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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1935)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOK1), OREGON. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 20. 1935. Medpord Mail Tribune 'Emmnt in Southern Onfloe Rudt (hi Mail Tfibun'' Dally Kinpl Saturday PuhlUfint tij UMWiUin I'ltlNTlNU CO. 5-at-'iU N fU sl vmt fft KitHKKl VV KLHL, Editor AO Independent Ncnpipcr Entered u lerond elus matter it Medfortl Ortfoo, under Acl of Much 8. 18T9. SLItsrWI'IlUN RATES M Mill IE, AftlllK Dally. j irer n.iu tii nixiihi. J. To ri!i. jm montli Hi ffrlM li, Aduree Medfortl. AsMand, Jeeksomllle. tnrl Pulnt. Pboenli. Talent, (iold mil ort nn lllihuara. Pally, am ar -0u Pally, li nnnthi Dillv. one fflnntli .0 All urau. cub to edianea. Official paper of Wa City of Medford, Official paper of Jackson CouiiLy. alCMi.Kit OK THE AHSOCIATKD PKE88 UeceiviriK Full Leased Wire SerTlct a.. .... n.iK1latlnn nf al' nrna rtltnfjti-JlM credited to It otherwise credited Id thU piper and alio to UW local mm puomnea nereia. All flRhU for publlcaUon of special dlapatcbu Herein ire aw reieneo. MKMHKH OP UNITED PRESS MT.MHKK OK AUDIT B I) HEAD OK CIRCULATION!) Adtertlilnt Rrpreieriuttm M. a MOtiESBEN COMPANT Offleei In St York, Chlcaso. Detroit, Rip Krartrlirf lw Ansdf SralUe Portland. MEMBER. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry Polltlclana promoting the proposed "third party" announce they will "concentrate on the church, and farmer vote" in 1936. It la a. trifle early for predictions, but the leaders will do aa much praying, a they do plowing. Manufacturer of next year' auto mobile are considering the advisa bility of placing the englnea In the rear. In the factory, instead of the drivers knocking them back there by ramming a phone pole. The Hitler regime In Germany ruthlessly beheaded two women spies. This fori, of bobbing" la considered too rough, even for No. 1 American fiends caught and convicted. A number of "hunger marchea" by the unemployed, etc., etc., on the national capltol and various state capltols are brewing. The weather la getting fine for hunger marching, and spring garden spading. OTHERWISE ALL RIGHT. "He Is a mountebank. He should be flung and horse-whipped from public life. He would double cross his own aunt. He attained power on the pennies and half pennies of the people and now . he la robbing them. When he dies, he will be cursed by mil lions." (Prom an oratorical at tack on Ramsay MacDonald, In the British parliament.) Pletch nsh, the boom-day tenor of Phoenix, is around again, after some trouble with a dentist. The legislature quashed the "cock tall hour" bill, providing for the serving of same In hotels and cafes. The "cocktail hour" Bounded rea sonable, but like the four-minute epeech of war times, a poor Judge of time. It was also feared It would cause a deluge of cocktail mlscrsn with no more luck than they had with their home brew., The Portland ball team la now being arwmnlrd, and la hitting home runs with the bnses full, on the sporting pages of the Oregonlan. with more gusto than at any time alnce the Wall atrret crash. FOR BALE: Beautiful fur coat, val ued at aaoo. Will wll for 7fl. Owner r ailed pant . Room A7, Star Apart ment." (Mendocino Register) Winter has gone. A New Mexico rattleman who gave a lady $3000 "to keep for him" last Ortohrr. hn pursued her twice arrow the continent In an effort to catch up with her. Preaa dispatches fall to ntat whether he denlred to regain the $3000 or give her the balance of his wealth to keep. MN mi st Kinr.. (M. ( nll-Rulletln) Foremost rank among the ne cessities of life, even during the depression, ta given by this coun try to RAsollne. The production of gasoline has held up during the depression far better than that of clothing or shoes, rr of proce.wd goods. During 1P34 gasoline made a new Ctl-tlme high record. H Flewlirr. the demon baker, who hint l.een going to the Public Speak ing uas. made a running talk at the bidmlntnn exhibition laat night, with nothing to run about. A Vienna doctor claims to have dlscoverrd the secret of "perpetual youth" This M1 tvme In handy with the aaoo per month pension. ruin that will be badly needed nxt summer to catch farmers with tl c r hay lun, continue to occur- :M!illVII.LE, Trim., Feb. 50 (API -By a vote of 67 to 30 the atate house of representatives today killed a bill to repeal Tennessee'! "monkey. Inw'' which prohibits the teaching In H'lK'Ol of Miiy theory that man Is rlei-wnoed from i lower order of animal!. 1 nHirStErfT vv A Lesson to Be Learned A PERSONAL letter from a member of the tate legislature contains the following: "Governor Martin Is on th. Job all th Um. H. observes no eight hour day. Ha never adjourna at 8 p. m. to meet again at eleven the following morning. He haa given the moat atrlklng example of concentration, application and hard work, aeen In the atate house for a generation. And no one aska who la boaa. Everyone admlta the Governor Is. Yet there la nothing arbitrary or dictatorial about him. He la willing to talk thing, over at anytime, and give every consideration to the other aide. If he had a cabinet of ten good bualneaa men Instead of the legislature to work with, the ship of atate Instead of being becalmed after a month of delay and bewilderment, would be selling full steam ahead, with lta decks cleared for action." Anyone visiting Salen will find the same general opinion expressed many times. Governor Martin is making a splendid record. He is handicapped by the legislature, not because it is a poor legislature hk such things go, it is certainly no worse than the average, but because large bodies move slowly, and repre sentative government, can neither eliminate politics, nor trans act business with the maximum efficiency. However what interested us most in the letter, was not the tribute to Governor Martin, nnr the revealing light thrown upon the inherent inefficiency of our traditional democratic methods of administration, but the fact these opinions were expressed by a Republican, who, we are quite certain, voted for Joe Dunne in the last election. . What a change has come over the spirit of his dreams? Only a short time ago a little over 00 days, it was being constantly broadcast that General Martin was an old man, retired from active service, because of physical and mental disability, who knew nothing about the state and cared less, and who if elected would take his orders from Os West. .... WE have no desire to rub it in, or try to revive any of the factionalism and bitterness of the gubernatorial campaign, but we do think it important and desirable, to bear such things in mind, so errors of the past may be PREVENTED in the future. It is plain to everyone now, that the campaign against Gen eral Martin was political shadow boxing and partisan flim-flam of the most transparent type. The things said against him were not true, and in most particulars were the exact reverse of the truth. .... Any voter really interested in the matter, could have estalr lished the falsity of this partisan whang-doodle, by spending a few hours checking up the facts SOME of them, we are glad to say, did. Enough in fact to elect the better qualified candidate. But thousands of them didn't. Thousands of voters fell and fell hard for this partisan propaganda. They didn't investigate for themselves, they took the word of the office seekers with an axe to grind and tluf professional politicians. They proved to be easy marks, and we are certain that a vast majority looking back on the campaign now, and observing the present situation at the state house will admit it. Tea, they fell for the same old line of hooey. And we arc calling attention to this matter, with the HOPE that when the next political campaign comes around they won't be so simple, won't swallow the pap from EITHER side, but will keep their heads and try to get the facts for THEMSELVES. For the more the voters follow this course, the more certain we are to get better men in public life, and getting better men in public life means getting better government. The Horror of MISS LILLIAN STEELE, New York girl recently released from fl Hnrmnn nr!nn rofncoa in eiMtvt tlm ni-ne. t-niini'l. that two German women of beauty and breeding were beheaded by the Hitler government, as spies. She thinks it propaganda wants to break the anti-Nazi spy ring once and for all, and takes this method of doing it. The two women, she opines, are cither fictitious, or are safe in prison, and when the storm blows over will be released. ... WE hopo Miss Steele is right. TB7i fiprmniiv'i rlpi.nrlenpA Berlin since the republic's overthrow, than this story of the top- hatted executioner, and the two victims. Spies, regardless of sex are exists, hut this is the first time we can recall, in modern his tory, that a so-called civilized nation has carried out the death sentence against WOMEN, in time of peace. If true, this ghastly horror, Germany has remained, since chauvinistic Hitler. Hut one of the most regrettable features of the situation, is that no one outside of the Hitler government, has the slightest idea what has happened. Nor will they until the dictator and his secret council, sec fit to make it known. The people of Germany are as ignorant of what is really going on in their country, as the world outside. There is no free speech. There is no free press. There arc no free or un controlled courts. The autocracy of the former Kaiser has been exchanged for the absolute tyranny of a small clique, of which Hitler is the spokesman and figuevhead. Only under such conditions could such a monstrous outrage have been perpetrated, or if the report is mere propaganda, such a method of disciplinary publicity be CONSIOKREP. . A NO yet we find some half baked agitators in this country today who arc advocating the overthrow of democracy ami the establishment of a dictatorship as preferable to the present situation. Some want a Kascist dictatorship, others a dictatorship of the proletariat. l'Vrtuimtfly the American people have in Russia, Germany and Italy, evidence of what dictatorship really MEANS. Democracy has its faults we all know conditions are often discouraging, but only those who are deaf, dumb and blind, can deny it is all in the best form of government yet devised by the hand ami brain of man. Kor America even to t'ONSlDEl! abandoning it, would be thecr madness 1 and the record. who should have known better. Hitlerism for home consumption. Hitler No more shocking evidence of hi-nrnlltv haa nrtma Ant nf self composed and courageous executed when a state of war will alienate what sympathy with the advent of the neurotic and Personal Health Service By William Slgried letter! pertaining to personal Health and hygiene not to dis ease dlagnoil! or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady If s etaraped atlf-addressed envelope la enclosed. Letten !hould be brief and written to Ink. Owing to the laige number or letter! received only a few can be an swered. No reply can be made to querlei not conforming to Instruction! address Dr. William Brady. 263 El Camlno. Beverly Bills, Cat. TUB PHOOF OF THE EAT IXO IS IV THE PADDING) Modern medical practice, particu larly therapeutics, U based upon ani mal experimentation. - That la. the science of medi cine is. The art of medicine puta this expertmenial knowledge to the test of exper ience, which ta n u m a n experi mentation. Act ual clinical ex perience la the criterion, the beat authority for all true phy sicians. Here la a fact wnich, In my Judg ment, clinical experience haa proved aa positively as any practical fact can be proved by animal experiment: In the great majority oi cases of obesity or overweight the essential cause is shortage of vitamins in the ordinary diet, and therefore the rational rem edy la correction of this nutritional defioency. This does not Imply that vitamins bring about reduction of excess fat or diminution of body di mensions. Indeed, many frail, un derweight Individuals have gained needed vigor and flesh on a suitable ration of vitamins On the other hand many thousands of overweight Individuals have found that they de sire and require less food when they get the vitamins which are necessary for normal functions. When the de mands of the body for vitamins are satfafled general health and vitality Invariably Improve, whether the Indi vidual elects to follow a reduction regime or not. This, I maintain, is a soundly es tablished principle of practice, sup ported by ample clinical evidence in the observations made by physicians throughout the country. Being a codger of sorts I have cogitated this question, many an hour and I can't conceive how It could be put to the test of animal experimentation, for it would be too difficult to approx- , Imate the many conditions which In fluence human habits of eating nd drinking. I often recall Topsy, the sorrel mare I drove when I was a young and honest practitioner In Penn Yan. believe It or not. Topsy was spoiled with petting. Somehow I couldn't unharness her and turn her Into her stall after a night call without giving her a generous extra measure of oats and additional hay so. naturally, she grew too fat, but that wa in the comparatively busy winter season. In the comparatively Idle summer time Topsy kept In fine condition. I believe now that she got more vitamins In the summer, what with the green grass and things she NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK. Feb. 30. In these days of impending or imagined doom. cape should be swirled to Joyous 53 laughers. That is to those who laugh from the boots up, hon estly, even bois terously. New York has a habit of wearing one down to pinched off little dry-as-Sahara smiles. Nothing Is more heartening than those riffter shaking guffaws of Joe Moore. Otis Ralston. Or '.ate' Prazlcr Hunt and Robert Benchley on the aisle at a first night. Also the balloonist, way Dick Berfln hns of puffing up like a pouter pigeon before letting go a cascade of chuckles. Get Paul Whlteman off In a cor ner and tickle hla funny bone and he'll break up meetln'. And the fel-: low who tells the funniest stories. Irvln Cobb, will laugh loudest at yours. The moat amusing laugher la C. Ii. Edvm. who opens his mouth, sticks out his tongue and bends double like a Jack-knife. In the feminine division Phyllis: Haver and Mae Allison can touch off an entire room, so contagious la their laugh. The late Marie Dressier was a grand laugher, too. Miriam Hopkins can begin cn a little blurt that la liable to expand to a roar, i Laughers, it Is noticed, are usually prosperous. Will Rogers, most calloused of the troupers, did the greatest bit of the ater fidgeting of his long career a recent evening. But this time he was on the hither side of the curtain to attend the first night of a per formance in which hla daughter. Mary, made her Broadway debut. His long-time friend, Fred Stone, sat In a nearby sent with the smelling salts. Bvit RoRer.V qualms were un necessary. The young lady acquitted hervlf creditably. So much bo she won the crltica praise. The atrneclinir group of exiles ban ished from the Russian court, bravely keep up the long ago pretenses In New York. Now and then they give a ball and bring out the daullng costumes that once paraded be fere the Crar'a box at such functions All of them work for a living now in a strange new land. Grand Duch ess Marie, the leader by risht oi title and so.MaI accomplishments. Photographs professionally. Prince Mn term belli has launched a profit able perfume business. There are princes who run dim cellar cafes and princesses who o out by the day as sesrmtrrw. But at the balls thev r.-me back to their standing In! a vanished empire. ! Adela Roger St. Join. a won high I Venors lour ns lis tic; ill v In her ring- j tide descriptions of tlv Hauptmann ' trial. Much of the lutiuea 125,000 -Ma!v'(jHp - : . m Brady, M. D. enjoyed, and but, one sorrel mare doesn't signify. If we had several groups of, aay, a hundred horses, to experiment with we might get evi dence which would satisfy the ultrs scientlflc laboratory men. A prominent mid-west physician writes: ... my ten days experience with (a vitamin ration) and ten days without It. Total loss of weight during thla period was eight pounds, with marked diminution in neck and waist measurements. There Is no doubt In my mind as to the efficacy of (the vitamin ration) to prevent undue hunger while one Is on a reduction diet ... I have had a drop of 16 mm. blood pressure with Improved breathing and general sense of well being , . . The only reason why animals are better experimental material than hu man beings is that you can control the diet of caged animals. Human beings are all liars, but some of them are willing to play the game fairly when they realise they are being ben efited by it. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ' Sunken Eyes I am 40, and havo deep set eye pits, which make me look strange. Read of a drug which, as a side ef fect, makes the eyeballs protrude (O. N.) Answer No drug can do anything for you. The chances are you are un derweight, and the fat pad back of the eyeballs Is deficient. That's what makes people look "hollow-eyed" when emaciated. Send dime and stamped envelope bearing your ad dress for Instructions for gaining weight. Luetic Acid - Will the lactic acid in sour milk or buttermilk or in siuerkraut irritete kidneys or bladder or do any harm to the liver If taken In considerable quantities? (P. C.) Answer One may take all the sour milk, buttermilk or sauerkraut one likes without anxiety about the lactic acid. That Is converted by oxi dation In the body :nto harmless car bon dioxide and water. Nitroglycerin Not for Everything An article of yours about anglaa Interested me. X-ray showed I have some enlargement of heart . . . would the glycerl trinitrate be good for me? (T. H. fl.) Answer Only your physician can Judge that. Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Ilrady should send letter direct to Dr. Wllllnm Rrady, M. D., 2GS E Camlno, Iteverly Hills, Cal. circulation spurt acquired by the newspaper for which she reported was attributed to her. Mrs. St. Johns Is versed in court proceedings, for aa a child she constantly attend ed the murder cases In which her father, a famous trial lawyer, ap peared. Also she is among the few writers who does not suffer the "typewriter travail." When she sits down at the machine, whether It be a newspaper assignment, magazine article or fiction story, she races through It without a halt. Jack Lalt Is another reporter whose thoughts never buck at the type writer. When he squares off to turn out a story, he romps right along to the finish without a hesitation save to light another cigarette, the rtend. Albert Payson Terhune. In his newspaper days, was a demon of reportorlal speed, so speedy indeed that for a time It threatened his writing career. He wrote by pencil so arduously that It afflicted the muscles and nerves of his right arm. rendering it for a time entirely use less. So far as I know there was only one American writer who wrote standing up. He was David Graham Phillips, who stood at an old-fashioned bookkeeper's high desk and used short, stubby pencils. It was his claim that thoughts were clearer In this position. Frank Ward O'Mal ley was a sitter on one leg. With both feet on the floor, he was ham strung. Arthur Somers Roche can not tap out a single line without an eye-shade. Or Rupert Hughes without his wife sitting near-by. And then there was Mark Twain who did much of his enduring work stretched out In bed. This may explain to the doorman of the Madison why a tall, thin stranger in a gray hat suddenly greeted him ao cordially at 3 p. m. yesterday. In gawking back at a smart looking trick the old fool stepped off the curb. And In the confusion, for some idiotic reason, rushed tip and shook the hand of the person nearest. (Copyright, 103S. McNaught Syndi cate.) Spenka at Church Dr. Calvin W. Laurer of Philadelphia, musical ed itor of the hymnal publications of the Presbyterian church, left this morn ing by train enroute to Albany, hav ing conducted a meeting last night at the Presbyterian church In Med ford. Dr. taufer spoke on hymns and demonstrated hymn singing. MARRIED WOMEN Tee CFRTA SK (he NEW, AtU I A(FI, prnvea mrthed fnr Femlnln Hygiene. Hero mm ended I hj doetort, nratied by women every- where who II la preferenr tm anything elee. (Ufe, non-lrrltatlng. Inexpensive. Ktrellenf torn tor Mlnr Vaginal j lrrttaUoK. I Bet CKKTAXK today. May b had Is j iltber Jelly. Cones or Powder form j MONEY BACK GUARANTEE Western Thrift Store CERTANE IS SAFE Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS GOVSRNMENT frderal, state and city of New Jersey did a fine Job In the Hauptm&nn case. It stayed with It persistently tor two and a half jeirs, gathering a shred of fact here arid a scrap there, and finally putting these fragments of evidence together to make a story so effective as to defeat the best ef forts of one of the country's best criminal lawyers to tear it apart. That is a real achievement. IT TOOK time. It took brains. It took MONEY vast sums of it: well over a half million dollars to catch Just ONE criminal out of the country's much too large criminal population. But the Job was well done, and nobody begrudges the expense. CATCHING and punishing crtm inals that Is to say, enforcing the law Is GOVERNMENT'S BUSI NESS. That is one of the large reas ons why we have government. When government does a good Joj of that which Is clearly and plainly government's buslnees, good citizens will not complain .f the coat is high, because they know that in the lorg run effective law enforcement will save infinitely more than it costs. IT IS ONLY when government steps beyond its own proper and legiti mate functions and begins to spend staggeringly vast sums of money in doing INEFFECTIVELY things that are none of government's business that thoughtful citizens become wor ried as to the future. --. . WHAT here follows is merely this writer's personal opinion. It can not be proved. It may not be true. But, at any rate, here Is the opin ion: Hauptmann's defense, engineered by a skillful and not at all scrup ulous criminal lawyer, was built largely upon PERJURED testimony that sought to establish an alibi for the defendant tha; is. sought to prove that he was not at the scene of the crime at the time It was com mitted. . PUTTING It in the plainest way It can possibly be put, these wit nessesassuming tht the opinion here expressed Is correct lied under oath. Presumably, in that event, they lied for money. If they lied for money, it Is reas onable to suppose that the money was furnished by the defendant, or hla attorney, or his friends, or his accomplice. The purpose was to defeat Justice, and so make crime safer, ' IF WE are ver tocontrol crime, we must not only catch suspected criminals but we must convict the guilty ones as well. Catching tho suspected criminal la only the be ginning of the Jotf. If we are to convict guilty crim inals after they are caught, we must discourage perjury DRASTICALLY, for perjured testimony destroys Jus tice. This writer, for one. hopes that the agents of government who so effec tively organized the case against Hauptmann will turn their great ability toward Investigating fully all the witnesses who swore that Haupt mann was elsewhere than at the scene of the Lindbergh kld&ping on the night of the crime, and, If It Is proved that they lied, will prosecut: them RELENTLESSLY. APPElfiSllCAT The monthly meeting of the South ern Oregon Osteopathic society was held Monday evening at the home of Dr. W. W. Howard, with Dr. Rus sell R. Sherwood the principal speaker. He delivered a paper on appendi citis. Its diagnosis, treatment and past operative management. Dr. Bertha Sawyer of ahland demon strated technique on the correction of sacro-lllac lesion. After the meeting refreshmenta were served by the hostesa to a 100 per cent attendance. The next meet ing will be held March 35 at the home of Dr. Blaine Prultt, In Grants Fass. Use Mall Tribune want ada Helps You Work and Helps You Play! the Famous Exhilarating Drink from South America TRY IT TOPAV The "Pally Drink of Millions" Importfd Plr.it from south America. Mailed or Pethered on Receipt of Check, Money-Ordf r, stumps, Ca.h, or sent CO. p. on ord.r. Jl ST PRINT NAME and check T R r IT CITY Mall Coupon lo wnoi:. lb. 'V. S Ih. loc. 1 lb. Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson Count) History from the files of the Mall Tribune of 20 and lu Vear Agn. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY. February 20, 1925. (It was Friday.) Medford defeats Ashland 39 to 20 in flrat game of annual series. The Tlgera endurance and teamwork brought victory in the second. Yell Leader Gordon Kershaw did noblf work in enemy country. The battle was rough and fast with G. KnlF1 and Chastaln scoring 13 points each Bryant stars for the Grizzlies. Labor Commissioner C. H. Gram visits valley to "work out plan for adjustment of labor shortage In the valley." Governor Pierce threatens to kill ! the Rogue fish bfll and declines to name fish commissioner from south ern Oregon per campaign promise. Republicans roiled by dalliance. "Conspiracy discovered" in Med fcrd'a plan to secure lg utte water by local editor. Fuji defeats Chris Gottlieb to win city billiard title by score of 225 to 211. Dan Watson finished second with two defeats and Gottlieb and Maru third. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY February 20. 1915. (It was Saturday.) Roxy Ann Is white with snow. Best rain in months falls over valley. Panama Pacific Exposition is open ed at San Francisco. American ship is sunk by mine in war zone. "The Prismatic Ray"-for hair and scalp Is introduced in city. Horses and cows Invade lawns and flower gardens of the east side, caus ing much complaint and demand for a poundmaster. The Medford" ""iTn-X-L-D" or ohestra Is formed and will make Its first appearance at the Star theatre. Theda Bara in ''A Fool There Was" creates sensation at Page. . j (Continued from Page One) competent international exchange experts here. They think that France will devalue sooner ct later, but that the International pressure on her will be no stronger now than It was six months ago. In baseball as in law. It's the win ning run that counts. A 5 to 4 de cisions is Just as conclusive as 9 to 0. Editorial Comment Killing Cot-ktall. The house did a good Job when by a vote of 41 to 19 It defeated the "cocktail" bill, which was almply camouflage for return of the saloon to profit greedy liquor Interests, who never know when they are well off and always demand more. The "cocktail" bill would have put the liquor control commission "on the spot" and sooner or later accom plished lta destruction and the re turn of prohibition as a revolt against abuses. It would not have eliminated the speakeasies but legal ized and multiplied them. The Oregon system of liquor con trol la working fairly well as an ex periment. Its hands s h.o u 1 d be strengthened and Its control In creased. Abuses which have material ized can be eliminated and pros pective abuses curtailed. It Is far more satisfactory than the experi ments of some neighboring states have been. To keep the state temperate, we do not need whiskey selling by the glass or drinking anything except light wines and beer in puoltc places. Those who want stronger drink can purchase It and consum: It In pri vate. A little law enforcement will not only curb the speakeasy, but the bootlegger. And If Oregon Is to remain wet, control must be tight- BIO PINES LBR. CO. l MEOFORD PHONE 1 AND AP1RES IIKRE . site de.ired ST TE . iim :;. MnKord. tue. 2 lh. SI. 00. h :.(io ened instead of loosened. Capltal-Jcurnal. Notes improement M. L. Ander son of Devils Lake, North Dakota, who has been in Medford for the past week, left last night for hla home. Mr. Anderson remarked on the improvement and prosperity of Med ford, especially in the business dis trict. He was in Medford a year ago and says the city has shown more change for the better than any place of Its size he has visited. on the BIG Ships TO NEW YORK ONLY 120 T0UB,8T $180 ROUNDTRIP Excellent meals and accommo dations included. All outside rooms-outdoor swimming pool -dancing. Spacious decks, lounge, smoking rooms. 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