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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1935)
pxge Fomrc MEDFOBD MXTL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON. TUESDAY. MAY 14. 1935. Medford Mail tribune "inryoat In outturn Ortooa Rudi tin Mail TrlbuM'' Dally Eieept Saturday jtillfiied by UEtirOHl) PRINT1NO CO. S5-3f-29 N. Fir SL Pboo Tft BOBKKT W. BUHL, Bditor Ao lDdcpndcnt Nmpaper Eolrd u mnJ el Ml matUr at Medford. Ormoo, under Act of Marrb 8, 18T9. 8UllfiCKlITIO.N KATES By Mall Id AdiiMt Daily, on- fear M.flO Dally, ad monthi -d Pally, or month , "P By Carrier Id Adiance Medford, Aabland, Jacksonville, Central Point. Fbotali. Taleot. Gold Bill and on Bluhwayt. Dally, otw rrar .' Dally, ii monthi Dally, out oontti 80 AU term, casb Id Mianca Official DW of thi City of Medford. MEMBEH OK TUB AH80CIATED PBEBt Hrxnun run iu TtM Asaoclated Preu U aiflwlifly tnUUod to IBS UW (of PUD uca iion wi i ""- credited to it i othersrlw erodlted In thla pl tod also to ne local nem piihllnhed herein. AH rlRhU for pulil lea linn of iperlal dlipaWhea Mrein ar aiw mmtu alEMIIKH OK UNITED PHK88 MEMHKH OK AUDIT IU1KBAO OK CIRCULATIONS Adfertlilni Hepreaentatltea M. C. MtHlKSREN COM PA Ml Officio In Srm Virl, Chlcajo, Detroit, Bae rranciKCO lx Anceiw Heal tie Portland. wiMotaiur Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur I'erry The Miniature Messiahs of Oregon, flourishing chiefly upstate, are still threatening the governor with a re call. The common iense of the gov ernor continues quite aggravating to them. The chief executive alleges their haloes are tin-horns. Electric fans have hecn put in order for the summer, and are ready to now whack off the first finger atuck In their vitals. There U some General Activity hereaboutd. but not enough to court martial Col. Laziness. What's that!" chorused do7ns aa a horse cantered down the Main Btem yesterday afternoon. Members will bring flowers and ahrubs to headquarters, where they will be chummed by Ml Josephine Weed. (Salmon Bar Jottings) Ap propriate! The Portland bull team continues to perform like a constructive ses sion of the legislature. 8. Morris, the trl-dlstrlct tiller ot the north end of the county, la now fleeing from wall street in a n 4d. An efficiently committee, In a Cali fornia county, "has been working three years trying to figure out a more efficient way to run the county," according to the Burbank (Calif.) News-nevlew. No result have yet been noted, except that the ef ficiency committee Is efficiently tak ing Its time. "Classical dancing" Is being taught at the Institutions of higher learn ing In thla state, with some male students. It Is fine to have collegians mapping- about a graceful as the ancKnt Greeks. On the other hand, there have been October and No vember afternoons, when the tax payers wished they could show more artistic burking of the line, awt chnrmlng Interpretation of a touch down. Or. the Sabbath, the flrat ladles of the season invaded the hill areas, in the first cay-colored "shorts," and were bitten by the first mos quitoes of the aenson. That's news. A dun ennte in the mall and was a pleasant change from ten days ot chain letters. Dewey Hill, the Prrapert hired man and athlete, played ball Sun day BRtilnst Butte Falls, with a aprnlned thumb, twisted ankle and a wrenched bark. Thla illustrates the strong love of Mr. Hill for base ball, and the hardlne of our moun taineer. The wore was not learned, and It la not known what else Mr. 11111 busted. O! MY iltl tOl S! I I KM. URhincton (l. C) Herald) In the district crime committee the other eve Mrs. Harvey Wiley was discussing problems. It whs an evening session and arms the table from Mrs. Wiley, ardent dry an she la. ant a some what Inebriated gentleman of the press. Each time, aa Mrs. Wiley looked Ma wav. she discovered that his eyes were gartng intently at her. Mr. Wiley has lived around wasn. Ington for many, many yearn and has seen many reporter, but not one who followed her every word aa did thla particular one. Mrs. Wiley eon"! tided, i The man across the way. still ln ehrlatecf. announced In a loud tone: "I could love you if you weren't prohibitionist ' Mrs. Wiley almost tumbled off her chair In amazement. The meeting broke up. Til Sined HuTe" FITCH BUItO, Ms. (UP, Levi If-hiia s sfe was more valuable than Its contents, so he took precautions t.ashua. auctioneer ant! second-hand dealer, hung a tag with the comhina tlon on Hie ctiNl. Pohhorv broke into the store, aliened tic sale and stole IS in Mhrr. MEMBER KG I OH This Is Insurance Week ITS a rare week that can go by these days without having some special celebration connected with it. There have been music weeks, health weeks, navy weeks, home owners week, and Made in Oregon weeks. Now it appears, we, are having a national life insurance week, which started yesterday, and is being duly observed over the air, through the press, and at vari ous and sundry luncheon clubs. Well the life insurance companies have earned a week for self congratulation. They have insurance in marked contrast made an enviable record during the past twelve months it has gone ahead by leaps and bounds. In 1934 for example, new purchases of life insurance in creased 10 over 10.33, or in round figures an increase of over a billion and a quarter dollars! ..... WE hear a great deal about how the government has been spending money for relief since 1029. Yet during this same period the people of this country, as beneficiarips of life insurance have been paid more than II! billion, an average of about $2,700,000,000 a year equal to about one-tenth of all wages paid and several times greater than all federal relief expenditures. What does this mean! Well, in the first place, it means, the people have had money to spend, for life insurance premiums must be paid for in cash. It also means, there bus been an absence of confidence in the usual forms of investment, and increased confidence in the older and safer forms of investment, among which insurance ranks high. In other words the depres sion has helped life insurance. In the third place it means, that in spite of all the weeping and wailing and claims that conditions instead of getting better are getting steadily worse, this country has not only turned the corner, but has been slowly but surely improving in a busi ness way for at least a year and a half and probably longer. With $98,000,000,000 of life insurance in force and with pur chases increasing at the rate of 10 a year, no other conclusion is possible. The people can't spend such sums of money without having it. AND finally it means, that however convinced the profession nl nrnnhnta nf nntinnnl rliunatnp ntn.r tin tliuf tlin t'minlpv !g going to the demnition bow wows and nothing enn save it, the man in the street the average citizen does not share this pessimism, refuses to be stampeded by it, and retains his simple faith in the stability of this country, and its ability to success fully survive the perils that beset it. Otherwise there would be dollars into life insurance, for if on the rocks, certainly the life with it. No person convinced Bolshevism is near would put his savings in a business, which Bolshevism would destroy. CO the life insurance companies are entitled to a period of celebration, during which they may point to their record with prido and satisfaction. It is a fine record of achievement, and it is a record, which the people of the country, are justified in accepting aa certain evidence that not only is recovery well on its way, but the foundations of recovery are being built not upon the sands but upon the rock, of safe, sane and con servative investment. The Railroads K YE verily the ruilroHtls are waking up. The Hip Van Winkle mIoip of Kplf eomplneency, and idolenee, n certainly over. No surer sirn could one wish than the startling ehange in railroad publicity technique. A friend in the Middle West lias sent us an example of what the railroads are now doing in this direction. For years newspapers have received canned dope from the railroads press airents, given one glance at the first paragraph and promptly consigned same to the waste basket. Old stuff, railroad folder hooey, the same old applesauce. Tf the railroads insist on that sort of junk let them pay for it. But it is different this year. Newspapers in the Kast and Middlewest are printing the railroad patter free gratis and who can blame them. It is first class stuff. It is alive, fresh and has a punch, listen to this for example, reproduced on the editorial page of one of the best known dailies in the Mississippi valley: Mother bears are having their cub out in the Rocky moun tain dena. National park rangers are polishing up the glaciers. Indian squaws are throwing their looms Into high, weaving new blanket In ancient design. Charming San Diego is beckoning to the world to visit her world's fair. Railroad shops are humming . . railroad train are shining.. Sign of spring 1 Signs of a western summer. It will be a western summer, thla tar. Nature and the rail roads nd improving buaineaa mw to that. Nature spent the winter piling higher than ever the snow In the Rockte. Sierras and Cascade snows that will keep the wooded uplands cool and clean and enticing to the perspiring vice prratdent and the vacationing Wellraley Junior while the cities stKle and reck. The railroads saw to the rest Ratea pared down to the bone this year, "til it'a almost cheaper to travel than not. The railroads who conquered the west, then peopled It. have subdivided It now and for a ticket around 57, or 09 or 80 if you chooee the sleeper, you can ride some 4.500 mile around the circle. Meals extra, of course, If you muat eat; and berth additional, If you can bear to sleep while glorious mountain lakes and rivers and foreets glide pat your window. And all the while the engineer does the steering, and you know there'll be no wheeling of motor in the high altitude, no chancing of tire on tortuou mountain road, and if there a depreciation on the locomotive you don't care a darn. And speed 1 Why. when the railroads started courting you they knew you had gon modern, and o Start your vacation on one of those western grevhound that are showing the way to the rest of the country. Railroad travel In the wet Is ,at its cheapest and fastest in hlfttnry. Ride for J cent a mile, and nearly two miles a minute! It cost you 3.6 cent a mile not o long a no. and you paid a surcharge on your sleeping car ticket stolis:ied. now. on western line. And lea than a decade back, you spent nearly 73 hours on the ratla between Chicago and the Pacific. Now you do It In A3 hour, or so. Vacattonlatwl is nearer h trsinl Follow the crowd west thi summer. Ride in air-conditioned comfort. rorest fires Mart and hum much Nrw rules prevent parties for stu tnore easily m stands of timber that ' dent a of Milwaukee State 'earlier have been killed by Im.cl.s that cat : collette lnvn belli i? M-hcduled at tav- Oit leave end bore Into the truui . j something to talk about, for life to Big Business in general, has the depression, while during no such diversion of billions of this country is doomed to crash insurance companies will crash Wake Up erns and roadhousc. Personal Health Service By William Nlgned letter, pertaining to personal Health and hjslene not to dlseaje dlacnosl. or treatment will b answered bj Ur. Brady U a .tamped ulr-ad-dressed envelope u enclosed. Letter, ibould be brief and written tn Ink. Owing to the large number of letter, rto reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instruction,. Address Dr. William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, CaJ. IS IT Straight cod liver oil or halibut liver oil I jUAt aa fattening aa ao much butter or lard. It la not for ita fattening- effect that doctors pre scribe fish liver oil, but for its vitamins chiefly. Kf 3 J "lh liver oil ia lith ri chest known natural source of vitamin D. the vitamin which prevent rickets and pro motes normal calcium meta bolism and hence the growth and the health of teeth and bones. Flah liver oil la also a good source of vitamin A, which pre vents or cure ophthalmia, night blindness, ulceration of cornea, con junctivitis, perhap renal calculus, multiple aceroal, and In optimal ra tion enables the body to develop and maintain the highest degree of im munity against Infection, particularly crl. Long before vitamin were dlscuv ercd physician prescribed cod liver oil empirically a a "tonic" and "al terative", especially in ca.se of chron ic bronchitis or frequent and obstin ate "colds',, and for children who seemed physically frail. Aside from the vitamin, cod liver oil contains considerable lodin, and this essential clement, so often lacking In the or dinary diet, account for come of the virtues acrlbed to cod liver oil. Elsewhere I have remarked on the futility of choosing only food which are assumed to be "easily digested" and eschewing Item assumed to be "difficult to dlgeat." Now I may add that in my opinion it Is quite as bootless to select or reject fooda be cauae they are reputed to be or not to be "fattening." True enough, over indulgence in certain Item of diet, taking certain things to excess. Is tha chief factor in many instances of overweight, it does not follow that moderate use of the same item In the diet will have any appreciable ef fect on body weight. It la grand total of calorie Ingested day by day that determines whether your food is "fat tening" or not. Probably the common notion that certain Item are "fattening" . and i other Items are "nourishing" or strengthening" without being "fat tenlnc" reat on the quaint diet list of the past, parellel columns of things one "may eat" or "may not eat." Some charlatans still sell such "diet" to the wiseacre and ninny hammer portion of the population. Sweet such as sugar, candy, ice cream, sweetened fountain beverage, cake, cookie, pudding, pastries, syr- NEW YORK DAY BY DAY Bv O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, May 14. Richard Le Oallienne, now nearing 70, becomes more and more a recluse In Paris. In true poetic amp mil i artyle he lives In cob-webby at- Kiltf-.x-u&Jr sunned himself at cafe tables, wear ing a velveteen Jacket, flowing tie and wide Latin Quarter hat. Btlt lately his few American friends remaining there scarcely ever see him. He sat isfies his mate rial desrres by turning out an occa sional sonnet for American consump tion. A pronounced esthete, he was usually found along such streets as Rue Taptlton (Butterfly). Rue de Par ad Is and Place du Deslr. Le Oallienne, born In Liverpool, Eng., came to America to be a busi ness man and for seven years en dured the routine grind at an office desk, but overnight abandoned It and became the most prolific of poets. Since that time he has written more than 60 books besides voluminous verse for magazines. The legends have it he did not see his talented American daughter, Eva Le Oallienne. due to a separation from his wife before she wa born, until the actress was starring on Broadway. One night he saw her name In light, bought a standee's t icket . and watched her from the back rati. Germany's tlfce moat popular Amer ican writers In the order named are: Sinclair I wis. Theodore Ureiser. Thomas Woolfe. Upton Sinclair and Ernest Hemingway. In Holland. Drei ser leads, with lafwls second. One of the most popular Yankee authors In England Is Charles O. Norris. Hem ingway, dfspite his "Death In the I Afternoon." Is not popular In Spain, j The Grand Central subway shuttles between midnight and 1 a. m. are known as the "Jag specials." They are packed with the Jovial tipsy who culled it a night and are going home. Rarely is there belligerency. The mood ts entirely playful and always there is a card. There wa one the other night whose antic were cll nmxed. Just as he was leaving the train at Times Square, by skinning the cat between two of the straps Aim scaiienng an nis cnange ann things from hi pocket. A returning newspaper man from Eng'.and lunched with Lloyd George en famitle. He was ushered into a charming old dining room with huge napkins at eacn place. The ex-pre-niler unfolded and shook his. In one corner was n-at haud-etnhrMdered button hoK which he fa;cned to on? .f t'l! upper button M hi wui.-t-vmi. And then beamed an "ail set smile. Brady, M.D. received only a fen can be answered. FATTBXINGT upi, chocolate bars, pack the most calorie In forms easiest to eat. For the overweight this 1 tragic. For the underweight It Is a blessing. No trou ble at all to slip down the chute a 400 or 500 calory chocolate sundae with fudge aauoe and walnuts or pecans; or If you are thirsty to drink a 150 calory glass of vour favorite refresh ing beverage. Most fat folk, I aay, have a fatal fondness for these delec tables. Many thin folk have a limit ed tolerance for such things. Insullln treatment raises the tolerance; pro motes better nutrition. But does vitamin B. Indeed we know that an optimal ration of vita min B la equivalent to a small dose of insulin in effect, but thla effect of vitamin B becomes manifest only after the optimal ration ha been taken for a month or more. Baby Sucks Clothe How to stop ten months old baby from sticking the bedclothes . (Mrs. L. R. W.) Answer Dtp edges of clothe in a decoction made by ateeping some quassia chips in a quart of water. Let dry. This impart a very bitter taste, which is harmless. A few ounces of the same decoction given as an in jection after a simple soap and water enema I e good rsmedy for pin worms. Substitute Effects of use of oleomarcerlne in place of butter and crlsco in placs of lard. (B. F. B.) Answer No objection to use of such substitutes provided the diet in cludes at least a pint of fresh milk daily. Fine Complexion r want lovely kin a well as heal thy skin. If my skin will remain fine without spending seven dollar that's what I pay every time a re plenish my supply of creams then I want to know it. (E. O.) Answer It Is silly to think the skin or the map can be nourished, beautified or improved by smearing It with fancy creams. Plain soap and water, for young okins, and plain oil or standard cold cream such aa a good pharmacist makes up after the Pharmacopoeia formula for cold cream (Ointment of Rose Water), for older skins. Is all the care the com plexion needs. Send stamped envelope bearing your address, for monograph on Care of Skin. Inclose ten cent if you wish also one on blackheads and pimples. (Copyright 1935, John F. Dille Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Urady should send letter direct to Pr. William Brady. M. D.. 205 El Camlno, Beverly UIMh, Calif. They were talking of names that somehow achieve unconscious dignity. Mrs. Atherton, for Instance. Incident ally, she liked to be called Gertrude. Three names almost invariably have a corn starch air. Such as Howard Chandler Christy and William Rhine lander Stewart. Few persons have fitted a name so well as Maurice Barrymore. And there Is a rare rhythm about Richard Harding Davis and royal swing to Edward King Gaylord, the Oklahoma publisher. And aa ma jestic as any Is Donald Ogden Stew art. Irene Hayes Is a red-head from a platform atop In Kansas who launch ed her commercial career selling po sies in a cranny of a New York sky scraper. Her assets were a small bench of cheaply priced flowers, spunk and a smile. Today she has a well staffed establishment on an ex clusive Park avenue corner with shlney go-wagons shaped like tulips, flower boxes and sprays of violets de livering wares. AU through the de pression she has prospered. I note this because I pass her place often, crossing town. And I have wondered tf thla has something to do with her success. Early or late whenever I glance through her windows I never fall to see her. And she la always busy. Vesta Victoria came over from Eng land the other week for the first time In 10 years. She was the Beat rice Lillle plus of her day. Every vaudeville fan saw her fake stumble and heard her off key shrills on a high note as she sang her serio-comic. "Waiting at the Church." Miss Vic toria Is well to do now and sines tn the 'alls only when she needs some thing extra. She was contempora neous with Eva Tanguay. The proprietor of the Club Gaucho on Sullivan street thought up right out of hi own head the Idea of put ting his capped doorman on a horse. Thus when taxis pull tn at the curb he gallops ua, dismounts and opens the door with a sweeping "Buenos Noches!" A difficulty is that when uptown shimmers feel a mood for Sullivan street they wouldn't know a the doorman was afoot, horseback or riding a high bicycle. (Copyright. 1P35. McNaught Syndicate i Three Guilty On Beat-Up Charge VANCOUVER. Wash.. May 14 -Ti Three men were convicted of third decree assault by a superior court Jury at midnight last night In a case resulting from the beating up of Charles BurvhfieJd. one of the pro prietors ot the Pit c.ifc. Feb. 2. The three convicted, all members . union, in cluded Elmer Johnwi. R-.cha-d tJct ney aid Ed Black el!. The c.iarge agatnst Norman Friede was dismissed - - Oregon Weather. Unsettled tonight and Wednesday, occasional rain over mountain and on coast; moderate temperature; moderate vuthwest wind off the coast . Kor Hfsc ih:r Wcat buy NO l. PK v HOR.4B KUielwyn B. Hoffmann. Comment on the . Day's News By FRANK JENKINS INTERESTING item from Rome: "The war office tonight iasue-1 a decree offering a bonus and three week furlough to any recruit In the conscript cla of 1911 who wanted to marry." f THE bonus amount to 500 lire, which In rubber dollar of the United State of America la equal to $41. The furlough, which 1 a mill tary term meaning leave of absence, lasts three week. So, if you are an Italian conscript soldier, aged about 24. and are tired of soldiering and want a break In the monotony, all you have to do 1 to hold up your right hand and say "I'm willing" and find yourself a bride and go off for a three-weeks honeymoon, with the government paying all the expense providing you can hold your expenses within 41. -- OF course, a la usually the case, there's a catch to it. When you get back from your honeymoon, you're pretty apt to be shipped to Africa to fight the Aby sinlans, nnd while you're away fight ing your wife will be expected to pre sent II Duce with a son and heir to take your place If you should be ao careless as get in the way of a bullet and get killed, thus depriving Italy of a soldier. It take cannon fodder to run dic tatorship with military ambitions. A CONSIDERABLE number . of crackpots In this country have the idea, or at leat profess to have It, that WE need a dictatorship. The notion of thi more or leea old fashioned and perhaps stlck-ln-the-mud writer Is that we'd better leavo things as they are, even though they may be none too good since the dem agogs have begun to get the upper hand. Honeymoons at government ex pense look pretty good at first glance, but somehow the cannon fodder Idea that is back of them leave a bad taste In American mouth. STILL, we may be sneaking up on the same idea from another angle. Claude Ingalls, the erudite edi tor of the Corvalll Gazette-Times says in his paper: "The birth rate In this country ts the lowest since 1915 and were it not for the 30 million on relief it would be as low as the stock market. But these on relief are said to be having the largest families and Increasing a fast as nature will permit." Just how Claude knows all thla can not here be stated with author ity. He's postmaster of his town, as well as editor, and it may be that he counts the birth announcement. Anyway, there it 1, and Claude is usually able to defend his state ments. DO you reckon the b,-ain trust, which ha sprung lot of crazy Old World Ideas on us In the past couple of yeara under the grilse of a new deal, has been bitten by the cannon fodder bug and 1 putting something over on us in the name of relief? One never can be quite sure what the brain trusters really are aiming at. Communications Ton Much Radio Advertising To the Editor: I wish to comment on our Radio Programa throughoxit west coast In respect to the advertising on the a'r Sunday evening. I n I taten t ng to Mot hers Day pro gram over KNX. Hollywood. I must say they had a very good program; a program that would give any sincere listener, good reflection, but before you could dlsest the thought, here conies an advertising voice that simply docs not fit In" with the se- . . . afl the benefits of country estate in town. iit to wiu' euft4 Jt E tee ni, tt nodent fmfy tth 11 CO and 7 30 Iocs be O'tvlcokirif Gold 5t, cot"eM H Bt Wri te e dicnpfrvt bor-lWt iiiiajtn-uu cred songs, recitation, and music, or accompanies such. I believe general, legitimate adver tising through the commercial week. 1 ampie for all ware of the nation .jt onn day out of seven l not too much to take for real mental as well a physical rest and reflection Sincerely your. E. S. H ED BERG. Medford, Ore., LINES TO A PORTRAIT (of E. E. Kelly In Mail Tribune) To the Editor: Brave veteran of court and war. Where are the lines, the tll-ta:e cars Of time, upon your rugged features; Are you alone sans age, of all God's creatures? Say. have you trafficked with the Devil Oh upright Judge, be on the level And bought for flesh rejuvenation, At fearful price of soul's damnation? Or. could It be. in far Luaon, You happ'd the magic spring upon The Fountain of Eternal Youth And deeply drank of It, forsooth? (Continued from Page One.) clea. with the same men (Hopkins, Ickes and Peoples) in control of the machinery, but under changed con ditions, where they will be adminis trators Instead of dictators. The foreign trade conflict between Messrs. Hull and Peek is not yet over, but soon may be. The Peek report which was given out at the White House a week ago seems to be bringing the issue to a cltmux If not a conclusion. The fast that the president gave out the re port caused insider to feel at first that he approved It. This conclusion seems to have been hasty. Apparently Mr. Roosevelt gave it out after a glance at Mr. Peek's summary, but ha since received advices from Mr Hull' friends. And they are going around whispering charge that Peek distorted commerce department trade figures in order to discredit Hull' foreign tmde policies. As for Mr. Hull, his close associa tes have noticed that he now tightens his lips every time the name of Peek t mentioned. From past experience, they Judge that the real fight is about to start. They are offering odds of 3 to 1 on Hull, and some are going so far as to predict Mr. Peek's ultimate resignation. The veteran progressive Senator Norris, of Nebraska, lost a manu script that he had marked In prep aration for a speech. A clerk who was looking for it asked the senator If he wa sure he had not left It at home when changing suits. Norris respond ed: "No. I'm sure about that, because I've only got one suit." Congressional leaders are so anx ious to get away that they have been talking privately about a plan to ad journ soon and have a special ses sion in November. This kind of tal generally arise at this time of the year. The work has been heavy. The Job ahead la going to be tedious and distasteful. Mr. Roosevelt will probably veto the Idea. He has made no plans for the summer beyond an Indefinite prom ise to visit the San Diego exposition It ha not been announced, but he expected to make thi trip in July. He cannot delay It. The senate has lately been getting nowhere more rapidly than usual It j ha spent most of Its recent weeks In j considering the anti-lynch bill, the j Bankhead farm tenant bill and thi : Cope land pure food bill, without get- I ting to a vote on any of them. Days 1 were spent debating the measures, yet they are now richt back where they started. Only two big bill have been passed in four months the re lief bill and the bonus. This 1 some thing of a record, even for thi most deliberative of all deliberative bodies. IPillliil! M Summ - l&anqam Round-Ttiifi Tanm &mt DAILY MAY 15-OCTOBER 15 From Portland Standard Toumt .$ 86.00 S 68.80 S Chicago. . New York. Atlanta. . Boston . . . .124.40 107.20 . .107.00 89.80' ..131.W 114.28 Detroit. , 98.30 81.10 Kansas City. . 72.00 57.60 81.15 105.65 65.20 57.60 86.15 103.55 New Orleans. 101.4,0 Philadelphia. 122.8V St. Louis 81.50 St. Paul 72.00 Toronto 103. J5 Washington.. 120.75 Other lo,l.rn point, la proportion. ttnurn limit O, M, j, limit 4S d.v. . Si. Loo,,. ... , . s, ah net, ,offd rn thf f,mflu, htxv 0TH OAST LIMITED Via North.rn P.tlne Rw,r fct.riT (.:,. ihown aSov. arc lh. amr -i .i.non For drt.i:,. c.ni,tt Soufi-rn fS: (Wntr.l Pa.,rn(r t,ni. 8. P. A S Ra.'.w Spoknms I'ortl.iiul A Seattle Hnilunv Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson county History from the files of the Mall Tribune of 10 and So Yean Ago). TEN VEAKS AGO TODAY May 15, l9i.-. (It Was Friday.) Floyd Hall, escaped California con vict, who staged a reign of terror. In the Sacramento valley, Is captured In a lodging house. William Jennings Bryan, a states man, Is booed by Brown university student for his views on evolution. The polls for the school site elec tion opened at 2:00 o'clock this after noon, and citizens, after a heated two weeks' campaign, flock to the polls. ' Gov. Pierce proclaims "Old Friends' week In state. Sheriff Jennings seize still and three men on the Applegate. Valley straw ben ies reach local markets. T WENT V VEAKS AGO TODAY May IS. 1913. (It was Saturday) Italian population clamors for war with Austria; deadlock reigns over all European battlefronts. Mrs. Elmer Chilciers is entertained by the 500 club of North Phoenix. Fred Wahl went to Medford Friday to get some Incubator chicks. (Riverside Ripples). The Raymond-Whitcomb company of Boston has already tfooked 14 trips to Crater lake with the Hall Taxi company. Surfacing of country roads with buckshot gravel start throughout the county. Charles Ray. a hlch school stu dent, was fined $5 in the police court Saturday afternoon by Police Judge Gay for speeding. Ray was arrested after a long chase, not knowing the law was after him. Rummage Sale In Central PL Will CENTRAL POINT, May 14. (Spl.) Central Point Health unit will hold a rummage sale May 17 and 18 in Central Point. Anyone having any articles they wish to contribute may call Central Point. 197, by Wednes day morning and the committee will call for them. The unit uppieiiates the co-operation they have had in the past five years from several individuals. Central Point is the only town in the state of Oregon to have a health house and the local committee has worked diligently to pay for It. They are now on their last payment and will appreciate very much the Assist ance of anyone Interested. Have Huson's toast and butter somt delicious Double K Nuts for your next party. Lawn and Garden Furniture BURK'S III i:. Mjiii Tel. 4-18 AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE See CARL Y. TENGWALD 125 West Main St. DRIVE IN FOR LOWE BROS. QUALITY PAINT AT BIG PINES LUMBER CO. rnovF nsi: PREMIER TRAINS Oarh 57.J5 95.75 77.45 102.83 69.65 48.00 67.60 94.20 54.35 48.00 74.70 92.10 Completely AIR-CONDITIONED Clean - Coo. Quiel .t Tourl.t Kr.i Si.nJ.rd sv.r.c c-,. f :i-.t r.n. Ing Car,, w'.h rott- r rrr..:. Ot..frvtin C -h. I .mince Cm Greof.r comfcrf. pfeaiu r,, .rorccr in train fro.,J. SloiiilCiirltnfp 0 ch tM," mt: in ii. in nt Ncrtv.-m R :. Via Oi 'Ig'-ilr vB-,f fro n v,ur v r "'. r -ft P. H Ctr r. Fortran .1, Or. -r. SfVa,',