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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 12, 1935)
PGE FOUR ' rEDFOHB M'ATL TRIBUNE, fEDFORD, OREGON. WEDNESDAY. .TUNE 12. 1935. Medford Mail Tribune "CwyvM III South in OrigM tads thf Mill Trlbuna'' Dally Cseept SilunUi MEUKURD PRINTING 00. SB.ir-19 N. Mr 8L ROBEHT W. BUHL, Bditor Ail Independent Nwripapw Entered as wrand elan nutter it Uedford, Oreson, under Aet w Marco s, isiw. SUItHCRIPTION UATE8 DUlj, oo feir 22 . n.n. .1. nwintha 3.TB nll' nni month "0 n. r-.H. in AritanM Mwlfflrd. Al&Und, JutaaorlUs, CMtraJ Point, PbotoU. Talaot, Oold Hill and oo Witmfs, Duly, rtu Dally, di onU. rll. ona tiontb All termi. cub in adianca. Official pipef of tba Ctt of Medford. Official papar of Jaeksoo County. UEMBEtt OfT TilB ASSOCIATED PBESS Beeclrim Full Leatad fflra Servlca tha um for publication of all sen dltpatoM VMitaa in no ouwiwm m,w - tod alao to Um loci) oen published herein. AU rights tor puMleaUoo of ipeclal db patch" tlrelo iix alo reaened. MEMBEH OK UNITED HKE8B MEMBKH OF AUDIT BUHEAO OF CIRCULATIONS AdmtUlnt HepreaanUtliea M. c. mouensen a compant - Offteea Id Sem Yiri, Chicago, Detroit, flu (TraneUeo x 4rwi Rnlll Portland. MEMBER MMMNa Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry "Save the Constitution" impends u the campaign slogan of the Re publican party in 1036. It la not a very Inspiring war-cry, and apt to go p-a-s-s-tl without notice. The ad ministration can aver, via it Brain Trust, "there was never any Inten tion of spending the Constitution why save It?" It lacks popular ap peal. In the present state ot the pocketbooka. and the cupboards oi the masses. What the Republican party needs la a slognn that will make the men votere cheer, and the women voters ha wl something like Thank God! He kept, ua out oi warl" The Townsend Old Age Pension eluba of the state, through their leaders, answer the claims of blath erskite upstate agitators with a de nial they favor a recall against Gov ernor Martin. This Indicates the old folks can still do some thinking for themselves, and cannot be herded back of ,a fool notion by political Uckera. A gasoline lunatic negotiated the Main Stem yesterday eve at 00 mph. He sure was In a mighty hurry to get some plaoa, to blow cigarette moke through his nose. niSTORY AND HOPE. (Cleveland Plalmlraler) Why has the fad come back now? No one knows. Its last re currence waa in war times, when knitting sweaters took on a patriotic glamor. The sweaters might not fit, but tha making of them satisfied an urge to serve for those women who could not take part In more active forms of service. This time It didn't take a war to stnrt the knitters and most of their product Is da algned to feminine use. So per haps they'll take more pains with its fit. The Weyerhaeuser ktdnsplng case has been sifted to the weeping mother angle. The human Jackal, who admitted his part In the crime la not the "tough but yellow" crim inal as described by the law, but is till the once adorable boy she hoped would be "a Salvation Army captain." It Is a long way from worthy street corner praying to body-snatching for gold. He planned to spend all his tainted loot upon himself and his "moll." though the one person with faith In him kept It on the slim bounty of relief. He was too smart to send her funds It might give a clue to the "Cl-men." Now the state of Washington makes ready to hang him. It will be ended soon for the wretch. But his mother will weep and pray for him all her day, the while suffering blacke.it anguish. She will rerelve no pnrole from her sor row, Society granted her boy many. Farmers have their hay in barn, or stack, and the fear of rain is not In their hearts. There Is considerable talk about the "return to horse and buggy days." it often looks like the coun try was ready to go, as soon as the horse waa returned. Revision of the parole lawa la now demanded as a curb upon ciHne, even unto abolishment of paroles completely. This would mean a fa vorite and lovable murderer, won la not be able to get out of the peni tentiary, to get bark In again. not so rmn.. as imm ai, (Not ota (Ok lit.) Tribune) The public will take notice that ny virtue of the authority vested in me as County Superintendent of Health, and In view of the preva lence of Hydrophobia among dogs ot this county. It Is my order as of this date that all dogs In this county shall either be kept lied Or muc rled and that any docs not tlrd or murzled are hereby d eels red a nui sance will be killed and the owner thereof Dated this anth day of April. 1935 dr. m. p Bi-cvrr. County Sup!, of Public Health. Cm Mail Tribune ft act adj. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Nicned letter, pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment wlli be answered bj Dr. Brady It a stamped self-addressed envelope ll enclosed. Letters should he brief and written In Ink Owing to the large number ot letters received only a fen can be answered. No reply can be mode to queries not conforming to instructions. Address ur. H'llllam Brady, 203 El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Cal. POCTOB BRADY P A northern reader writes: I am 36 years old and work on a farm. As soon as warm weather comes In the spring I work without a shirt on. I take a little more sun each day until I get tanned to the waist and can go all day without burning. I take a dip each night. I feel great all summer and can work much easier. Some people say T can take too much sun. Can I? Plcaee. give us your opinion of working like this. I don't know whether It would be beat to be candid about It. The hit ters are aa mad as hattera whenever I intimate that it is healthful to go bareheaded all you can with comfort. The galoahers pry me loose If I in sist that wetting the feet does not cause any Illness. The "s teen teen specie of vacuum cleaners preserve dignified silence while one species demands and obtains my execution for my opinion that one species Is no more and no lee hygienic thsn the others. However, It may be safe to get In a lick or two before the ahlrtlsts become orgs n I red. In general this Is my opinion: The more anybody can go naked comfort ably the better for health. Of ccmrne I mean physical comfort, not anxiety about style, custom or the law. If one feels slightly cold or chilly, when entirely or partly nude, yet not too cold for reasonable comfort, that Is beneficial in itself, I believe, for it is stimulating and Invigorating, In con tradistinction to the effects of slight excess of clothing or body warmth, i which as every Intelligent person knows. Is depressing and vitiating, softening, weakening. Anybody .who contemplates taking the aim or who must be exposed to sunlight, should go sbout It by grad ually increasing stages, as this reader suggests. Lily whit mollycoddles who have not had an Introduction should make the first meetings very short, say five minutes basking In the noonday raya the first day, ten minutes the second day, and so on. strictly clocked. Or In a, more mod erate sun and for one not utterly a 1 NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, June 12. Imitation may be the alncerest form of flat tery, but it often proves disastrous 10 a m u se m ent originators. A shining example Is the eclipse of Helen Kane. Her petulant bo-noop- a-dooplng Jump ed her out of obscurity to four figured weekly salary. She packed movie stage shows and musical com edles aa no other performer of her day. Then came a flood of imitators on the stage, screen and radio. So excellently done her art seemed an easy accomplishment. In a movie cartoon suit she brought, the de fendant showed a half hundred girls could do her trick. Then there was Joe Penner's glng-gang-goo. He shot up to a salary of five figures and Is still In demand but only moderately so. There waa scarcely a radio program without a pseud o Penner and It grew pretty tiresome. Joe Frisco haa so many Imitator he's almost constantly at liberty. Too. there Is the husky voiced dramatic actress Lenore Ulrlc missing from the boards too long. There was a time when every vaudeville mimic impersonated her. But the moat con splcuoua suffocation by imitation was Eva Tanguay. At one time SOU performera were essaying her Jittery twists. I had a moment of horror along the west drive of Central Park yes terday I never want to experience agttin. A golden haired rose-bud tod dling after her nurse, suddenly turn ed toward the maelstrom of traffic In the roadway. In a flash she was paddling to what looked Instant doom. One car with a mighty shriek of brakes and quick turn missed her by an eyelash, but others were bear ing down. There were despairing screams and hasty prayers. She ea rsped miraculously. A bright strip ot tin-foil had attracted her. New Tork t called the worlds best shod city. In the crowded cen ters are often two and three shoe .h.p to a block. Mnn resplendent stores on the Bowery and Grand street are shoe retailers. Members of the amusement profession are par ticularly meticulous about footwear. ' Jane Cowl Is reputed to buy a doren i pair at a crack. Damon Kunyon s , chief extravagance is shoes, which he weara a few times and ptiMcs on to his pal. Hype Igoe. Irving Hro kaw, one ol the better dressed men. keeps 00 pairs In his wardrobe at all times William Onsdby Loew is Another shoe spendthrift. Then the necktie splurgers. Adoiph Zukor has at times bought SOOO at a crack. They arc his favorite tift 1 to employers on returning European trips. Clarence MncKay at one time waa also a heavy cravat customer. And Vernon (sstle. at the peak oi hla dance renin, had deMgiia lor scarves never dupll-'ated in Atnenca especiallv made bt a silk concern in Li on. Flo icfcld bouui ties by 1 1?,. v'fif KERKNTS TUB SIN stranger, there may be two or three flve-mlnute exposures the first day, morning, noon and night or late noon, and mort skin and more time day by day. The ideal always la to acquire more or less tan but to avoid sunburn. In any regular sun bathing It La well to protect the eyes with dark goggles. Bad policy to try to read or use the eyes In the intense dazzle. If you prefer, a dark band age may cover the eyes. It is also a bad policy to wear smoked or tint ed glaasea when one Is out In the sun, unless there Is extraordinary glare from the snow, sands, water or when driving against the late after noon sun. Ordinarily It la better for health and comfort to let one's eyes accustom themselves to normal ex posure. The youths snd men who work and plAy In tfhe sun as nearly naked as possible need not worry about the imaginary shrivelling of brains or other disasters from absorbing too much ultraviolet. QUESTIONS A NTa SMYTHS What's Wrong Here? Please Inform me what the symp toms of chronic arsenic poisoning are. B. W. J. Answer No, no, this is a health column. The patient should tell the dotcor his symptoms. Peroxide. Please give your opinion on the use of hydrogen peroxide as a mouth wash and deodorant. la It harmful should a little be accidentally swal lowed? E. a. m. Answer It Is sometimes a good one In the presence of pus or foul exud ate or secretions. It is harmless If swsl lowed. Tare of fhe Pnrnp.lierniill,i. I should like instruction for the care of pipes and smoking parapher nalia. -Jt. R. Answer Maintain a flock of 'em, and keep 'em out on the roof in the sun and air when not In use. The baffling problem, I find. Is to keep rjiy 'baccy out of the reach of Slim Jim Kennedy, who Is a good council man and a fair bowler, but how he hates to buy tobacco. (Copyright. 1035, John P. Dllle Co ) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, nl. D., 26ft El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. the several dosien every month or so. At his passing he had more than a thousand that had never been worn. Bert Williams once bought every tie In a window at Sulka'a. . Some summers ago, I dropped into Charvot's In Paris to Select ties. My usual Scot wariness succumbed to what I thought was a reck. ess fever of buying. I had pushed aside more than a down. But the clerk seemed knee deep In yawning boredom at my spurt of extravagance. In waiting for change I learned from him that he had Just waited on Charles O. Norrls. who had selected 800 ties. 1 walked out, passing under a foot stool without scraping my hat. The celebrated sound proof three storied house of the elder Joseph Pull t re r In E. 79th street ia now a continental apartment house with Inner gardens, massive iron wrought entrances and foreign looking valets du chnmbre with brass buttoned ticking vests and green aprons. The blind publisher built the mansion during the nerve tortured years when the slightest Jar or sound im posed agony. So much so he fled finally and permanently to roam the seven seas In his palatial yacht until the end. His son Ralph's home next door has also been sold. The original home Is nltched Into one and six room apartments. Among the first tenants was the explorer, Roy Chap man Andrews. I've long been a push over tor those tricks, magic, puzzle shops along Broadway. Yesterday I prfked up something new to me a little gadget to slip In the mouth and potif I with an exhale there shoots out a few tiny sparks snd a coll ot smoke. I tried it out on the taxi- driver, while settling the fare. He was not the least startled. "I get that way. too, Buddy." he said, "after radishes." (Copyright. 1035. McNaught Syndi cate). Communications It Was a Pleniiire To the Editor: On behalf of the directors of the recently held non-Jury srt exhibit. I wish to express our thanks for the part you played in making the ex hibit a success. Your co-operation was appreciated, not only by those rejvnsibip for the exhibit, but by the exhibitors thenuelves. Yours wry sincerely. JACKSON COUNTY CHAMBER OP COMMERCE A. H. Banwell. Manager. 120,000 "Birds" Wait Sacrifice Before Gunners A total of 120 000 clay discs will be literally .shot to pieces durtiu; I lie four days of the Ore con state trapahoot which opens here to. morrow. If ptled up like a stack of psncakca, that's enough clay pigeons to fill to overflowing the windows of every Child;, restaur a nt in the country. Not has than ItiO.POO rounds of ammunition will re fired durtn? the tournament and if the Ameri can colonist j. had lsd that amount of shot and shell the revolution nould have ended riicht there a Bunker Hill. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JKNKINS. RAMSAY MacDONALD, premier of Oreat Britain, resigns- hla post, giving ill health aa the reason. The premier of Oreat Britain is a diplomat, and diplomats are apt to offer as explanations of their acts almost any reason but the real one. But, assuming thst 111 health lb the reason, one finds It easy to sympathize with MacDonald. Being forced by 111 health to give up a great work Is about as grave a disappointment as can come to anyone. f-e- DONALD RICHBERG, head of NRA, tenders his resignation, to take effect on June 16. He gives no rea son for his action. Presumably, his reason Is that NRA la dead and . he knows It, There is talk of reviving it as, a voluntary sort of affair, but that Is merely to let It down easy, llHAT does "the rJublic think of TT the death of NRA, now that it has had time to think It over? Well, the action of the stock mar ket provides as good an answer to that question as any. Following the supreme court's NRA decision, the market broke sharply for a day or two. Then It began to recover. It has now recovered all the loss sustained In the break, and the aver age Is near the high for the year. THE stock market serves two use ful purposes. Primarily, It provides a market for the securities which industry offers as a means or obtaining long-time capital. That Is Its big Job and the one which justifies Its existence. It also serves ss an interesting barometer of the public's- attitude toward the future of business. When people are confident of the future, they buy. When they lack confidence, they sell. The NRA decision came suddenly, and people generally didn't know Just what to think of It. So, in order to be on the safe side, they SOLD. But, In a few days, they re covered their confidence and began to buy. In other words, they decided the death of NRA would do no hafm to business. 4 THE summer vacation season, warmer weather and the open ing of the Crater Lake road have brought Increasing tourist tramc Into Southern Oregon during the past week. That la good news. Tourists spend money new money and we need an the new money we can get. The more we get. the better on we shall be. SO FAR as any individual commu nity is concerned, the money pent by INCOMING tourists is so much gained. The money spent oy OUTGOING tourists that Is to say. those of us who take a trip away from home is so much lost. Whether tourist business helps or hurts any community depends on whether more totirlsts come in than go out. Here In Southern Oregon, which, because of Crater lake ana many other attractions, is one of tne nation's outstanding playgrounds, it undoubtedly helps, because more tourist dollars come In than we carry out. (Continued from Page One.) mark how appropriate Is the name of the Roosevelt estate. From experi ence, thev have learned that the president retires to his Hudson river retreat occasionally for more pur poses than relaxation and rest. Living in the White House here is like being a movie actor in Holly wood. Every time anyone Is seen coming in or going out. the world hears about It, and starta drawing deductions which are usually errone ous. At Hyde Park, the president has real seclusion. Newsmen axe quar tered miles away, in town. The world cannot watch. This not only permits him to think without interruptions, but also to summon Into private con ference persons whose appearance at the White House would cause head lines. The insiders here have heard that, on this trip, he has not only been canvassing the NRA situation but has spent considerable time on the polttcal situation. They expect a new trend of White House activity in respect to both subjects soon after his return. Ti The farm crowd outside the admin -ltratlon haa a tip that the AAA wilt certainly turn to the expore subsidy theory of farm relief by fall. Cotton, wheat and lard are mentioned as the fir.t products with wstilch experiment will he undertaken. These are three In which the I'nited Ptats has ex portable surpluses Whether the AAA U use the M - Ni;y-H.iuen plan ot the ipoit-dc- benture plan ts uncertain. Both are still Included In the amendments to the AAA act now pending In con gress. A leading agitator behind the scenes here for Introduction of the export subsidy method of fsrm relief Is George Peek, the foreign trade adviser of the new deal whose advice in that matter has not been followed lately. He has been fighting for the export control feature for ten years. It Is now being ardently denied, but he may leave the government service to resume an active position In farm or ganization circles. The Rlchberg resignation was an nounced a week ahead of time In or der to have a beneficial effect on senators who were considering the new NRA resolution. The resignation waa actually agreed on privately, months ago, when General Johnson left, and the NRA waa being tempo rarily reformed under Rlchberg. A warm scrap has been going on Inside about control of the new liq uor regulation authority. The treas ury wanted It. So did the present control administration headed by Jos. Choate. Apparently the treasury is losing. Although the palatial new labor de partment building has office shower baths for the highest officials, they are grumbling because no wall hooks were Installed on which to hang their clothes. They cannot drive a nail Into such palatial walls and have se? tied this major problem by using chairs. The highest new deal authority has offered, or will offer, Donald Rlch berg the Job of legal adviser to the communications commission to con duct the A. T. and T. Investigation. Sams Valley SAMS VALLEY, June 12. (Spl.) If favorable weather exists Friday, a welner roast party will be given by the Sams Valley ladles' extension unit on the banks of the river behind the Lyman place. Weiners, buns and marshmallows will be sold to rais funds for financing unit leaders and delegates. Everyone welcome. Judge E. B. Day was confined a few days In the hospital with an Infected eye, which la Improving gradually. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kcger are en tertaining relatives from Washington this week. In recording names of business houses who aided the Grange in e curlng drapes for the stage in the auditorium, the name of Valentine's cafe waa overlooked. MVa. Alice Willlts of Medford. who is an authority on birds, will speak on the subject po the Sams Valley Grange at lta next regular meeting. Saturday night. Mrs. Willlts was pro cured by the lecturer and will fur nish the main number of the lecture hour. Bible school, which has been con ducted by Carl Aldlnger. will be clos ed Sunday morning with a program by the young people. A meeting of the ladles' extension unit will be held at the schoolhouse by the demonstration agent, June 21, for completing the guide pattern pro ject. All Interested In this project should attend at 0:30 a. m. Jerome Fitzgerald, master of Sams Valley Grange, and Wesley McDon ough left Sunday to attend the ses sion of the Oregon State Grange at MeMlnnvllle. John Wilson, student of the Sac ramento Junior college. Is vacation ing with his parents, Mr. snd Mrs. O. T. Wilson. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tonn of Cen tral Point visited Sams Valley friends and relatives Sunday. Members of Sams VaUey Grange gathered Friday at the Seegmlller place and aided friends and neigh bors In getting ground ready for t.he cement foundation for the new house soon to be constructed on the W1I-llsms-Seegmllter place. The cloudy atmosphere creates an uneasy feeling smong farmers with hay still down. The W. W. Edlngton and Oarrett hay crops are extra heavy and necessitate a larger force than usual In putting up the crop. L ERE DIVORCE DRY RFNO. Nev.. June 12. (API Pearl Buck, the novelist, was honeymoon ing today after a double, quick mari tal shift which made her the bride of Richard J. Walsh, New York publisher. They left Reno by automobile im mediately following last night's mar riage ceremony, which was performed almost before the Ink was dry on di vorce decrees freeing them from for mer mates. Mrs. Ruth A. Walsh, who divorced the publisher while Mrs. Buck was obtaining legal severance from John L. Duck, witnessed the marriage and sped the newlyweds on their way with best wishes. Home portraits or family groups and children at Special Prices Shangle Studio. Phone 1308. Cse Mall Tribuue want ads. A i At Beautiful REAMLAND TONIGHT! To Tuneful GEO. DAYTON Medford 's Newest Sensational Dance Orchestra t.!Hl: J'nler I he vih .iI ontcM ami ecnrr a regular position with tico. tons bind a real opportunity and It rot nstfhlnc tt enter? Favors State Trial i J J. Charles Dennis, U. 8. attorney at Tacoma, Wash., believes state courts should prosecute the kidnap ers of George, Weyerhaeuser, (As sociated Press Photo) CHIEF OF G-MEN IN FIRM DENIAL KIDNAPERCAUGHT (Continued from Page one.) for a (200,000 Idaho bank robbery, had escaped through the tight net of police patrols, possibly hitch-hiked out of the country. Deny Capture. The department of Justice agents broke their characteristic silence to deny reports that their intense activ ity in the Butte region last night in dicated Mahan had been captured ond returned to Salt Lake City or Tacoma. Chief .Murphy's assistant. Jack Dug gan. said emphatically the elusive Mehan could not have slipped through the police line and that he Is at ill In hiding In or near Butte. "We will Just have to settle down and wait him out," said Duggan. He knows this country a nd he had a hideout prepared for him." The announcement of J. Edar Hoover, head of the bureau of inves tigation at Washing ton. that Mahan apparently received $105,000 of the J200.000 paid for the release of nine-year-old George Weyerhaeuser, and probably has the money with him or burled, started Butte's new gold rush. Search for Ransom. Scores of volunteers who had been aiding in Mie search for the cx-con-vlct, dropped their hunt and turned Instead to a scrutiny of the famed mining hills near here, pockmarked with "glory holes" and pits where the bonanza finds of early mining days were made. Several 'gold hunters" prowled old mine shafts and tunnels near here today. Buttp streets and roads near here, especially those leading toward the Canadian border, were patrolled again today, the fourth day of the hunt for Mahan. one of the greatest man hunts Montana ever has experienced. In addition, all airlines were watch ed, nearly every car was halted on the highways and officers scrutinized the passengers carefully. Another house-to-house search was made in Butte, where officers believed a wom an who befriended him in 1928. or a convict who served time with him in Washington, state prison may have given him refuge. Mahan'a mouse-colored car, stored In a garage, was raided by souvenir hunters who took the radiator and gasoline caps, hub caps snd other equipment. E BETTER CHANCE McMINNVTLLB. Ore.. June 12 fAP Dr. Elam J. Anderson, presi dent of Llnfleld college, yesterday de clared that returning prosperity al ready has given the graduating student a better chance to adjust himself to the world and find a niche in his chosen field. Dr. Anderson said thst approximately 20 per cent of this graduating class already have teaching Jobs, and that another 15 per cent had been assured employment. "Contrasted with previous years this Is a phenomenal Improvement." he said In presenting the 1P35 class of seniors at the annual commence ment exercises. Honorary doctor of laws decrees were conferred on Bert Brown Barker, vice-president of the University of Oregon: Senator Charles McNary and Marshal Dana. Melodies by And His MUSIC MCE Flight 'o Time (Mrdfori) and Jackson Count? History from the tllrt ol the Mall Tribune of 10 snd 20 Sears ago). TEN YEARS AGO TODAY June 13. if 25. (It was Friday.) The National Guard encampment open with hundreds viewing inspec tion of brigade. Liquor raid Is made on store near camp grounds, and 300 gallons of moonshine seized. Stat traffic cops ordered to "be hard-boiled" with drunken auto driv ers. "Tax Justice League". to be formed here. San Francisco has worst fire in 20 years, entailing a three million dol lar loss. "Rings around the sun," seen by many residents, Is taken by some as & sign of hot weather. A live rattlesnake, confined in a glass case. Is on exhibition at Bill O'Hara's place. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY June 12, 101.V (It was Saturday.) Germans put young Belgian girls to work In coal mines, London dis patch states. Mr. snd Mrs. Dick Antle and daughters Hazel and Mildred leave for San Francisco to see the exposi tion. The Arrowhesd Literary society of Table Rock has a new piano. The Drama league, through Director Ralph Bard well, urges all members to attend Maude Adams at the Page in "Quality Street." Chicago traffic paralyzed by trol ley strike. "Utopia Wealth Division Society" lecturer addresses Haymarket Square audience. (Continued from Page One.) list of 1162 items, and that close to 75 per cent of the tax delinquency will come under the law within the next month. District Attorney George A. Codding announced that a decree of foreclos ure would be invoked July 15 upon all delinquent tax claims unless ad vantage was taken of the 10 per cent law within the next month. Persons interested are requested to see either the sheriff's office or the district at torney a office relative to payments and the law thereto. The second quarterly payments on current 1935 taxes are due on or be fore next Saturday, June 15. After that date interest Is effective. So far there has been no rush of tax payers to the tax collection depart ment, but It is 'nected to develop In the next three days. Tax payments to date, by years since 1927, are as follows: 1927 , 1928 1929 (back taxes) ........ 111.83 1.154.40 9.118.27 24.365.79 1930 1931. '32. '33. 34 .... 1935 (current tax) Business Clinics For Optometrists GRANTS PASS, June 12. (Spl.) A series of business clinics for op tometrists of southern Oregon will be conducted in the Redwoods hotel at Grants Pass, beginning at 7:30 this evening, under direction of Ralph Bars tow of the University of Roches ter, N. Y. Sessions will also be held on Thursday morning, afternoon and evening, all dealing with the busi ness side of the profession. For Hose that Wear buy NOLDE & HORST Ethelwyo B. Hoffmann. is the (Jnutce HON fattening; Ait- . 3k. rXE- A ' . tjf I ' fre v Lost River. Inc. jB I ''If J1 Ye Poet's Cornei THE WORLD NIGHTMARE pleasant Herbert Lawlon, Central Point, Ore. The World Is asleep In a nightmare. And needs some unaiy m. do awake It. It Is dreaming of War and a strug gle with death. And It may tske an Atlas to shaka It. Now. more than ever before, the na tions sre prone To fly at the throats of the others. Forgetting, the smaller this old world gets. The nearer they come being broth ers. Unless you and I can agree on a plan. Then quickly decide how to do It, We may be too late to save this old World. But we wouldn't be left long to rue it. Shout! Wake up your neighbor! The World's being drugged! Make a brave stand for peace, and then back it! If the World needs a noise like a war to wake tip. Then. Peace Advocates, maJca a racket! If It comes to a pinch, and a wax's to be fought. Then the fighting Is done by the masses. If peace la secured thru the efforts of men. Those men will be from the middle classes. For the overly rich and the "underly" poor Have gained by war nor resent It. It's as plain as your face, for every one knows That the overly rich could prevent It. How eager are nations tho' their rulers are men To welcome a challenge to battle; When tho sale of munitions makes overly rich And the "middles" and "poors" die 'like cattle. But HOW will the overly rich gain by war? (No reapeetors of persona are gases) No safety resides in billions of wealth. When wealth is destroyed with, the masses. If we'd take out the "over" from overly rich. And leave them Just "richly" with middles. And then add the "over" to the un derly poor. We'd be solving these terrible rid dles. Then these former "overs" and un der lys too. (Both undesirable classes). Would holler for Peace along with the rest Of the kindly and peace-loving masses. Warrant Call. School District No. (19. Notice is hereby given that there are funds on hand for the redemption of warrants numbered 82 to 173 in clusive. Interest ceases on June 11th, 1935. Pavable at Medford National Bank. CLARE W. SHORES, Clerk. Ose Mall Tribune want ada. Lawn & Garden Furniture Awnings SURK'S Tel. 418 4 Phone 1300 for Towing or Wrecker Service Anywhere Anytime Lewis Super Service M - S ! I..JL.HIIUI i .. ,