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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1935)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUXE. MEDFOKI). OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1935, .Tribune "Vxrryan Id Southern 41 regno Uuda the UmU Tribune" Dally Kirept 8 tarda v. Publlahed by MKDKOhD PRINTINO CO. I5-27-'JB N. Fir SL Phona ta. ROBERT W. RUHU Editor. As Independent Nawapapar. Entered as cond-clae matter at Mad (ord. OresoD, under Act of llarcb A, 1' SUUSORIPTION BATES Daily, ona year ? Daily, alz months.. .7 Dally, one iontb Bv Carrier, tn Advance Mad ford, Aen- I.- bannvlll. CtDUll Point. Phoenli. Talent, Gold Hill and on Dally, on. year "OO Dally, all montho.... Dally, one month All tar ma, eaab la advance. Official Pnpr of the City of Med ford Official Paper of Jarknon County. UKMIIr.R OP THE AStMICIATKII PKfcBl Kf-celtliiK Cull luterd wire Bcrvice. Tne Aaaoclated Preaa la aiclualvely en titled to tne uae for publication of al nana dlir.atchea credited to It or other- wise crcllted In trila paper, and aiao to ih ififi (iwa DubMahad herein. All rlgtjta for publication of apaclai niapatcnea nerein are aiao raaervwa. II B 11 H E II OK UNITED PRESS MEIIRKR OK AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertlttnf Rapraaentatlvee M. C. MKKNHKN COMPANt Offtcea in Nw York, Chicago Detroit Ban Franclpco. Loa An gala a, Baattla, Portland. MEMBER Something should bo done about the weather, which contlnuea at hot, even the Chamber of Commerce can in no good In It. a e e A number of young men are run ning around in their first long trousers, so they won't be self-con scious when they start to achool in the, next Monday. Ftaln la badly needei for fall plowing, and the atart of the deer serssoa the last or the month. The womenfolks would also welcome some pwettyltatlon to see If It will wilt their rw autumn hat with the Biaary tilt. Apeilicatleaa for fan for the on eerwetion of IS new armories la the ravaSe km awaa fllea. Tmey will ccaoon M kaH4y la each of vir, or a wre&l- e e IHMn-pwm twai sf-startls? aaol fc,hrs of poverty accustomed to a;slnavthe-hat to kp gefhg until their Utcaila atarta functlonlrft. have Justifiable grounds for envy. Thj gentleman engage In the establish ment of a full-gAwn rainbow In the province of Alberta, Canada, botjic, was paid f.i,000 to appear in Cfiea:y, ana epaila hi sclMoav hMM B tat! "&Ft4jri CaJt Mfe'aV Save." I fc Want IN Oflrit " la-Mffh9 -ai-iraiiai," aaa eaarfMUa law iwelw fc mrnaah Ma paia? at V? so cwthwataeMMnM Ho Ths ptaiM 18 lartt llbvawl. Tfj t my an allam M te toVfi anu n4 Imbj h. doer ft a 4ai a a e taaao tn IMkWsMn, mm varM rtv&e. Tfatt) lnlcaw ths oM4aats DMia)ti, Via: ett Mais Plrta UQt. e e Tl aa tlfc 0aa YtaJafgi pa a laaewa to fffoatlti suonoaer tlai t-alraaV raaaj th ayMait at-rry ar nvfilieaai aa vt qtuaatl-4 e a a A Colombo pr(flDi.-t'f iJUst tvith w.)cr f 11 dnn. ifravttc '-re as IntoiiOj (f an autre ftaa to go without 4i'oUt' uatll payday. a a a Johnlln, a ahotntin exirt. has a bb. shot burlr in the lot hide Hfijoitunn his litt fliT. ftto tts not recall any brother expert rlstak9.g him for a clay pla?n. e a The metropolitan papers today print a picture of the "Cir&id Cham pion Bull" or the atate fair. The photo corrects the Impression he only haa two legs, and la making epeeehes to cut the taxes, and ve the workera, farmers and OM Polks a e utld like acqtialntnnc of goofl btialnesa man or a young farmer, like one with car. for pastime and rcMilt. Artdreim C. A., care Star. (Coluaa Star) Wedding horns win aoon be honking. a a e The Justin (Up-to-Hchool) Smltn boy nW has five teeth, and will bite anything once. e e A man from Spokane visited O Pstton the first of the week, ar. they re-knocked home-runs all over the MlaMssippi valley. e e In some upatato criminal mean nei one side is protesting "the laws delay," and the other side. 'Inno cent until proven guilty." A gooa lawyer would file something to show the convicted are not In the peni tentiary until they get there. a Several unauccewtful attempt- have been made by 1-armM drivers ot auto, to knock the Epe switch engine off the MMn Stem crossing The engineer uses both hands, ami Ihe firemnn stays on hta own side rf the cab. FUTURE FLYING IN FROCKS, SAYS AMELIA OMAHA, Neb, (Vpt. 8 (VPt Ainelia Rarhart expecta to do name of her future flying In an afternoon frock, she said yesterday, but not un til airplanes are made so they can te kept spotlessly clean, , It urn I riiiMtltteiimcut bought. MADISON, Wl (UP) An en lightened rural population will do more to readjuat Amerlcaja economic and social problems thafranjr other ai'itfle movement. Dean Chrl L Chr'.tensen nf the Unlverfritj of Wis consin colleee of ngiiculture a.ild In aji addreM here. MEDFORD. Ye Smudge Pol By Arthur Perry What f F THIS Italio-Kthiopian situation were not so serious it would be laughable. If the pompous mouthings of Baron Pompco Aloisa, .Mussolini's official spokesman, did not spell death and destruction, for thousands of human beings, white and black; the scene could be lifted from the council of the League of Nations at Geneva, transferred to the stage at Oovent Garden, and with a few Gilbert and Sullivan touohes, provide the world with another comic opera CLASSIC! 1VT0 DOUBT it was this deep ' fhnf. nrpvenfot the rlelpffltps nt Geneva, from annreciatinir the essentially farcical character of' the performance, and, as Baron Pompco waxed more and more eloquent and bombastic, failing to roll about in their seats, with mirth. For the scene certainly had opera boufflc, that make-believe, unreality and solemn pre- ensc, which provides the core, set to music. VISUALIZE it, if you can. The official spokesman of a great world nower. solemnly maintaininc. before a hieb interna tional tribunal, that a small blacks, "constitutes an immediate and permanent danger to the security of Italy and its colonies, and Kaly is rising against this intolerable situation to DEKKND her own security, as well as the prestige of both Italy and the League 1" eOTH Italy and the League. A war of DEFENSE if you please, a world power armed t the teeth, with every modern weapon, by sen, land to PROTECT herself, against a tribe of untrained and poorly equipped blacks, who have never moved from the borders of their land-locked'iingdom, in the depths of darkest Africa, and probably never will. And not only to uphold the of the League. The LEAGUE mind you, which was designed, above every thing else to prevent the thing conquest of a weak and coniparatio;ly defenseless ntion, by a stroiic and powerful one. The League, which if it fails to PREVENT this r, will not excuse for its existence. S TF this wnre not piioiirIi, the jjoughty Bjron, bearoe so "intvsicntod with h own verbffcity" that befor coi eluded the days performance, he endorsed this mazinf pro nouncement from Rome: Italy intends to wage wr agQinst Rthiopift, "with the league, without the League or AGATNS th IJefgue!"0Tlit was Mussolini's statement, nnd the Fgscifft All Highest docs not bluff. 0 tN'CUEDIBLEsn't it! Not thfit fffils iiifrtnf armed coinjjipst, Tor tlint been the history of imperialism through tho centuries: 0 Hut tlutt it should solemnly Sclibcreteij- try to do this before thfieivilized world intle nmc ot DEKKNSIVR warfare, nil to uphold the pPestiyt, of n intMtioiieJ orf tnization, aiMK cn h(v to pMig, uUa i i Msew'.l of I9iIV8N'T IXQ jn" lipt l&i? i rlfxoiil it A). It t not oily finical, tie mem on li tii'a oWicig statc aieift utile beftire the I.tagu, tk no 01 it inclined to call it in. It fact pursuina thGillM t Sillive idefc if the actual f otineonn'a ial(tt OtlY yttirl4f, wire plOi-td in f libretto nnd set to music, even froti th qleadpoint ofeomie (fr(, tho critics would dcvletVlht pftit cutei-Jted O'hI over-dre. ti'j't that i ''( elWoiaiiia ye: of hgvc Irouaht doubt, the revival of militaristic inifet-f'isai, tfAIf A CKX TUUV TOO I.ATK, is bound to ml. 0 What can't be justified in thi fied. Such a spectacle as Unron Pompco Aloist mtda of himself at Geneva yesterday, is probably the inevitlblc result. DAYDY BAY By O. 6. Mclntyre NEW YORK. Sept. 5,-Most of US. not born In New York, often tret walled Jn by a starchy cosmopolitan ism ironi which tlu seema no wjw miliar small town .f things of our formative yeara aeem far away and we are never q u it e able to ahake off this In sularity. Yet a 30-mln-ute ride lm the metmpotltan out skirts In any di rection and we are completely out ot it. There are a hundred Mllit's and hamlets that seem as remote ns a way out yonder rronaroads. The same types, the same sort of civic stK'tiiitlon. Towns that started from taw and got nowhere. n a short before-dinner drive, one may come upon ttramily communities where cows are bclns driven In from pasture, where dinner is supper and the bark porch tin basin Is still in use, Shirt-leeW men are pitching horwshoes In front of the blacksmith shop. oil lamps burn on the sitting room table, chickens have gone to roost and old Towser la stretched In the aide- yard for a dreamier sleep. There are the friendly little bartwr shops with the back-room bnnjoiM. rear vards sprouting with sunflower and the leaning, medineval chalet. Helen Menken and Judith Ander son were the only dramatic actresses on Broadway throuuh the entire blis tering stretch of summer. Their Pu iitwr pru-e play at the Empire was tne singes sole summer hope. The dovihle stardom reaulled tn the usual buElng ftN.ni profesMi.nftl lm lousy Mis Mfukn irrrMintt Mts Andrrson In mufti with rMit-rrpt'io'ii nirr t ana woe u-rsa Hie fact la p) arc ' E a Farce! sense of the tragedy involved, all the essential elements of of the satirical political drama, flea bitten nation of half-naked tfnd air, at her command forced prestige of Italy but the prestige Italy is now doing, armed only have no prestige, but Tt W aou1d w0t more lid, Urn nnwpr fin- nrlsti'jp. bv (Ml t ilipln-y, jn this u to. And thOt what no dt nd tS, hs to be justi f boeii compnlora but eic In atwhtVft j 4)1 to dirOt tbe fctoeiaVs thy put I on a little act, tch glvlnf) the other I the marble eye, that sysrts the tongurgj wiping. The only hatred I've ever known on the lea)! betwsn stage stars was that of the Rufiell brothers, kat come dians In second string theaters and variety. They were rowdy female Im personators of the Bridget type, and brothers. With a mutual hatred that was venomous. On the Otage they clowned and smacked each other around but off they lived In separate hotels and for the last U years of tftelr lives-never (Spoke to each other. The same thing was satd of the Rcw Brothers remiber then In Havana, tn Panama, etc? But thla wss the Invention of a presa agent. Ting Is, however, usually a strain between stars. Familiarity breeds the usual contempt plus, of course, the peacock pomp that oXten Inflates the g)tor beyond endurance. Such boy hood rompanlona as Montgomery and atone had thetr days, weeks and sometimes monthi of cootnemi. But when the show closed they were pals aaaln. ltre was a season, too. when Montgomery and Stone. In a MSjcW featuring Slate Janls, had a three cornered pout. None spoke to the others off stage. The staunchest f the theatrical hookups, aald to be (J)itlrely without friction, is that of Clark and McCullough. The enduring popularity of Klsle Janls was strikingly lltustrated in the universal eoiictttide over her fate in a recent auto smashup. At the hos pital where she was taken the doc tors were forced to issue hourly re ports long after the crisis. The Al gonquin had a special bulloQn board Reporters camped at the entrance in relays and London and Paris were espectally Insistent for frequent re port($ The actrets has been In aeml retlrement and living tn the preten tious country home of her affluent days at Tsrrytown. One of the ete? phone numbers to find is that of The 7,?.? Us inst In the book and belong to a little (roup at the Harvard Club members have a hard timi All the remem- bering p.ous numbers to the rigged 1 Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Slfined letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be ansnered bj Ur. Brady If a stamped aelf-ad-d reived entelnpe Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink Uulng tu the largo number ot lettera received onlj a few can be answered No reply can he made to querlea not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady, 269 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cal. IS THFRR A 6HURTAGE In h! book "Chemistry of Pood Nutrition." Dr. Henry C. Sherman eaya there need be no practical danger of ahortage of vita min B xce p t where an unduly iarge proportion of the caloric? needed In nutri tion are taken In the form of arti ficially refined foods. Whaat U the chief aource of vitamin B for moat of ua. But nearly all of the vitamin B la con tained in the erbryo or germ of the wheat kernel and In the bran, both of which are removed and discarded In the refining of wheat for white flour. Heat destroy more than one third of the vitamin B In any food during cooking or baking. The average American menu pro vides not lesa than three ounce of protean, two ounces of fat and 13 ounces of carbohydrate. That Is equivalent to 400 oalorlea from pro tein, 650, calories from fat and over 1600 calories from carbohydrate Breads, cakes, pastries, sweets, sug ar, refined syrups, candy, Ice cream, potato minus skin, refined cereals, re fined corn meal, polished rice, boiled vegetables these are the favOiQe carbohydrates In the American menu. All vitamin poor Items. The water In which vegetables are bolted dis solves put most of the vitamin 1. as well aa mineral wilts, and Is usually thrown away, where as It should be used In soup. Some phyalclansoarbltrarlly main tain that the average American9 diet contains sufficient vitamin 8. If bread were mad from the un Ijj - ; household to buy plali wheat, and,' use it dally in various dishes, entire or cracked or krlnklad in the home grinder, perhajf most people would receive enough vitamin B- A great mcny tamiUgs autflst for several months of the year on food which is unquestionably poor tn vita mins, not onl? but A, C and G. In the winter months when s)resh vege tables, fruits or reens are not avail able or only Importer! and hence ex pensive items are available, It Is quite probable that these fan)iuA suffer In : many wati froi? a abort of vita mins. In nature) vitamins never occur singly, but always in combinations or groups of two or more, so that 1L there la a shortage of m thera is doubtless a ehortag of other vli- u0 a scheme that would merely mean looking up one last nuyoer in tne book. That's what a Harvard educa tion does for folk. Thingumabolit: Oeifj Fowl writes his best Un4 before tt-eaM&ftt- . Tommy U1ard Is on his 162nd cross ing of the Pacific. , . . aVifar fa! laces widow has writtet a mystery noval. . . . Mrs. Arthur Somera Roche has been asked to plot one. . . . Poodles Huinaford . la now with a one-ring circus. . . . Lester tAaUack is the only living charter rmVnljjr of the Lambs. . . . uirlee chevalier Is homesick rajendy fdr Hollywood. .... His Pffls j pals are alt Americans. i Prank Case tells of the actor In front of the Palace regurgltaaig y1 sudden burb. "Something I ate. tnanic God!" he exclaimed. o r (Copyright. 19.15 Mcftiught Syndicate) IFfflS BtO APPLEGATT. Sept. 5. (Spl) The reflection of a mirror in the aim light, with which every person hss played at some tlrrs In his Itfe, V being used for signaling between for est service lookouts here this Bum mer. Mt. Isabel lookout, equipped with radio Instead of a telephone, flashes ran Saltmarah at Tallowbfik with a mirror when unable ten make con nections with the forest service ware house at Med ford, where the receiv ing set Is located. Mr. Saltmarah In turn telephones the Star ranirer sta tion, and the request for the ware house to tune In on Isabel Is relayed from there. The receiving set In use at Star station thla summer haa been removed. Mt. Isabel, an emergency station, was put on duty recently, and la in charge of two CCC men from Camp Applegate. Mr, Simpson, radio expert from Portland, accompanied by his wife and K. P. McHeynolds of the MMford forestry headquarters, visited at the ranger station this week. Mr. .:mn5on also making the trip to Mt. Isabel. 736 RESCUED FROM LINER AFTER CRASH LONDON, rng . Sept. 3 (API Two British Mnera today rescued all the 7:ta psAxencers of another British ship, the S. S. Doris, after It had col- llded with the French S. S. Forlgny in tne Atlantic orr the coast or Portu- j The collision occurred tn a fog. The aes was calm. The passengers accepted the interruption of their holiday : cruise without a aln of panic. In aljin of panic. In- stesd. they sang as they waited their turn at the lifeboats and sang again 1 as they pulled away to safety. j Ruth I Dance Siurtl Froll i f nirM" or Frdsy Hpt 5 and 6 Sparia Blaj Toon 1543 '"JUH'M""'"'! m OR IS THERE A SHORTAGE? mint u well. We are only beginning to learn to recognize the symptoms or signs of moderate shortages of vltiniln. We know enough about It now to war rant the opinion ( expressed by a number of competent authorities) that many of the vsue disturbances commonly attributed to nervous ness," anemia, "autointoxication," In digestion, "rheumatism" and the like. are really manl testations of vitamin shortage. From clinical results of the thera peutic test by many physicians (that is, giving patients adequate vitamin rations for a few months and observ ing whether the trouble la markedly improved) and a aurvey of the aver age American diet today, It would seem that there Is a shortage of vita mins In the diet of a majority of people which accounts for a multi plicity of minor health impairments otherwise unexplained. QU&TIONS AND ANSWERS Tonsil Lore. Ben Told by throat specialist who does not believe In removing tonsils If possible, that the average life ex pectancy after removal of the ton sils Is only 20 years . . . Mrs J. a. a. Answer That Is scarcely borne out by experience. However, good phy sicians no longer take radical atti tude on the "complete" removal. of tonsils. It la piobably better to leave some normal tonsil tissue In the throat when treating Infected or dis eased tonsils. As a matter of fact, rarely is thP tonsil "completely" re moved, no matter what method or what operator. It Is recognized to day that normal tonsil or adenoid tissue serves some purpose In de femlnf) against Infections. , ' Silicon. I have Ben Told my body lacks proper supply of silicon or silicic acid. would like to know what I should eat to get a sufficient supply of this mineral. (Miss O. R. G.) Answer Ben is spoofing. No one knows whether silicon Is essential or whether it Is deleterious. ' Tonsils Purloined. rr. , whom you recommend as) to me for diathermy treatment of tonsils was very successful with the method In my case and also my two -boys. We fca grateful for this easy method. It is hard to realize that our tonsl are gone . . . (A. P. .) (Copyright. 1935. John P. Dille Ef. Nute: persons wlsllng to coatatunft-are with Dr. Brady shoulf) seta letter direct to Ur. ft 1 1 tin ti Brady. M. D., 265 El Camion, It-verly Hills, Cat. (Continued from Page One) continue while the Plttman commit tee merely Justifies the buying pro gram. The Inside on Father Coughlln latest fulmlnatlon agalait the admin istration Is supposed to be that He feels he was double-crossed on the new banking bill. He had expected the administration to hold out against the Glass version. Also, he expected more administration support tor the Prazler-Lemke bia and there fore was willing to keep quiet, until It was too late. At least this Is the explanation offered by his friends here who would n$ knowingly mis represent him. Despite this, and all ttt hasten said lately. It Is at least a 5 to 1 wager that he will be on the Roose velt side In the end. There are rea sons. PreaOent Roosevelt has established himself aa a veto president. He hss9 lurnro. aown 113 bills passed by con gress so far In hie presidential car eer. Coolldge vetoed only forty-elght bills, and Hoover thlrty-thlee. Yet the president has escaped pub lie notice as a vetoer. principally be cause nearly all the bills he hss turn ed down are small private claims bills. These do not attract public attention but they are dear to a congressman's heart. Also dear to Washington "law yers trying to collect small claims on a contingent fee basis. Congress haa over-ridden but one Roosevelt veto the Independent of fices appropriation bill containing the cute on veterans' allowances (most of which have now been re stored). . An antt-Huey Long section has been unofficially added lately to the di gest of editorial comment prepared by the democratic national commit We. A recent Issuocarrled half a dut en editorials ridiculing Long's presi dential aspirations and assailing his filibuster against the deficiency ap propriation bill. This is more notice than Huey has ever received before from the D. N. c. GOAT IS FORFEIT IN DALLAS GOLF MATCH DALLAS. Te., Sept. -(fPI Ridgelt Killer, one armed golfer, got the goat of Dean B. D. Jennings of Sout hern Methodist by winning 10 golf matches from him. The goat was sidebet. Jennlnss will have it Mr- becuod and will serve it oeraonallv. I PALOMINAS. Aris (UPl A huge tooth, believed to he that of a mas todon which roamed Anions thou sands of y-srs v w found In s well on the C A. S'evena ranch rtes ere It u found at iVp'n of 3A feet in a red sandstone formation. SELASSIE DEEDS VAST AREA ; . ... V -CT'. , r E T H .I'T P I:Asr J " X 'S " Vf r t V N - 1 c Tht itrlped area of thla Associated Presa map ahowi the section of Ethiopia reported deeded by Emperor Haile Selassie to American and British Interests for exploitation and development. An American presl. dent and board will direct the company In charge, which will be owned by Standard Oil of New York, a British agent said. As war with Italy threatened, the Lion of Judah signed the charter, which gives the Anglo-American combine a large measure of control over more than half tne country. A concession for the development of Lake Tana and the Blue Nile with England and Egyptian capital was reported also under consideration by the emporor. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS FITY the columnist. When other people go on vacations, they leave their labors, their worries and their responsibilities behind. The poor devil of a columnist has to lug a typewriter along and take time 'oil every day to fill a yawning hole with type. (The sneering cynic, of course, will Interject that the readers are the ones to be pitied. He's crazy. The reader can skip It, but the columnist can't lf0 be ejects the ghost to go on walking). is ft one of the gems of the mountains, with bulky Bailey on one aide and sharp, craggy Th lei sen on the other; the lake In between, a pale blue gem. A somewhat ruffled gem tonight, as a sharp0 wind is blowing, causing campers along the shore to crawl into coats and sweaters and stand humped up. with their backs to the breeze, somewhat like a bunch of cattle with tails pointed Into the storm and dumb suffering tn their eyes. f4 rlB suffering ir0the campers' eyes, by the way. Isn't ANYTHING compared to the suffering there'll be In their hips and spines after a few hours on hard beds. Ci.e of the mysteries of life Is why paople will desert good mattresses and springs to sleep on the hStti, ground and i?ALL IT FUN. SUPPER over. Dishes washed. This particular nartv consists of this columnist and Bill, aged 17, with about IS cents' worth of equipment In the back of a coupe. You'd be surprised at how many dishes we can get along without. Here's a secret. Dishes that are got along WITHOUT don't have to be washed. DARKNESS and the evening fire. Bailey outlined sharply against the glowing western sky. Waves lap ping softly on the shore. It's surprising, up here In tijfsc surroundings, how little difference It makes whether the New Deal Is a suc cess or a failure; whether the pump Is to be primed and the stream ol business to start gushing forth whether the country 1. to be bank rupted in the process of trying , to prime It. Really. It would be a fine thing If we could all beat It for the hills until tha experimenters get through with their tinkering. EVERYONE that Is, everyone worth while hss felt the fasci nating thrill of a fire In the ope at night. Whj Well, that Isn't hard to an swer. For more thousands of years than anyone can guess, our ancestors sat around flrea at night, and th& fires were friends and protectors, fending off the chill and keeping o:t the ravening beasts. When sitting around a fire at night, do you unconsciously look for gleam ing eyes In the surrounding ring of darkness? There's every resson why you should, because for countless ages your foroeara SAW gleaming eyes in i the surrounding darkness. j Fire was one of mini flnt friends j and one cf his best. ITS interesting to think that men existed before the uses of fire were known, and It's even more interest ing to reflect that If somebody back In those early days hadn't possessed more brains than his predecessors along with an Inquiring mind, fire would never have been adapted to man's use. and wed still be raw my. apes living in trees It lox BRAINS to ee the (ire in a smouldering 1-g. lighted by the lightning, and figure out how to turn this mystifying and rather terrifying agency of the Almighty Into a servant of mankind. We think we're pretty iSiart In these days, and In many waya we are but we haven't got all tne smartness. That remote ancestor of ours, who ever he was, who first gazed upon fire and felt the stirring of the Idea that fire might be turned to man's uses, was pretty smart himself. And he started a lot of progress. O BUT shucksl It's getting late. And the brain trust knows everything we need to know, anyway. Why fool away the time with such thoughts? Let's turn In. Q ll SACRIFICE DR THRONG TO STORE A sensational saving opportunity In furniture, right at tne time when furniture prices are advancing, has drawn throngs to John Cupp's fur niture store today for the opening of a sacrifice, selling out sab o, 35. 000 worth of fine merchandise. John COipp's standard line of furnishings la selling at prices that have been cut to the bone. After 13 years U the furniture busi ness In Medford. John Cupp has been forced by business Interests In the east to sell out his entire stooi. to quit his long-standing trade In this community. Prices marked to amaz ingly low levcla will draw crowds to tho store at such rate that the salesrooms will be wiped clean of every article within a few days, o seekera of real bargains In nationally known quality .lines must visit the atore Immediately to cash In on the tremendously low prices in effect. The fine stock Is marked to move for cash, but customers are reminded that through John Cupp's conveni ent lay-away plan, a 25 per cent de posit will hold any article for 30 days. CiSh will cct for this one time, and buyers are Riven a great privilege in thla surprisingly accomo dating offer. The store, at Sixth and Bartlett streets, will be open evt)itrigs until further notice. The jeeds of every household can be satisfied with the greatest economy by taking advan tage of the prlcea on aplendld lines of furniture. Goods that will appeal to every buyer Include card tables, coffee tables, floor lamps, brd lamps, table lamps, smoking aeta. end ta blea. plllowa. novelty ruga, desks, sec retaries, occasional chairs, club cr.lrs, bedroom suites, bed springs, matt rc!Js. dining suites, davenport suites, footstools, ranges, heaters. :ugs. lin oleum, electric appliances, mix-masters. Every article In the anle la guaran snteed to be high quality. FIRST AID CAR TRAVELS 7000 MILES IN STATE SALEM. Sept. 5. (API The George Baker first-aid ca) which has been conducting a tour of the state under the direction of Governor Martin's first aid committee, visited 32 cities and covered a total of 7.000 miles be tween June 17 and September 5. The Information was contained In a report filed In the executive de partment here today by Fred Roberts of the Portland fire department. Sener Gas I Md for l ights PALO ALTO. Cal. ( UP) Success ful experiments in the i& of sewer gas for Illuminating purposes have been conducted here. More than 3. 0P0 randlepower was developed in the mantle-type Illuminator which shone "crews Plo Alot airport like a loco- n'otlve h""'ght. TONIGHT ANn - - " , n . . . onKlINfc, PATROL Under the Big Top at Jackson County Fai Grounds 26 PROFESSION,!, ACTS llmirs Open :.on r.en. Adin. 40c show at f:O0 SPECIAL BARGAIN COUPON! Thl. Coupon and IV mil admit one Isdv or rhlld to the Clrrnt. any performance, roiirtr.. Illlljh hrlne I'atml. rJSL Flight fo Time Med ford and Jackson County history from the files of the Mall Tribune I" and 20 Year, As". TEN YEARS AGO TODAY September S, 1925 lit was Saturday) Premier of Prance, at opening ses sion of League of Nations, "chides America" for failure to participate Mrs. Woodrow Wilson attends. Mrs. Carl V. Tengwald and chil dren return thla week from a summer spent In Chicago. General rush of citizens to the hills to spend the double holiday due to labor day following Sunday. Tha forecast Is for rain and the sky la cloudy. Senator Robert N. Stanfleld attenda a Republican meeting here and will visit Crater Lake en route to Klam ath Palls.. Vice-President Charles O. Dawea will speak at Ashland for 30 minutes Tuesday afternoon. He will speak from the rear platform of his prlvat car. Schools of city to open Monday, and big Increase In attendance ex pected. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY September 5, 1915 (It was Sunday) Great Britain deposits $65,000.0 in New York banks for purchase of war supplies: artillery duel rages on west ern front: no letup In flight of Rus sian armlea on eastern front. O Pacific highway between this city and Central Point developa cracks, and expert advises county to fill theti) with asphalt. The first overcoats oPthe season appeared on the Btreets last night, and It was the coldest night or the fall. The minimum temperature w.a 45 degrees, and It was chilly. !all coats tor women have arrived and ara being worn. Difficulty being experienced on pro curing workers jjn Pish Lake ds. Police order sll transients out of city who refuse to toll. An unknown thief steal tavo pounds of Jerky belonging to !c BarSdulI, which he left In hla car. , SAL. .pt. (AP) Attornta. General I. fl Van Wnkle toca? com pleted the ullot title for the propos ed constitutional amendment. wlc wolild change the law to t)llow ad vertising by dentists. The title read: "To forbid by constitution amend ment the prohibition or regulation of any advertisement of any business, vocation, profession, service or of th sale of any goods or other property, or of any quality, price or othar de tail In connection therewith, provid ed the advertiement staff) th truth; and repealing all provisions of ex isting laws maklngDsuch regu'atlt or prohibition." f Use Mall Tribune want alls. VOX ROOKS And Planning Assl'tanc P1H JgTIA?l 101 MEOFQH Many residents of Medford and vi cinity, whose lives have been made miserable through suffering from those distressing surface muscular pains which ara so often mis-called "rheumatic." will be glad to know that an effective relief la now avaft-at-i which la bringing Joy to many who have used It. This relief prepara- ! tlon la known as Williams R.U.X. Compound and Is prepared from the prescription of a former army doctor, whopped it In his exteaaive practice for many yeara. Sufferers now may have the benefit of Its relief at a cost of only a few cent a day. ET you suffer from shooting, stabbing muscular pains in shoulders, arms or legs: If you are bothered with neural gic or surface pains of the body, dont endure this agony any longer without trying Williams R.U.X. Compound. Oct a bottle at Heath's Drug Store today. The first bottle must satisfy you or money refunded. Ad. ai t urrtc- tuc . t t iv a a j vr o Free Parking TITLE DffltF! PLAN " BIG PINES LUMBIK CO. I 1'IIONE ONE "I NEWS 35 &