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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 17, 1935)
SfEPFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORP. OREGON. SUNDAY. MAHCTI 17. M33. PAOE NINE WHAT YOU WANT Classified FOR EASY REFEREMCjl( WAlUtiU VV&KVUU TO U-litiV 1 TO Read every ad on this pafF. You will probably find ex actly the thing you want to buy or sell. If It isn't there, advertise. It's Inexpensive, effective. Per word first Insertion (Minimum 25c) Each additional Insertion, per word ..lc (Mlnlmnm 10c) Per line per month without copy changes .... $1.25 Phone 75 FOR WANT ADS LOST AND FOUND liOST Wednesday, male Irish setter No collar. Call 1518-J-2. IiOST Front bezel and crystal from lady's wrist watch. Reward. Tel. 174 or 1637-W. 2i RATES LOST U dog missing, call 1516. ) WANTED FEMALE HELP WANTED Lady or couple to share furnished apartment, 99.00 per month. 309 Beatty. . ADDRESSING Mailing circulars at home, for man dealers. Enrn 910 weekly. Experience unnecessary. Stamp brings particulars. WILSON, Tucson, Ariz. ADDRESS envelopes at home, spare timer 5 to 15 weekly. Experience unnecccssary. Dignified work. Send stamp for particulars. HAWKINS, Dept. 802, Box 75, Hammond, Ind. LADIES Copy names, addresses for mail order firms. Good pay. Exper ience, unnecessary, no canvassing. Write; stamped envelope. United Advertising. 1114 DcKalb Avenue, Brooklvn, N. Y. SPECIAL EMPLOYMENT for married women. $15 weekly and your own dresses FREE representing nation ally known Fashion Frocks. No canvassing. No investment. Send dress size. Fashion Frocks, Dept. W-170, Cincinnati. Ohio. WANTED Middle-aged woman- for general housework. 106 Ciark St. WANTED Young lady for p:irt time housework lor room, 'oard and small wages. 138 So. Grape. WANTED MALE HELP STEADY WORK GOOD PAY' Several choice openings in country and towns for reliable men or wo men. No capital or experience re quired. Write MR. THOMAS, 426 Third St.. Oakland, Calif. I WANT THREE MEN for local tea and coffee routes paying up to 942.50 a week. No capital or exper ience needed but must be willing to give prompt weekly service to approx. 200 families. I furnish ev erything. Fords given producers. Write Albert Mills, 7084 Monmouth, Cincinnati, Ohio. SALEM AN WANTED Man to sell flour and feed for lare Portland mill, this territory, on commission basis Acquaintance with bakery and other trade essential. Give adcirtwa and phone. Box 5014, Mall Tribune. WANTED SITUATIONS WANTED Practical nursing or house work. House next Oak Grove school. PLAIN and fancy qullttnc, 3 00 and pp. Effle Mee, Appleate. Ore. EXPERIENCED Italian and American cook for 20 years, needs work. Tel. 16 or 208 W. Jackson. WANTED Care oi sick or any work Mrs Huson. Phone 1345-M. WANTED-MISCELLANEOUS WANTED To buy model "A" Fords and Chevrolets. Must be reason able. 132 So. Riverside. WANTED Wool, mohair. See us be fore you sell. Wrool bags Ac twine for t-ale. Medford Barcaln House. 27 No. Grape St. Ph. 1062. WANT TO BUY Vlctrola It records. Good condition. Box 2137. Tribune. TO BUY Jackson County Building and Loan stock. Phone 1223. WANTED To buy a neat 8 or 4 roum house. Call 1630. WANTED We pay cash for household goods furniture and stoves We also ouv metsls. hides, pelts, voo! and mo hair MEDFORD BAROAIN HOUSE. 27 N Grape St. Phone 1062 DO commercial spraying. McGonagle Phone 258-M. INCOME TAX DUE Both state and federal Have had years of experi ence In preparing returns. Phone 1277-Y aftr 4pm Fred L Colng FOR RENT HOUSES SMALL modern nicely furnished hou'-e. Rcnsonable rent. Inquire 22 Keene Wny. FOR RENT 0 room mrxlrrn home In.-aTerl corner at .V.h A; Hnllv fct.. Phone 1223. j FOR RENT Mrs. Clark's attractive! house on the hlkf.ft.iy In (io'.d Hill. $8 50 per month. Key next donr. " ' HOVSE for rent. 1232 W FOB HENT - H-in.ej 'urnianed o: 02Uuxn.i..ed. Bruaa a. lAate. J ORJtENT HOUSES i FOR RENT A nice modern furnlsh I ed country home to party with ref erences and a Job In town. Will leave chickens If wanted: might leave cow. For Information write Box I 2215. Tribune office. FOR RENT 4 furnished houses. 81 Summit. FOR RENT Furn. house. 137 Tripp FOR RENT APARTMENTS FOR RENT Desirable furnished apartment. Hotel Grand. FOR RENT 2-room apt, 317 E. JacK son. Phon 749-Y. FOR RENT Modern furnished apt.; refimshed. Adults. 315 N. Bartlett. FURNISHED 3-rm. apts. 604 W. JOth. FOR RENT Apts. 334 Apple. FURNISHED, steam - heated house keeping apartments. Reasonable rates. Phone 457-J. FOR RENT Furnished apt. Light and heat. Adults. 349 N. Bartlett. FOR RENT FURNISHED ROOMS ! FOR RENT Furnished haiwkeeplrut i . room; light and water; $8.00. 331 So. ivv. ATTRACTIVE rooms. 404 8. drape. RATES very moderate at 716 E. Main FOR RENT MISCELLANEOUS FOR RENT Front office rooms over Pick's Hardware. West Main. Call John F. White, 449-M. FOR RENT Store space. oppolt space occupied by Medford Flower Shop, tn Medford Center B'.dg See Morthlands, Medford Flower Shop. CABINS FOR RESTBtiay. week" or month See at Camp Witaua. N. Riverside. BUSINESS LOCATION FOR RENT At 32 North Grape street. Will remodel to suit tenant, furn ish steam heat if desired. Size lfixflo feet., will rent or lease at reasonable figure. Call at Mall Tribune (Newspaper) office. FOR EXCHANGE FOR TRADE 12-Auge Winchester pump gun. for fresn cow- Call 834-J FOR EXCHANGE REAL ESTATE TRADE for larger ranch sixteen acres. 5 room house. Solon Parks, Rt. 3, Grants Pass. Ore. FOR SALE KJtlAL ESTATE ACRE LOTS on banks of Rogue riv er. Nothing finer. Deeded water. llKhr.o. shade. Buy now while you can. Low prices, kosv terms. D. E. Millard, sur Route, Eagle Point, ure. 5 ACRES On Spring St. Beautiful view, close in. Exceptional bargain, S60O. easy terms. Write D. E. Mil lard. Star Route, Eagle Point, Ore. FOR SALE OR TRADE Hydraulic mine now in operation. All deeded land. Wide pay streak. A steady pronucer. box 2141. lrioune. FOR SALE Very attractive home; moder ' In every detail; one mile from Medforo; 800 will han dle. P. O. Box 510, Medford. WHY SACRIFICE? To Get Rid of Some Heartache. No. 1 4-room house: bathroom, gar age, fine lot; Summit Ave. Price 81350. Just what I owe. No. 2 Business location, 450 feet Pa cific highway, on a corner; 6-room house: city water, new .tore build ing for trading post; chicken house. Immediate sale, S20O0. No. 3 4 acres: 5-room nouse: pump ing plsnt: best slfalfa and garden land: Grlffen creek district. Price $850. No. 4 40 acres finest alfalfa land in Jackson county. Make fine dairy ranch; Grlffen creek district; 20 acres Irrigated. Sell thla for Just wnat I owe, $4200. No. 5 ift acres Bear creek bottom land; fine 7-room modern house; electric pumping plant; continuous flow of water for Irrigation: well located. Property cost me $6500 will take $2250. No. 6 37 acres orchard property; 700 Anjou and Bartlett pear trees, full bearing: 600 9-year-old An(.u and Bartlett: balance fine alfalfa land: 5-room house and barn. I paid $12,000. Must sell $8500. Terms on all properties. Mv loss your gain. Phone Owner, 910-Y, or call at 20 No. Peach. FURNISHED modern J-roJm'buniiat low; fireplace: east front: fine shade, garage: close In; paved street $1650: $300 down. Inquire 130 cot taee St. WILL CONSIDER a legitimate olfer on 1 4 -acre place, best of land 2 good wells. Inquire Hotel Valandra Central Point. HOMES FOR SALE WE HAVE PRICED ALL OUR RF.AL ESTATE LOW FOR IMMEDIATE CASH SALE LOOK THESE PROP-ERTTF-S OVER. 308 Alice St $ 700 00 320 S Ivy St 1600 00 1S17 W. Main St 1080 00 644 Palm St 1200 00 444 S. Ivy St 68000 13 Keii,xyi 880 00 903 No Riverside 1160 00 12 w-stern 600 00 '.0 Crater Lake Ave Bo.i F:nr,c:r,a can Be arranjed for sur chasers -vho can pav 30" down WESTERN LOAN AND BUILDINO COMPANY. 45 South Central Avenue. W E. Thom.m. .Vent. BNOWN A: WHITE ar- llin i-mall acrr-dize tracts at prtre which vou cannot Afford to ovArlnotc pjne ' FOIL. HIGHWAY. WATER. CL1-j MATE Clow to fine HUNT I NO j FISHING, rorr in and .nvtieat BROWN A WHITE REALTORS 1 104 W Main. Phone 130 poh ftr, on tradf - ryjTi:nr v room r.t'''-M'. jn.cr i'e nuclei FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE By owner. Bear Creek bottom acreage, close In. Phone 1524-L. SEE Charles A. Wing Agency, Ino, to Buy your Home. FOR SALE Modern 4-room home on east side. 6 minutes walk from city center $600 will handle, balance CJ. Box 4815. Tribune. HOUSES FOR SALE OR HENTJack- son county Building & Loan Asa'n Phone 195. WHEN you think of real estate, think of Brown Ac White. FOR SALE AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE 1927 Chrysler roadster,' new top, new paint, 175. Phone 1566-L. 1928 Ford touring. 1931 Ford truck. Long W. B. 1931 Studebaker aedan. 1929 Ford coupe. 1926 Nash sedan. 1934 Willys sedan. 1928 Chrysler sedan. WALTER W. ABBET. INC. Nash Graham WILLYS 77 International Trucks Sales and Service 123 South Riverside Avenue Medford, Oregon FOR SALE CHEAP Moreland 3-ton truck; long bed. Inquire 233 Beatty St. FOR SALE lVa-ton 1932 Ford truok. dual wheels, long wheel oase; hotel range and hood, eteam table, etec trlc washer, folding wall beds. 1603 No. Riverside. FOR SALE OR TRADE '28 Graham Bros, truck. Will take car. Phone 172, evenlnga. FOR QUICK SALE or trade for used car. equity In 3-room house: pay ments S8.50. Call after 4 p. m.. 517 Bessie St. BARGAINS every one. at 22 So. Fir. LOOK at all the used cars before you buy. 22 So. Fir. DON'T FORGET 22 80. Fir for better used car values. AT A - SACRIFICE 1834 V-8 Tudor 6edan: small mileage. 22 So. Fir. FOR SALE POULTRY AND EGGS FOR SALE Started chicks, Hansen strain, 11c, 1927 Sunset Ave. HATCHINgTegGS W'hlte Giant and Barred Rock, Dryden strain, heavy laying strains. A. E. walker. Talent, FOR SALE R. I. Red cmcks; blood tested. Mrs. Snyder. Tel. 4-F-4 SUPERIOR quality chicks for 1835. Heavy laying strains. Large type Hansen stock. White Leghorns 9c: Rocks, Red 10c. Catalog fiee. Jenks natcuery. Tangent, ore. HATCHING EGGS. Plymouth Rock Tel. 515 WHITE LEGHORN setting eggs. oOo C A DeVoe. ! 523-J-2 FOR SALE LIVESTOCK FOR SALE Oentle saddle pony Priced low. Medford Pear Co"., Phone n-F-6. FOR SALE Horses and mules. Call Mra. M. F. Hanley, Phone 188 R. 1. FOR SALE Fine turkey torn. Chas E. Gray, Gold Hill. Ore. FOR SALE Jersey milk cow. Hogue, near Howard school. FOR SALE 6 milk cows. 7 heifers, 1 yearling Guernsey bull; hay. C. J. Greb. Eagle Point. FOR SALE OR TRADE Work and saddle horses. Medford Riding Academy Phone B38-R. FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE Large baby crib. Call I147-W. FOR SALE OR TRADE For good car 32 h. p. Johnson motor, speed ing cruiser boat and trailer, phone 839 from 8 to o daytime. FOR SALE Pansy plants, pedigreed giants, extra fine. 50c doz. Mrs. Dan A. Howard, Spring St. TIRES FOR SALE 32x4 4 30x5 good condition. Chet Leonard Station No. 1. FISHING TACKLE All kinds. Sport ing Goods, Boats. Motors. Guns. Boots, Shoes. Etc. Priced right. 317 North Riverside. FOR SALE Hotpolnt electric range. 3-plate with oven, cheap. 211 4 W. Jackson. FOR SALE Non-lrrlgated alfalfa seed. Hlghtest Dodder free. 18c per lb. E. B. Lucss. Beagle, Ore. FOR SALE Johnson racing outboard motor. Class B. Perfect condition, $90. Tel 1566-L. FOR SALE 25-20 rifle and Aladdin lamp. Tel 103 1-L. YOUNGBItRY 5c each & Red Cur rant 10c each. A. E. Walker. Talent. WANTED Electric refrigerator state make, sire and price to Box L. G., Mall Tribune. SPEEL'S PANSY PLANTS. 25c dozen Airs, uressier, UU7 East Main. FOR SALE Electric washing tna- tiuuc, lanp. ui iripp at. FOR 9 M,E 300-fT! B-an spray rig u.eim ttonen. Talent, phone Ah land 372-J-a. MR. PARMER Buy your seed the convenient. Inexpensive producer-to-oonsumer. money-a,ving way We have unuxusl values in ecxxj qual ity alfalfas, clover, (rrassea. Write for pnee list and sample "It More Than Pays" I NT F. 1 1 M O U NT A I N SEED COMPANY. Twin Falls, Idaho. FOR SALE Beard Iru barley end Ka naka oats. Monarch Seed Co. SPECIAL PRICES on river loam and fertilizer Oarden plowing and lawn work, washed sand. rock, and plas ter sand Phone 1534-Y or 812-J. FOR SALE Hay E B Hanley ranch 1 10 00 ton . FOR RAf E Whtut ml cU 1 AO ct aimj hjc hur hay. G A. DeVoa. FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE Home-grown alfalfa aeM. F. E. Bybee. Medford Rt. 1 FOR SALE Good Newtown apples, 90c boi. Pinnacle No. 4. FOR SALE Good light wagon and butfgy. Tel. 634-Y. FOR SALE Chair, ltorarv table, wicker davenport. Phone 1393- Y. FOR SALE Grafting wax. Monarch Seed Co. FOR SALE Air compressor. 150-lb. pressure. Tel. 282 or Inquire Berry dale Store. DRY black oak. laurel, manzanlta, nr. Phone 71. FOR SALE, TRADE OR HIRE Sev eral well-mated teams. 11. V. Mitch ell. Oregon Hotel, Ashland. FOR SALE Seed corn In ear, 8c lb. Jacksonvllle-Phoenlz road, west of King's highway. Mrs. Simmers. FOR SALE Crested wheat grass. Monarch Seed Co. FOR SALE Common alfalfa. 819 per cwt. Monarch Seed Co. FOR SALE Coal burning Buck.ve brooder. 500-chlck capiat?. See Don Robins, located first place north of Blackwell hill on Pacific highway. FOR SALE Poison barley with fruit. It kills better. Monarch Seed Co. FOR SALE Good quality Federation seed wheat, recleaned, $1 60 recleaned Haanchen b.irley, $2 00 per hundred. Henry Nledermeyer. 1 mile north Jacksonville on Old Stige road. Tel. 354. Jacksonville. FOR SALE Lime-sulfur to spray fruit trees and berry bushes. Mon arch Seed Co. GLADIOLAS Red, Lavender. Yellow. White. Pink. All colors of the rain bow. Twelve varieties. 60 good sized bulbs, tl .00: 120. 81.75: 180. S2.25. Post paid. NOW Is the time to plant. P. A. Jerome, Route No. 4 Box 127. Grants Pass. Ore. ALFALFA seed from old reliable stock. Fields known to produce good crops for 35 years. If you want Common alfalfa, many tests show this equal to any. Superior to many. Oregon standard purity $18.00 per hundred. Phone 523-J-4. FOR SALE CHEAP Lumber suitable for brooder houses. Can arrange for money under PHA Plan for any building repairs. Economy Lumber Co.. Tel 594. North Pacific Hwy. at Court St. MISCELLANEOUS INDIAN AND LINCOLN HEAD PEN NIES wanted. Will pay up to C3 each If over 10 years old. Certain pennies worth 63. Latest listing 10c. American Coin Co., Box 319 Grand Rapids, Mich. UNCLE ED: Club members were tick led pink at suggestion of passing Double Mint Oum after our get togethers. Betty. I HAVE J ust purchased 7inePercherori stallion, weighing 2100 lbs. Grand son of the noted La.ro. worM's champion stallion, valued at 45.r00 Walter Wooldridge, Central Point. OLD STAMPS. ENVE1oVeTCARD8 Do not burn any: sell them to me. Address P. o. Box 793, Med ford. BUSINESS DIRECTORY Transfer, EADS TRANSFER Ai STORAGE CO. Office 1015 No. Central. Phone 315 Prices right. Service guaranteed. HAWLEY TRANSFER Expert pack ers and movers. Special livestock moving equipment. Prices right 819 North Riverside Phone 615. Mail Tribune Daily ACROSS Knock Common fruit Opening Watch closely Entlcea Mountain In Creta Fated Tie Vat Manufactures Dad Acid fruit Not apt or fit Regiment In the Turkish army Smell New: comb. form UrumbMngly Compass point Foker term One for whom use a tiling la don or Riven Pinnacle of lea tn a Flacler New Tet. ment ipell- 1ns of Anhtr Regular ending of the past tenne PonkT Solution of Saturday's Puzzlt APPARELpAD OiSlE SUJC I O E mP QLA R. TRETllA TMgjA NU" ESS jfgBE F TTTHgJA N R E HE J A Y ERSNO 1 1 3 O A T 'tt TfA S SMASH iflllA Rtg E iqii m sIgjn Amra A NHS A T I Et1yBMA !MJ1N R IE M NAD I RN EeD "UE S" AlRjE MfMBS T AITTE "5" 41. Art of eaylnc or doing the rlrht thing A Drnamontat pium M. Epoch f. Nuisance 66. Sing eofUy 4, Kxcune; eoltoq. Pfi. Kternity I. Play on word 67. Snug room I. Act of comid SS. Copper coin erlng be. SI. Marrr forehmd 2 3 a 4 15 6 17 Q WM'M io I" Jt : : I m4i A,-'", ' 28 2j yfT To tl JJ 32 '. '!. . , , 45 vm.4 a1 ZZZlZZZZZIZZZ BUSINESS DIRECTORY JACKSON CO. ABSTRACT CO. Abstract of Title and Title Insurance. The only complete Title ; System In Jackson i County. MURRAY ABSTRACT Co. Abstracts of Title. Rooms 3 and ft. No. 33 North Central. Ave., upstairs. Eipert Window Cleaner. LET GEORGE DO IT Tel. 1173 House cleaning, floor waxing, orl ental rug cleaning it upholstering Dentistry. DENTISTRY Dr. J. H. Gove. 33o E. Main. Money to Lend MONEY LOANED S0 to 300 for personal or household purposes on House Furnishings or Autos; also Cars Re-flnanced. Loans closed within 30 minutes, under super vision of the state Banking Dept. License No. 8-157. See W. E. Thomas or E. J. Riley. 45 So. Cen tral. I'ltlmlug & rii perlia ng.nR. WE CREATE DISTINCT1VB CHARM In colors for your home by paint ing, tinting, paperhanglng. HARRY MARX. Route 1, Phone 14-F-4. M. A. BLISS Painting & paperhang Ing. Tel 640-W. 313 So. Grape. JOHN H. LOCK, painter and decor ator. Quality work, prices reason able. Res. 134 King St. Call 053-R BUSINESS CHANCES FOR SALE Lunch counter. Good steady trade. 337 So. 6th St.. Klam ath Falls. LEGAL NOTICES Call for lllfls for Wood. The Board of Directors of Howard School District 100. Medford. Oregon will receive sealed bids up to April 0, 1930. for 30 cord of old growth body fir, to be delivered by July 1, 1936. The board reserves the rlht to reject any or all bid. RUTH STOCKS. Clerk. School District No. 100 Route 3, Box 112. Medford. Oregon March 14. 1935. Count p Treasurer's Call for General County Fund Warrants. State of Oregon, County of Jackson, SR. Notice la hereby given that there are funds on hand. Tor the redemp tion of all warrants drawn on the General County Fund of Jackson County, registered to and Including March 31. 1934. Interest on the above called warrants, ceases on this the 16th day of March, 1038. Dated at Medford, Oregon, March 16, 1935. A. C. WALKER. Treas. of Jackson County. Call for Illds fur Wood. Jackson County Court Is asking for bids for 200 cords of Dodv fir to be delivered to County Shop before Sep tember 1, 1635. Bids must be in beta- April 1, 1935. DIRTY FEET IDENTIFY STOLEN CHICKEN FLOCK MARSHALL. Mo., March 16. (UP) Farmer Sam Barbee had a full flock of chickens today after Identifying 35 hena found at a Kansas City poultry house. Barbee's stolen chickens were reutrncd to him after he examined their feet and Identified the peculiar dirt on them from his birnyord. ' Ask the customers who have their watch repairing done hore. Johnson the Jeweler. Cross-Word Puzzle 7. Mother of Helen of Troy S. Plural ending j. Aromatic roota u. I'uie ei tribe guotly t nuwur 1 1 ttaiiKe of knowledge iv, Jupuiiene um :l. ttp Hy one's elf It. Groan itoltly i-i Volcano in Ma; Unique t'i. Dallied :u. Nutte oi the western continent J i. Plnglo thitiiji 31. Draw tK:lie J 5. Attend the alci I'J. Ineect 42. Acquire! by Inbor 4S. Scarce 47. Meat dlah 48. Spread lorty 49. Have being 51. Obtained 52. Front of the foot 63. Purpoet 65. Metric meae ure of vol ume: abhr. DOWN I. Color L Affirmative T C " t tit 'Vy NEW SERIAL Chapter Ona f "LITTLE JAMES" THERE were three James Brewster Stimsons. The third James had a great denl to live up to. Not only was he the grandson of New Concord's only ex-governor and most eminent citizen but, as Judge Holcomb so frequently pointed out, the son of the one entirely satisfactory husband Kansas had ever produced. The Judge usually added, "or any other state. Everyone in New Concord sus pected, and all the women knew positively, that this paragon, Dr. Jim Slimson, the second James, had refused to be vaccinated during the smallpox epidemic In 1883 because ha could not bear to go on living after the death of his wife, Molly. Molly died In giving birth to the third Jumea. Dr. Jim at the time was not yet thirty, handsome, talented, an only sou and heir to a forlune. Appar eutly nothing counted but Molly. He died murmuring her namo and was canonized ovornlght. His Utile son was then six months old. Tho women were entirely respon sible for Dr. Jim's posthumous ealntship. The men had liked Jim well enough living. They grew fear fully tired of him dead. Judge Hoi comb, a bachelor, claimed that whenovor a New Concord husband caught his wlfo looking at him with a peculiar gleam in her eye he knew that he was being compared to Dr. Jim and that the comparison was hideously unsatisfactory. The women sniffed at these Jokes or me iwigo. uke a certain royal contemporary they wore not annsed and made no bones about allowing it. moy actually seemed to feel a vicarious prldo In Dr. Jlm'a almost deliberate death and never aeemcd to tire of discussing It. Beyond irritating their husband this would have been harmless enough. If the Interest In the father had not inspired them to an Interest In his son. It was the third Jamos Stimaon's grent misfortune that the women of New Concord, nartlcular ly the Intimates of his Aunt Sarah, maintained for moro than twenty years an actively and possessively maternal concern In his develop ment, nis career, and most of all, tn his mnrrlnge. i-rannmy no utile orphan was ever more tenderly loved and cher ished. The night of his father's fu neral Sarab, hla grandmother, said to her husband, "The tenderness of God has left ns little James." The Governor made no answer. In bis heart was the bitter cry that a god capable of tenderness would have taken him and spared his son. Later, when Time had softened thst bitterness, he remembered and was comforted. "The tenderness of God," he would whisper, watching the child asleep In his cradle or playing by his side. Sometimes as the boy grew oldor he seemed both son and grandson. He was called James to distinguish him from his father. But more often thnn not the Governor thought of him as Jim. 'T'HB Governor was a born roman 1 tic. James was to carry on the name, continue the family tradition of service and leadership, live In the house his grandfather had built with such loving pride and care.l CARNEGIE MEDAL PORTLAND. March lrt fAPt Ed ward W. KUnskl, 33. Troutdala farmer who risked hli life to save a frind from dah. ha reelvrd a check for 11000 from tha Carne hand It on to his children. Life would have been unbearable to both old James and old Sarah it they had not little James. "The Governor was born In Massa chusetts. In the early fifties, while he was still studying law at Har vard, he had been fired with an am bition "to go West and grow up with the country.' However, young Stimson had neither the ambition nor the desire to go West and grow np with the country alone, so he married pretty Sarah Stockwell nlmost before the ink was dry on his sheepskin. Their honeymoon was their Jour ney Westward. They had no dellnlto Intention when they set out of sot tUng In Kansas. They planned vaguely to take a look at Snlnt Jo seph, Missouri, or possibly go on to a place In the wilds of Westorn Kan sas known as Denver. It was by merest chance that their paddle-wheeled river steamer, on Its way to Saint Joseph from Saint Louis developed engine trou ble and tied up for three days at the wharf of a struggling trading post on the left bank of the Mis souri rtlver. Tho young homoseok ers relieved the tedium of the three days' stay hy climbing the heavily wooded hanks on the Kai.sas side and exploring the fertile wooded country boyond. Thrushes and meadow larks sang their clear yearning love songs hour after hour. The young Stimsons stopped to listen hand in hand at the top of a high bluff overlooking the Missouri, Just where the river began a magnificent mile-wide bend "We'll stay and build a home on this very spot," they decided. They stayed, but It was many years he' fore thoy had their heart's desire and hullded the mansion of their dreams on tho river bluff. They wero at first happy years, even gay years. New Concord fulled, alas, to become the metropolis of James dreams and developed In' stead Into a pleasant little residen tial city of sixteen thousand souls. James soon extended his interests boyond local affairs. He was one of those instrumental In making Kansns Into a free state. Later he fought to keep It free and lost an arm at the second Battle of Dull Run. Somo years after the olose of the War he was elected gover nor and might have gone to the United States Senate. But his health had never been good after the loss of his arm. He returned to New Con cord and bis law practice. The two James Stimsons used to ride together almost every fine aft ernoon, the Governor astride Dan, bis Kentucky pacer, and James III on Bird, his pony, named after Miss Bird Strong, one of bis neighbors and closest friends. The start of their dally ride was an event In the rather dU routine of tha Stimson household. Mrs. Stimson used to claim proudly as the two rode off bowing and wav ing, that they were the two hand somest men in the entire state of Kansas which meant, of course, In hero fund commission. He will use the money as prt payment on a ranch ha now la renting. On .October 8, 1033, Robert I. Lanrtdownt, 39, was working on ft ladder In a well. He was overcome by carbon monoxide gas and fell Into tha trater. KJlnskl descended In a bucket lowered by a windlass.' He tied a rope around Lanadowne and both were drawn to the surface. Both were 111 for several days from ef- fert of the bis. KUnskt married ) and has three small children. the whole world and as far as hei husband was concerned Mrs. Stim son was not far wrong. ALL the countryside knew ana was Interested In the two James and their rides often partook ol something of the nature of a M umphal progress. The Governor, ai owner of several fine farms, wni keenly interested In the crops and the weather and all that pertains thereto so that he and his farmer friends had a great deal to discuss, It was small wonder then that little James preferred tho Rivet Road where It was lonelier and there were fewer long talks about manure, the condition of the wheat and other uninteresting things not designed for the entertainment of small boys. Jnmes was a born chat terbox, hut his grandfather was very strict about not letting him Inter rupt when his elders were talking. James liked It better when his grandfather took blm fishing. Dressed In their oldest clothes they would scramble down the river bank Just below the Mansion and fish In a slough a mile or two further ou near the Leavenworth Road. It would be Impossible to explain just why James always caught a little fish and his grandfather a big one, but this seemed natural and fitting; to both. The Governor had become mora and more silent as he grew older, but on these Ashing trips he often talked to his grandson tor hours at a time. "Did It hurt an awful lot when they cut your arm offf" James would ask anxiously as If for tha first time. The Governor would re ply that It had hurt pretty badly, though he spared the child the hideous details of an amputation without anaesthetics. - Perhaps the story James liked best waa the one nbout tbe swarma of grasshoppers which in 1SGS set tled over Kansas like a plngue oC Egypt and literally ate up every spear of grass and blade or leaf of green. The account of the grasshoppers appearing as his grandfather said, "like a cloud between us and tha sun," covering the streets and side walks of New Concord to the depth of a foot and being shoveled by the citizens Into enormous hogsheads and dumped Into the river by the ton, was to James a tale so delight fully awful that he fairly shivered with Joy every time he heard It. He could not look with equnnlmlty upon even a lone grasshopper until he was quite a big boy, . Almost, but not quite as thrilling, were the stories of the dark days after the Civil War when settlers came flocking In expecting to find new Utopia only to face years of heart-breaking drought. But as these tales made Junes sad tht Governor cheered him up by telllni of the discovery of alfalfa and dr farming In tha Western portions ol the state, emphasizing the stupen doits strides forward Kansas had made In consequence. So like a bard of old the Srsl James Brewster Stimson sang till' sagas of long ago to an enthralled and enraptured audience of one. And deep In the heart of hla small grandson was planted a love for hli state a reverent admiration for hli grandfather and an unconscious de sire to make both proud of him, This was to Influence his entire Ufa ICnpyritM, mi. Ualeel H. Farnhaml Mors of th. background of "Llttl. Jam.." comtl out, tomorrow. WILLAMETTE DEBATERS DEFEATED BY STATERS CORVAI.U8, Ore., Mar. 16. (AP) The Willamette unlveralty men'a de bate team was defeated 3 to 0 by Oregon State college here Thursday night In a debate on the question wheth.r the states should adopt a system of state medical service. The State college was represented by Kenneth Wood of Portland and Albert Nicola of Corvallli. Rolland K.ster and Harold Prultt represented I Willamette. r o