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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1935)
irEDTTOTtD" M"AIL TRIBTrST;, MEDFORD, OHFtOS. MONDAY. 'ArGrST "12. 1935 MEDFORDvTRIBUNE BTmm la SVnithera Orefe ftade the Mail Tribune" Dally deeps Saturday. Publlihid br MEDFOED PRINTING CO. :-2t-3 N. Fir St. Phone Tl. ROBERT W. RUHU Editor. AD Indpndnt Nwpmpr. 1 nccrtd aa eecond-claae matter at ! ' trd. Or con. uadar Act of March I, ISil. SUBSCRIPTION BATES iiv HaU Ja Advaaeat Oatlr. one jaar iijy, its montha Daily, ona month " m Carrier, la Advance Maiford, Ash- and, Jacksonville, Central Point, t'hoenlx, Talent. Gold Hill and en 'itahwaya. "ally, on rear only, ill months Dally, ona month All terms, eaata In adranee. Official Paper of tha City of Bedford. Official Paper of JarkMts County. Mt MBrR OF THE ASSOCIATED PUEB& RaoaUlos Full Laal Hire Service. The Awoclatad Prat la eiclus1ely a nld to tha un for publication of all - dlapatcbaa eradltad to It or othar ita eradltad la thla papar, and alas to h local niwi publtihei baraln. All rlfhta for publication of epaclal iiptchae harala ara alao raaarvad. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advartlrinf Rapraaantattvca M. C MOOKNBKN A tOMPa.M Offlcaa In Naw Tork, Chlciro Datrolt Sao Franc taco. Loa Angelaa, Seattle, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot 87 Arthur Perry In Clackamas county, press report reveal, bandits broke Into an estab lishment and "robbed elot machine of approximately S300 and the till of about 1.50." Thla Indicates the business trend more clearly than s chart, with 72 lines all running uphill. Motorists seem to be refraining from beating trains to crossings, to be robbed and murdered, or both, by hitch-hikers they befriend, as they wend their weary way along ths highways. Standard equipment of an auto should be a couple of pairs of handcuffs and s aupply of Oregon boots, with the understand ing, the befriended one, shall stick his wrists snd ankles In same, ere proceeding on the Journey. Thus the Good Samaritan has protection, and the etiquette of the road would be revised. The appealing twist of the ; hlfcch-htkera thumb, would be ana- j werad by the motorist, with 1 friendly wave of s set of braceleta. J a Professional Good Men of the up state areaa have suddenly ceased their pestering of the Governor, snd threat of his recall have disappear ed, u If by magic. It may be the magicians are Just resting from their agitation, while thinking up new meanness for the early fall hall raising. a e The foreign correspondent of the Chicago Tribune, chased from Italy, by II Dues, declares "Mussolini does not want war." The layman has never seriously doubted this, as far sa Mussolini was personally con cerned. However, they feel he still regards It as a fine thing for the other fellow. e a a Orandpa Woodpecker Is recuper ating from being shot at and missed by s 13-year old boy. "He Just didn't 4m at anything In particular, and danged. If I can figure out how the tot missed me," ruminated Grandpa to callers yesterday. a a Emerson said that If you Invented s better mouse trap, the world would make a path to your door. But If you put out a better olsp trap, they are apt to elect you to office. (Lewlstown Journal). Pain ful truth Item. a a a An aluminum corporation offers to buy all the Bonneville Dam elec trical power, and build s huge fac tory on the Columbia river. This looks like a dandy labor-creating and fca producing proposition. But hold your cheering! Some Portland politician will discover It Is a plot of Andrew Mellon of the aluminum trust, "to throttle the farmer and the worker." Then look out for the enrapturing slogan: "Aluminum without cost to the taxpayers." a Hog raisers are now getting almost ss much for the hogs they raise, aa the ones they didn't. a Quy Tex of C. Pt la celebrating a birthday today. Little Is known about the number of his years, ex cept that his la too old to boll, a a A scenario writer of Hollywood offers himself aa a human Icicle, to be frorenatiff, and revived by a scientist. If he comes out of the refrigeration Intact, he plana to get married, and be the first man in history to Jump from the ice-box to the frying pn. a a a HOW EDITOR UtT RICH A child is born In the neighbor hood; the attending physician get 10. Tli editor gives tha loud mouth youngster and the happy parents a send-off and gets 10. When it la christened the clergy man gets S10 and the editor too. It grow up and marries. The edi tor publisher another long-winded article and tells s down lies about the "beautiful and accomplishes bride." The clergyman gets S10 and a piece of cak and the editor gets 000. In course of time It dies. The doc tor geta from 26 to SI00 and the undertaker gets from AO to M00. the editor pub!! shea a notice of Its death and an obituary two columns long, lodge and society resolutions, a let of poetry and a free card of thanks and geta 000. Exchange. ROME. Aug. 13. ( API Italy sum tsoaed a new urjlt of Its reserve m'll Ury power to the colors today. The Last Laugh HE !augh best who laughs last. Former President Hoover is having the last laugh. Stepping from the Overland Limited at Chicago he smilingly greets the reporters and fires another broadside at President Roosevelt and his administration: "The nation haa a right to know befora thla aesalon of con greva tnda what changca thla admlnlatratlon propoaea In tha oonatltutton. Tha admlnlatratlon'a acta and uttaranoea alnoa tha aupreme court daelalon on KRA hata avldancad a contlnuoua Intent to chant tha constitution directly ao aa to authorize con centration of powar ... Thla creataa ona of tha moat momentoua laauaa ilnoa tha clrll nr." SayiDg which Mr. Hoover proceeded to an air-conditioned lake front hotel, lunched with a few personal friends, NOT political leaders, and lighting a fresh cigar boarded the after noon limited for New Tork. YES, ex-President Hoover is having a fine time, the best time he has had probably since the days in war swept Belgium. He is not pleasing the Roosevelt administration, neither is he pleasing the powers that be in hia own party, but he is pleas ing HIMSELF. It would, we think, take very pitiless and bigoted type of mind to begrudge the former president this little holiday he is now so thoroughly enjoying. All partisanship aside, we feel he had it coming. For during the last two years of his administra tion and the first two years of his successor's the sage of Palo Alto certainly suffered in body and spirit, as few presidents and ex-presidents have suffered. NOW the worm has turned. That old law of compensation is functioning at last. The time has come when "Herbert the Hara'ssed" can gft back, at his enemies, not only his politi cal enemies but his personal ones; not only the Democrat and particularly the president who gave him such a terrific beat ing; but that inner circle of conservative Republicans, who never liked him, don't like him now, and boil with rage when ever he writes an article or issues a public statement. In short former President Hoover is doing as he darn pleases. That would be a grand and glorious feeling to anyone, but,a man who for four long years, could never do not even fish, as he liked to do; and who try as he would, could never really get on with the boys", it cornea near being Heaven. OH it's great to be a free man again, say what one wishes, do aa one likes, and tell those who don't like it to go jump in the lake. Tha Republican leaders who never liked Hoover, who never loyally supported him, are now on top in the party councils, and see a great opportunity before them. The New Deal is a flop, F. D. R. is slipping, victory is in the bag, if they only play their cards carefully and no one spills the beans! Then Herbert Hoover comes along and issues another state ment! Howthat man does get in their hair. Can't he see he is through, can't be nominated and if he were, would be beaten worse than he was before. "Why does be keep messing things up, spoiling all the sure-fire issues the Republicans have by put ting HIS tag on them. Why the man is poison. Can't someone shut him up? IT would be interesting to know how many prominent Republi- cans have tried to do this very thing. It would also be in teresting to know how many have asked him to announce that under no circumstances will be be a candidate in 1036. There certainly have been plenty. But while Mr. Hoover's sense of humor is somewhat deficient, his sense of justice isn't. And ho believes watching certain chickens come home to ronst, and having his own inning, is only his just due. So he intends to have it. He IS having it! Not that he really intends to run for presi dent again. He is too smart for thst. But he DOES intend to keep the boys guessing and until the psychological time comes Say nothing definite about it. For no one knows better than he, that the moment he for mally retires from the race, his little holiday is over the curtain comes tumbling down on his "last laugh." The extras would no sooner be on the street than ha would be placed on the politi cal shelf permanently and forever. But until that time H. H. is sitting pretty, ne does not want to be the nominee, but he does want to say something about who will bo and as long as his intentions are in doubt, that will he his privilege. Tea indeed it's a long lane that has no turning. Herbert Hoover hns waited a long time, but the turn is here. Our considered judgment is that President Hoover is. today, all things considered, the happiest roan in the I'nited States. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NT5W TORK. Auf. H In the man ner of Arnold Bennett's Jmimal: A bright day turns m 11 In;. A dsy to he lost in a mys tery story. Som tsry story fieme thins; hy Oaborlau. I wa noticing one of those magnifi cent caricature by Prauh thla morning-. So Eur opean. Tet he halls from Lima, O. As did the 1st Ray Rohn. And who ha i I.,..., not been won der-struck by those llhtnlng-llxe nes of Elrg In charcoal? Ten mtn ut et vollal Mark Twain must hsve had the Ideal head for aketohera Bryan for rarlcaturtM. Mlcaare tale from a nearby flat: A parrot squawk ed "Olorrl" snd fell lifeless. A stripling named Dana Murray ha been sending columnist contri butions over a period, The point: He kept on writing with no reward save occasional recognition. I see he land ed the other dsy in s nstlonal week ly. An aivompllahed atyList sauntered out of the Raquet club thla morning ult. shirt, collsr dove g-er with s loping dep blue polka -do B on a woorv morn1ig after a bl'irry nM dresMe up like a laat sot Billy Clu ton. goes to the Bl It more and break fasts on ohllled grapes and tJiln brown bread smeared with cream cheese, pouf goes the hangover! A lady In St. Petersburg. Fla., write of the ftehman who roam back al ley with hie clarion Jn-aong: "Pish dts' mawnln'. Nice fresh fish. Caught 'em alive, sell m dead. Attaboy, the flah man coming'. Pishman got 'em. you take 'em, take m away, rishmsn got erythln' but money. Take m away." Mterate poet hsva don Jim Quirk used to rattle off the come-on spiel a crulalng nlht cab man, sheltering near the Lnox in Boston, delivered to roaming drunks In a brogue a thick aa a Undy beef cut. renomoua with tnaulte but stmng together with Irish blarney. Zlegfeld an ted to spot It In a follies. With Quirk ss the cabbie and Leon Ft roll a the drunk. I wonder If there's a happier writ ing pair than Rupert and Pat Hughe. They work at night at adjoining desk In their Hollywood home. Often Into den. Rupert stopping now and then to walk up and down, puffin fiercely black cigtre. and drinking scalding potion of coffee. He rival Damon Ronton a a Java addict. The Hughe sleep until noon and then dress for a showy luncheon plaoe In viting f-om one to ten guest That 1 their relaxation. They are Ineensr able. When Rupert gets off on hi hobbythe peccadillo of George Washington he put her finger to her Una: "Vow Mr. Huies!" And he subsides. Flubbed "d Poyishly con fused. Adela Rogers Jus become the sob Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Signed letter pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dlieuse diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady If s stamped self-addressed enrelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady. 26S El Caralno, BeTerly Hills, Cal. NEWER KNOWLEDOK TJlcer of the stomach (gaatrlo ul cer) or of the duodenum (Intestine Just beyond the stomach)' Is called peptic ulcef. Various views aa to the nature and cause ol this common condition have led to the use of many differ ent methods or plans of treat ment. At best, no treatment as yet has proved very satisfactory, though the flip py regimen or some modlfiaatlon of It, ha given victims of peptic ulcer the greatest degree of comparative comfort and safety. The conviction has grown upon the profession hat more t involved in these cases of peptic ulcer than the local lesion In the mucou membrane. A question on which there has been much speculation la "Why doesn't the healthy stom ach digest itself?" or "What cause the erosion or digestion of small areaa of the mucous membrane of stomach or duodenum which pro duces peptic ulcer?" Overstimulation or Irritation of the stomach with hot sauce, condiments, or alcohol, has been considered one factor of ulcer. .Then some physicians have regarded peptic ulcer aa a local In fection, some have thought it her editary, and some have favored the view that It results from some in terference with the circulation or blood supply of the affected area of gastric or duodenal lining. The multiplicity of opinions has led to various methods of treatment. McCarrlson. British army surgeon in India observed the frequency or peptic ulcer among tribes In the south whose diet wa mainly rice and tapioca (poor In vitamins) and a striking rarity of the disease among the Sikhs whose diet wa largely milk and vegetables (rich In vitamins). In experimental work he found that monkeys fed on diets poor in vitamins usually developed peptic ulcer. McCarrlson wa one oi the first to prove that an adequate supply of vitamins Is essentia) to maintain normal nutrition and health of the gastro-lntestlnal tract. Many other Investigators have con firmed this since. Vitamins A, B, and C appear to be particularly essential, and D to s lesser de gree. Manvllle found that with a defic iency of vitamin A there 1 s fail ure In the secretion of mucus In the stomach, and mucus la the nat ural protective of the delicate stom ach lining ngalnst Irritations of all kinds and against digestion by the gnstrlc Juice Itself. Heretofore the diets generally pre slater for my money. She know how to aqueere out the last pitying; tear with a climaxing sentence. There used to be one in the middle weat who could dish such pathos and a sou peon of philosophy. Her name wa Jesate Partlon. Of a banker who smashed up his life, wine, women and the ponies, she wrote: "He went down a dark, crooked alley to a blind end " A writer receive novelties in pen cils. Each an Inventor' dream of riches. I have one with a tiny electric glow for making night notes. Another topped with a strip of magnifying glam for looking up phone numbers. And the Col. Hartfleld silvered crayon that stretches Into a yard stick. To dsydsy came one that with a twist a year becomes a perpetual calendar. One by one they will disappear. Like fllea snd pin, no one knows where pencils go I Hattle Bell Johnston transfers thla Idyllic from a remote littoral of Italy. "The view from my balcony, oo-la-lal Alto Montecanltl in the distance cov ered with grape vine and shoe-dauber tree. Peasants with wine casks on art perpetuate the ancient cav alcade. This Inn make It own wine, vinegar, olive oil. The . nights are starry, bright and still and from time to time music float in from the twinkle of the thermae not fer away.' Another letter today from a dot In Pennsylvania called "Helen Furnace." Thyra Samter Wlrulow's "My Own. My Native Land" arrive, autographed- A supreme artist of the hort story who write far too little. Tt onme out at dinner last nlht that Walter Howey I making strides with the ab lold Mirror. A fresh fortune-telling craze in the afeA oards. palms, coffee grounds. Versailles and Tokay each haa a squad. I peek Into the open-fronted "Flying Trapere" now and then hope fully, but have yet to see anyone swinging overhead "with the greatest of ease." For a book mark: "Here I Fell Asleep!" (Copyright, 1935. McNaught Syndicate) LIS I AWs I1 1 inoiiinw j (Contlnunl from Pig. Ona) posed to h ave bee n su b ml t td 1 0 htm. officially or unofficially. The objection wa based 00 me chanical obstacles. A new minting machine system would bar to be established to make the new coin a This may be one reason why the treasury a a not very anxlou to have hearings on It proposed bill Another thst hearings would gie the henka-a an opportune) to show what complication the new or PEPTIC IXCRR scribed In tha alleviation or treat ment of peptic ulcer have been ser iously deficient In vitamins, and U It 1 true that inadequate supply ol the several vitamins la a predispos ing cause of peptic ulcer, It becomes obvious that a diet used In the treatment of the condition should Include, or be supplemented with, optimal ration of the vitamins, that Is, more than the normal body re quires to maintain health, for It is necessary to restore the depleted vitamin reserve In the body If you hope to bring about good nutrition and anything like normal function ing. These are Just some crazy notions of mine, which you will not find In doctor books, not for five or ten years yet. Take m or leave 'em. In any case I challenge any physician or other scientific person to question any of them. ' QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS It la Fatal to Black Widows Is the story about Harold Lloyd turning scientist and searching for a chemical to destroy black widows some kind of Joke? Answer I don't know. Harold might get s good cue from the Los Angeles county health department. They have found that spraying with a 10 per cent solution of lethane in light oil disposes of the spiders and la comparatively harmless' to man and animals. Lethane is an organic thio-cyanate. Alcohol Still Depresses Please give your opinion on this claim of the whiskey people that "scientific research proves that ( a certain brand of wtmkey) stimulates the circulation." (F. D. L. 8.) Answer That's for the moron public. It is as "scientific" as the claim that a certain brand of to bacco steadies the nerves or Increases endurance. Nothing Is too silly for Forty Million Americans. No medi cal authority or other competent person imagines alcohol stimulates the circulation. Every authority knows It depresses the circulation. X-ray Diagnosis of Tuberculosis Can lung tuberculosis be detected by X-ray when an ordinary doctor falls to diagnose It? (C. J.) Answer X-ray picture gives only corroborative evidence. X-ray evi dence alone may be misleading, for other conditions may east shadows similar to those of tuberculosis. This Is one of many questions ans wered in "1000 Questions and Ans wer on T. B." a book compiled and published by National Tuberculosis Association, New York City. Kd. Note: Persons wishing Ut communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D.. 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. fractional coins would add to their business. Even so. the bill might have gone through congress without trouble except that It was so vaguely drawn that it gave the treasury powers beyond those strictly needed for the coinage of doughnuts. The recluse of the cabinet Is Labor Secretary Perkins. She 1 so nd verse to publicity that her own Demo cratic publicity organisation Is un able to get anything out of her. Recently the women's division or the national committee decided that the labor secretsry was getting the worst publicity of any cabinet mem ber. It schemed to build her up quietly. To effect that purpose three dif ferent attempts were made to get Information about her home and her life. Each application wa turn ed down by her secretary, even the one that came from the official Democratic magazine of the national committee. This establishes a new record 'or political shyness among public of ficials. Usually they are willing to pay for such advertising. What President Roosevelt's 011 message to congress meant wa that the states, will be given an oppor tunity to work out production con trol, if they can. The oil crowd within the new deal Is not very enthusiastic about the state com pacts, but had no other ideas. That explain why Mr. Roosevelt's mes jse was so short, In fact the short est he has sent to congress this session. Underlying skepticism seems to be based on the met that the pacts are gentlemen's agreements, and there seems to be some question whether everyone in that Industry Is a gentleman. 1 ss he faaiAer tenth mm so trod moory hold Tovobi ll! 1 1 nnu( f ill 1 1 ni tic I III oai yow own sinsaw and kliuIiv willi w (fcajus TvroinxL I my be rapsid in vnfl weekly or wotxttfy psyaieutft. Investigate ov prompt, mUmtB ana cooSdcntaal serffca. COX. PBOtTE OR WKTTT 1 OREGON WASHINGTON M0TGAGE 00. 4 . Central. Licence No. -1s7 ee W. T.. Thomas Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS TpWO Intereatlng paragraph that 1 Is, If you find world news In teresting. "Governmental plana for sn Sal opian mission to Japan, to leave Ad dis Ababa soon, were disclosed today." "An suthorltatlve Tokyo source In dicated today that Toshlharu Harlma. first secretary of the Japanese em bassy in Rome, ha been designated to open a Japanese legation at Addl Ababa. Ethiopia, in January. THERE'S a community of Interest, you see, between Ut',le Ethiopia and s big snd rather truculent Japan Just what no ordinary, average, everyday person know; that knowl edge being reserved for the diplomats of the Inner circles. But It looks a If Muaeollnl might be stirring up a larger hornets nest than appear on the surface. YOU may think, you're not interest ed In these developments in the news of the world, preferring the lat est murder story much nearer home, but If war DOES start In Ethiopia you'll probably be Interested before It end. EXCEEDINGLY political headline: "Borah May Enter Republican Race." Presidential race, of course. His "friends" are putting him for ward, and It isn't known yet, the cor respondents on the Washington front Inform us. whether or not he will run. He may. If he can be assured of an adequate expense fund and a good campaign manager. OF course he'll run. If the prospects look good. Borah haa been want ing to run for President for nearly as many years as this writer can re member, but something has always arisen to make It look unwise. The old part of It la that If Borah had become a Presidential candidate at any time In the past he'd have run as a near-radical, whereas If he makes a campaign now It will be as a near conservative. Borah hasn't changed. It is politics that has done the changing. Somebody dropped a good story about Borah In Southern Oregon e, while back. It ran something like this: Borah was out riding In Rock Creek park (one of Washington beauty spots) one day, and everything was lovely and he was a happy as any human being can be. But suddenly he discovered that both he and tne horse were going In the same direc tion, and that ruined the day for him. - FOR years, Borah professed to be lieve in a lot of the things the New Dealers are now pushing hard, becau se t n those days n a bod y else could see them with a telescope. But when the administration took nrj these Isms, along with the New Deal. Borah had to Jump the reser vation and become a near -conservative, lifting hi role In defense of the constitution. He Just couldn't go in the same direction with anybody else. REVEREND J. W. ANGELL 10 Rev. Joseph W. Angell will deltver the sermon at the ll o'clock service tomorrow In the Monterey Presbyter Ian church. He will fill the pulpit In the absence of Rev. George Easton Petrie, who Is attending the Synod of California now in session at San Francisco. Next Sunday morning Mr. Angell will preach at the Mayflower Congre gational church, the pastor of which. Rev. John Hunter. Is leaving Monday for a vacation at Idlewlld near Palm Sprinsrs. Rev. Mr. Angell has Just arrived here from Oold Bach. Oregon, where he is closing a pastorate of more than six years. With Mrs. Angell he Is re siding st, 210 Willow street. Psclflc Grove, former home of Miss Virginia Strong. Mr. and Mrs. Angell plan to remain here permanently. Although they have never resided here before. Mr. and Mrs. Ansell have been frequent visitors since their a mrjeer to ttse bajaJjuus V ftw pffwsxl or boose borrow ix to $300 ha first . trip hers in 1808. Monterey (Calif.) KaraJd. Her. J. W. Angell and Mrs. Angell are well known In Med ford, and Jack eon eounty. having for several years resided In Phoenix. Flight '0 Time Med ford snd Jackson Coonty history from the file of tha Mall Tribune 10 snd 30 Tears Ago). TEN TEARS AGO TODAY August 12, 1!2 (It was Wednesday) Gertrude Ederte starts training for English channel swim. Charley Chaplin, movie comedian, improves, but la still s sick man, doc tors report . Plane arrives from Eugene for pa trol of forest fires. California and Montana shaken by quakes, damage slight. 15T ears of pears have been shipped east to date, from thla valley. 37 cars were dispatched yesterday. Tourist travel to Crater Lake still heavy. Oregon Jones, notorious southern Oregon bandit. Is killed, and three guards are killed In the bloodiest prison break In Oregon penitentiary history. Three convicts Ellsworth Kelly, James Wlllos and James Mur ray escape. TWENTY TEARS AGO TODAY Anguat 12, 1015 ' (It was Thursday) 300 In prise to be swarded school children at eounty fair. Tha Tt theatre has been replaced by the Empire theatre. Zeppelin raid on English coast kills 36 persons. Furniture for the new Barnum ho tel on Front street arrives. Will and Stanley Lydlard. accom panied by their two sisters. Miss Grace and Miss Sue. started Wednes day morning for Lakevlew, where they will visit relatives for a few days and on their return will visit Crater Lake and other sights slong the river road -(Table Roek Tablets). 13.675 acres of land have been signed up In the valley for Irrigation. LORDS RETURN TOPIC OF REV. W. A. DAWES SERMON TO BAPTISTS The Lord's Return was the sub ject of Rev. Wolford A. Dawes at the Baptist church Sunday morning. Many references were quoted from the New Testament and also In the Old Testament, a doctrine dear to the heart of God's people. The sermon dealt with the truth In the New Testament. Later he may take the facts In the Old Testament: 1. The fact of His return. 3. The manner. 3. The results. 4. The time. "Jesus said he would return. 'I go to prepare a place for you: If I go I will return. Every writer of the New Testament Tefers to his return. They called It 'a blessed hope," said the pastor. . "The return Is not based upon phil osophy, not based upon hearsay but upon the Word of God. "The manner, Pentecost, was not the return, not the destruction of Jerusalem, not death, death being sorrow and grief. When Jesus comes there will be rejoicing. 'The same Jecus shalt return In like manner.' Rev. ifi. Every eye shall see him. Two parts coming for his church and coming with his saints. King of Kings and Lord of Lords. "Result : Those who are asleep awake, mortal shall put on Immor tality. John said. 'Now are we the sons of God.' When he shall appear we shall bs like hint. Henceforth laid up for me a crown of righteousness, the service that is acceptable Is re warded. "Time: The Lord la yet to come and receive to himself. j "Jesut said. No man knoweth the! hour. Be ready, accept Him now. be a faithful servant, resting in his promises," the speaker concluded. Use Mail Itioumi want ads. Music! Flowers! Clothes in A New Setting Save Thursday Night See Wednesday Night's Tribune JACKSON COUNTY 'GRANGE LUNACY' EDITORIAL TOPIC Portland Publication Grills Fanner Organization For Action In Banks Case Called Reactionaries. Under the title 'Jackson County Grange Lunacy." published In "Ev erybody' Business," a Portland pub lication, of which Kelley Loe Is pub lisher, the Bell view Grange, and the Pomona Grange, as well as Jackson county Is placed on the editorial grill. The article Is an aftermath of the resolution passed by the Bell view Grange and reported adopted by the fc Pomona. In which State Senator Peter Zimmerman and Dr. Albert Slaughter of Portland, members of the state executive committee of the grange were criticized for signing a petition for an investigation of the murder trial of L. A. Banks, former local agi tator, and demanding the resignation of Zimmerman and Slaughter, as members of the executive committee. The article holds the two signed a citizens, not as Grange officials, and that en Investigation not a pardon was sought for Banks. The article states: "Jackson county Is perhaps the most reactionary of any in the state. Patrons of husbandry there, either through inoculation with reactionary lde.vi. or through Intimidation or both have taken on the hue of Jack son county politics." Other excerpts from the article read : "In the two years that have elapsed since Bsnks conviction, many citi zens have come to the belief that possibly there was a miscarriage of Justice In the trial, which was held while Intense feeing prevailed In Jackson county, and to a degree throughout the state. "Jackson county was one of the two counties In the state, which favored the sales tax. which is a fair Illustra tion of the extreme reaction in that section. "There is other significance in the action of the Jackson County Pomona Grange. It serves a double purpos: first, to extend prejudice ngalnst an investigation of the Banks case, end second, to provide an excuse for an attack on liberal officials of the stat grange The policy of the reaction aries appears to be to use whatever Issue promises to be successful in a particular section to weaken sta te grange officials." The article further states, "thla pa per (Everybody's Business) is inform ed the action of the Jackson Pomona, may now be transmitted to grange throughout the state for their action. "Other granges will be asked to endorse the Jackson County Lunacy." Copies of the publication have been received by many Jackson county grangers, and the article above-mentioned created considerable resent ment. At a meeting held In Phoenix. Sat- i urday. July 24. the Pomona consider- ed approval of the Bellvtew Granite resolution, but no public report was made on the action taken. Tender KeMoatPd MARSH FIELD, Ore.. Aug , 12. (AP) Aided by two tugs, the Unit ed States coast guard cutter Pul aski yesterday pulled the 65-foot cannery tender, C. P. R. A. No. 3, off the sands of North Spit, one mile north of Coos Bay, Ore., where It ran aground during a dense fog Thursdav. SPRINGFIELD, III., Aug. 12. ( AP) Three men were Injured, two ser iously when an Illinois Central freight train was dynamited three miles south of here early today. First Church of Christ Scientist 15 Minute Devotional Period KMED 8 0 "clock a. m. Daily August 12 to 17 Inc.