Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 18, 1935, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18. 1935
Medford Mail Tribune
"Cnryont tn Soulhtrn Orifloa
fttidt Uit Hall rribuna'
Daily eiecpt fltturdsi
tizimtuu rui mi. so co.
18-2f-2U N tit 8u
BuHF.KT W. KUHU Editor
An lodtpeodert Nenpaptr
CDttred u weoDd elssi Bitter tt Medfwd
Oreioo, ond Act of Much I, 18T.
SUBSCRIPTION HATK8
Bj Hill id A'lne
Dill), one reir S.JfJJ
Dtlx. ti awnlhi 3
IHHj, on mooLb u
Br Curler lit Adunee Medford, Aiblsnd,
JitUomille, Central Point, PbocoU. Tiiut. Jold
fill I tod on WshMji.
Dillj, on tear 18. OU
Daily, li month
Dally, one month ' -0
All tersu. eub Id sdtarxe.
ufflelel paper of tbt City of Medford.
OfMdtl paper of Jacksoo County.
UEMBEH OIT TUB ASSOCIATED PIIESfl
llrtelrlni full Leased Wire Scrrlee
The Aiioctatrd I'rew ti eietuiltily eoliued u
the uie for publication of all oei dltpatenM
credited to It otiwwlM credited to this paper
cd alto to the local nevi publlihed berelo.
AU flgbtt for publication 01 ipeaai uupaicon
Herein are sue rttenta.
MKMBEB OF UNITED PKE88
UEMBKK OK AUDIT BUKEAO
IV CIKCULAT10N8
Adier thing KepresenUtliea
M. & MOCENSEN COMPANY
Orfieee Id Ne York, Chicago, Detroit, 8a
franelur Ijo Arnelet Seattle Portland.
ME MBE.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Artliur Ferry
The president of Oeneral Motors
declares: "The buyers, of our pro
duct are our real bosses." This
should be taken with a grain of
their "Eaay Payment Plan."
The legislature only bu six daya
to run. It la hoped it they won't
run, they at least quit, In the same
length of time required for the cre
atlon of the earth.
"WEEP NO MORE" ITEM
(La Grande Observer)
Sixteen-year old Anne Shirley,
(above), who haa made auch
phenomenal success of three re
cent plcturea that she haa been
signed to a contract that will re
lieve her and her mother from
the housework at which they
have tolled for years.
t
Peace la raging ao lntenaely in
these parU, It la believed a school
election could be held without use
of "character aasaasl nation," commit
tees, or shotguns.
Plcturea of the Ilauptmann tr.al
have been shown nere. Interest was
divided between the demeanor of the
defendant on the stand, and the loud
plaid walat worn bv a restless lady
stenographer.
Linden Congregational church,
morning worship at 10 o'clock. Rov.
Silver will preach and the choir will
sing. "The Lord Have Mercy Upon
Us." (Linden Tribune) . Nothing
personal, one hopes.
The Don Runyard boy la growing
In a manner, that would hustle a
Objections and protests are being
filed to the injustice of a It license
fee on a 175 dog.
Cong. Pierce of Eastern Oregon his
Introduced a bill In Congress pro
hibiting the Literary Dlgeat'a atraw
vote, on the ground they Influence
the elections. Thin peevishness can be
corrected by a law prohibiting any
voting against Cong Pierce, legally
or straw.
An auto horn has been invented
that "sounds a musical thank-you."
What Is needed Is an auto horn, that
brays and kicks the young man who
go4 to sleep on It while waiting fo
nts girl to powder her nose.
"WHEN WAOBS ARE TOO HIGH"
(Hd line Oregon Voter). If ever, and
for the other fellow
The committee appointed to watch
for careless av.tolst. may cause the
autoslnt to name a committee to
watch out for pedestrians and warn
them, not to croaa the crowning, until
they come to M.
Premier Mussolini of Italy, with
hostilities with F-thiopta pending, hss
advised a'.l Italians, to "be preps .-vd
for any eventuality" In sny event
uality, there Is no danger or Mussolini,
getting to the front before sny or hu
soldiers.
DANCING Classic dancing alien
children rrom five to 13 years. Prices
reasonable. For appointment, phono
S35-M." (Redding Searchlight). Don't
rem long enough.
THE CO.MPI.KTK SV.Y.-l p
Bigotry, fanaticism, communism---the
devil's own brew of the Ill-bred
end misconceived sre getting too
firm a hold upon humanity all ovr
the globe f.tr the o-tmfort of person
who like to think betore they act and
to reason things out before they
move. It u a time when reaction
pastes for pr; ra- when clamor
pasae for logic and prejudice
t:ood sense. In the meantime what la
the duty of the enlightened man'
Shall he rare the breeze and kep
his mouth shut or go out and battle
for the return of teaaon and the will
of Ood? (Omaha World-Herald).
When it (.timet to radius rememoer
"Pruitt's can do tt " Phone 22
pae aia4 ?;idui taut ad.
.NR. A,
IS
The Gold Clause Ruling
"PHE essence of the long awaited gold clause decision, as we
iiiuierstflnd it, is that the
manage the currency of this country, is emphatically upheld.
When conditions, such as the recent world depression, bring
about the devaluation of the dollar, if this congressional action
is technically contrary to the provisions of private contract, the
latter falls before the former. '
In other words, private persons, states, municipalities and
their sub-divisions, have and had no power to ENTER INTO
gold clause contracts, if and when such action, interferes with
the power of congress to regulate the currency.
That is, the power of the people through their representa
tives in congress is supreme. In time of crisis, purely technical
considerations must yield to the public welfare.
It is the old "rule of reason."
. . .
WHILE the New Deal invalidation of "gold clauses" is sus
tained in private contracts; it is not so sustained on gov
ernment bonds.
The supreme court rules, that Uncle Sam must pay off his
own bonds in gold or the equivalent in devalued currency. That
is technically the holder of g $1000 federal bond is entitled ;o
$1,690 in our present currency.
BUT, in the same decision the court holds that the court of
claims has no jurisdiction over such cases, which appears to
mean that it would be impossible for holders of government
bonds to COLLECT on their old gold basis.
So while theoretically the government must pay gold on its
own obligations or the currency equivalent, PRACTICALLY
no owner or owners of such bonds can FORCE the government
to do so, as the law now stands.
TPIIE decision is very involved, and deals with matters which
it is extremely difficult for the average layman to under
stand. Until the entire decision has been published, and experts
have digested it, most of us will withhold final judgment, not
only as to TRECISELY what the ruling means; but as to any
moral considerations involved if any.
But the main effect of this decision, the most momentous
action of the supreme court in many-years, i fairly clear.
On matters of this sort Wall Street is a pretty reliable inter
preter. A few minutes after the announcement, stocks started
to soar skyward, kept souring for several hours and then quieted
down, apparently also inclined to get the final lowdown, before
breaking its suspender buttons. But everyone including Wall
Street agrees that the decision, as a whole, will make business
better instead of the reverse.
And we remain essentially a business people. So the ruling
will be generally welcomed, and may well mark, the real end
of the depression and the actual return of something like
NORMAL prosperity.
All needed for some time has been confidence. There appears
good reason to believe that this clarification of the gold clause
will bring it. -
NliVV YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK, Feb. 18. In the
manner of Arnold Bennett's Jour
nal: Surprises In the mall. A let
ter from Zlm
with one of his
tramps limned
on the envoi
ope. And a sheaf
of sketches of
remote Spanish
town a auto
graphed from
Vernon Howe
Ballcy. At break
fast someone
told how Victor
Herbert did his
best work.
He liked to
compoao Into at night clad only in
long underwear and smoking thick,
black cigars. Also palaver of that
remarkable book, "Maurice Guest,"
by Henry Handel Richardson. The
author, It astonishes us to learn,
was a woman. Marshall Nellan thinks
Rosa Lewis, of the Hotel Cavendish.
the greatest woman character alive.
A magazine editor steamed up Ted
Cook two yeara ago to write some
short stories. Everything was set
tled. The other day the editor wired
to know how he was coming along.
There came back this post card
reply: "Don't crowd me I" An P. P.
A. contributor thought up calling
Broadway rue de Vallee. O, he did I
Near Sherry's a sludgy, stout Ish
fellow with pendant cheeks said he
used to play with me In Ohio. Re
fused hla name. A romancer, I felt.
But no matter, hla hunger was as
tonishing. This month 1 have con
tributed steadily to the Cosmopoli
tan 14 years. Waspish weather.
The chauffeur John De Carlo
veered Into Avenue B. last eve
ning to point out a Three Cent
Store. Everything so priced. Even
a hair brush. Near the docks huskies
ere Mugging a rat as big as a
griffon, 1 swear. Further along they
wore dredging Tor a suicide. In De-
tancey street we niggled some enltrd
orange weds. They call them Ghetto
pecans. In England not long ago
Karl Kitchen saw some fancy baga
of his favorite nuts and inquired:
How much are those English wal
nuts?" The clerk: "O, you mean
tho.e sun-hnked California nuts."
That ftllly undergraduate talk
Kvlng nround lin, bp.-ome plngur
Ukr: "Sec you nround tcnl.h." Or
"Whcic cm I pu-k you up about
rlght-Wi?" A group ol thrill at No
il today. (Irorgo and Diana fltt
mMinrf cnt a rivcnl wefk-enu
at a piclurrwiup old raMle In Waif a
Tory had 16 bathroom, to thrm
lca. That', mv notion of rai
hopuuty. j MW William Lyon
Phflpa with hta umbrella padding
to a mattn'. r-, ti,( only pro
Oaalonal cruic to review attrrnoons.
Phil Bak.r rrvlrwrd hi, foiloi .
ahort-IIVfd opua wilh: "Nathan
walked out brtueen the llrat ayll-
able."
I larrup of hot Mfpemirr-Mupprng I
auaaga baa arrived. With corn cake '
1
power of congress to control and
and black-strap aorguhum It's
memorable morsel. M. told me of
meeting the Gene Crawleys' two
rosebuds on way to a church with
their nurse. "Do you like Sunday
school?" she asked. The elder: "Yea,
Indeedy. We can hardly wait." And
tney rainy danced away. I had a
letter from Hollywood about Colleen
Moore's doll house. Some years ago
sne got Tarklngton, Julian Street,
Wells and others to autograph min
iature books, especially made with
covera carrying the author and book
title. The house Is now valued at
870,000 by collectors.
A curloua twist. Expensive night
cluba and restaurants are In a whirl
wind boom. But so-called middle
claas places are locking up. Our
home town editor, Col. Whitman
G. Sibley, has written his last line.
In a small Ohio river community,
arter the fashion of Ed Howe. Wil
liam Allen White and Robert Quil
len, he attracted country-wide rec
ognition. An achievement, thatl Far
greater than winning notice writing
for powerful newspapera and syndi
cates. Hundreds of the latter but
only a handful of Slbloya. A pair
of proud Percherons with white
manes and brass-bossed collars
drawing a brewer a cart up the ave
nue turned every eye. I thought of
the first auto on Broadway. Dil
lingham, with a lady, drove It. In
front of the old Cadillac hotl it
bucked and took blare. They got out
and scurried away red to the ears!
I worked on magazine proofs an
hour before dinner. Remarkable how
an article can be tickled up. David
Phillips said hla finest work was
done In revision. Booked tentatively
to cruise with Capt. O. O. Mclntyre.
relation, on hla ship Huslalai
voyaging from Honolulu to outlying
islands. I'm clutched by a dread.
In case of disaster, passengers might
mistake the Mcln tyres and club me
out of the first life-boat. M. and
agreed In a contentful talk we
had never so longed to see Paris.
We reveled In a sun-down walk by
the river In the Bols toward St.
Cloud. A chocolat chaud In front ol
roquet '. A spin up the grand boule
vards to the place Bastille. And
back along the quays.
TOF
PORTLAND. Ore., Teb. 18 (API
Willamette valiey onions went to a
new high prtc for the season today
when buyers quoted 3.00 a hun
dred pounds tiet to grower.
Comparatively few carloads remain
In the wtlWmette valley producing
region and rails have come from the
Atlantic seaboard, the southwest and
west.
The scarcity of the "good-keeping"
onions resulted In the advance of 11
cental within the pajt 34 hours, but '
few growers were willing to sell even
at this tlgure. A survey Indicates
that about 135 carloads remain out
of a crop of 1.000 cars.
for Hose that Wear buy
NOLDB H0R8T
Ctnelwrn B- Hoffmann
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M. D.
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis
ease diagnosis or treatment will toe
it ii -ad dressed envelope ts enclosed. Letters should be brier and written id
Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be an
swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions
Address Dr. William Brady. 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal.
MTRITION MEANS
To those whose Interest Is limited
to headlines snd funnies, nutrition
is a fsncy term for victuals or "eats."
With Increasing
knowledge of the
chemistry and
the physiology of
plant and animal
life the word nu
t r I 1 1 o n de
notes more and
more In the field
of science. 1
deed It has now
come to auch
pas a that when
a gioup of scien
tific experts dis
cusses their observations and re
searches they speak In a strange lan
guage which we ordinary folk can
hardly understand.
By your leave I purpose to sit for
a while on this step half way up and
smoke this new pipe presented by an
old fan (believe It or not) while I
listen to the Jargon of the savants up
above and translate It Into words of
no over wo syllables for you dumb
eggs down below. You never know
If you listen you may know some
thing. I ask Just one favor of you
If, In spite of my long yeara of experi
ence at this, I lapse Into medlcalese,
please stop me. The most tiresome
bore Is one who asks a doctor to ex
plain something and then pretends
to understand when he can't possi
bly know what the doctor la talking
about.
Nutrition Is a function of living
plants and animals, consisting in the
Ingestion or taking In of nutriment,
pabulum, food, nourishment, and the
assimilation of material thru chemi
cal beings called metabolism: this
material being used In the body for
production of heat or energy, for re
pair of wear and tear, for growth and
for new construction or reproduction.
Successive stages of metabolism are
commonly known as digestion, ab
sorption, assimilation and excretion
or elimination. Excretion or elimina
tion is effected thru defecation, uri
nation, sweating, expiration or exha
lation. All this and more Is comprised In
nutrition.
Excretion or elimination la the least
Important part of the enire process
of nutrition and is perfectly auto
matic or self-regulating If not un
wisely tampered with but most of
you dumb laymen are Introspective
and even morbid about this, having
had the wrong sort of teaching by
the quacks and nostrum mongers all
your life and so you've tossed so many
monkeywrenches into tne wonts mni
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
IN THESE days when many strange
theories are abroad, this theory is
being urged upon us:
That by pensioning a considerable
part of the population, we can create
vast new prosperity for all the popu
lation. Many honest people believe this to
be true.
IN ORDER to get a better under
1 standing of this theory, let'a cut
It down to a size we can understand.
Suppose, for example, that you and
five other people are working a farm
In the way our great-great-grandfathers
worked It getting your food
by growing it out of the soil: your
clothing by shearing your sheep snd
carding, spinning and weaving the
wool; your soap by mixing fat with
potash: your shoes by tanning hides
and sewing the leather, and your
shelter by cutting down trees and
building cabins.
In such a case, these things would
constitute your WEALTH, and each
of you would contribute his share
toward the production of this wealth.
NOTE this, for It Is Important:
There would be only as much
wealth as you actually PRODUCED.
NOW let us suppose that four of
vnti pot. tone (her unrl sitlri:
Let us PENSION the other two.
That la to say, let us GIVE to them,
without their having to work for It.
a share of everything we produce."
WOULD that create any new wealth?
Wrtlllrf It rnlf tn tYm nrrvlnr-.
tion of sny more food, of any more
clothing, of any more shoes, of any
more soap, of sny mre houses?
The answer Is perfectly plain it
mould NOT.
IT .MIGHT be the perfectly fair and
decent thing for the four of you
to do.
The two who were pensioned might
be older and weaker. They might be
past their fully productive years
They might have done their full
hare in the paat and so he entitled
to rest and freedom and leisure.
But the four of you who went on
working wouldn't PRODUCE MORE
food and clothing and shis and soap
and houses than the six of you had
produced before
THIS is the point:
It isn't SPENDING that create
wealth. It l PRODUCING. No
more weailh can be consumed" c
answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped
MORE THAN DIGESTION
you're all out of kilter now. and
maybe you bad better not throw
away your pills or potions, trick
enemas and Imported bird seed until
you have studied my treatise. "The
Constipation Habit," and conned It
several times. Theres' only one way
you can get a copy of thla treatise:
send ten cents In coin not (stamps)
and a three-cent stamped envelope
faring your address and ask for the
treatise. Correspondents who do not
comply with my terms may squawk
and yelk and cancel subscription or
even pull their ads they won't get
snywhere with me.
Normal, perfect. Ideal nutrition,
metabolism, growth or health Is eu-
trophy. Deficient nutrition la vari
ously known as atrophy, inanition!
malnutrition, marasmus, emaciation,
withering, constitutional weakness,
frailty, underweight, dystrophy. We
might get by without some of these
big words, but In a conference like
this I find a Judicious Introduction
of a few big words keeps the lay
members guessing: If one excludes all
Impressive words some laymen will
think they know about as much aa
the doctor does, and then one can't
teach them anything.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
TIC
Young man has peculiar habit of
constantly blinking his eyes, will
children be likely to Inherit this? Is
there any cure for It? (B. C. 8.)
Answer. Habit spasm or tic la not
heritable, but a child might acquire
the same habit from Imitation. Tlck
tock, tlck-tock, papa to baby. The
habit Is curable by a faithfully fol
lowed series of exercises. Including In
hibition exercises.
Quack Starves 'Em to Death
. . . Had Br i glit's disease. The doc
tor kept him on an orange Juice fast
for foui months. ... I have seen him
cry from hunger pains . . . finally the
doctor said he was all well and said
he could eat anything ... he was
dead in two weeks. (Mrs. M. B. L.)
Ans. The quack, you mean, not
the doctor.
Acidity
Please give a list of foods one
should avoid when there la too much
acid W. W.)
Ans Send stamped addressed en
velope and 10 cents for booklet.
"Ouide to Right Eating."
(Copyright, 1935, John F. Dllle Co.)
Ed Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady, M. !.. 265 C
Camlno. Beverly Hills. Cal.
"enjoyed," If you prefer that word
than Is ACTUALLY PRODUCED.
THIS Is undoubtedly true:
Our system of distributing the
things we produce isn't perfect. It
never has been, and It Is quite .prob
able that It never will be.
But this Is ALSO true:
You can't DISTRIBUTE more
things than are PRODUCED, and the
only way to produce things Is to
work.
18 CONVICTS FLEE
(Continued irom rsge One)
tents rounded up all Inside turnkeys
and Day Sergeant Walter Ford, lock
ing them In a cell.
"Come on," they yelled.
A mob of youthful prisoners rallied
to the cry, rushed headlong upstairs
Into the visitors' room.
Visitors Seized
"There were about twenty visitors
there, mostly women snd children."
said Leslie Long, a convict, who was
there talking with his wife and sister-in-law.
"We all went out toward the front
tower. They herded us out there to
keep the guards from shooting st
them.
"After they broke, I went over and
gave up "
As the cage-maddened mob rsm
paRed down the corridors toward the
double-barred front door and free
dom, one of them snatched a bs wed
off shotgun from a door guard's rack.
An Instant later, the same gun
blared Its fatal charge at 60-year-oid
"Uncle" Peter Jones, veteran tower
guard.
"Vm sure he didn't have a chance
to defend himself." cried Mrs. Waters.
The escaping convicts hunched for
ward warily behind their helpless
hostages.
Warden Appears
A feminine figure ran Into the yard
from the warden's residence. Just out-
side the walls. It was Warden Waters,
Her hand fluttered up tn a signal to
ririrmen in sentry boxes on wall and
tower.
They rired. without effect, their
marksmanship impeded by the hap
le captives.
But a moment later, from a flank,
came the sullen boom of Deputy
Warden M R. Galllcn's
shotgun.
utomatlc
right boys lurched and stumbled otisly If that b.ll ever cornea up.
as his slug ripped into their flesh j There are at lean twenty other senm
None naa seriously hurt. Another, i tors who would practice if they
terrified, halted. A tenth was taken thought there was any need of tt.
by a nearby civilian. Vernon Tails- Controlling leaders are wholw out
ferro of Carter, who was present at
the break and was deputised and
armed by the guards.
Twenty-one of the more determined
prisoners swarmed Into parked aut-
mobies, or stopped drivers of cars on ,
the big hlghvay upon whih the re- '
f.vmauiry lacM.
Three of them rt recaptured K
later by posMmeD at eayra.
T
TO THIS COUNTY
3,100 Persons Directly De
pendent Upon Forests-
Industry Promises Growth
Must Sustain Yield.
"What do the people of Jackson
county do for a living?" Is one of the
questions asked In a population sur
vey Just being made by the forest
service tn connection with the sus
tained timber yield program proposed
for Oregon and Washington.
The answer to this question, for
estry officials say, shows that forest
land and timber crops already play
aa Important part In the life of Jack'
son county. In this county It Is found
that of a total population of 32,918
in 1930, roughly 3,100 persons, were
directly dependent on the timber In
dustry for a livelihood. It Is found
also that a population at least
great Is Indirectly dependent on the
Industry. Furthermore, since the to
tal timber stand In this county rep
resents nearly 20 billion board feet.
It Is pointed out that lumber manu
facture Is destined to play a much
more Important part than It has yet
played In the life of the county.
Must Sustain Yield
In 1929 there were 21 sawmills In
the county which cut 111,351,000
board feet of lumber, although In
1933 the mills had decreased to 12
In number, cutting 43,957.000 board
feet. With the return of normal con
ditions a strong "come-back" in the
Industry may be expected. It Is said.
However. In order to assure continued
activity of this Industry which sup
ports so large a portion of the coun
ty's population, It Is necessary that
continuous production be maintain
ed on the timber lands which supply
present and future mills, according to
the report. This Is a major reason
back of the urge for the so-called
"sustained yield management" of our
forests, and is a reason that should
be fully understood by every citizen
of the county, according to the re
port. Foresters state that the pres
ent "cut-out and get-out" policy of
forest cutting will result in a brief
period of Industrial activity, followed
by Inevitable economic and social dis
aster. Aids Many Industries
The survey shows that Oregon's
basic Industries which could exist
without dependence upon other In
dustries are few In number.' Of these
basic Industries, agriculture and tim
ber comprise roughly 68 per cent.
The timber Industry alone comprises
between 30 and 40 per centi and
much of the agricultural activity Is
closely related to the prosperity of
the timber workers as a great home
market. The state's economic struc
ture and tax base, It Is shown, depend
upon timber In approximately the
same proportion as its population.
It Is pointed out that the adoption
of a continuous production program
for Oregon's forests and timber In
dustries requires certain . necessary
measures. A full realization by the
public of the present timber situa
tion would undoubtedly make these
measures effective.
Forests Richest Resource
"The hopes of this state for ob
taining new Industries through cheap
power development," say forest offi
cials, "must not blind us to the fact
that primarily most of our productive
land Is valuable only for growing
timber. Whatever additional Indus
tries we gain should not prevent us
from fully capitalizing our richest
Industrial asset. timber."
The survey Indicates that, because
of its virgin timber supply. Oregon
Is one of the few states In the union
where a sustained timber yield pro
gram can be put Into operation with
out curtailing Industrial activity
pending the time when new forest
crops will be available for cutting.
In fact it Is shown that Oregon's
lumber production can be substan
tially "stepped up" under careful
sustained yield management without
impairing the state's permanent eco
nomic structure.
(Continued from Page One)
when found, some senators have a
sudden urge to talk indefinitely.
Somehow or other they never get to
vote. The customary fate appears
to await the current one.
It Is sponsored by democrats, all
right, and it will emerge from the
senate Judiciary committee soon and
reach the senate calendar. There la
no reason to believe It will sdvsnce
much ftirther.
For instance, one democratic sena
tor from an Illustrious southern state
'.a telling his friends that he ha. been
gradually expanding his natural Ion;
windedr.ev by practicing In the attic
at merits. He is now nt. he says, to
talk for at least two week cont.nu-
'of sympathy with the leslslation and
, may arrai.ee leas exhausting means
j for lu demise.
NT RKMnMHl i: to the mother
who netfle-t to g!e
her child
i-k of Wrirley'a chew
sum
I'M Mia r.-icvuia mat kui.
Flight o Time
(Medford altd Jackon Count;
lllitor. Irom th, file, of the
Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Vean
Ao.
TEX VEtRS GO TODAY
Kehruaiiv 18. 1935
(It Wai Wednesday)
Motorist, who have not procured
their 1925 auto platea. are given a
final warning by state trafllo de
partment. Chris Ootttiebdieata R. Maru.
250 to 225 In the nlty billiard title
series, and Dan Wat. ion and O. Fugl
will play the other semi-final game
tonight. Gottlieb la sure of a place
In the finals. Watson has lost one
game.
Receiver la named for the Grants
Pass railroad.
E. H. Hedriclt. superintendent of
schools at Heppner, Ore- Is named
head of the Medford school system,
beginning next fall. Prof. Hedriclt Is
regarded as one of the aDlest educa
tors tn the state.
Antl-clgarette bill Is defeated In
state senate.
John C. Mann Is elected second
vice president of the state merchants
association, who pledge "o pposltton
to government meddling In b uslness."
TtVEXTV YEARS AGO TODAY
February 18. 1915
It Was Thursday)
Prank James, brother of Jesse
James, notorious bandit, dies of apo
plexy at Excelsior Springs, Mo., age
74 years. Frank James, after a vivid
criminal career lived the life of fnrm
er for 30 years.
Kaiser's submarine blockade of
England In full force, and Ameriitan
ships warned to steer clear of rar
zone. Lull comes to European batt le
fronts, preparatory to spring offens
ives. Masonic lodge moves to new quar
tera tn the M. P. It H. building.
Grand Jury reporta "the windows
at the poor farm need washing, and
the county Jail Is kept too warm."
President Wilson will press button
opening Panama-Pacific Exposition at
San Francisco Saturday.
PUGH BONOS POSTED
BY PORTLAND PAIR
Bonds In the sum of 12500 for re
lease of Kyle Pugh from the county
Jail, pending appeal to the state sup
reme court, from his conviction a.id
sentence of five years in state prison,
for criminal syndicalism, have bean
approved by Judge H D. Norton. T'.ie
sureties were listed as two Portland
residents.
Pugh has been In the county Jail
since last September when he was
charged with the attempted sale, dis
tribution and possession of commu
nistic literature advocating the over
throw of the American form of gov
ernment by "force, crime, and vio
lence." 4 1
Derby
DERBY, Feb. 18. (Spl. Many of
those attending the Community club
program and dance Saturday nlgiU
Included people from neighboring
communities
Main feature in the home drama
tics was the comic play put on In cos
tume and directed by Mrs. Murl Deen.
entitled "The Mock Wedding."
Wayne Whaley contributed a much
enjoyed song as did the tiny grand
daughter of Mrs. "Doc" Hamlin of
Eagle Point, truly remarkable for one
so young.
Mra. Ed Eld red accompanied Percy
O'Ncll through two lovely violin
pieces with the piano.
The program was followed by the
usual dance, eighty being present.
The music was furnished by Wayne
and Bert Whaley and Lorlne Smith.
Mrs. Frank Hill Is convalescing
nicely at her home after her serious
Illness and is able to be up and about
the house for short Intervals.
Murl Deen haa been on the sick list
this last week. His many friends ex
tend wishes for a speedy recovery.
Mrs. William Slmonds on the Coker
Butte road spent the week end visit
ing among friends and relatives of
Derby.
Quite the most enjoyable affair of
the week was held at the school house
on Thursday afternoon In the form
of a Valentine's Day tea given by the
teachers, the Mlses Harriet Smith
and Irwanda Ba tenia n. The gathering
was given the treat of hearing classi
cal piano selections which Included
the beautiful "Impromptu" by Schu
bert and the "Nocturne" by Chopin
rendered by Mis Charlotte Walters.
of Ashland. James Stevens of Med
ford delighted old and young with
several "darkey" songs. Mra. Stevens
accompanied on the piano.
Other guests Included Mrs. C. C.
Walters and Mrs. I. R. Bateman both
of AAhland.
The tea table was covered with a
lovely lace cloth. The centerpiece of
sweet peas and carnations, tall tapers
and motifs carried out in red and
white paid Just tribute to the day.
Tiny cookies and candles were pass
ed by school girls while Mrs. c. E,
Slmonds poured.
The school children also had their
annual Valentine box followed by hot
chocolate and cookies tn the gjm.
Ose Uail rriDuoe want ada
Phone Mi Well haul away your
refuse City Sanitary Service
Sonstipation
Fw" If constipation causes vou Oas.
Indigestion, Headaches, Bad
Sleep, Pimply Skm. get quick
relief with ADLERIKA. Thor
ough anion, vet antle. safe.
l Medford rturm and Heath s LUuft
Store
1935 JURY LIS!
(Continued from Page One)
Anderson, John A., Central Point,
Rt. 1, farmer.
Bowman. Roy R., Jacksonville, car
penter. Brsyton. E. H., Medford, J'vllle Star
Rt.. orchardist.
Blrdseye, Mrs. Effle, Rogue River,
housewife.
Blrdseye, Victor F., Gold Hill, farm
er. .
Beck. W. A., Rogue Rover, laborer.
Brenner, John, Central Point, Rt.
1, farmer.
Bellenger, Frank R . Medford, re
tired. Brockway, A. E., Medford, Rt. 1,
farmer.
Burns, A. F-, Medford, Rt. 1, me
chanic. Bigham, Elbert, Eagle Point, farm
er. Burreson, Peter, Gold Hill, Star Rt.,
farmer.
Blackford. Oscar. Central Point,
farmer.
Borg. C. G-, Talent, miner.
' Baughman, Rosa Lee, Talent,
housewife.
B rower, Bertha D-, Ashland, house
wife. Byrd. G. W.. Ashland, farmer.
Brophy, Jack W., Eagle Point,
farmer.
Blair, C. P.. Central Point, Rt. I,
farmer.
Bossum. Charlie, Medford, mill
man.
Bldcn, Elva, Medford, housewife.
Brownlee, J. E.. Medford, Rt. 4,
service station operator.
Bourne, Geo. A., Medford, Rt. 4,
farmer. .
Bishop, Guy. Medford, Rt. 4, farm-
er.
Byers. Jean, Ashland, farmer.
Bradshaw, Lee, Brownsboro. farmer.
Briscoe, Calltc, Ashland, housekeep
er. Bowers. Milton D., Gold Hill, la
borer. Baughman, Vella, Ashland, house
wife. Blede, Gertrude, Ashland, house
witfe. IVltows, BenJ.. Eagle Point, farmer.
Efetz, Peter E-. Eagle Point, farm
er. Bl.pham. Wm., Eagle Point, farmer.
Brpwn, Chas. A., Ashland, Rt. 1,
rancler.
BoMnert, Arnold, Central Point,
R. F. p., farmer.
Brown, Austle B., Ashland, Rt. 1,
farmer.,
Boar Iman, Margaret, Prospect,
hcusewlYe.
Barnelurg, Fred, Medford, Rt. 4,
farmer.
Bell, PUoyd. Phoenix, farmer.
Barkley, Wm. M., Phoenix, confec
tionery.
Bateman, Mabel, Ashland, house
wife.
Boggs, Ethel W., Medford, house
wife. Bailey. Jo tin W.. Talent, farmer.
Bybee, Frank, Medford, R. F. D.t
farmer.
Benson, Rsrfael, Medford, Rt. 3,
farmer.
Biddle. Madfee R., Medford, Rt. a,
housewife.
Clngcade. Chns., Eagle Point, farm
er. Caton, Alice M, Sams Valley, house
wife. Cook. J. W.. Medford, Rt. 4, fruit
man.
Coblelgh, Guy, Medford, Rt. 4,
farmer. ,
Chandler, Noati, Talent, Rt. 1,
farmer.
Cochran. Edith .0., Talent, clerk.
Claycomb. H. L-, Ashland, Hill
crest St., auto dealer.
Croucher, Frank, Medford, Rt. 3.
farmer.
Coffeen, Charlie A., Medford, 4
plumber.
Coy. Bertha. .Gold UlU. secretary.
Carlton. Mildred F., Central Point,
housewife.
Carson. O. F., Ashlarid. laborer.
Caton, Francis L., Sams Valley,
merchant.
Crandall, E. A.. Eagle Point, re
tired. Carter. F. S .. Ashland, farmer.
Cook. Ethel L-. Ashland, housewife.
Chaney. Violet H., Talent, Rt. 1,
housewife.
Cantrall. John, Medford,, mgr. ser.
sts.
Collins. Samuel C, Central Point,
Rt. a. farmer.
Carver. Fay. phoenix. hou;wife.
Cantrall. Miles. Ruch. farmer.
Currier, w. J.. Medford. la.twrer.
Colvlg. Nina. Medford. housewife.
Chlldcrs, Elmer, Medford contract
or. Chit wood, Minnie A. Jacksonville,
housewife.
Crawford, Belle. Talent, housewife.
Chlldcrs, Frank, Gold Hill, mail
carrier.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest V. Hurt of 712
Wtst Eleventh strt announce tit
birth of a on. James Allen Hurt, at
their home Sunday, February 17.
A daughter, weshlng 9'; pounda,
as born to Mr. and Mrs. James R.
Huklll at thlr home on Howard ave.
nue rarly thla morning.
mm
BIO PINES LBR. CO.
MEDFOKP
PHUM. 1