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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1935)
rPXGE FOUR MEDFORD Mini TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1935 MEDFORD$$TRIBUNE rerrniie In Sonthern Oresosj Heads the Mali Tribune" Daily Except Baturdar. Published br MBDrORD PR1NT1NO CO. W-J7-2J N. Fir St. Phone 11. HOBEHT W.'RUHL, Editor. An Independent Newspaper. Entered eecond-cla.i mailer a4 Med. ord. Oregon, under Act ot March I, ' SUBSCRIPTION BATBS By Mall In Advancei Pally, one year. Dally, en month ' Dally, one month 1" iii" .,h. By Carrier, In Advance Modlord. Ash land, Jacksonville, Central Point, Phoenix, Talent, Gold Hill and on highways. 00 Dally, one year Dally, six months " Dally, one month All terms, cash In advance. Oftirlnl Pnper of the City of Hertford.. . . . ........ ... .iIi,mi Cnnntr. UlllCIIU 1 Uiei " -' ' HKMIIKH OK TUB AHSOCIATBO l-HKHB Jlecelvin, Full leased Wire The Associated lTe. Is exclusively en titled to the uae for publication of all rew. dl.p.tche. credited to It or other visa credited In this paper, and also to the local news published herein. All rights for publication of special dispatches herein are also rsserved. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEM OER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representative H. C. MtlOENSKM ft COMi'ANT Offices In New York, Chicago Detroit San Francisco. I.os Angeles, Seattle, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Terry. Italy, according to press reports maintains she "is not engagec, . h.it annlvlng necessary police measures In Ethiopia." The Ethlo- plang now faco arrest tor u... -i defense of their native land, and milt for libel for scattering the re port It has been Invaded. There U ome support of the Italian view. ..ma hAtch of HCW8 reports that Bsllle Selassie, the "Roaring lion of Judah" expressed -aistroo. at the aerial bombing of his sub jects and towns, and a headline reveals, "Britain again asks Italy to Befraln." Everything la going to be rough but the language, and the alleged war conducted In a firm, but ladylike manner. see The upstate movement to change "use name of the Columbia river, la making about as much headway, as a plan to have It run In the other direction for a spell. see everybody now has a war map of the Mediterranean area, but there Is a acarolty of that vital munition pf war the rod-headed pin. The Harvest Festival Is once more iriwn.H In the land. ClOSClV followed by the Harvost Ball, and several ' towns have thermometers pmuw;u iu front of their Commercial clubs to ahow the progress of tne ourrom clvlo drive. see The Older Girls are now busy with fall housecloanlng and fixing 4h. narlnt. en the woodwork and the rugs will not clash. There widespread artlstlo cneenng up vi the house, which Is not fit tor a thing, except to live In. see Another hunter has called to ex hibit the horns of the deer he slew. A farmer dropped In and displayed Prohibition crock In which he will mix up some country sausage. e e e Bowling addicts are busy oudgel Hng -their brains, to find names for the teams, other than those used by their wives, when members don't get home on time, e e e The potato control code, It la fear ed, will bring "potato bootleggers," dispensing Illicit spuds much as they did liquor. Just Imagine get ting a potato bsked by the boot legger counting ten. See TICKS!) OF T1IF. T1MKS IT KM (Itoseburg News-Review) A project for cleaning up and beautltuylng Roaeburg oemeter les would meet with universal approval. Euch work la badly needed. If federal work relief funds can not be applied Co such an effort why not a local campaign for the purpose? see It Is now reported that the pol itical ghost of Herbert Hoover ap peared at the Boulder Dam dedica tion last week, and Is worrying the Democrats. Through Democratic ptc ayunlslmess, the dam wsa named after one or a million boulders. Instead of Mr. Hoover, who had much to do with Its building. Mr. Hoover Is also worrying the Repub licans. vnh thorn he Is no ghost, but a Rrlm reality as a presidential candidate, now busy getting in the first tnlks. see The Governor, beleaguered by re quests from counties for special prosecutors Co Investigate gambling scandals, scents a political plot on the pnrt of gamblers to maks the alot-mschlne an Issue, and suggests that the counties do their own Investigating, at their own expense. The state has neither the special prosecutors nor the money needed. This Is good logic, that can be overcome by placing a slot machine In every grnnd Jury room, and us ing the "take" to paV the expenses of the Investigation of Itself. see The youngest B. Hammond boy yesterday blew out 18 candles cn a cake. e e e Alarms are now felt prejudices will arise against foreign borti people of this state. The state has few foreigners, but plenty of prejudices. I Dan Hmvard Itetttrne Dan Howard returned. Saturday wl'.h Mrs. Howard from Cirangeville. Idaho, where he ha been reooverlTig from Injuries received when the airplane he was piloting plunued to earth about three weeks eco. Mr. Howard declared he does not tntrr.d to Rive up flying be cause) ot the accident. Just a MIGHT as well be optimistic) about it There is a small item in today's news which, if true, may mean; No European war. The cessation of hostilities in Ethiopia much sooner than expected. THE dispatch is from Addis Ababa. It claims the King of Kings has already received peace overtures from Mussolini. Asked directly if the report is true, a representative of the Ethiopian government answered "practically so." Rome was queried in the same way. The answer was an emphatic: "Nothing to it. We have just started to fight." Yes, but only a few days ago when Rome was queried as to the reported air attack on Adowa, there was an equally emphatic denial. Now that attack is a matter of history, and the official denial, well it's just another one of those things. In other words if you wish the truth about this war, don't go to Rome for it. e e e e e IF Mussolini HAS started to feel out Haile Selassie regarding peace thus early in the game, it can mean only one thing. II Duce is not such a d. f. as he appears. He appreciates the difficulties of a long drawn out campaign in Ethiopia, and the dangers to him and his country, if his campaign of conquest should lead to a general European conflagration. ' So what does he dot He starts to talk peace, at the very FIRST opportunity, which comes with the fall of Adowa. To have backed out of this reckless enterprise before, would have been impossible, after all these months of sabre rattling, to quit before he had started would have meant his downfall at home. It was one of those things that couldn't be done, regard less of the dangers involved in defying the League of Nations, and incurring the hostility and ill-will of the civilized world. But now with the fall of Adowa, one of the chief objectives of the war against Ethiopia, sentimentally, has been obtained. It gives something of the same patriotic and emotional satisfac tion to the Italian people, that the sinking of the Spanish fleet gave to" the people of this country, following the blowing up of the Maine. With Italian arms steadily advancing on all fronts, with the casualty lists not yet coming in, with the Fascist crowds in Italy still cheering II Duce, what better time than the present to have King Selassie sue for peace. For of course the peace overture would have to come FROM HIM. No doubt Mussolini's recent move was secretly offering Ethiopia certain concessions, if she would start the peace ball rolling, NOW. ALL of which is hypothetical of course. But, if the Addis Ababa report IS true, then it does give some assurance, that there is some sanity left in Fascist Italy after all; that the Ethiopian adventure is not merely an outburst of militant mnd ness, which won't stop until it wears itself out, and that if Mussolini can save his face, and get some territorial concessions (which King Selassie offered sometime before hostilities start ed) as well, he will be willing to cull it a day, and save his country from further cost in blood and treasure of continued war, and provent the breaking out this year at least, of anothor European war. The Plug Hat Demagogue IT would bring tears to the eyelids of a brass monkey to hear these eastern Liberty Leaguers agonize over a proposed change in the Constitution. To hear them rave one would think the Constitution was petrified, that it never had changed, that it never could change. Yet eight short years ago these self same friends of a cast-iron Constitution were yelling their bends off demanding a change in the Constitution as it affected the pro hibition of the sale of liquor. More than that most of them openly violated and angrily advocated violation of the provision of the 18th Amendment which was as much a part of the Consti tution then as tho 14th. Amendment with its sacred clauses pro tecting property is a part of the Constitution today. DONT get the notion that the demagogues are always flannel mouthed yappers who incite the poor to treason. The fart that a man years a plug hat and a double-breasted watch chain over his white vest doesn't keep him from being a deningogun teaching bitter class hatred to solidify tho rich and turn thorn against the poor. And in this rabblo-rousing save the Constitution, don't bo paralvzers of the Constitution is ber the constitutional records of ing the propaganda of the Liberty The American Constitution over written. But part of its wisdom lies in it's flexibility. We have amended it twenty-one times, and probably in the next decado will add two or three new amendments and still the flag will wave. The country still will be prospering and the gov ernment nt Washington will reign over a free and happy people. Wm. Allen White in Emporia FEHL OVERRULED Or.Jectlons to mo findings of fact ami decree In the Interpleader suit of Nledermeyer, Inc., filed by Earl It. Fehl, state prison In mat, and Corlnthla K. Htalley, were overruled in ft decision by Circuit Judge Carl B, Wlmberly of Dour Ins county, filed with the county clerfc. The court held thai 'the objec tion were not filed within the time pro Tided In equity cuci, The objections are based upon technical point of law and that certain comment! by the . court in the decree are unnecessary. In the matter of the aawaw cost bill of Jackson county for the cost of trying Fehl In Klamath county for Tote stealing, the drfne hold that the decision makea Electa A. PVhl, wife of the defendant, finan cially liable with her husband, when Jnrkson county has no claim against bar lor trial eipetue. Chance campaign which is going on to fooled by men whose record as bo raw and so recent. Remem the gentry v!m are promulgat League. is the wisest charter of liberty (Kan.) (lazettc. PEAR SHIPMENTS REACH 1531 MARK IVnr shipments Horn the Rogue River valley for the cwnson pnssed the IftOO mark: Inst week, with a totnl of I Ml cars, Apple shipment to dnte totnl 18 cars, Sunday was the lightest ahlppliw day in two month, with one cur of pear and one enr of tipplre be ing dispatched. Last week there was a lull in picking and packing oper ations. Harvesting of the Winter Netils pears and Newtown apples was re newed this morning, with mot ni the orchards getting underway Clearing weather following the ram of Inst week has made condition!, ideal. Many orchard l.t started pick ing last week. Picking and parkin: for the year la expect rd to he ended by the first week of Novrmher. Use Mall Tribune want ads. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease amgnusis or treatment win be answered by nr. Brady If a scamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink Uwlng 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, 269 El Csmlno, Beverly TUB AUTONOMY OP Breathing is self-governed, auto matic, autonomous, yet you can speed up or retard breathing or stop It al- .'ZZ!! together for - a while. During sleep your breath ing goes right on, even more effici ently than when you are awake and assuming an unnatural, pos ture or perhaps consciously striv ing to breathe deeply. In short your lungs func tion best when you keep your mind off them. All that is true also of the intes tine, only more so, Altho it la possi ble to disturb the function of the Intestine indirectly, so that the peri staltic movements or propulsive waves become for a time less frequent and less vigorous, or more frequent and more vigorous, the duration of any such Indirect effect of a medicine or an emotion or of the character of food taken is limited, and so far as present knowledge goes, such modifi cations of Intestinal function are temporary only. The regular or nor mal activity of the Intestine cannt be permanently affected by such a cause but If the medicine, emotion or food which Is capable of disturbing the function Is repeatedly taken, day after day, the same effects may be repeatedly produced. That la all the constipation habit amounts to. Many Individuals who have been educated by nostrum vendors and quacks imagine the evil of constipa tion lies In the poisoning of the sys tem by retained waste matter. That Is sheer quack hokum, without even plausible scientific basis. The best evidence of the absurdity of the mor bid notion of "autointoxication" Is the fact that so many of its who know bettor arid never use any sort of laxa tive or physic become quite consti pated at times, pay no attention, do nothing about It and suffer no Incon venience or unpleasant symptoms whatever. The Intestine Is autonom ous. Don't Interfere and It will regu late Itself. Constipation is a p red lea- ' ment rather than an ailment; the consequence of bad habit rather than i the habit. You cannot permanently alter the NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Oct. 7. Diary: By rirst post ' came Harry Btlllwell Ed wards' autographed copy of his "Aneaa Afrlcan- us," that mag nificent chron ology of Negro loyalty that wrings my heart. A gay note from Harry Leon Wil son, too, and a postcard from Claire Luce, do- lng the theatres of Moscow. So tapping out my Jot. This day I heard the Ed Nolans had left Los Angeles per manently for residence In Houston. Later to see Eileen and Virginia Rothncker at the Waldorf and chat ted In tho foyer & moment with Oscar, who seems as alert as he was 2i yearB ago. Tho Will Hayscs to dinner and away early. And my wife and 1 talked of play actors most remem bered In hit parts, and Sidney Toler and Percy Kilbride were our mutual choices. Early to bed starting the first novel ever I read by Temple miley, called "Pair aa the Moon." And goodlsh, too. Frederick Lonsdale, who antedat ed Noel Coward writing decadent nonsense of the sophisticates, has returned to his trade after a three year Iny-off, with a London play starring Edna Beat. It Is said to reach a new high In fluffy mirth. Lonsdale was once a waiter and got his inspirations for lampooning May fair, overhearing conversations ot those he served. The West 70's reveal many arch itectural reminders of the building genius of the late "Daddy" Brown ing. Despite his eccentricities, he was first to see the eventual met ropolitan need for small apartments with kitchenettes. He rushed up a half dozen thin white shafts at a time when the expansive duplex and triplex era? was on. I am told his ventures weathered the depres sion. Among auspicious suburban developments to which he lent a hand was Jackson Heights, probably the most completely rented area on Long Island. Personal nomination for the smoothest of the old time vaude ville acts that of Ted Lewis and his crying clarinet. In leaving the radio temporarily. 1 hear Paul Whlteman Is actuated solely by a desire not to lose ht crown as master or the sort of mu sio he fostered. He has been at the whim of program makers and the whistling and dancy tunes that spun America into a collective waiw wrre more or less subjugated for potpourri of piffle Jokes, gsga and .-kits. In short. TauI, and deservedly no, considers himself a serious art ist. Not a Balleff. Tha pool table Is also getting a new deal. Manufacturer lave start ed a movement to remove the stig ma of a Oas House environment and Jockey t back Into the sedste mansion They are changing the color of the cloth, dropping that a iW5s. Cv " I Hills. Cal. LUNGS AND INTESTINE functioning of the lungs by holding your breath or by deep breathing or faster breathing for a few moments every day or every hour. Nor can you permanently alter the function of the Intestine by any tern porary Interference. Even tho you take one physic or another every day for years, the bowel function remains unchanged, and will continue quite normally If you suddenly quit taking the physic. The natural autonomic regulation will require from three to five days to readjust itself, but It In variably does so, If only you have enough brains to wait and leave the machinery alone. This is not theory, but the practical experience of thous ands of readers who have regained freedom from the physio habit. The harmful poisoning associated with constipation is not the imagi nary ' autointoxication" but the poi soning of the entire organism by drugs taken as physic. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Suleratus Is baking soda harmful If taken every day to ward off colds? (K.A.R.) Answer Yes. It doesn't ward off anything. It would rather tend to Interfere with the natural develop ment of Immunity, I believe. Calcium Lactate Some time ago you mentioned pos sible relief for hay fever by treatment with calcium lactate. (B. E, Answer Send stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for monograph on Hay Fever. Bed Wetting ' Six year old son confirmed bed wetter; I have punished, bribed, beg ged and shamed. (Mrs. L. B.) Answer You have done everything wrong. Send stamped envelope bear ing your address and ask for mono graph on bed wetting, but be sure to mention that your son wets the bed, otherwise no advice. Raw Cucumber Are fresh green cucumbers Injuri ous if eaten raw? Ls it necessary to soak the poison out of them . . . (Mrs. T. R. S.( Answer They are wholesome and healthful raw. If you like them. They contain no poison and so require no soaking. Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Ilrady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 260 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. poisonous green of old-fashioned wall paper for softer hues, white, dove gray and sky blue. And there's an attachment which goes over the table to make It suitable for ping pong or a hunt breakfast. Tip: That famous picture of Mark Twain at billiards would make a striking ad. Rudy Vallee's fixedness in the top drawer of the amusement world proves to be a phenomenon of a chimerical industry. Men who have watched the changes confess they are nonplussed. For five years they have been saying this is Rudy's last year. Then he bobs up with a con tract for a weekly salary bigger than ever. The reason Is not diffi cult to fathom. At every perform ance he turns in his best. That wins In every line. Horatio Alger, Jr.. used to tell us. Thingumabobs: The Billy See-mans have three old oaks transplanted to their Central Park West pent house . . . King Leopold of Belgium subscribes to six American monthly magazines ... He likes stories by Ernest Hemingway . . . Prank Sul livan finds Will Cuppy restful be cause Cuppy usually feels worse than he does , . . Ellen Glasgow's most confidential friend Is James Branc Cabell . . . The Prince of Wales speaks better French than most Frenchmen . . . Frank Craven be gan acting at five, his father, moth er and grandparents on both sides were troupers. A post card from the parents ot a four-year old in Olympia, Wash., reveals that the youngster had her own reason for disliking surf bath ing. Found sulking far from the water's edge, she double negatived: "I don't like no water that come runntn' at you hunchback." SECOND 1IFTING3 Mary Jullano, member of a gypsy band, fined 145 and costs In jus tice court Saturday, for the sdrolt removal from the pockets of Wil liam Stucker of a wallet containing 53. figured in another pickpocket episode, according to county author ities, wherein she "lifted" a purse containing $15 from the pocket oi a truck driver, and waa later forced to return It. She returned Stucker's 5M and paid the $145. so operations were not profitable The truck driver, according to the police version, was fixing a tire alongside the Pacific highway when the gypsy auto drove up and atop ped, and Mary alighted. Sne ap proached the truck driver and his companion warned him. He replien he, was on his guard. The gypsy lady, in gay and flowing skirts left In high dudgeon, After the tire was changed, the truck driver took inventory of his pockets and lo. the $15 was missing. The truck driver overtook the gypsy auto and forced it to the side of the road, where a con fa 0 was held on the return of the $lV After threats and denials, the money There a no other reports of . .i,(.n.v. B,ms'..f(n .kin WINDOW OLAS We sell window glass and will replsce youi Druksn erinduws reasonably, rruwande Cab inet Works. Comment on the Day's News By FBANK JENKINS AS WE read the flaring headlines these fateful days, two ques tions arise: 1, Why does Italy want varf 2. Why do England and Prance want peace? IS IT because Italy Is Inherently wicked and sinful, careless 01 the rights of others and thinking only of her own place In the sun; whereas England and France are ln-w herently sweet and lovely? Nr, all. Is because England and Prance already HAVE WHAT THEY WANT, and so wish to keep things as they are, while Italy HASN'T got what she wants, and so wishes to change things. War, you know, Is the great changer, ENGLAND (meaning, of course, Great Britain) partly as a re sult of the world war and partly as a result of various wars during the past two or three centuries, has a great colonial empire, embracing about one-fourth of the surface ot the earth. Prance, chiefly as the result of the outcome of the world war, In cluding the Juggling and the bluf fing that went on at the peace table, likewise has an Important colonial empire and a very favor able state of affairs at home.' Both are content. Neither wants the present comfortable situation altered. Both are willing, If neces sary, to FIGHT in order to KEEP what -they have already seized. M. war and cheated at the peace table poker game, Is far from satis fied with things as they are, and wants something better than she has. How Is she to get what she wants? Obviously, the only way Is by go ing to war. for If Italy should ask Britain and Prance to share with her the loot of their past wars, so that she might be' as happy and comfortable as they, she would get whit the diplomats would term an exchange of views, but which the man In the street would call the hoarse hoot. IT IS the old, old story of the haves and the have-nots. The haves want to keep things as they are, . for existing conditions are PLEASANT. The haves have everything to lose and nothing to gain by change. The have-nots, on the other hand, have everything to gain and nothing to lose by kicking up a disturbance. Britain and Prance, In the present Instance, are the haves, and Italy Is the have-not. BRITAIN and France will have much to say of their high moral motives In seeking to prevent war. Pay no attention to what they say, for their motives are neither high nor moral. They are merely seeking to keep what they have. WE Americans are apt to be the world's prize saps sentimental ists Is the kindlier but less accurate word. Back In world war days, we let ourselves be worked on by exper ienced European propagandists until we finally got Into the war with the Idea that we were making the world safe for democracy, whereas we were merely helping the Allies to lick the Germans eo that they could take their shirts. Let's have more sense this time. If we have any sense at all, we will take no stock In the contention of Great Britain and France that in seeking to prevent Italy from going to war with Ethiopia they are sacrificing themselves to serve the welfare of the world. APPEAL OCT. 9TH Arguments on the appeal of Kyle Pugh, Josephine county resident, under a five year sentence In state prison for conviction of criminal syndicalism, by a Jackson county Jury, will be argued before the su preme court Wednesday. Briefs of both sides In the case have been filed. Pugh was charged with attempted sale and distribution In this county of communistic literature advocat ing the overthrow of the American form of government by force. The appeal of the High brothers. Robert N. (Babe) and Oeorge A., of Ashland, under a four and one half year sentence ea.h In state prison for conviction of setting fire to the Balfour-Guthrie barn near Ashland In January, 1933. will be I argued oeio in. n.gn n mly. October 16. The sentence was passed last April. Oeorge A. High Is at liberty ai present on bonds. His brother is held In the county Jail In lieu lot bonds. EASTBOUND PLANE (Continued from Page One.) It was first reported, about 2:30 a. m that the plane waa overdue. Located Nfeflf Dawn. 'We flew ships all night over the area, but did not find the wreckage until after dawn," said one air lines employe. Officials rushed to the scene by auto and began at once to Investi gate the smashup after the coroner, Paul Worland, had been notified nd had started work of extricating the 12 bodes from the tangled mass of debris. . "The plane apparently struck the top of one hill, lost its propeller and engine, and then bounced, nose first, against the top of another hill." said Bill Hoar, assistant manager for the company here. "We have been unable to determine the exact cause of the accident. The weather was excellent and it appear ed Colllson had good flying sped "There was no fire, but apparently the entire crew and all the pas sengers were killed when the plane hit the second time." Hit Peak of Hill. "The ground Is level except for a few smaU hills. The ship apparently struck one of these right at the peak." The plane waa the company's regu lar eastbound plane number four from Oakland. Cal., to New York City. Colllson was one of the veterans of the airmail service. He flew in the open cockpit days on the transmoun tain run when airmail operations were In charge of the government. He led the search for the Ill-fated United Airlines ship that crashed in the Wasatch mountains, IS miles west of Salt Lake City, In a storm in March, 1934. Before today's tragedy, that was the only serious accident the line had experienced. Passengers Named. Besides Pilot Colllson and co-pilot and stewardess. United Airlines offic ials announced the following nine passengers were killed: G. H. Miner, Park Lane Hotel, Chi cago. C. H. Matthews, Jr., Pittsburgh. J. Cushing, Los Angeles. Roy R. Balne, en route from Salt Lake City to Chicago. Vincent Butler of Oakland. Miss Juliet Hillman of Pittsburgh. Walter B. Crandall, Associated OH company, San Francisco, Mrs. Coralyn Cathcart of Portland. Ore. The cause of the accident cannot be determined, company officials said, until the department of commerce completes Its investigation. f Meteorological Report , October 7, J935. Forecasts. Medford and vicinity: Fair tonight and Tuesday; warmer Tuesday with lower humidity. Oregon: Fair tonight and Tuesday, but fogs locally on coast; warmer In terior of west portion Tu?sday, with lower humidity. Local Data. Temperature a year ago today: Highest, 70; lowest, 54. Total monthly precipitation, 0.49 inch. Excess for the month. 0.31 Inch. Total precipitation since September 1. 1935, 0.75 inch. Excess for the sea son, .05 Inch. Relative humidity at 5 p. m. yes terday, 39; 5 a. m. today, 98. Sunrise tomorrow, 6:16 a. m. Sunset tomorrow, 5:41 p. m. Observations Taken at 3 a 120 Meridian Time. i cj 53 fl ? g f Boise Boston Chicago Denver EureXa Helena Los Angelas MEDFORD New York Omaha Phoenl Portland Reno Roaeburg Salt Lake San Francisco Seattle Spokane Walla Walla Waahlngton, D.C. 73 48 .... Clear 44 40 .06 Cloud; 48 36 .06 P. Cld7 70 46 . Cloudy 60 48 ... Clear 68 46 T. Cl5 73 68 .. Cloudy 80 48 .... Clear 50 38 .63 Clear 53 40 .03 Cloudy 98 6 P. Cldy 66 52 Clear 74 43 Clear 66 SO Cloudy 80 36 Clear 68 .... 66 50 F.wjy 70 44 Clear .... 50 .... Clear 44 36 .08 Clear APPROVE TALENT SEWERFUND PLEA TALENT. Oct. 7.- fSpl.l A tele gram has been received by Mayor Hart stating that Talent's application for sewer funds, amounting to $35,000 . had been approved by the government and that the funds would be avail able as soon as Talent's council met the necessary preliminary details. It will be necessary for Talent to I have trt complete detailed plan of j the sewer and disposal plant ready by j Nov. 1st. Work must start not later' than Dec. 15th. Forty-five percent of this Brant is a direct gift from the j itovernment, 55 percent is loaned to ( the city for a period of from 10 to 20 years. Holds False Teeth Tighter and Longer This new delightful po-vder keeps false teeth from rocklrw. slipping cr , dropping. No pvsiy lA< or fee'.ln. Olves perfect conflcienre all dsv lo:vi. Oet Fssteeth from your dru.:,!.; Three sues. Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County hisiury front the files of the Mai Tribune 10 and 20 Year TEN YEARS AGO TODAY October 7, 1925. (It was Wednesday.) Walter Johnson hurls Washington to a 4 to 1 victory over Pittsburgh In the first game of the world series, and holds the Pirates helpless. Repairs to West Main street pave ment urged. Phil M. Kershaw la named a mem ber of the city council. Voters urged to "build a city for the future" at polls tomorrow. Op position urges "crush the Medford gang," at Natatorlum, and "breaks up in more or less disorder." Orator of the evening attacks the Mall Tribune, the power company, the Republican administration and Chamber of Com merce. Christy Mattehwson, Idol of base ball fans, near death from tubercu losis, Intensified by war gas burns in Prance. Total of 69 divorce suits filed te county so far this year. It la a rec ord. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 7, 1915. (It was Thursday.) Small hall at Nat rented by real estate agent for speech "in which I will peel the hide off the courthouse ring and the Medford gang." Germany and Austria start inva sion of .Serbia. President Woodrow Wilson will wed Washington, D. C, widow in Novem ber. Bost. local favorite to defeat Phil adelphia In first game of world series. Jonas Wold and W. P. Qulsenbury charged with hunting pheasants on Canal company property. Thomas A. Carlton, Flounce Rock district stockman, and Miss Gertrude Ulrlch of this city are wed at Pres byterian church, by the Rev. W. P. Shields. (Continued from Page One) With the battle fleet stationed in the harbor, and tuna production set ting a new record, tho community is bcmlng. Yet approximately 90,000 persons in this neighborhood are at!!I on relief. (The population of the city proper i about 180,000.) Tho sucess of this and the Chicago fair is about to bring on what may be a national rash of such events. There will be one In Dallas next year, possibly one In Los Angeles and Port land the year following, and one in San Francisco the third year. New York Is planning one. too, for 1939. Perhaps all can succeed, but It la doubtful. The fact Is this fair will break about even. Attendance did not come up to expectations, but the original Invest ment was curtailed because many buildings were left over from the 1916 exposition. There Is Inside talk about reopen ing It In January, and this probably will be done. The fair is certainly worth a Tlslt for anyone who has the money, it cannot approximate Chicago in ex travagance, but It has a tropical foli age setting which gives it surpassing natural beauty. , Only two critics have panned it. One was a national news magazine whose criticism was written in New York. The other was Judje. Jr.. who lamented the audacity of the nudist colony sideshow. A number of private investigations of the evangelist. Almee MacPherson, have been made by interested author ities, although they have not been made public. Most were made with the Intention of exposure, which later proved to be unjustified. At least one of the reports concluded that Sister Almee Is sincere in her relig ious beliefs, an unparalleled show man (better than Billy Sunday). It also conceded th-it she Uces much good amon,- the people to whom she appears. Her popularity has (alien off. but she still has a substantial following. Hollywocdsmen on the inside de scribe the Barrymoro-Bar.-Ie cross country chase (which drew more at tention out here than Mr. Rooaevelfs Frcmon farm speech) as "Just another Barrymore ga.?." It seems that the msn who lives Hamlet has a quslnt sense of humor. He did not need the publicity. As a box office attraction he Is standing well amon-j glrl-glg-glers. The reason he Is making few picture! s that he won't work Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can get relief now with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than CreomuU sion. which goes right to the seat of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the inflamed mem branes as the germ-laden phlegm Is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, don't be discouraged, your drucgist is authorized to guarantee Creomulston and to refund your money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. uet t-rconiuion ngnt now. tftavj