company execu tive for supposed i;erviion of op erating companies; Inflation of utility stocks through wrlt-up of capitali sation . . . Mr. Irkea U running in to ae Mr. Roivelt every day. and congrrfwmen are perturbed. They are lmot unnnin.oimly ar,ainv him for the p'cprved reilel ).-t The r objec Uou tie so deep Uial, U Mi. Room Month the initiative, but almost suf velt tries to appoint Mr. Ickea. con gress will unquestionably find a way to block the appointment. Biniam Filene of Boston csn be quoted as saying thst "price fixing by codes will succeed when fishes chsse Hons." . . The New Deal should lake those "under supervision of U. S. Tressury" signs from closed bsnks snd plsee them on closed farms. WINETR0UT is CHAIRMAN OF JOSEPHINE RED CROSS O RANTS PA.SS. Jan. 24 . f5.pl C. A. Winetrout was elected Tuesday nfcht to be county chairman of tht Red Cross chptr for 1833. Election wo held at the annual meeting in the courthouse. Other officera re-elected wer Mr Oeorve S Eaton. rlce-chaJrman; R. W. Clarke, treasurer, and Mis Lola j Myers, secretary. When tt come to radio, remember pruuts can do it" Phone 23 Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygtene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment Hill be answered by Dr. Brady If s stamped ltlf-addreed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the laige number of letters received only a few can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions Address Or. William Brady. 265 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cal. WHEN COLD MAKES Even Ol' Doc Brady, who, ai sev eral know, does not believe In talcing "cold" from chilling, dampness, drafts, sudden changes. Insufficient clothing, and all that, used to be annoyed by run ning at the nose and getting bleary eyed when he ventured out In nearly - zero weather. No doubt he'd still stuff up and run at the nose If he were so exposed. but It wouldn't annoy him any more, or Leonard Hin of London Clinic and Institute of physical Med icine brings reassurance about this. He observes that breathing cold out side air Increases the blood flow through respiratory membranes. arousing secretions which kill mi crobes. Eyes may water and noses run but colds, says Prof. Hill, God bless him, are not derived from these conditions. This will come as a painful set back to the self-styled scientific au thorities In Yankeeland who have attempted to combat the proper ed ucation of the public about the na ture, cause and prevention of alleg ed "colds" by broadcasting some half-baked laboratory conception that chilling of the surface produces blanching or withdrawal of blood from the lining of the respiratory tract and so "lowers resistance" against Infection. Poppycock. In the first place no one knows what "re sistance" Is or whether anything raises or lowers an Individual's im munity against respiratory Infection so casually. The whole nonsensical theory of "lowered resistance" Is nothing more than a peurlle attempt of the old fossils In medicine And research to ease themselves out of a ridiculous situation. For years they have man aged to get by. with people .who do not think for themselves, on the hypothesis that congestion or too much blood In the mucous mem brane lining the respiratory tract "lowers resistance." But with the recognition of the mechanism of Im munity and tho natural process of healing, the old timers were con strained to devise a new hypothesis more in, harmony with newer knowl edge of physiology and pathology. So NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O.O. Mclntyre PALM BEACH, Jan. 24. We dined with the Arthur Somers Roches last evening In their patio. Against a backdrop of .banyans and mottled moonlight. I first met Roche the year he was be ing acclaimed as the Am erlcan Oppenhetm for nov No shared I confidences i years. mo-! Ltl V ments of me8- Jwpjr "y rims but more AJ often he Is In an iJ&2L.Zl upshoot of ex uberant, rkliiig hell -for-1 eat her his whim of the moment. Today it may be golf, tomorrow some outrageously tawdry night club and the next day he Is burstlrjg with banzals for an obscure author showing promise In the pulps. Legends about him would fill a book. He slept on park benches, was a waiter In Suicide Hall, dashed off sonnets for Bob Davis In ante-rooms to rush back to Doc. Perry's to buy another round. The fact Is. Roche was making 40. 000 a year selling fic tion when our paths crossed 20 years ago. The son of James Jeffrey Roche, distinguished Irish scholar, wit and poet, he was graduated from Holyoke. read law and knocked about Park Row until he turned to fiction. He built a fine home from royalties here because Palm Beach as a locale ex uded the glamour he likes to Im prison in his novels. To banter with the Roches on the phone is as much cock-eyed fun as any-one can have. Inseparable. If you call one both are likely to answer on connecting phones. I asked for Ethel and some Inanity I voiced caused Roche to cut In with the stinging sarcasm of which he Is master. All one can do Is splutter a few tepid "Is that sos?" Its difficult to real Ire he has been cried out of more earnings than any sucker of his time. But he has. From the rotogravures. It might be Imagined Palm Beach Is starchy with formality. Yet It's most informal of the American spas. Full evening dress Is seen only among ballroom dancers or the grills. And some of the dowd iest frumps and courtliest jays wan der palmetto paths. Wealth does not have to bend to sartorlral whims. It sniffs at fashion and dresses as It pleases. Dinner Jackets with soft shirts and collars are customary. Mil ton Holden Is regarded as neatest in such Informality. Abandonment of Coco nut Orove la a wrench for regulars. It fitted Its name plus a Jar band In white duck. The Orove was an accessory of the famous Royal Polnciana, a rambling and barny old Inn that died of mel low antiquity In a world gone sud denly modern. It offered all It danc ing and camaraderie for a dollar. The finest coconut cakes In the world were baked there and the urbane Jack Hobby, mho knew everybody was at the entrance to greet you. You w theatrical Broad y and Southamp ton swtlU. 3 (5 AfA el. "Loot." lfr Jl writer has ll my con ao many - 1 He hu Brady, M. D. VOIR NOSE RUN. they hit on the notion that maybe this blanching which some smart lad noticed in a guinea pig or a white rat would serve the purpose. So there you are. You must take tht whole theory of "lowered resist ance" on faith alone. It Is just the latest theory of your favorite "aui thority." The constant washing of the sur face of the cornea with tears pre serves the eyeball from Infection. One of the purposes of the con stant secretion of mucus by the membrane lining the nose Is to catch and wash out dust or other foreign particles, and as Leonard Hill's teach ing reminds us, the normal secretion of the nasal passages Is more or less bactericidal In effect. More so, I be lieve, than la any "antiseptic" medl cant one can safely use. So don't feel annoyed If your nose runs and your eyes water for a while when you first go out In the cold. That Is a protective reaction and It Is good for your health. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS norm wood. Chewing wormwood and swallow ing the Juice. I seem to like it. Is it injurious? E. F. H.) Answer Yes, wormwood (absinth ium) is a narcotic and will cause headache, trembling, convulsions. Circumcision. Boy 2 months old not circumcised. Is it all right to let him go without It? Mrs. w. P.) Answer Circumcision is necessary only when the condition interferes with voiding or with dally toilet. Win Vour Freedom. We have recently tried using flax seeds as recommended by you, and we think we get at least as satisfac tory results as we did from psyllium seeds.'' How long can one continue taking a tablespoon full of flaxseeds dally . . . (C. R. D.) Answer Indefinitely. But why continue taking anything of the kind? Send 10 cents and stamped en velope bearing your address, for copy of the booklet "The Constipation Habit." Study It carefully, and then take a brace and break away. It Is entirely a question of will or brain power. (Copyright 1936, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Ur. Brudy should tend letter direct to Dr. William llrady, M. !., m El Camlno. Beverly Hills. Cal. Palm Beach's reigning dowager Is Mrs. E. T. Stotesbury, of Philadel phia. Her nod is law In the upper stratum. Col Stotesbury was a drum mer In the Civil War and likely the greatest dandy for his years In all the land. The Stotesbury party list is the social skimmed cream. Young Jimmy Cromwell Is Mrs. Stotesbury's son by a former marriage. He recent ly went llt'ry and turned out a not' so-good book but Is reputed to have the Inside track In the gallop for the hand of the lovely blonde heiress Doris Duke. So he should worry about literature. The Stotesbury home here was designed by Addison Mlzner and launched the Incredible Mizners on their career of catering astonishing architecture and promoting fantastic villages In Florida. Architecture, by the way. in Palm Beach Is in overnight metamorpho sis. Red roofed Spanish castles with flaming awnings and a patio have become passe with hiccup sudden ness. And a headache for hundreds of home owners. The new decor Is English colonial with a sprinkling of French dlrectorle. It writes finish for torture benches, cast Iron what-nots and return of livable furnishings. Jules Bache's manse Is among those undergoing change. Many others arc at the blue print stage. Nobody seemed to have remembered until now that white colonial pillars lent such enchantment to the vagaries of moonlight. A cold wave up north or hall stones falling In Vermont flutter Florida headline writers into ecstatic frenzy. The thermometer's drop cata pults them Into all sorts of rhetoric al somersaults. Aside from adding to the general gaiety, tt gives the visitor the Idea of being one of fortune's fools. It looks pretty silly to see dogs running around panting like all get out. And here it Is around the first of February I- (CopyTlght. 1935. McNaught Syndi cate) Communications Some ImpoMlbliitlef To the Editor: That the earth Is round. Columbus wag crazy. That steel ships would float easy as a wooden boat. Wright brothers' contraption wo contrary to the law of gravitation The automobile another crank's imagination. A locomotive that would pulj one hundred or more loaded freight cars or pull a passenger trlan eighty or more miles per hour. Take power from one machine and transfer It hundreds of miles to an other. usten to people talk ha.t way around the globe or talk to people on the other aide of the world. Canada wo only an Iceberg. Alaska I Seward s Folly. The Hudson river could ever be tunneled. The Ooiden Gate could be spanned The Panama Canal could ever be built. The Niagara Falls could ever be harnessed. A home could run. trot or pace a mile in lew than two minutes. The c P. R. would ever pay Inter est on tta bonds. The Townsend p'.an of old age pen sion and relief would ever work. C. W YAB9LET. Med ford. Jan 23. P1 EveiTbod? eta be omxlj. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS THIS Townsend old age pension plan it la so characteristic of the political thinking of many votera of today and the reaction to It In congress la so typical of the attitude of the average politician of today as to make It, In many weye, the most Interesting project that baa come be fore the country. THE Townsend plan, remember, proposes to pay MOO a month to every person In the nation above the age of 60, with the requirement that the 300 all be spent within the month when It Is received. There are approximately ten mil lion persons over 60, and at 1200 per month each this means an annual expenditure of 34 billion dollars. Twenty-four billion dollara Is roughly HALF the national In come. LET'S see what that mean. If you are a wage earner, earn ing i,000 a year, and the Townsend plan became a law, It would mean that If you paid your share of the tax necessary to aupport It you would pay 500 a year toward the Townsend plan alone, and would have to live and pay your other taxes out of the remaining $500. . IP YOU are a farmer, and after a year of hard work and takln? the usual risks that accompany farming you produced a crop that sold for 2,000, It would mean that you would have to contribute 91,000 of It to ward the Townsend plan, paying your living costs, jour other taxes and all your other expenses out of the re maining $1,000. IP YOU are a groceryman, doing a ftross business of afiO.000 n venr. it. would mean that out of that 50.000 you would have to pay $29,000 to ward the Townsend old age pension, buying your stock, psylng your rent, heat, light, help, other taxes and living expenses out of your remain ing S25.000. In other words, half of all the money taken In by EVERYBODY, at our present national rate of turn over, would have to go to the sup port of this amazing project. BUT." you may retort gleefully, "I don't pay .any taxes, so It could not catch ME!" Walt a minute. You BUY THINGS. If half of all the money taken In by EVERYBODY had to go to the aupport of the Townsend old age pensions, everybody who sells any. thing would have Just two choices he would either have to go broke IMMEDIATELY or he would have to raise his prices staggeringly. If everybody went broke at once there would be no money with which to pay pensions, and if everybody raised his prices staggeringly five times, 10 times, 30 times what they are now, as would havo to be done money wouldn't buy much. In either event" the nation would go to ruin. YET, plain as this Is when we'stop and take the time to look the facts squarely In the face, we see millions of people signing petitions urging congress to pass this clearly ruinous measure, and wc hear con gressmen saying that If they don't pass It they won't be sent back to congress! WHY? f4 Here Is why: Because, thanks to false leadership, we sre reaching the point where the welfare of the NATION AS A WHOLE Is no longer the chief consideration of Its clttzena where the Individual Is willing to ssy: "If It's good for ME. to the devil with everybody else! What do I care for the nation as a whole!" A RE we beginning to reach that point In America? This writer, who Is a constitutional optimist, certainly hopes not. But the amazing support that has been given to the Impossible Townsend plan makes one wonder. LL S. L. Daneard. Dead Indian district sawmill operator, was bound over to the grand Jury on a charge of larceny by bailee, by Justice of the Peace L A. Roberts of -Ashland yesterday. Daneard. allegodly failed to turn over to employees. 8S2 60 realised from the sale of lumber la Sacramen to. Calif , af.er he hod agreed to do so. tabor claims acainn Daneard. acording to the district attorney offU-e. ranee from 25 to 1135. The-e are 30 claimants, mostly married men residing In Ashland, who planned on the vees tiding them over the win ter. Daneard was bound over to tho trand Jury lost week on a charge of falling to maintain a monthly payroll tt is a companion cae to the one riled yesterday. ' Lime gelatin aa!sd b'.endi v.t.i rot or nop It look pretty, too "itness For Bruno if- T$ Mrs. Bertha Hoff, German-Amerl-san house wife, is expected to testify at the trial of Bruno Hauptmann and name others than tho German car penter as the Lindbergh baby kid-nan-killer. (Associated Press Photo! Flight 0 Time (Medford end Jackson Count) History from the files of the Mall Tribune uf 20 and 10 Yean Ago). TEN YEARS AGO TODAY January 34, 1925. (It was Saturday.) Bill Introduced In legislature to bar Income tax in Oregon until 1950. Bad roads cause 6ams Valley resi dents to use horses instead of auto. Work starts on widening Irrigation canal near Rogue River, with 20 men employed. Total eclipse of the sun occurs, and Is viewed throughout the nation. Burglars enter the Pantorium on North Plr street, and steal five suits of clothes. Snow and cold sweep eastern Ore gon. N Espee watertank Is moved from site near Main street to Its new location beyond Jackson street. Medford defeats Phoenix, 44 to 14. with Ahchle Lalng and Mervln Chas taln doing most of the scoring for the locals. Coach Calllson Is dis gusted with showing of his charges E. V. White of Los Angeles, profes sor of economics, will speak at 'the Nat next Tuesday evening, on "Tlie Elastic Dollar, and Enough for All." TWENTY YEARS A0 TODAY Jnnunry 21. 1flir. Jackson county rates tnird In state In number of automobiles. High school enrollment now ex ceeds 300 students. Page thjreater announces "the pre sentation of authentic and author ized European war pictures." Doors will be opened an hour earlier, and show will last until midnight. Q. O. P. war horses of Jackson coun ty announce they will publish a series of articles on the subject, "How Long Will the Republicans Vote the DcmoT cratlc Ticket" Police announce speed trap to oatch speeders on East Jackson street they are too smart to speed on West Jackson street." Jackson county delegation at the legislature wires sportsmen: "We will fight until death to protect Rogvie river fish." Russian hordes pour Into Poland, to meet threat of German offensive; Allies launch heavy tombardment of German lines on Verdun front; Brit ish cruisers harrasa Oerman battle fleet. STUDENTS OF 0. S. C. FREE FROM RADICAL t CORVALLIS Students t Oregon State college have not been betrayed into following radical and visionary leadership, although no avenues of thought or Investigation have been closed to them, writes President George W. Peavy in his biennial re port to the chancellor which is em bodied In the printed report of the state board of hlcher education now In the hands of the legislators and other state officials. "General scholarship has been kept on a high plane In the past two years and individual and group achievements have been in all es sentials as worthy as In blennfums more fortunate In economic oppor tunities, rresiaem reavy reponea "While alert to contemporary prob lems, and sympathetic toward pro gressive proposals for solving them, students have pretty consistently kept their self-control and refused to be stampeded by extremes." Financial difficulties that have beset every part of the state system have fallen heavily upon the state Special Dance at the DUTCH MILL Saturday Night! t.ooil Mulc for a flood Time ..Hue luwiiu vlth tha rhsnzes In burrlcular assignments the college la i "more emphatically man in me past the center of the more expensive) tvDM of ma lor curricula the scien tific and the technical." the presi dent records but he say the faculty members "shouldered not mereiy s lint hut venerous share of the bur dens of the taxpayer in accepting salary cut and taxing on mora work." "Rn t tha reoreanlred oropram has been concerned, the members of the faculty have worked as a unit in It upport," the report add, "Thev have keDt their eves on con structive policies and have tried to cooperate with an concerneo. in neip lng to build out of the several dif ferent units, long separate and diver gent, a solidarity of state service." Referring to moral stanaaras ana ethical ideals of the college commun ity. President Peavy reports that "Th tmriitlons-e-mutuallv endorsed by students and faculty over a long period of time prohibiting the use of Intoxicants, and excluding smok ing from the campus excepting In ( certain specifically designated rooms, have been maintained with a degree of fidelity that has given distinction to the campus." Maintaining high standards- has not been easy in view nf nnnt-war Dsvcholoev and "The return of liquor on a legal basis his. of course, aggravated tne amicuivy, he said. "Ait-nerfttrtftr from the standpoint of continued service to the resources. industries and citizenship of tne state; adaptability to new demands In time of crises: fortitude, faculty morale and institutional integrity. Oregon State college has never main tained Its traditions and Ideals with greater fidelity than during the past biennlum." President Peavy concludes. Summons; In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Jackson County. R. s. Murray, Plaintiff, vs. John Dallalre. administrator of the estate of Arthur Dallaire. deceased: John Dallalre. Adelard Dallalre. Prank Dallaire, Trefley Dallalre. Victor Dallalre. Joseph Dallaire, Amle Dallalre. Anna Dallalre O'Nell, . sole and only heirs at law of Ar- thur Dallalre. deceased: Agnes Dal laire. wife of Adelard Dallalre: Delia Dallalre. wife of Victor Dallalre; Southern Oregon Credit Bureau; Intermountaln Building and Lean; Charles H. Carey, corporation com missioner for the State of Oregon, in chanze of the assets of the Inter Mountain Building and Loan with in the Stat of Oregon; State In dustrial Accident Commission; also all other persons or parties un known claiming any right, title, estate. Hen or Interest In and to the real estate described in the Complaint on file herein, Do fend - ' ants. To the Defendants Frank Dallaire, Treflev Dallaire. Joseph Dallalre. Amio Dallaire, and Anna Dallalre O'Nell; also all other persons or parties un known claiming any right, title, es tate, lien or interest in and to the real estate described in the Complaint on file herein: In the name of the State of Oregon, you and each of you are hereby re quired to appear and answer the Complaint or the Plaintiff on Hie herein against you, or otherwise plead thereto within four (41 weeks from the date of the flrxt publication of this Summons. i And yon are hereby notified that if you fail to appear and answer tha Complaint of the Plaintiff as required herein, or otherwise plead thereto, Plaintiff will take a Decree against you for the relief demanded in said Complaint, a succinct statement of which is as follows, to-wlt; For a decree and Judgment against the property which la the subject of this suit for the sum of 775.64. which Includes delinquent Interest from January 18, 1933. to the 9th day of January. 1935, and also Includes the sum of $12.00 expended by Plain tiff for insurance premiums, and also Includes $273,99 expended by Plaintiff In payment of delinquent taxes, plus interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum on the principal sum of $775.64 from the 9th day of January, 1935, plus $75.00 attorney's fees, plus $19.00 for continuation of abstract of title, plus all Plaintiff's casts and disbursements hereinafter to be taxed, plus interest in said Judgment at the j rat of 8 per cent per annum from me aaie oi tne uecree nerein. ana that said Decree and Judgment be held a first and prior lien upon the following described property, situated f and being In the County of Jack.on, State of Oregon. to-wlt : Lot Two (2) in Block Seventv- three (73). Medford. in the Comity of Jackson. State of Oregon. And for the further decree foreclos ing Plaintiff's mortgage against '.he real property hereinabove described. Tills Summons Is published in the Medford Mail Tribune by order of ;he Honorable H. D. Norton. Judge of the above entitled court duly made on the 24th day of January. 1935. That date of the first publication of this Summons la the 24th day of January, 1935. O. H. BENGTSON. Attorney for Plaintiff. 126 East Main Street, Medford. Oregon. ms-iwi-ff prTal DANCE Saturday NIGHT Dreamland DINTY MOORE and His Orchestra MEN 35c LADIES VOc Hid