PAGE TWELVE MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON. FRIDAY. MARCH" 1. 1935. Medford Mail Tribune 'Cmvoni ll 5outmrn Ortaoe Audi tlit Hail fribunt'' Daily tfietpt Altaian PuM lined ty MKl'HMII) PH1NTINU CO. tt 'il ty H tU HL ftM tft RUBE If T W UUUL, Kdltor At) Independent Newspaper Entered a tecum) eli atttif it Madford Oregon, under Act irf Mareb 8. 1ST. 8i;HK( KIHTION BATES By Mill id Adttiice OHIy. jo year 15.00 Dally, ill month it-1 6 Daily, one nontr u By Carrier li- Atarx Mwifonl, Aanland. iafkiontlUt. Cantral I'olnt. Pboanli. TalaoU UoU) Bill tnd on Hijtmay, Dally, ooe rear (O OU Daily, li montha t.35 Dally, ooe month -AO Ali termi cash lo adanea. Official oaper ol the City of Medford. Official paper of J action Comity UEMBKU Of THE ASSOCIATED fHEBB Kecetrlnf Kull Leased Win Serrlct tbe Aaoe!aled Pra la eiclivhely antltlM lo tna um for publication of ai: oea dUpatrfiai credited to It otlierwlia credited In tnU v:t and also to ttw local nevi pulillh herein. All 1ghU for publication of (paelaJ diipatcbe DtralD are aw rescnea. MF.MBKH Of UNITED HKKRS ITEMHEH OF AUDIT HUKEAO LIT CIHCULAT10N8 Admtlilns Kepretenialltea u. c. mo(;knhen a company Offlcea lo Nn York, Chicago, Detroit, Baa PranclHY ij Angela fleatUr Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur ferry The author of a number of news paper aerials reports, "I often get up in the middle of the night to write." A vicious critic suggests that hereafter he go to bed in the middle of the day to keep from writing. ' An unemployed chemist of Arkan sas hss found a way to manufacture liquor from turnips, end desires fi nancial backing to establish a dis tillery, to sell the finished product to the needy at dime per gallon. The Idea Is on a par with the pro posal advanced at the start of the depression to have the Boy Scout cook meals for the hungry. Both are needlessly cruel notions. a "When tt comes to out-and-out practicalities It would be far better to give the alien a kick In the psnts and send him across the ocean rawer than to klsa him ever so sweetly, buy him a house and garden and tell him to "Stay and etn no more." (Newsdom) TMcl Tskl Don't get sensible I a Cows Instead of autoa that need It are being dehorned, mostly in the rural areas. Owing to the rains and snows, there is more mud, than st any time since the last nine weeks of the SD83 campaign. as Journalistic philosophers have start ed argulDg that a poor man with food neighbors Is better off thsn Andrew Mellon with $93,000,000. a Press dispatches state that a groom at Reno, Nev., wedding fainted, Just before the ceremony. However, he was ruthlessly revived. The legislature, to date, has been considerable of an aggravation, but not sufficiently so to cause any amart-aleck scribe to refer to them as the alleglslature. The meadow-larks were all out yesterday pm.. trying to sing their own songs, as well as Dork Dutler whistles them. a "CAPTURED BANDIT REC1RET8 CRIME" (Red Bluff News) Not to mention the 'rupture.' Under a new federal law. a hunter Is only allowed three shells In his shotgun while hunting ducks, or pulling same through a fence, wrong end to. a a "PLANACEAS." To balance the budget U not the Intent Of Sinclair. Townsend and Long A penny that's saved Is a dollar that's spent With Sinclair. Townsend am. Long So print paper money and clutch at the strsws. To reason this season Is treason be cause We now have a three-headed Santa Claus: Sinclair, Townsend and Long! "Get some Mi I n g for nothing! You needn't produce!" Say Sinclair. Townsend and long. "The Eagle will lay golden eggs like the goowt" Ssy Sinclair. Townsend and Long There's plenty of cash In the Na- tlonsl Till. Bo step to the counter and pocket your fill. Tour grsndrhlldren's children will settle the bill!" Ssy Sinclair, Townsend snd Long The world Is so lull of a number of plana Like Sinclair's. Townaend'a snd Long's. And each of the plans hss an army of fans. Like Sinclair. Townsend snd Long So fsll into line with a full dinner pall. And sing as you swing over hill, over dale; Tor Ood and lor country and also for Kale. With Sinclair. Townsend and Long (Arthur L. Lippmann In Ute) TJe Mali Tribune wai ads. Huey Long, How Long? HL'EY LONG lias a sense of humor. Like Huey, there is nothing subtle, quiet or retiring about it. It is loud, bump tious, and rather crude, evoking not a smile or a chuckle, but a horse laugh, and a resounding slap on the uplifted knee. Huey had his little joke yesterday. On one of his frequent excursions to Baton Rouge from Washington, D. C, the Kingfish announced his candidacy for governor of Louisiana in 193G. "It'd b fine to b governor of a state I this" uld he. Why thl state', got 11.600.000 In the bank. I'm going to run for governor." No wonder the vaulted corridors of the state legislature resounded with raucous laughter. That's a good one! . FOR who is governor of Louisiana nowt Tluey Long. He is also the lieutenant governor, the attorney general, the hoard of equalization, the highway commission and the state supreme court. Huey is everything in Louisiana, and he knows it. If anyone dares to dispute the fact, Huey orders out the national guard, and sends them scooting into Mississippi or the Gulf of Mexico. What a delicious gesture, therefore, to solemnly announce his candidacy for governor, as he threw another batch of bills into the legislative hopper for the boys to sanction. And that million and a half of cash in the bank, as an added touch to the comic picture 1 . ISN'T Huey a CASE! He is, and a dangerous one. When a man can do the things Huey does and do- them "WITH A SMILE", watch out ! For such a man has brains and a resource fulness that becomes the "man on horseback." There is nothing of the fanatic or the martyr in Huey Long. He is the opportunist and the demagogue par excellence, lie knows just what he wants, and how to get it, and he INTENDS to get it! If Huey were another John Brown or Oliver Cromwell, the date of his downfall would be far easier to predict. Sooner or later his fanatical devotion to his principles, would get him. But Huey has no principles. He has no real convictions. He is out to get HIS, while the getting is good, and if he finds one tech nique isn't bringing the desired results, he will change his course, with the ease and insouciance of a fleeing jack rabbit. A GAINST the true misguided zealot, ridicule is always iin effective weapon. But what good does it do, to laugh at a man who laughs at himself, and appreciates as much as any one, the irony of the spectacle, ho No, Huey Long represents a and until economic conditions ness of that problem, will continue. ' He not only has the great of his hand, he has the Senate of there isn't a member of that august body, that dares lift a finger to oppose him. It is an open secret that Postmaster General Farley, who could scarcely be called a sissy, is shaking and shivering in his boots, because Huey has declared war against him. . . IF the Kingfish only took himself SERIOUSLY, it would not be so necessary f(jr people who really love their country and have faith in democracy, to do so. But he doesn't. And that we regard as the key to his char acter, and also the explanation of his invulnerability. He is ridiculous, but it does no good to ridicule him. He is vulgar, ruthless, unscrupulous, but when a man admits he has no morals in a conventional sense,' what docs it profit to moralize about him. . Of course Huey is ouly mortal, physically and politically. Sooner or later his star must set, as all stars do. But the more one studies him, and the social unrest that still endures, the less confidence one feels, in setting the exact date. NEWS BEHIND THE NEWS (Continued from P P I n si ii n - Ilf 1 l If HI 1P2 equals 100) 1939 Aversge 119 104 8 109 1 106 111 in 953 1930 Average 9fl 91 5 88 7 03 103 93 88 4 1931 Average 81 77 4 87 5 75 93 63 73 0 1933 Average 64 64 3 45 S 56 69 28 64 3 1033. January 65 61.4 39.5 56 60 33 61.0 February ...... 36 61 7 40.3 54 60 19 59 8 March 60 58 3 37.1 50 57 14 60.3 1934. Jsnuary 78 75 I 54 0 64 68 49 73 3 February . 63 61 7 60 6 64 71 44 73 6 ! March 85 81 0 64 8 66 77 33 73 7 September 71 73 9 37 9 59 75 39 77 6 October 73 76 7 61.0 67 14 31 70 5 November 74 76 7 59.5 59 73 31 76 5 December 85 79 0 fl3 3 64 76 33 76 9 Jsnuary. 1935 t0 80 4 64 1 64 73 30 73 8 February (Est.) PO 81. 67 65 74 30 79 4 fact thst certain Industrial line ha-c been easing up slightly during the last two weeks of Whmary. Thlfc la noticeable particularly In steel, but not In Industry general. y At the same time here hu been a renewal of private talk among busi ness men about uncertainty. This time It Is based on congress. Trie tndefinlteness of NRA reorfpntratlon. ttf latest bank bill, the rail bltlv the holding company legation end the possibility of further tax propos al are more or less responsible. This feeling of uncertainty may not be entirely Justified, but It xita Whether It will have any lmpo:tant effect on March and April bumneui Involves a guess on which competent observers are divided The reason stel dropped was be cause automobile pr.-duction Is level ing off. There in you nave the beM example of why tt is difficult to gauge the Immediate prospect of industry flteW production reaohed a inexi mum of 53 per cent three week a sjo, but it will aeon te bars around 45 per cent. Automobile production in creased by fem-er than 500 car for the week ended February 33 Yet thoa inalde the automobile trade ail", tell you that production for the firvt quarter of the year wll; be aroir.id a million cars It wa 393.000 tor January, probably 350 001 for Febru ary and need b nly 350.000 for I March to approximate a billion fr th nit.,.. presents. None at all. real problem in this country, materially improve, the serious state of Louisiana in the hollow the United States so buffaloed, page one) Aftr that, motor car output will depend entirely on sales. No one can hasaj-d even a good gueiss m to what these will be. Tne- best indication that Industry generally la holding up well lie in electric power consumption data. It has varied les than half a point during the last four weeks. Another hint of underlying strength ts the car loading figure, whkh ha been Ahowing allghtly m.v thsn seasonal Improvement lately The cne almost hopeta factor 1 buiMing. After the first brief fluh of PWA activity a year .igo. building ha failed to show anything but s'.ight ocoaaJonal flurries, which nevr developed into a trend. The latest favorable flurry :s In residential buiMirig January infract were -jp to $33 400 000. a 5o per v-nt Improve ment over December The amount, of course, la Insignificant PWA con tracts awarded by Secretary lekrs in January amounted to $36 ooo.oor). which a atvtvit on--third of the wl ume In that month last yeir Tere will be hope for b-uldir.g aftr the pending work relief bli; pwe. but not before. The price of onU thtee com mod -Itie are relatively ir.ghe man f a m and food price no-c rvi,u i, only the prices of bulldl-.y maierMla. iisdoa leather and metals are ne.rrr t:i. 1936 level. And food price s.-e ar.il going up. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. bit ned letters pertaining to perwjnai health and hygiene not to dis ease dlugnoalb or treatment will be answered by Or. Brady If a stamped stir-aildressetl antelope I enclosed- Letters should be brief and written id Ink. Oh trig to the laige number of letters received only a few can be an nered. No reply can be made to queries nut conforming to Instruction Address Dr. William Brady. 2C.5 El Camlno. Beverly Hills. Cal. ONE BY ONE THE OLD TRADITIONS PASS Every now and the a young child finds some pretty "candy" pills or tablets, supar coated pellets or chocolate coated. eats them, and presently dieti from strychnine convulsions. To the dis. credit of modern medicine be It told that the regular medical practitioner, the family physician, ts to blame for these terrible deaths In too many instances. Yes, the National Formulary, which Is second only to the u. 8. Pharmacopoeia In author lty, la accessory before the fact and thus the entire medical profession Is responsible, for the National For mulary. In deference to quaint med ical tradition, still lista the pills or tablets which carry such horrible death to Innocent children, viz., Ftl lulae Alolnl. Strychnlnae et Bella donnae, or as It Is familiarly called the A. B. t S. tablet. Each pill con tains one fifth grain of aloln, one eighth grain of belladonna extract and 1-125th grain of strychnine. Adults have been fatally poisoned by one-fourth grain of strychnine. The average medicinal dose for an adult Is one-fortieth grain, a young child would be likely to suffer strychnine convulsions from the amount of strychnine In throe or four of these unjustified A. B. & S. pills. . In fact everybody should know that when a baby or young child SUDDENLY Is seized with convul sions or spasms the possibility of strychnine poisoning must always be considered. Aloln Is a resin from aloe, which Is the dried juice of & tropical plant. It Is purgative. It tends to Irritate the Intestine, and causes griping. To offset this, belladonna Is effective, PROVIDED the belladonna Is given not along with the aloln but four or five hours after It. A dose of aloln or crude aloes (it has been much used In veterinary medicine) acts In, say ten hours. A dose of bella donna acts In three hours. So there Is nQ sense In combining them In one dose when the purpose Is to obtain the antispasmodic effect of belladonna at the time when the spasmodic or griping effect of the aloln ts producrd. But the old timers did not understand this. And In medicine TRADITION is strong, no matter how absurd or unjustifiable It may be. Just why the strychnine was In corporated In the formula Is a mys NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. McJntyre NEW YORK, Morch 1. Thoughts while strolling: Who remembers when everybody enld pocket lighters Best American ssng In 20 years The Last Round WTZtHlSt' -SaaYj naMffht DaVii W- it . n n. I . h I rial-IB i and Howard Bru- bnker. Wonder If anyone drinks like a D a s h t el Hanunett hero? That W. J. Bryan curl In Hey wood Broun's hair. 1 V;ij Pair of tango dancers Mutlln. Mickey Ne linn's memoirs ahnuid put Hollywood in stitches. Add crazy ambitions: To hurl a bushel of dimes from the Empire tower. More look allkes: Edwm Markham and Santa Claus Human monochrome In gray Carl Van Veen ten. How to atav awake all night: Try to work out rhyme-form where vowel j forms permute like this: Nutty, nighty, nauchty. Or fatty, flighty.; forty. Cole Porter doesn't give the ; hero-worshlpper a chance to get sick of him. Hs skips to the other ! side of the world. One word de- j script Ion of F. P A sardonic. I Visitor from France spend their time riding the skyscraper elevators. J the spendthrift. Jack Dempsey's col lars are tighter than Sid Solomon's. The Illusionist Card'.nt's oyster-white complexion. No wonder after all those cigarettes. Made up name fori Herbert Swope'a whirlwind gutdyap , spuzz. I A ahaggy sheep dog makes one think of Llovd George. A Russian wolfhound ol Dolores. And a dasehs- j hund of that phoney Broadway count. Nlrk Kenney's auto license I with his initials. Bnbe Ruth must be easy to sculpt. Crying Indies from the matinees. That's what I crave, a good cry. The elder Cornelius Vanderhlit are said to be looking Mr escape from their dull red mansion on a Fifth avenue corner. What was once a palace among palaces ts now scooped in by vulgar trade on- all sides. The onv other residential echo of another day is the Helen Gould mansion a skip south and It's rareiv unbearded In recent years. About the only ahow of lire in the VanderMlt house la the stde-w Mskered butler ho peeps through a door curtain late affen oons st passing crowds. He's ft Hawkms right out of Belgr.ive Square More tV.an a doen mushroom magir'.nes have tried at various times to follow the shake-down r.-le ol Town Topios since that journal ot social tattle went on the rocks. But all d ed aborning I'nder the Mack mail b:-.i.ls"-ntnii of Col. Minn. Town IpK threw terror into hyh pl.vef aad buudjrcd paid ta.'cufcU Ui noee. tery which only the eminent medical authorities of an elder day could reveal and they never revealed It. I reckon a dash of strychnine was put In the funny formula on the principle that it would Impart more zip and power to the pill. The old boys harbored a vague notion that strychnine somehow Increased the strength of everything. That's why the National Formulary, not to men tion the Pharmacopoeia, still strives to preserve these queer old shotgun concoctions for which "scientific" medicine Is famous. The formulas of these quaint mixtures are Just as funny as the near Latin In which they are written. But there Is nothing funny about strychnine poisoning, and the sooner the American Medical Association mends Its way In some of these bad Jokes on the public, the better it wilt be for the dignity of our pro fession. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Food and Growth Kindly give a list of foods which would be conducive to growth, also foods which have a tendency to re tard growth. (Mrs. J. G. F.) Answer In my Judgment these foods conduce to normal growth : Plenty of fresh' raw milk, cream, butter. Dally use of cheese, any and all kinds. Eggs. At least one raw vegetable, relish or salad green and one raw fruit dally. I do not know of any food which would retard growth. Mother an Addict Four young children. Baby five months old nurses. Baby seems nor ma! but at times looks very pale and blue around the mouth. Mother Is an Inveterate clgaret - smoker. Could her smoking possibly poison the baby? (Mrs. S. A. G.) Answer Yes, It is quite conceiv able that the Infant gets a Jolt of the poison In the mother's milk. For tunately, women who are tobacco addicts rarely succeed In nursing a baby the quantity or quality of breast milk fails after a few weeks or months. In my opinion the ex pecan t mother should give up smok ing for the sake of the baby's health. Trio logy In our Biology class we are having a discussion as to whether It Is cor rect to lie down after meals or to exercise. (J. K.) Answer Invalids, elderly and feeble folk may lie down a while or take a short rest after meals. Young, healty folk should never think of such things. Ed Note: I'erwins wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady alio j Id send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 2(55 E Camlno. Beverly Hills. Cal. But no one haa had the Mann tech nique since that bewhlskered rascal passed from the mortal scene. A weekly tried similar tactics In modi fied form In the Times Square area but its editor was soon crated off to Atlanta. t Like most downtown enterprises, the telescope man has also been caught in the northward sweep. For years, In the wind and the rain, he revealed the wonders of the heavens from a corner of Madison Square. Early this winter he seeped up to Longarre and now comes out every dusk with the yap wa gon ba rkers to hang up his familiar sign: "See Old Sirlua, the dog star, and- the splendors of Saturn 10 cents." But his pickings seem slim. His are not the stars Broadway wants to see. Doans Powell, long a middle-west cartoonist, has been exhibiting what he calls his "masque vlvant" at one of the galleries. In a period of un employment he discovered an ability to fashion masks in papier mache of celebrities Into startling likenesses. S- much so that total strangers have. for a lark, worn them to parties and been accepted as Clifton Webb. Noel Coward, Alfred Lunt. Dudley Field Malone or Frank Sullivan. And sev eral, unsuspecting, have been scared out of their wita when the masks were suddenly removed. Money and poet are usually far apart. But Harlem haa linked them in Its bank. The Dunbar National, gleaming bright on a prominent cor ner. The name Is a memorial to the gifted poet. Paul Laurence Dunbar, who, like Keats, died so tragically young. Dunbar was a copy boy on a newspaper In Dayton. O.. for which I once laboured. None of us thought him especially talented. But that's a world attitude toward poets until too late. Nutty tipsy tale. Two drunks weaving home after midnight argue where the moon Is shining so brightly is the moon or sun. They decided to nsk the next man they met. He lurched out of a saloon and they Pdor romplcxton often cartim Iremn constipation and poriv potaona wan ed hy it- Add Certihed Crvaula. mad ol mineral water ol Mineral U etla. Txa. to your dnnking water and aid natur n tuning up tne avt tem. The complejuon naturally clear Ask for tht diet chart IntnxIiM ton ei la l 0!V lor vile dt Wr.MI'RN 1MKIM MOKE l.'i tat M. IB A BETTER j p COMPLEXION Y: :! 1 7 put the question. Scanning the skies from zenith to hori2on. he bowed elaborstely and htecuped: "Ycu'li have to excuse me but 1 m a stranger in thlsh town!" (Copyright. 1935. McNaught Syndicate) Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS THIS Interesting and HIGHLY SIGNIFICANT dispatch appears In the news of the day: "It would take FOUR MILLION workmen- two years to produce the 18.574,000.000 (EIGHTEEN BILLION five hundred and seventy-four mil lion) pent-up demand for machinery accumulated during the depression since 1939. the Machinery and Allied Product Institute announced today on completion of a nationwide sur vey." THAT Is to say. If business bought the new machinery It wants and needs. It would spend more than EIGHTEEN BILLION dollars, and the spending of this eighteen bil lion dollars would give employment to four million men for two years. REMEMBER, this would be private money, dug up out of Indi vidual pockets, to pay for some thing people want and need. Not a dollar of It would be added to the national debt. No taxes would have to be levied to pay it back. AND the Jobs thus created for four million men for two years would be REAL Jobs, such as self respecting men want. making things for which there is an actual market not Just PLAY Jobs, created for the purpose of keeping people's bands busy In the hope that they may be kept out of mischief. AND don't forget this: This eighteen billion dollars' worth of new machinery would be put . to work producing comforts. conveniences and luxuries for the enrichment of human life here in America which really Is the biggest thing of all. WELL," you ask? "why don't priv ate Industry and private cap ital go Into their pockets, dig up this eighteen billion dollars, buy the machinery and GO TO WORK?" HERE Is the answer: Because, with existing condi tions and prospects, private Industry fears It will not be permitted to EARN A PROFIT on this new in vestment. This is the whole story. IF you are going to work, you- want 1 to know you will be PAID. If your boss is going to risk his ! capitol or his credit, or both, he i wants to know he will be allowed j to earn a profit. j If you aren't going to be paid, you won't work. If your boss Isn't going to be allowed to earn a pro- . fit, he won't risk his capital and his credit. ! UNFORTUNATELY, at the present j moment, our political leader- ; ship Is strongly Influenced by those I who believe, or PROFESS TO BE- ' LIEVE, that profit Is a sin and should be abolished. . As long as that condition exists, there will be stagnation. - THIS writer, who Is a confirmed optimist and refuses to believe the world is going to the dogs, does 1 not think present conditions or pres- j ent leadership will endure indefln- i ltely. i This world Is old. very old Indeed, 1 FRED WOLCOTT and HIS fp LU CALIFORNIANS U another and ALL the unpleasant things we are going through now have been gone through before. ALWAYS the world haa righted Itself, In time, and progress has gone on. It will do so again. But until the world does right Itself, and clear thinking again tri umphs over demagoglsm, we must be patient. Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the files of the Mall Tribune of 10 and 20 Years Ago). TEN YEARS AGO TODAY. March 1, 1935 (It was Sunday) March came In like a lamb, with sunshine in the forenoon and cloudy in the afternoon. Mann's to hold annual showing of spring styles last three days of week. Jackson county has on deposit in 13 banks of county $366,323.85, audi tor's report shows. Seasonal labor conference, to work out plan to eliminate labor shortage here In spring and summer, to be held at public library Friday. Ashland Normal school bill signed by the governor and la now a law. Valley residents reported victims of "Spanish prisoner" swindle. Attorney George A. Neuner of Rose burg Is named United States district attorney for Oregon. TWENTY YEABSAGO TODAY March 1, 1915 (It was Monday) Sunday was an Ideal spring day, with warm and balmy air and bright sunshine, and many went fishing In Bear creek. This city and Ashland seethe with interest over the annual high school basketball series. Medford won the first game, 31 to "10, and Ashland took the second, 17 to 14. The next two games will be played over the coming week end. "Ashland Grows as Ltthla Flows" has been adopted as the official slo gan of the south county metropolis. Teams and men are needed for work on the city Intake on Lake creek. That the paved Pacific highway Is of as great use to the farmer as it Is to the automoblllst is demonstrated by a count of vehicles made by Ow- : ney Patton one day recently. In eight hours 111 autoa passed, 73 wagons. 1 34 buggies. 18 bicycles and motor cycles and 10 horseback riders. No count was kept of the Jitney and auto j stages. Give your watch the "Micrometer" test "Free" at Johnson's, the only service of this kind in southern Ore gon.. For Hose that Wear buy NOLDE & HORST Ethelwyn B- Hoffmann Uncle Sam Will Repair Your Property Under the terms of the National Housing Act, with no down payment and small monthly installments, you can have PAINT PHONE 7 A NEW ROOF For estimates NEW FLOORS and details A FIREPLACE, ETC. Timber Products Co. End No. Central Ave. PUBLIC DEMANDS. A Return Engagement! 12 STARS OF RADIO AND popular program of Colorful Musi BEEAMLAMS5 M MONDAY NIGHT Men 40c Ladies 25 lllIIMi TASK mi ? i SALEM, March 1 JP With the statement that he asumed "the dut:es of the office of commlsloer of public utilities with the sense of tremendous responsibility involved. Frank C. McColIoch of Baker today replaced Charles M hToma as head of the utilities department. "My knowledge of the exact situa tion In the department is necessarily limited." McCclloch continued, "and an yextended statement of policy ts - therefore very premature at this time. I expect, however, to immediately ac quaint myself with the exact statu) of the telephone case, the Northwest ern Electric company case and other cases now pending in the courts. "It Is my understanding that the state of Oregon has many thousand of dollars Invested in these cases and It goes without saying that any suh case with merit will be vigorously prosecuted to a conclusion. Final de termination in those matters rest necessarily, however. In the future." "There has been a tremendous amount of valuable work done by my predecessor in assembling valuaole data on various utilities. It is my understanding that this work la nearly completed. Such work is nec essarily very expensive, and I hope to bring it to an early conclusion in order to reduce the operating expenwa of the office. "I have enjoyed unu&ual courtesy, consideration and assistance dur'ng the past three or four days from my distinguished predecessor. Mr. Charlea M. Thomas." the new commissioner concluded. "He has done everything possible to make my path earier. I find him to be a high-minded, our- teous, sportsmanlike gentleman, and In these qualities I shall strive to emulate him' Use Mail Tribune want ads. ft ram The Famous Old MARBLE CORNER At Jacksonville OPENS Sat. Nite DANCING Come and cn.Tny yourself In lhi historic old place. D. E. Hartman, Prop. STAGE m 3l I