1 PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OR EG ON. MONDAY. M ALCH IS. 1935 Medpord Mail Tribune "Cnrvant M South ttn Ortgu Kuii Mil Mail TrisuW OaJti Kicepl flaturdat ur.)KObi piiintinu CO. 1I-IM0 N. fit BL PbUM ft ROBERT W. BUHL, t-llloc An Indeittndrnt Ntpp Katurd u traind mitUr at Uedfortf Ortfun, under Act ul Marcn 8. 1ST 8. Hi;:i.S) lill'TIK-N KATK8 B. Mali In AiliimM Dally, orr tear Dal i. fli month! Dally, oi month B(l B Tirrlrr In AfhincaV Urdford. AattUM Jaeksomllla, Central Point, PbotoU. laiaot. Gold Bill and on tHsnVt Daily, oat iu 8.Uu Dal It, til month 1 Datlv. one munth HO All term, wh Id sdisne. Official paper or the Cltj of Medford. Official paper of Jickaon Counti MFMBLH UP THE AKHMCIATKl HHEM RercUlne Full Leued Wire Bentce lb AMnelatrd Preea U aicliultelf entitled U the use for puhliratloo of all rwwi dltpaiehw credited U It ui otherwlie credited in tni paper and alio to be loci. rw puhllnhtd herein. All rlihu fo puhllratloD of ipeclal dsatcbw nerein ar bIm returned. MKMHKH iW UNITED PHRM alEMHKH UK AUDIT HI KRAO UF CIKCL'LAIIMNB Adifrini'it KepreacnlilHea U C M1M.K.8EN k CUM I' A NY Offleee In N Y'rrk. Chlcajo. Detroit, 8lD frnrin l Ance. Rnitle Porlland Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur I'erry Wsshlngton. D. C observers fig ure "the 1936 presidential cam paign will atreaa rellgloue note." Thle will start Portland polltlclana singing. 'The Lord Paya All," on bat-passing Jaunta through the rural aeotlons. John Btrachey, a British Intel lectual smart-aloe 1c, la threatened with deportation, for preaching Communlam In America. To him verythlng Is wrong with this coun try but the dollars be collects for lectures. . She Is 18 years old. Among ber . first rank achievements she bss won all bonors In raising fine bogs. She ought to make a first-class wile. (Northwest rarm Journal). What do you think? Item. An Oklahoma citizen emitted a yell that waa heard seven miles away. Press dispatches indicate the yip was purely a test of lungs and laroyx. and not dua to suddenly remembering he was mad at ev erything and everybody. All the standard signs of Spring have shown up. except 14 candi date for sheriff. The pussywillows are la the lead, as harbingers. All re fat and fuzzy, and trying hard ta be tiger lilies. "DEMOCRATS DOISO COUNTRY GOOD" (Hdllne Dpi Norte Tripli cate), So It would seem. Speed-ldlots continue to lesve the aroma of brimstone on Esst Main street, aa their luck and tires fall tbem not. The depression la now charged with earning "a decline of beauty among American women." Credit should be given however, for not making the homely women, (If any), mors so. The Heavy Thinking Committee ol the CofC. has been unable to de olde upon a fit fate for the resi dent, found guilty of cruelty to the climate, by slurring svmmertlme In . the valley. Many feel the enda of Justice will be serveC If he Is re quired to stay In the city limits sll next summer. "For Sale 37 Bull. bans. Fat Mrs. Willis." (Durham. Calif., News). Come on out from under the house. Editor! ... Th esteemed la Orande Observer tells of a cltlren who lset week observed his 03iii birthday. Jour nalistic tradition was csst sslde. and no reporter felt that the B3 year old citizen felt, aa young as he ever did. Amelia Isrhart. the lady flyer and conquerer of two oceens. denies the mean gossip "ana went nungry on a visit to the White House. Tins ought to qussh the meaner gossip, that Mrs. Roosevelt doee not stay homs long enough to cook a meai PIONEER FIF.Al'TY HINTS (Pendleton East Oregonlan) A painted girl on the atreet Is a sure sign of a downward career. Those girls that "paint and powder" need the atten tion of their parents and all of their relatives. (80 Yrs. Ago Col ) The weather continues unfsvorable for citizens to mske gardens, ana endeavor to break their shovel handle, before all the backyard baa been spaded. MAKE IT TIMES Last session Uis legislature passed a law providing for capital pun ishment by hanging, but forgot to MEMBER provide any means for carrying " out. so the law was vetoed by the governor. This year the legislature baa not only passed a hanging law but haa remembered to provide for a new atout hemp rope aa well. So before you choke your wife or poison your husband think twice You might live to regret It. (Em poria. Kansas. Claret tel. Dm Mall Trlpuna want ads. Editorial correspondence PASADENA, (V.if., Mar, h 17. l'aairlena is as thrilling as an old shoe and jiwt a comfortable. Returning to the same little hotel where so many vo"ka have been spent during the past decade, one fits Mindly J.ito the old niche, and wonders absurdly if one ever had been away. Came down Friday night on the Lark. This popular train to Los Angeles is still going strong twenty-six ears with a diner and three lounging cars! The latter might better be termed eoektail cars under the present regime. One can get drinks as soft as an ostrich plume, or as hard as tool steel. They also serve cold lunches, and with dance music coming over the radio, there is a decidedly night club atmosphere prevailing. Leaving late the Lark clicked off 76 miles per hour at one point and pulled in at Glendale on time. Somewhere down the line a couple of men were bundled inlo the section opposite somewhat the worse for wear. The porter had a hard time getting them out in the morning. They also alighted at Glendaleone of them greeted his wife affectionately with a toothpick in his mouth. We expected the embrace to be ended in screams and indignant protestations but nothing of the port occurred. Yes, some men can get away with murder! The gorgeous weather continues. Today is Sunday and a proper subject for more superlatives. Pasadena's amazing Sun day church parade has not diminished appreciably. The chimes are tolling out familiar hymns, and the Sunday school entrances are packed with fresh-faced boys and girls in their best bib and tucker. Across the street is the there has been a steady file of going up the brond steps, for world may golf, motor- picnic or on the Sabbath, but in Pasadena SUNDAY is SUNDAY. In the present muddled state of the world one finds in this phe nomena, something vaguely reassuring. While the winter tourist season is about over, hotels here report the best tourist business excursions to the desert are all by this glorious sunshine, have ordinary fashion. The "older astic about such colorful manifestations of Jlother Nature. One party consisting of (our returned from such an excursion. The one man appeared all in, but the ladies were fairly bouncing with aesthetic enthusiasm. Asked if he didn't enjoy the trip the one man looked about warily and then remarked sotto enough quite a sight, acres and look at flowers for ten or fifteen minutes and then TALK flowers for three hours!" One great stimulus to the Anita racing season. There was considerable opposition to open ing a race track in this pre-Viclorian paradise, and in certain quarters eyebrows are still raised but even here, we fear, money talks a little louder than anything else, then too the actual racing goes on "outside of town." According to one local resident horse racing has been a wonderful thing for Pasa dena, like a permanent wave and a face-lifting for Grandmother. Charlie Chaplin is working on or six years to be called "The where the foot shuffling "Sharlie" gets mixed un in the machin ery of a modern mass production plant. Sounds good and no (loiiot will Be. mere is only one Charlie Chaplin and he has the rare good sense, to give his public a little less than they want so they are always crying for more. Contrary to early report The Masses will not be a talkie it will be pantomime as of yore, and by one of the greatest pantomimists of all time. R. W. R. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JKNKINS HERE'S a good one: Oiar af T.alratilja a. airamnna I., southern Oregon knows, they have a geyser the only one In the atato. Pllota flying over Lnkevtew say this geyser makes a perfect wind sock. In dicating accurately the direction and velocity of the wind. Steam rises from the geyser, and the wind blowa the ateam. ACCURATE knowledge aa to dlrec lrm nnH wlnrlt, nf th, wlnH U essential to making a aafe landing, and making a safe landing la the big thing In flying. , Nearly anybody can STAY UP In a modern plane. The thing that counts Is to get down safely. & an SERA project, they are pro- view geyser. In that event, they would use the geyser as a wind Indicator. and would heat the hangar with the natural hot water. Petty smart! CLAUDE DAVlsiadresslng a south em Oregon service club on Thurs dsy. made a number of interesting statements. Here Is one of them: "The federal government estimates that there are 18 million buildings In the United States. Of these, some three million are so old that they should be wrecked and got rid of. "Of the remaining 13 million, a very large number have been deteri orating rapidly In the live years of depression, and need repair and mod ernization to sae them from costly obsolescence." (Obsolescence Is a big word mean ing going out of dste.) IF all those threemilllon worn out bulldlnga could be torn down and replaced and all the IS million re maining buildings could be brougnt up to an adequate state of repslr, it would create quite a market for labor and bulldlnga mstertele A lot of that would t.'rp their ownera could Just i reasonable measure the future. OX Ci.Hll.! ( I. N OTHER Interest! f i based upon comnifvoiil bu"-n. report. Christian Science church, and well dressed men and women, half an hour. The rest of the engage in other pagan pastimes in several years. Just now the vogue heavy rains followed brought out the flowers in extra girls" are particularly enthusi women and one man, have just voice, ' Sure I liked it well acres of wild flowers, but whv local hotel trade was the Santa his new film the first in five Masses." The big scene will be "In 1933. eome 60 per cent, of all the SMALL business concerns of the country showed a profit not, per haps, aa BIO a profit as they would have liked, but at least a profit. "Of the BIO business concerns of the country, relatively few. ahowed a profit In 1933." nPHE big outfits, you see, aren't as much smarter than the small ones as we have been led to believe, and It also Isn't true that all the money In the country Is draining Into the hands of the big fellows. Thst Is Just tommyrot peddled by the demagogues'. CLAUDE also told a good yarn. A negro preacher was telling his congregation the difference between mere "talking" snd oratory. "When you gits tip and says FACTS," he said, "dnt's Just talkln. But when yo' gits up and pounds de table an proclaims dat black am white, dst am ORA TORY!" One of the thlnga badly wrong with us In these days Is that we have too much oratory. Your watch repairing will receire my personal sttentlon. Johnson the Jeweler. 4 DeVoe's. where you csn get "most anything most any time." Reported Engaged The Infanta Maria Christian! above), only unmarried daughter f former King Alfonso of Spalr s reported In Pari! to be engaged o Frtnce Carl Emanuel Von Liech k4.4tlrv lAMociiUd rea Photo) W f, i Jar miii a Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. tflgniMl letters prt1nlnj to personal health and bTflene not to disease dlaenoU or treatment Kill be answered bf Dr. Brady it itamped self-ad-dressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink Owl ui; to the large number of letters recelted only m re ran be answered. No reply ran be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady, 283 El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Cal. OLD KING CFOKGF. IK According to a January London dis patch King George Insisted on going a-huntlng for field game at Band rlngham and would not listen to his physicians' pleas that he spend the winter on the Riviera. The doc tors Imagine the king's chest and lungs were left "delicate" by his 1 1 1 n e s of six yesrs ago. But his majesty re mained adamant to their Impor tunities and only to humor them consented finally to run down to Eastbourne on the channel. In such circumstances It must be pretty tough to be a monarch. I can well understand it would never do for the king to give the doctors the haw-saw, even tho he knows darn well they're Just a bevy of old women fussing about with their cold phobias and all that sort of thing. At the same time It is plain the poor man has to put up the best argument he can, for If he evinced Just a shade more compliance the doctors would have him swathed In red flannels and all sewed up for the winter. On the whole I think His Majesty gave an excellent account of himself, for a man In such a difficult position. Un- i officially King George takes little; stock In the cold obsession. I'll wager. Delicate chest and lungs! Bah-bahl I The annual discovery of the cause and cure of "the common cold" was made this year In December, by a Dr. Meyer who was director of the Hoper Foundation for Medical Re search of the University of California. Aa a rule the discovery Is given to the public toward the end of Janu ary or early In February, but this year the University of California was determined to cop the publicity, so the story broke In December. "In the present state of knowledge," said Dr. Meyer, as the newspapers pre sented the story, "the only depend able advice for an Individual with a cold Is to go to bed and to Isolate himself from other people who may catch It." Had the director let It go at that, the effect would have been fine. But having given the only dependable advice he could not resist the Im pulse to expatiate a bit. He said re cent experimental evidence Indicates that there Is no Blngle cause of the common cold; some colds appear to be caused by bacteria or by filterable viruses which are Infectious or con tagious; others appear to be caused by outside Influences that are not transmltta ble from one person to an other. So already, you see, the only de pendable advice la nullified. If some so-called "colds" are due to non-infectious causes, who Is going to put himself to any inconvenience to avoid communicating his disease to others? NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, March 18. Diftry: Betimes to do a turn on the avenue before breakfast and saw Burton Mppf-ssmm Rnscoe. who in 1 I hit early 40' is H j,gs-'aW setting down his 1 t memoirs. Also I d4 Ed- Hatrick. gar- W0- denlaed and spruce. And Rus se U Patterson, who Is graying at the templea like a city slick er. V So back to the dally squirm 1 a n d a letter r2 from Constance Coiuer win. news ol her dogs in Hollywood and another from E. W. Howe. And hearing of Fred C. Kelly who is essaying for Prof. Moley's "Today." Then to the Waldorf to see Minister Meredith Nicholson and Dorothy, recently from Venezuela. With my wife to Rube and Irma Goldberg's buffet and as much hoop la as ever I had. Walking late across West 72nd street and through the park and a man on ft bench was sobbing. And near the Plana entrance a young girl foxed with drink was haranguing a constable. Marc Connelly, playwright, has a natural school-gtrltnh complexion that would be t he envy of the mot pronounced beauty parlor ad dict. Sometimes this phenomenon has fooled itrantters bucking the weekly poker games. Ac a matter of fact he is one of the town's cleverest exponents of draw. With a bunted straight, he once made the late Dr. Oeorge A. Dorsey. a 'wlsard at bluff, drop a flush for ;a pot of $100. Incidentally, for vituperative repartee at the poker table Chnrlea O. Norrls and the late Arthur Somers Roche were unbeat able. Their salty sallies crackled like 'machine gun fir or a hall or brick bats through plate glass. Those who know the homing in stinct of the cartoonist Jav N Darling are wondering how long It will be before he cracks under the strain as federal wild lire com missioner and takes for tall grass He haa been In Washington a year During his New York residence he would arrive with all the books, -lot-hee and paraphernalia needed fov a yesr. Then perhaps In a week w o. at his drawing board, nostalgia would overwhelm him and they would find this thumbtcked note "I'm on may way to Dee Moinee.' Personal nomination for the most kenlnR cable st tim of the year I the Fiermcnte marital muss in Italy. afvHt&y A CHARY OLD SOI L. Having gone so far. Dr. Meyer de elded to make a thorough lob of It. He averred, somewhat oracularly. ! that statistical as well as experimen tal proof clearly show thst chilling of the body Is an important predis posing cause of colds. Cold weather increases the chance of Infection, etc.. etc. Dr. Meyer means that It seems so to him. Like too many other modern interpretors of science he awtimes that ir he imagines anything Is so It must be so. But that Isn't science at all. That is Just the same old em plrclsm that has served medicine so well for thousands of years. If chilling of the body or cold weather has anything to do with the ailment in question, then the "only dependable advice" this research au thority would give it not quite de pendable, after all. QUESTIONS AN1 ANSWERS. The Menace of ias Leaks. We live on the first floor of eight family house. Our bed room is direct ly above the gas meters. Nearly every month I have to notify the gas com pany there Is a leakage of gas. They naiiAllv rs.nn.tr the leak, but in a few days it leaks again and we get the odors of gas . . . (Mrs. c. k.) Answer That Is a constant injury to health, and If enough gas leaijs It may become a peril to life. I don't know how you can remedy the situa tion vnant hv movlnsr out. Perhaps makeshift repairs Instead of renew ing a faulty fitting, explains the nui sance. Is there not a cause for action against the gas company In the cir cumstances? Eleotrolysls. urhr run t tret the necessary in structions to learn electrolysis? Is it possible to use it on yourseu Are the necessary materials expensive? (L. E. K.) Answer Any physician who em ploys it can teach you. Yes. you could use it on yourself. The requirements for electrolysis are not expensive one ordinary dry cell such as is used for doorbells, a few feet of lamp cord, a needle holder and plain sewing needle. Bortc Arid. What strength of boric acid solu tion Is used as a douche? What strength as a wet antiseptic compress on an Infected hand? Is boric acid solution ever dangerous to use for any purpose? Answer Heaping teaspoon of boric acid powder or crystals to the pint of boiled water may be used as douche, irrigation, gargle, mouth wash, eye wash, ear wash, nasal spray or for hot antiseptic compress on wound or in fected hand. Boric acid is as safe as any antiseptic can be. (Copyright, 1935, John F. Dills Co.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady shojld send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D.. 2G5 & Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cal. The former Margaret Hawkeaworth, whose reign In the ballroom dance was second to Irene Castle, lfl the wealthiest of the former light fan tastic trippers. For many seasons she twirled In the more fashionable clubs with the six-foot Basil Dur rant, now a men's tailor. Her for tune is reputed in seven figure She was recently headlined as a vic tim in a $350,000 Jewel robbery in Miami. Her riches came from shrewd advice In market speculations. She sold at the top and salted It in alr-tlght trust funds and life Insur ance annuities. Another famous dancer of that tinseled time Is the lovely Joan Sawyer, married to a wealthy Ohloan. Irene Castle mar ried a rich Chlcagoan. Florence Wal ton, of the same period, is also comfortably fixed. When Grove Patterson was In Russia not long ago. a little girl In Moscow was tnklng an examina tion in school. The teacher asked as the principal question: "Is there a Ood and what is his religion?" The child, in the well known words of Lenin, answered very promptly: There is no Ood and religion is the opiate of the people." The teacher exclaimed "Right I" And the little girl cried out: "Thank Ood, I've passed!" Abolishing the Diety Is not so easy, even in the Soviet- Bagatelles: Lowell Thomas has more different Jobs than any writ ing man of bis time . . . ward Line ships sail from Pier 13 . . . Honore Morrow is living In an old moated castle In Devon . . . Isaac Marcossen has occupied the same Oramercy Park apartment for 22 years . . . Burton Holmes, in the list of America's ten best dressed, has all his clothes made In Amer ica . . . Will Hays Is an expert horseman . . . Don Clarke is build ing a home In Venice, Florida . . Mrs. Rube Goldberg mastered ski ing at Lake Placid, but on her way to the station ccmlng home stub bed and broke a toe . . . Sinclair Lewis knows the complete history of every word he usee. Heart throb in the mail: "An un suspecting little golden head of six Just dashed in from her playmates tearfully to demand : 'We do too own our house, don't we daddy?' And at my preposterous assurance that we still did. she skipped tri umphantly out again, leaving me tarlng tight-lipped out the win dow." Communications apanl.h i.eons Offered To the Idltor: The srtlctes which appeared In your Sunday Tribune, describing the splendid highway, now being con structed trom Laredo to Mexico City, have made a deep lmpre&?'.pn on many ol your readers. While com plete data about the most wonderful o til lHa&way, to siteud from pole to pole along the Pacific coast are rxt ye', available, some of the stu d'v.it; a .tending- the SERA Spanish classes, are already planning to drive over the Atlantic highway this fall. The progress made in the regular classes, taught Tuesdays and Thurs- ' days, has been wonderful. If contin ued during the next three months, many of the students will have a ' good working knowledge of the lan guage. A special class Is also taught, without charge and without pay for the teacher, to assist those who have 1 been unable to attend regularly and those who still wish to take up this Important study, it meets Fridays. : 2 to 4 p. m. in the auditorium of the ' court house. ) Very few of the great number who i have had lessons In Spanish, seem to be aware that an advanced class Is taught in the high school, every Mon day 7 to 9 p. m. For this, no text books are required. Mimeograph cop ies are furnished of lessons now be ing broadcast over KOAC. These are especially suited to perfect the stu dent in conversational Spanish. Those interested are invited to en roll and Join a Spanish club which is being formed now. Visitors are also welcome. J. C. HUNTER. March 16, 1935. (Continued from Page one) slinging a paint brush over Munich houses and feeling the urge of pol itical ambition. Official figures show that 1,890,000 copies have been sold. It has been translated into four teen languages. Crowds have been coming to see the five million fingerprints on file in the Justice department bureau In such large numbers that visiting hours have been established. Several senators have bought baby bonds In lots of a thousand dollars and more, but have admonished the treasury not to make the fact pub lic. The senators do not want any one to know they have that much money. SPRAYlDlrTFOR CH APH1DS !N SHORT T Green peach aphlds are now work ing on peach buds and It Is the rec ommendation of ti. G. Gentner, en tomologist of the Southern Oregon Experiment Station and L. P. Wilcox, county agent, that control measures for this Insect be applied within the next few days. Infestations of this aphid are wide spread throughout the county and therefore all peach growers are ad vised to apply sprays aa recommend ed, if crops ore desired. Use nicotine sulfate (black leaf 40) at the rate of one pint to the one hundred gal lons of water, plus one pound of commercial spreader. Increased ef fectiveness of the nicotine is caused by the, spreader and is well worth the additional cost. Green peach aphis hatch quite ear ly and feed upon fruit buds until the bloom opens, at which time they work their way to the Inside base of the petals and feed upon the young fruits. The bloom then wilts and falls off without setting fruit. Many crop failures have been due to this Insect. Spraying should be done be fore any flower buds open completely if good control Is to be obtained. INSTALLMENT TAX SALEM. Ore. (Tjpi Allowing pay ment of taxes on the installment plan has broucht about a noticeable Im provement in the tax situation In the state, according to reports by coun ties to the state tax commission. Although $13,943,914 Of the 1P34 taxea is still due, taxjayera turned in $13,677 In taxes for 1933 and prior years. The quarterly payment plan adopted by the legislature with re bates for prompt payment and inter est charges against delinquent taxes, aided In getting a larce proportion of the back payments In, said the com mission. Curry county continued to have the highest per centatre of delin quency, with "0 per cent of its 1934 levy unpaid at the first of the yesr. Crook county has 86 per cent to take second place. Larsest delinquencies were reported In the coastal timber regions and eastern Oregon wheat country. The Willamette valley was better. Mult nomah county having only 25 per cent delinquency and other valley counties close behind. IOOF Will Confer Third Degree At I Meeting Tuesday The decree team of Medford Lodge. ! No. 83. I. O. O. F. will confer the third degree on a candidate Tups- j day night at the hall on West Sixth 1 Street Nobis Oran4 C. B. Crk as that all members bs prssent at the rec ar time. . d:tit: from Ash '.and. Centre: nt. Oold Hill and Jacksonville will r prent. R-freshmr.s- will be served follow ing t".e initiation ceremonies. WINDOW G LAS. We !! WIndo :. snd l.l repiac vui broken windows reisotiaoly. rroftDndje Cab inet VYorU. BwWd Hitlerite To Wed Germany's well-uniformed premier of Prussia, Hermann WHhelm Goe ring (below), Is to wed Emmy Son nemann (above), famous German actress. Goering la one of Chancel lor Hitler's chief aides. (Associated Press Photo) Meteorological Report March 18, 1935 Forecasts Medford and vicinity: Fair tonight and Tuesday; temperature below nor mal. Oregon: Fair east and extreme south portion tonight and Tuesday: unsettled elsewhere; temperature be low normal. Local Data Temperature a year ago today: Highest 78; lowest 30. Total monthly precipitation 0.67 inches. Deficiency for the month 0.33 Inches. Total precipitation since September 1, 1934. 1J.04 inches. Deficiency for the season 0.45 Inches. Relative humidity at 5 p. m. yes terday 65 per cent; 5 a. m. today 93 per cent. Tomorrow: Sunrise, 6:16 a. m sun set, 6:22 p. m. Observations Taken at 5 A. M., 110 Meridian Time r n mi. ,ty , f C ' " W ' y t --MM "' ff 1 3 PS S1 rV r a 2 o j i j r ! ? i ; Boise 52 30 T. Cloudy Boston 66 20 Clear Chicago . 34 26 Cloudy Denver .. 50 30 Cloudy Eureka u . 50 40 .16 P.Cdy. Helena - 48 28 T. Cloudy Los Angeles . 66 50 .... Cloudy MEDPORD 49 35 ,08 Cloudy New York 26 T. Clear Omaha ; 50 34 .... Cloudy Phoenix 74 46 .... P.Cdy. Portland 60 36 .12 Cloudy Reno 54 28 .... Clear Rosehurg 50 38 Cloudy Salt Lake 64 40 .... Clear San Francisco .... 56 46 .... Clear Seattle 50 38 T. Cloudy Spokane 48 32 .01 P.Cdy. Walla Walla 52 Washington, D.C 68 32 Clear RnYflTF UUIUIL 111 II EASTERN REGIONS SALEM, Ore. ( UP , The coyote Is invading the east reported A. M. Day. of the bureau of biological sur vey. Tourist in the west have been taking coyote puppies home with them discovering they are unsatisfactory pets and allowing them to escape. The coyote multiplies very rapidly, five to seven pups to a litter being tne average, witn some litters run ning as high as 17. Coyotes have been found in New York. Pennsylvania. Tennessee, South Carolina. Georgia. Florida and Ala bama, although the animal is a na tive of only the western plains. "With the royote'a adaptability, shrewdness, boldness and abllltv to multiply, it Is possible that "they may eventually inhabit the entire United States. said Day. "The coyote Is the most adaptable of the predatory animals; home is wherever he diss his den: clvillratlon has no terrors for him: he mlgrstes easily and on slight provocation, and in late years seems to be moving east ward on his own power." Are You Rundown, Ailing? WHEN you fee! i u ii a o w n , when your blood is thin or stomach pives you trouble, J Z. R. or "jour S y rmnss," trv Dr. B 'f p'"'' Golden l-yf Medical Dicov. erv. If vt-iii sr thin-hlr.ode.1, need to rut cn healthy a- tM It i depend iW i.v.ir 1 l P-.iIIg rf 154" 0k St. SIfm. Off, "j , 1 t rpJ nJ runJVwn. At tirr.es I ui !TH'.r-ri'Ti. .-ti Sf'chM 1. 1. I hifilT ft:t F: . u . i,n M-i: -0 i.-nfr U :vi yp rrv atd I K' f.-f n -1- l! I 1 r-r .; t . lfr, tL it i i i 1 r-0 f .:.' 'i I-,,''. IV Mm, uUl SO it., bqold 91.00, Flight 'o Time (Medford aud Jackon lounty I! It tor? from the files of the Mall Tribune of 10 and 20 Years All)). TEN VKABS AliO TODAY .March 18, ID23 (It Was Wednesday) Insurance policy Issued In favor of Roy A. DeAutremont, Slsklyous tun ne( bandit suspect Is ordered cancel, led. J. A. Churchill, state superinten dent of state schools Is favored for president of Ashland Normal school. President Coolldge has pictures tak en with William Jennings Bryan, on White House lawn. Ed M. White and Allen Arnold of Phoenix collide In their autos at Lo zler lane and Jacksonville highway . Intersection. f First smudging of the season comes, when the mercury drops to 37 de grees. Jsckson County Bsr assoclstlon sdopts resolution favoring change la court procedure. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY March 19. 1D15 (It Waa Thursday) Owners of blooded horses threaten to file test suit gainst city council orders prohibiting parading of stal lions on Main street Saturday after noons. "The Tardy Cannon Ball" at the It: "Thirteenth episode of The Mas ter Key" at the Page; and "Eighth episode of "The Exploits of Elslne" at the Star. Circulars distributed "warning, sin ful Medford will be destroyed." A boy and a girl both IB years old disappear and friends suspect they have eloped. City council authorizes a $4000 In surance policy on the fire hall. 4 Lake Creek LAKE CREEK, March 18. (Spl) Mrs. Margaret Nussbaum and Mrs. Laverne Pech demonstrated the making of different kinds of rolls, etc.. from bread dough at a meet ing of the Lost Creek club, which met at the home of Mrs. Maysel Hoefft, March 1, Ten ladies were present to receive the Instructions. Next meeting will be held at Mrs. John Shorts, March 21. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tonn of Bams 'alley were week-end guests at the Tonn home here. People of the community were grieved to hear of the death of Grandpa Settles, Sunday night. Mr. Settles waa a man of a simple, kindly nature and beloved by all who knew him. Orvll Settles of Westport. Ore., and Mrs. Springer of Portland are here to attend the funeral and visit with the Y. H. Wyont fam- ily. Mr. Settles Is a brother of Mrs. Wyant, and Mrs. Springer i an aunt. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tonn were callers Sunday on Mr. and Mrs. Wal lace Ragsdale Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ragsdale are the proud parents of a baby boy born March 10. Ernest Smith of Butte Falls has been taking the agriculture census in this neighborhood. Mr. and Mrs. Orval Blair of Jack sonville and Mr. and Mrs. Orval Vandorfy of Medford are guests this week of Mr. and Mrs. William Hoefft. Mrs. May Bellows and Mrs. H. H. Fox have been assisting at the Wyant home the past few days. Mrs. Springer of Portland visited at the J. B. Short home Friday. Charles and Conrad Newstrom of Grants Past, were guests at tho Walch home Sunday. SGARLET FEVER PERIL DISAPPEARS WITH AGE SALEM. Ore. ( UP) Immunity to scsrlet fever Increases with the ags of the person, said Dr. Frederick D. Strieker, state health officer. Application of the Dick test for susceptibility shows that 60 per cent of children between the ages of one and five years are susceptible. From five to 10 years the rate Is 35 per t cent; from 10 to 30 the rate drops to 20 per cent, and 'over the age of 20. It stands at about 15 per cent, Up to $300 If Yoc Need Monty, we can aaommodate you quickly and confidentially. We will lend you up to $300 on your own signature and security. No in dorsers required no ques tions asked of employer, rela tives or friends convenient repayment terms. You will ite our way of doing business. Oregon-Washington Mortgage Co. 4S .. Central. I .kik '-a - See W. E. Thoir -.1 nr r. 4. H'HI 4: 3C" "