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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 7, 1935)
PAGE SIX MEDFOltl) NAIL TULBUNE, MKUFUUH. OREGON. THURSDAY. FEBKUAKY 7. 1935 Medford Mail Tribune "Cmvont ui Southern Orel 00 Ru tht Hail MtuiM' Daily Eiccpt Saturday HtDKOHl) CKINTINU CO. I5-2TSH N I'll 8L fawn 16 KOBEftT W (Il'HL, editor Ko Independent Nmpaptr Entered u tecond class natter at Uedford Orecon, under Act of Marcb 8, 1879. SUHSCKJl'TION BATES v Mill In AilikitfM t1lll, Jfw 1IU 5.0U Pail, ill monthi .J Dally, one month By Carrier in AdTinca Medford, Aiblind. Jirbontilie, Central Point, PbotaU. TaJiot, Gold Bill ana on IHihaj. DiilT. on rear .....$80U Otlly. 111 montni -i& Daily, dm mootb Ail tarms. caib lo adranc. Official paper of tba City of Madford. Official paper of Jacaaoo County. U EM HE II OF THE ASSOCIATED PHEflS iui.tna PS. 11 t U'lra Rrrrlr .. n.m la irliutitlt nlltled LO toe um (or publication of ai: oea dlipateBe credited to II " oinermm creauro 10 iam vv and alM to itw local nea publlined brrelo. All rlcnU for puMlfatloo of tpaeial dlipatcbes bareui are aiw resenta. MKMHKH OF UNITED PKE88 MF.MHEH OK AUDI1 HUHEAD IV CIRCULATIONS AdTtrtistrn HepresenuHtea M. a MOGEN8EN k CO MP A. NT Office Id Htm York, Cblcato. Detroit , Sal Franrlsec L Angeles Buttle Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry The Multnomah county poor firm, (of all places), showed a profit Jast year of 10.916.36, the auperlntend ent admits. WANTED Middle-aged neat lady or widow to keep houaa for tlf bachelors, one very reliable. Befer encea exchanged. (Susanvllla. Cel., Review). About the average one In four. A bunch of gypalea, the first of the year, whtraed through Wed. 80 far everybody thinks they know, where their pocketbook Is. RKYKI.RY BUSTS LOOSE (Harrison Tidings) A surprise was staged on Mr. and Mrs. Stan Dudley Wednes day evening, when a party of tight couples called after 0:00 o'clock for a popcorn feed, bringing their own poppers and corn. A number of the up-to-the-minute ladlea, are flouncing about In new spring ensembles, which will causa their better-halves to spring, as they never sprang before, In ap proximately 30 days. Del Oetchell, the banker-poet, and T. Fish, the boom-day tenor, at tended the. Phoenix Orange din ner Tues. evng, and ate more chick en than a professional friend of the farmer, from Portland. The lat ter dignatarlea always manage to get at the end of the table, where they have more freedom of the elbows, while gnawing a brcaat-bone.- A captured California bank-robber makes a speech In the newa reels, warning youth "crime doea not pay." It waa not much of a speech, and should be a warning 'along that line. NARY A SCRATCH (Time Magazine) Graduated from the Univer sity of Virginia, Oscar Under wood, Jr., was In Parla as a law clerk for a U. 8. firm when war broke out In 1014. Back home In 1018, he aerved on the Mexican border with his Ala bama mllltla regiment, then to France in 1017, did not take off his uniform until 1010. Reports from Los Angeles ssy a newspaper reporter there waa rob bed of 1130. We have talked to recent Los Angeles Journalist about this, and he firmly holds to the opinion. It was 91.30. . Establishment of a whipping post In Oregon, for crimes of violence. Is opposed cn the grounds It Is "brutal." It Is almost as "brutal." as pecking a cltlren over the head with butt-end of a pistol, because he only had ,30c for a robber. The legislature Is still grinding out laws, though there are more now than people have time 10 break. Owing to a typographical error in these parte ten dsys ago, 8prlrtg hereBfter will be referred to as the vernal season. ... SI'HIN'ti POI.TKV Just two great big boys. Full of sunshine and smiles. And good cheer and Joys. We think you're all right. And so do you wives. 80 why need you worry The rest of your lives. Per Andy and Rslph, Really too good to live. For one drives a Chrysler And the other a Chev. Out that makes no difference, We're proud of you each, 80 cheer up good Comrades. You're both a real peach. De r Andy and Ralph, Just too of s kind. Both bring home the bacon. If It Is about all rind. But we know thst ycu do The best that y.iu can. 80 we think you are dandy. Pendleton Cast Oregrjuian. vv The Challenge to Liberty "The United State shall guarantee to every state In this Union, a republican form of government." Article IV. Section IV, U. 8. Constitution. In his latest syndicated article, Walter Lippmann raises the pertinent question, as to whether or not this Bection of our organic law has not been violated in Louisiana. With some modifications he answers his own question in the affirmative. From all he can learn, republican government in that state has been destroyed and a Huey Long dictatorship actually exists. The acid test will be applied, he declares, when it is seen bow the ruling powers deal with the opposition which is now organ izing in Louisiana and whether a restoration of orderly govern ment is achieved without violence. In discussing this problem, Mr. Lippmann gives an exposi tion of the privileges and obligations of a free people, under a republican form of government, which is so clear in its reasoning and 10 unanswerable in its conclusions, that we feel it is worthy of quotation in full : The dictatorship of Senator Long presents a question of prin ciple about which there la a dangerous confusion In the minds of msny who believe in democracy. The question Is whether men must acquiesce In the overthrow of democracy If the dic tator can obtain the aupport of a majority of the voters. I believe there can be only one answer to that question. To answer in the affirmative would be to reduce democracy to an absurdity. It would mesn that today's majority had the right to deprive tomorrow's majority of It rights. Who can make auch a claim? Who will aay that a dictator may use free Insti tutions to destroy free Institutions? That a temporary majority may impose Its trsnslent wUl upon all future majorities? That men may use freedom of speech to acquire the power to destroy freedom of speech? That they may use elections to abolish elections? That they may exploit the constitutional guarantees to subvert them? The Idea that a dictatorship may be established by demo cratic processes Is a sophistry. It could be entertained only In an age when men had enjoyed liberty ao long that they had forgotten what It means and how It was won. One can have respect for dlctatora who overthrow free liutl tutlona by force and frankly say they Intend to rule by force. But dlctatora who were elected, and then pretend to rule by popular consent, though they have destroyed the Institutions through which the popular will can express Itself freely, are practicing an ugly fraud. And those who acquiesce In the tyranny because It was achieved by majority rule are pretending to be convinced when In fact they are cowed. Free Institutions are not the property of any majority. They do not confer upon majorities unlimited powers. The rights of the majority are limited rights. They are limited not only by the constitutional guarantees but by the moral principle Implied In those guarantees. That principle la that men may not use the facilities of liberty to Impair them. No man may Invoke a right In order to destroy It. The right of free speech belongs to those who are willing to preserve It. The right to elect belongs to those who mesn to trsnsmlt that right to their successors. The rule of the majority la morally Justified only If another ma jority la free to reverse that rule. To hold any other view than this Is to believe that democracy alone, of all forma of government, la prohibited by Its own prin ciples from Insuring Its own preservation. It la high time that free men repudiated ao preposterous a doctlne. There Is nothing In the principles of democracy which requires a people to aur render democracy or relieves them of the obligation to defend It. In other words the people of a democracy have g right through the ballot box to change their government in any way they wish, but they have no RIGHT to destroy it, either by their votes or by force. This is only the right of revolution, which is alwHys available, but which no government can allow, without ceasing to BE a government. A Silly Business TRADITIONALLY, Democrats like to talk aud like to fight. Thv nni rnr lilrA U e;l,t tl,Al nAlLt 1 ! ii - v ..uv vm.j ...... "ej11" ."v-ii i,uiim:ni eiiemii'H, lliey lllie to fight among themselves. , These deeply imbedded characteristics of the followers of Jefferson and. Jackson, no doubt explain, why Congressman alter Pierce, and his faithful followers, arc opposing the effort of Governor Martin to extend the date of the primary election in this state. At least we can discern no other reason. The .Martin proposal is a sensible one. It would shorten the primary free-for-all in Oregon from five months to approximately two. The new pri mary date would be the first week in September instead of the third Friday in May. The ensuing campaign would be less costly to the candidates,, and far less tiresome to the electorate. DUT "Our Walter" likes to (alk. He likes to point with pride and view with alarm. From his congressional seat in Wash ington he maintains, that he could not possibly cover his district in 80 or 30 days, even though, he could if he wished, travel comfortably two or three times around the world in that time. He regards this measure as me ratno siaiions and newspapers, to increase their political advertising, discourage independent candidates, and place an unfair financial burden upon the the people, of which Walter Number 1, AS a matter of fact, under the v.,...'...,,, Binivui, u cut, ainua lllltu RUOUl tile IirSl of September. Those who start out earlier, in the hope of get ting a jump on their opponents, are invariably disappointed. During the harvest, the vacation period and the ting da.vs, few people want to he propositioned and back-slapped by politicians. They resent rather than welcome such advances. One has only to review the results of the last election in this state to grant the truth of this statement. Rut Walter likes to talk ami likes to fight. Not double-fisted fighting in the open, but infighting of the conventional wire pulling type, the "agin" the government and "agin" the or ganization brand. So he enters the lists against the Martin program, and warn. the proletarit of eastern Oregon, ami union labor bos at Port land, of the peril t lint confronts them. A silly business I Shortening of the primary campaign is simply a common sen.e move toward economy economy in hot n,r, riMMiomy in snoe leal her, economy in all the noise and fury that professional politicians delight in, but the people arc eter nally tired of. The Krwin bill should pass! "DARK HORSE' LEADING THREE CUSHION TOURNEY Nrw Y'ORK Feb. 7 (API Ed- WSrd Soltr Of Rn.tnn ' ri.rk tnr--" I of the tournament, mill bossled a perfect record today In th, national a diabolical plot on the part of shoulders of the champions of always classifies himself as t present law, the ACTIVE pri- n,"ur three-cushion billiard cham- Soil, who upset th defending champion, hung up his third succm- !v tr-lnmnh nleht hv rif.tln, Cleorae M O Dea of Chicago, 40 lo 1 39 In 93 Innings. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hjelene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment will be aniered by Dr. Brady If a stumped stlf-addrestted envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in Ink. Owing to tiie large number of letters received only a few can be an fwered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions, address Dr. William Brady, 265 CJ Cam! no. Beverly lit I la, Cal. NATURAL VERSUS S In the course of a letter from a noted pediatrician and research work er X am struck with this remark: "Some of the observations w e make In animal experiment can be applied to bu rn an beings." There speaks ' he physician of ex perience. Altlio he has done and Is doing notable work In the study of nutrition, this doctor still gards clinical ex perience ai the best authority. Such a doctor will not lead his patients in a stampede for the latest "scientific" remedy and then leave them there while he scar ries off after some still later dictum of subsidized science. I have listened to the same pediatrician research man describe, before the medical society, his experience with one 'after anotner vitamin D carrier for prevention and treatment of rickets and how nlfl faith In the efficacy of the synthetic vitamin carriers diminished as the purported potency of the remedies increased, until at last he had come back to natural sources. S teen bock himself found that syn thetic vitamin D (vlosterol) must be fed in doses enormously greater than the dose of natural vitamin D (In food or In plain cod liver oil), to produce the same antl-rachitlc effect. We plodding practitioners scarcely know whta It Is all about when the manufacturer of synthetic vitamins come a running with products of seadtly increasing potency 250 units, 500 units, 1.000, 10,000 and so on up, till we are dizzy with the wonder of It all. But after they have given us the run around with all the high pressure scientific sounding hokum, as duly approved and sanctified oy the Council on Food and Folderol of the A. M. A., thera comes a time when we sit back and Inquire breath lessly what's the big Idea anyway? We suspect that one of the labora tory Inferences or observations whicn can not be applied to human beings Is thla system of meaatirlng vitamin rations by rat units. True, the rat seems to thrive on a mixed diet of the same character as that which best nourishes civilized people. B-.it there la little between rats and men In the general biological sense, end It Is hardiy logical to assume that we may safely apply knowledge gain ed from the study of rat physiology or pathology to human health and sickness. , NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Feb. 7. The Dear Noel crowd wandered out after the first night's plushed performance re- BM-Mak cently, a olt De r - H I wlldered. All the I laaHsMl4 familiar lngred lents had been offered a Cow ard authorship. Alfred Lunt. Lynn Fontanne and a Tiffany audience. But things didn't Jell The usual bright heavens fairly crashed about the Cow ard worshippers They had witnessed hi first flop in America. No amount of cheering or stampeding could save It. Not even the presence of Noel himself, who admits he has "achieved ft definite publicity value." All the newspaper critics used their broad axes next Jiay without excep tion, and George Jrnn Nathan is to be heard from. The fact la the dam of tolerance built up for Coward simply burst under the strain. Nearly all his plays, threaded with perver sion, have been saved by brilliant dialogue. Notably "Private Lives," "The Vor tex." and "Design tor Living." But whiplash sophistication could not save this one. When a barefoot beast-man of a Caribbean Island spat once in the face of his refined-look- j iiiK iiiisurra tnt) nunirnce snunaerca The second time It reached for Its hat. Not even a Coward can beglam our spitting. The New Yorker and Its fugle-man. Alexander Woollcott, are bowlnn stiffly these days and Woollcott. at least temporarily, has vanished from his accustomed page. According to the Algonquin gossip the break was over a matter of selec it s brooming V nu It that way had wei selection. Woollcott ulsance spelling had oorn out over the department store book belt auto graphing his best seller. On such ex cursions he picked up a number ol Pullman car Decame rons which hr relayed In his weekly essay. The New ARE YOU RUNDOWN? IIEN' you arc rundown it sometimes runs into something serious. Y our health is too im port. mt to be ne if -ieeted. Improve the stom..ch and the blood with Dr. Pierce's it olden Mnlii-.il Dicov F W, IVwiri of 7 trr. Rm4 ?th St.. V.i wah.. : "I was too weak an. I rhau(M (o t1. aiiMriin ami tir, am wr.kfr an,) wfaWr. I hv) vrrr luilf dfi-p fur ft,,1 1 .ijitnl ttAitif 1-r. I ifur f.oMrn Mrl;,il llmoArrv n,t Kutlf i.sniptrtcN if,li.rr(T mv .:( hft'ih ml Htfi'pS ir i I M.P twn it Laict mt, uby o liquid. 1 ii. m hit Mr. YNTHETIC FOODS One ounce of cream cheese con Ulna 1,400 units of vitamin A. One ounce of American cheese contains 700 units. One ounce of butter con tains 1,400 units. One ounce of car rots contains 840 units. One ounce of liver contains 2.800 units. One ounce of escarole (a kind of chicory used as salad) contains 6,000 units. One ounce of prunes contains 300 units. One ounce of tomato, raw or canned, or tomato Juice, fresh or canned , con t a 1 ns 1 70 u n 1 ts. On e ounce orange Juice contains only 20 units. These are among the richest natural sources of vitamin A. Why pay enormous prices for synthetic products which purport to be so ex tremely potent In vitamin content? For that matter, who knows how many units of any vitamin an indi vidual requires to maintain or re store optimum health? Nobody knows. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Calcium Lactate for Asthma, I took calcium lactate for 10 weeks and found great relief from asthma. Should I continue taking it? Mrs H. L. Answer Another course of 10 weeks next spring or early summer. Mean while, you should be sure to get as much sunshine on naked skin (or ultra-violet from artificial source) as your skin will stand, and an optimal vitamin ration. Swimming. Is It harmful in any way for one who has had a mastoid operation to go In swimming? B. V., Jr. Answer Not In open water, but if you swim In a pool, wear suitable plugs of wool (not cotton) In both the nostrils and the ears , and breathe entirely through the mouth while swimming. In fact, I think it wi3C for anyone who swims In a pool to wear wool plugs In both nostrils and breathe through the mouth while In the water. Neat Trick. Since salt Is good for digestion and soda bicarb corrects acidity, occurred to me to combine the two, but friend says such a combination would knock the taker for a row of obituaries . . B. M. Answer Salt la not good for di gestion, and saleralus does not cor rect acidity. However, taking the two in combination would do no more harm than taking either salt or sod.v (Copyright. 1935, John P. Dllle Co.) Kd. Mute: Persons wishing to cimitnunlrntH ivltli Or. Brady houid tend letter dlrert to Or William Brady, M l.. 4V! El . Camlnn. Beverly Hills. Cal. Yorker thought them too ancient and suggested he return to his murder monographs or pnt-a-cake whimsy. This sent the essayist fluttering off In high dudgeon. So he refused to write and The New Yorker, waiting for him to cool off, got another boy. Humorists seem to pair off togeth er. Donald Ogden Stewart and Rob ert C. Benchley are inseparable In New York or Hollywood. And there Is that long standing friendship be tween Corey Ford and Prank Sulli van. Irvln Cobb and Will Rogers spend much leisure together on the coast. Chic Sale and Homer Croy have been buddies for 20 years. Then, of course, there's the long alliance be tween Charles V. MacArthur and Ben Hecht, Phil Baker and Ben Bernle, the Jack Bcnnys and Burns and Al- Every Model Has the Super Freezer toe trays plule out at l'ie touch of a finper. The motor starts automatically when defrosting Is completed. There's more room for tail bottles. Ice cubes freeze more qutcltly and there are plenty of them. There's a Hydrator , In every mode'. all have Interior lights. Every model Is an amarina .slue. Se the FTtcMalt '35 at the ftrst opportunity. l?n, Al Jolson and Jack Warner. George Jeesel and Eddie Cantor, etc. There was analogy In real life In the part Talulah Bankhead played In a recent and rather depressing drama. In the play she was a tortur ously beglamoured lady, doomed to die. With six months to live, she em barked on her last days with a spirit' of hoopla. Although Miss Bankhead has been restored to health, there was ft period several years ago when she was precariously 111. Yet not many friends who gathered at her bedside knew it. She kept them buoy ed and laughing, so much so "to run In to see lalulah" was a part of a gay evening out. Most people lot upon JuJes Bru latour, the husband of Hope Hamp ton, as a Frenchman. He speaks the language In true Parisian tongue and has the manner and the savoir-faire of the Gallia aristocrat meandering the boulevard for his afternoon con stitutional. The name, too, might ap propriately decorate the facade of ft grands magazin. Yet Brulatour la 100 percent American, born In Louisiana. He also suggests Caesar In profile on a rare old coin. Thingumabobs: John L. Horgan, Broadway hotel man. waa once a "boy tenor" of the river show boat . . . Sean O'Casey, Irish playwright, ends insomnia attacks with cups of scalding black coffee . . . Paul White man, around the house, calls his wife "Maggie" .' . . Sinclair Lewis Is a sucker for black bean soup . . . Llndy, Broadway restaurateur, was once a waiter at Horchcr's In Berlin . . . Kathleen Norrls was San Fran cisco's "sob sister" and was given her first assignment by E. D. Coblentz , . . Gene Tunney has been sculpted U times. He has a head the scuplt- ors love . . . The Player's billiard I table is the biggest single money maker of Its kind In town. Verne porter just falls in the door way gasping that Mnx B&er Is a leather merchant on Tenth avenue. The last time he arrived swooning was to tell of a laundress on 10th avenue named Pearl White. 4 Comment oti the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS DICK SHEPHERD, who runs the Hunter Hot Springs hotel at Lakeview, has 60 honker geese that started from the original pair that came down out of the skies and adopted him and his place two or three years ago. They're a beautiful sight to sec. and about this time of the year they are a musical lot to hear. (That Is, If you like the music of a honker goose). - HERE'S something to think about: Dick estimates that his flock of 60 "band," if you Insist on being technical would Increase within five years to TWO thousand If given ade quate feed, nesting facilities and pro tection from hunters and other ene mies. IP THERE is sucha thing as gooso heaven, a little corner of it must be located around Dick's place. There'st plenty of WARM water, with pools fed by boiling springs, one of which produces the famous Lakeview geyser, and there are stub ble fields In the near distance. Dick supplements the stubble field wth a grain ration for his pets. Uncle Sam Lends You a Hand Under the N. H. A. You can Buy A 51HI1p M EONARD ELECTRIC HOLLY BUILDING Then there Is PROTECTION. These geese know they're safe. That means everything In the world to wild crea tures. (You're probably famillar with the assertion, made with ft more or less straight face by the park rangers, that every bear In the southern Cas cades and the northern Sierras knows the boundary lines of Crater Lake and Lassen parks as well as the ran gers themselves, coming up to them furtively from the outside and as suming a nonchalant and perfectly at home ease and manner as soon as they cross over). REMEMBER, these geese discovered Dick's haven of refuge for them selves, putting up whatever passes In the goose tribes for claim stakes. Now listen: Every now and then ANOTHER band of questing honkers tops the surrounding hills, spots those warm pools and circles them to Investi gate., with the thrifty thought of taking possession. When this happens, do the squat ters who are in possession welcome the newcomers to their Utopia? They do NOT! THEY kick up a fuss that can be heard for ;i;ven miles, honking at the invaders, flapping their wings at them, calling them vile names, say ing aa plain as day: "This is OUR place: ours by right of discovery. We found it. We've taken possession, and we LIKE It. There's no room for outsiders, so you get the hell out of here!'1 IT'S Just possible that these geese arc wiser than we Americans. We found this country of ours or our forefathers did. We shooed the Indians out, tamed the wilderness. built cities, constructed roads, so that we can get from place to place made of It quite a paradise on earth. Then, instead of discouraging the questing outsiders telling them plainly as Dick's geese to do get the hell out of here and leave us alone we WELCOME them in, share our prized possessions with them, and even listen tolerantly when a tot of them get up on soap boxes and pro claim that America is the prize sink hole of the world, governed by grasp ing and vicious ogres and inhabited by morons. We've shared our blessings, includ ing WORK, mj effectively with out siders from all oer the earth that we now have some TEN MILLION more people than jobs! - IT'S possible, you know, to learn 1 even from geese, and the lesson these geese of Dick's teach so plainly might be worth bur heeding. amendable to lcbbmg pressure. When such resolutions arrive here they are more or lesa terrorizing (Continued r.jm page one) With the Super Freezer No Down Payment 3 AND UP TO YEARS TO PAY! Interest Only $5.00 Per Hundred a Year WE TAKE CARE OF ALL FINANCING DETAILS Here's your chance to benefit by the provisions of the National Housing Act. You can now have a Frigidaire '35 with the Super Freezer . . . make no down payment . . . and take as long as tnree years to pay ! Simply come in and select the Frigidaire you want. We help arrange the financing under the provisions of the National Housing Act. The Frigidaire '35, with the Super Freezer, sets new stan dards in ice-freezing capacity in healthful food preser vation in the crisping and freshening of vegetables in economical performance. See the new Frigidaire '35 for yourself at our store to-morrow. Morris E. Leonard to congressmen, for they Indicate that their whole sta:e is beseeching them. At least two votes against the court were made this way. Bonvs jtltlons now are coming in nearly every day. One day recently two were received by the senate from Washington state and Missouri ,v.t. ns. nnr mpan these two were lobbied through these particular legislatures). The scheme is particularly good this year because nearly all the legislatures are in session and the petitions can be rushed through to meet any special situation here. Another way In which State Sec retary Hull has applied the pimers subtly to the Russians Is in the Brazilian trade agreement. He slash ed the duty on manganese ore 60 per cent for Brazil, but not for Russia. If the supreme court Is going to issue an adverse gold decision, the proper time would be next Monday about 3:10 p. m. The markets will then be closed and will remain einuri until Vt?dneidav because Tuesday Is Lincoln's birthday. Con gress will be In session Tuesday ana could enact any necessary legisla tion. However, no one expects the decision to be adverse. Flight o Time (Mdirnrd and Jnckson Counlj lllstnr.v from Ihe llles of the Mall Trlhnne of 20 anil III Year, Aso). TKX YEARS Alio TODAY Fe'nrunry 7. I!)S3 Traffic on Paclric highway held up by mammoth slide near Roscburg. Los Angeles religious sect waits In vain "for end of world" yesterday, ns procllamed by "the supreme prophet- Wheat goes to tl.90 per bushel on Chicago market. Fifty years ago today, there was ten inches of snow at Ashland, old timers recall. Good horse races are assured county fair next September. for Jack Dempsey and Estelle T.vylor, film actress are wed. and whereabouts unknown. Chamber of Commerce to erect bill board and distribute pamphlets to advertise the valley. TWENTY' YEARS AtiO TODAY February 7, 1015 Kansas passes a law prohibiting use of rouge by women. Germans -fall to dislodge Russians from Carpathians after 22 charges In a day. Eleven wedding licenses were Issued In January by the county clerk. Work started on federal building at Sixth and Holly streets. Flour raises four cents per pound. Associated Charities makes second appeal for 4100 to continue social work for another month. Unless the , money is procured the work will b3 I, abandoned. I , NOW AVAILABLE AT BIG PINES LUMBER CO. Phone No. 1 Maiitifatalaal TELEPHONE 427 I