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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1935)
PXGE FOUR . MEDFOTtD MXIt TRIBUNE, IfEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1935 MedfordTribune MBerron 8onth.ra OracM Beade the 1UU Trlbon" DaU Except Batardaj. PuDllahed br liBDrORD PRINTIMO CO. I.I-S M. Fir 8t ' ROBSRT W. BUHL. Hdltor. As Independent Nairapapar. Entered aa Mtond-oUM niur J Med ford. Oreon. under Act of Maroh 1. 1" iinefRIPTTdH &A.TE By Vail Io Advance: Dally, ona year.... Dally, ala inootbe..... ,11.x , 1.11 , .10 aah. By Carrt.r, In Adanca Madford. Point. land. Jaoaoni". -"- Fboenli. Talent. Oold Hill I . blahwaya. Dally, ona yaar.. ... Dally, all inootha. Dally, ona month . All terma, caab In ad.aac. Official Papar of tba City of Udlr. Official rapar oi ,.-. HKS1HKB OF THB A8SOCIATISO HBEBg Hterlvlni Fall Leeeed Wire SerTloe. Tha Aaaoolatad Praaa la aoluilaly an tltlad to tba uaa for publication of all eewa dlapatehaa oradltad to It or other. wl.e cradlted In thla papar, and alao to tha local oawa publlahad herein. All rlBhta for publication of epeolal dlapatohaa herein ara alao raaaryad. MEMBER OF nNITBDPBBSi MEMBER OF AUDIT BURSATJ OF CIRCUUkTIONS Adaertlalm R,Dree.ntatlei M. 0. UOGE.NSE.N COMPANl Offtcaa In New lork. Chicago Datrolt Sao Franclaeo. Lot Anaalaa, Seattle, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Artbar Perry. The emergency eewlon of the legl. lature. apparently Intent on Intro ducing bllU covering everything but their own much-needed Abolishment, adjourned over the week-end. The raceaa waa for the purpose of Attend ing football game Saturday after noon In Portland. Instead of going to church In Salem Sunday morning, as rumored. a a a A German psychologist report he finds "husbands are happiest If their wives are unhappy." A ldy. who Is no psychologist, but deeply Tersed In the ways of the brutes, re ports this Is alio what makes them happy. as There la considerable scolding of tha Roosevelt Boys, over tha radio, and In tha press, for tha speedy and reckless manner In which they drive their high-sptrtted autos. on, t least one occasion, nsrrowly avert ing an entanglement with a loco motive at a crossing. Ona faoetloua eastern parsgrapher alleges tha sons of the chief executive travel wherever they Journey at 80 to 80 mllea per, because they are trying to catch up with their Ma. So far, the boya, In their motoring, hava known enough not to pick up a hitch-hiker, and get hit in the need with a monkey wrench. . a a a A brush fire roared over southern California, causing 88.000.000 damage, and giving a number of He-film actors an excuse to hava their pic tures taken in their undershirt and BVDS. a a a A CAST-IRON NOOOIN. (Chtro (Calif.) Enterprise) Though It waa all up hill, h gathered such momentum en route that his brakes wouldn't hold and skidded Into a camp wngon and as he dived beneath It to climb up on the hounds, he struck the king bolt with his heed, shearing It off as though by a cold chisel. a a T.ANDOK MILKS COW IN BUSI NESS SUIT" (BUklyous Messenger Hdllne) What tha dressy Bossy Is wearing. see Hermy Offenbeoher of the Apple gate towned Sat., dressed in his Sunday eost, and his Friday over alls. a a a Hog-Corn farmers voted over whelmingly for the continuation of Santa Claus In governmental affairs, via payment for hogs they do not rslse. The neit referendum will be to reimburse the consumer and the worker for the pork-chops he can't arford to buy. a a a The tears and cheera of Saturdays football battles hava died and been dried. A number of teams csme out the little end of the horn, end Just as many survived with their goal lines "unsullied." The usual number were "defeated but not beaten." The CofO. waa to all Interna and pur poses massacred, as completely as during tha long years when they worried more about the preservation of their traditions, than the accumu lation of touchdowns. a a There waa an election last Batur. day. The voters did not pour out voiumtnouily. They were not mad at the district attorney, and had not been lied to for seven months, a a a A DYNAMIC MOlTilFn,. "A lot' of goggle-eyed, moss covered Iron bound conservatives will try to take charge of the Republican party. The hsrd-bolled reactionaries sre now flying a kite with tha name of Char'e A. Lindbergh on It. No more charming personality haa appeared In two decades than Col. Lindbergh, but the country has a right to know where he stands. We have a charmer In the White House now, and w don't want to change him for an other. If the Incumbent charmer had declared three years ago that he would be standing where we find him. he would be polishing his pant In his private law office Instead of on the big fat chair In tha Whit Houae. (William Allen Whit In Princeton University psper). 4 Wedding Night In Jail. CHICAGO, Oct. 38. (UP) Der mott Kelly, 90, and his bride of few hours, Mary, 18. spent their wed ding merit In separate cells last n!rb.. Mirr:M at Wau;n. they sxrtreaAfyi hf-rplneaa too noiMlv at Editorial Correspondence VICTORIA, B. a, Oct 24. When we were here three or four months ago we discovered something about Wednesday afternoons on this tight little isle. Don't try to do any business during that period of mid-week. For it's a holiday. Everything shuts up at noon on Wednesday and you can't even buy one of Mr. Rogers' Victoria creams until the next morning. a a a a That was one reason we scheduled this flying visit to start on the afternoon of Thursday. But we were to learn another lesson. Never try to do any business on Thursday in Victoria or any other part of Canada, if tha last Thursday in the month is Canada's Thanksgiving Day, and not a wheel stirring except on the family Chevrolet. We never knew Canada had a Thanksgiving Day before, but we know -it now and will never forget it. We have been wandering about on deserted streets for over eight hours, talking to our selves and wondering why in the Not that our business was we never found a city where stores close up as in Victoria. was held before our boat landed a motor cycle climbing contest the city, but we had seen all form of recreation in the news predicament, there are alwavs and diverting medium for killing least not on the last Thursday of the month of Uctober. We visited every movie house in the place and not only were they all packed to the doors but there were long queues outside waiting to get in. One of these mob-pulling attractions was "Night Life of the Gods" combined with "Charley Chan m Paris." (Toll that to Gene Childers and see if even he doesn't smile and buy you a nickel cigar!) ee.ee Yen, Sir. Not only was this the case all afternoon, but fol lowing tea at the Crystal Gardens and a walk along the sea wall, we tried the early movies around seven-thirty. There were the queues again, looked like the same ones. Now we like the movies as well as the next man, in fact we put ourselves down as a couple of movie fans, but we have never yet seen the movie we would stand in line for, for more than five or six minutes and then only if we thought there was better than an even chance So we didn t attend the movies, we didn t attend anything, we simply resumed our "street walking." a a . a a However, there was one compensation. In fact the older we get and who doesn'tf the more convinced we are, that only excepting the force of gravity perhaps, the law of compensa tions is the most constant force in human life. It is always working. In fact, we have a pious idea that one of the secrets of successful living is to concentrate one's attention on this beneficent element in our mundane existence. It is so useful in easing one safely and comfortably over the chuck holes and through the unwanted detours At any rate, if we had found on Thanksgiving afternoon we would never have run into Isadore Bacharach on the sea wall, directly in front of the Emrress hotel, and thus discover a scheme far better than the Townsend plan to insure perpetual prosperity. Isadore -he spelled out his name for us, proved to be some thing new in our experience, a Hebrew tramp. He looked the part in both directions, a two weeks' growth of black beard on a decidedly Hebraic face, ragged olothes and ragged over coat several times too large, but and comfortable looking. We toward us whore we sat on the recessed seat along the sea wall. Two other things we noticed, the .man had a bunch of wadded newspaper in his breast pocket, where a handkerchief usually protmdes, and the clearest brightest pair of large brown eyes one could imagine so fresh and clean in that dirty unshaven face, they gave one a shock like running into a couple of clear mountain springs bubbling up in a mucky swamp. He pulled out a bunch of soiled wadded hotel folders and time tables from his overcoat pocket and asked us, jerking his head in that direction, if the Black-ball ferry was running to Port Angeles. Having taken the ferry for Port Angeles last July we happened to know that season and was closed up for the This started a conversation an hour, and gave ns enough material for a book entitled "How To Enjoy Perfect Health And Day." Isadore Bacharach the name U. S. A. left Syria three years ago, arrived in New Tork as a stowaway, walked from New York, with the assistance of the Ci P. H. through Canada to Vancouver and had been on Vancouver Island three weeks. He walks from teu to fifteen milps per day, always sloeps in the open, and subsists almost exclusively on water and meat. He prefers goat meat to any thing else, and for some time, lived on wild goats in the north part of the island. Meat, he claims, can always be secured in city or country, without cost. lie cents for dog meat but not often. has made him immune to all diseases of oiviuzed man. tie could take a bath in t. b. germs and never get so much as a cough. He has no aches or pains, Beforo lonsed glasses, now he can see at all. To prove it he read the harbor when it was at least Joiin." He has everything he wants, is absolutely independent and free, the entire world is his, about two cents per day, lie tourist pamphlets and only works when he has to, which isn t often, ss he can live on five or six dollars a year. He is enroute to California for tha winter, and is looking for the shortest boat trip to the mainland, which will also be the cheapest, so he was sorry to learn the Black-ball ferry is tied up for the winter. Vcs, it sounds a bit fishy, but that's the story Isadore told ss to those pockets full of time tables, folders and what not, they are proof of where he has been, when one of these days he returns to his Syrian home, and recounts his travels to fsmily and friends 1 So that's the life of the "blanket stiff." Perfect health, never an ache nor pain, jaunting around the world at two cents per day. Was Isadore spoofing 'tourists in front of the Kmpressl Maybe. But he and his folders ami time tables went on their wav, and never asked a dime. R. V. a $30,000 HOT JEWELRY DISCOVERED BY POLICE WASHINGTON, Oct. 38. (UP) Folic were confronted laat night with a attuatton of the man-bltea-dog variety. They held a man and woman In custody on whom they had nelred 130.000 In Jewelry, but no one had reported any theft. Tha prison ers wouldn't tlK. tia aUU Tbui tut ad. that Thursday happens to be of October. For that Thursday with turkey, all the trimmings heck we came. so important, but time is. And there is so little to do when the There was a football game but it at one-thirty p. m. There was on a hill about six miles from we cared to eee of that strange reels. In most cities, in such a the movies that most restful time. But not in Victoria at of winning that $3001 in life's journey. something to do in Victoria a pair of good shoes, strong noted the shoes as he came it only ran during the tourist winter. which wandered along close to See the World On Nothing a he adopted after reaching the .sometimes has to pay a few The open air life, he claims, he left he had to wear thick like a hawk without any glasses name of the boat coining in the 4110 yards away the "Princess and he is seeing it at a cost ot collects time tables, hotel and SING SING RECRUITS MORF. INTELLECTUAL OWNING, N. T.. Oct, 98 (CP) Sing sint is going Intellectual, pur ine, ths past year 5" college men have been Imprisoned and 303 new prison ers are high school graduates, author ities disclosed today. Bl'CKlNOHAMS HOMK-MADK CANDY, Whip Cream rwlfre Re 40c lb., special IJe lb. Ths Creat, its Contra. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal bealtb and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment trlU b aniwered By Or. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number ot letter received only a tew can be answered No reply can be made to qnertes not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 864 El Camlno, Beverly HI 111, Cat. UNDULANT PTVKR Milk may b perfectly freen, rich, attractively bottled and capped, per fect In taste and served in the moat cleanly manner yet contain the germs of undulant fever. Case of undu lant fever (Mal ta fever. Medi terranean fever, Gibraltar fever, a It - haa been variously known) occur in every a t a t e 1 n the country, in Can- ad a, Denmark, Sweden, and oth er European countries, in Tu nls, Algeria. New Zealand, South Africa. The disease waa probably brought to thla coun try In 1905, when the U. S. Bureau of Animal Industry imported some goat from Malta, selected from the finest stock on the Island, to be used to build up healthy herds of mtlk producers in thla country. Several of the officers and men who drank the goats' milk on the voyage fell 111 with Malta fever; two who hed boil ed the milk before drinking It es caped the Illness. The goats were aiaughtered snortiy after arriv ing at the quarantine station here, but a woman at the station had al ready contracted the disease. There la so much similarity be tween tsne germ of contagious abor tion In cattle and that of undulant fever in man, that some bacteriolo gists believe the contagious abortion germ, not rarely present In cows' milk, may cauae undulant' fever In man. The present agitation for com pulsory par-bolllng (pasteurizing) of all milk la baaed largely on this as sumption. Undulant fever la bad business. It la called "undulant" because the course of the Illness, which at first may be mistaken for typhoid, influ enza or rheumatic fever, is character istic a run of feverish Illness, then a period of comparative relief and im provement, followed by another run of fever, and so on, perhaps for months and months. A blood test, analagousto the Wi dal test for typhoid fever In man, la readily made by the bacteriologist, and this test definitely shows wheth er the cow harbors the germs of con tagious abortion. Well administered public health departments everywhere now require thla test or ail herds where the milk la to be sold raw. I like milk raw, and If the cow has been given the tuberculosis test and the blood test for contagious abortion (Bang's disease, Veterinariea call It) and haa not reacted to either, you may deliver me a couple of quarts of the raw milk every day. NEW YORK ; DAY BY DAY 'By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Oct.t 38. Diary: To breakfast came Nina Ayres, Pauline Taylor and Polly Grimes. Later talk ing to w. a Maud, who wrote "The Old Boat Rocke r," ti n d tip the avenue In a sudden skelp of rain to sit with Ryley Coop er, Just back from his Buf falo Bill align ment in Holly wood. Home and a sprig of the must exotic posies ever I saw from Irene Hayes, a bird of paradise effect, and Ewing Oallo way barglod by, newly from Ken tucky on his first vacation In IS years. Typing a stretch and to Mar garet and Brock Pemberton's tea. Dinner with my lady a place we selected In pasMng because it looked cor.y, called CheB Jean, and I squandered a pretty turn for crepes Burette. So to Conde Nast'a where came a mighty gathering to celebrate new operatic honors that have be fallen George Oershwtn. Royal Brown la regarded by maga zine editors as the are of the "love interest." His dreainv canoe drifting tn ths moonlight romances are sure fir circulation builders and his ca reer an epic of courage in afflic tion. As a Boston reporter 30 years ago he became stone denf. He now Uvea In a fling of portable houses along a bleak stretch of Cape Cod. a life of shy remoteness. He married a girt reporter whose llpa he has learned to read and she Is Inter preter when editors call. Brown, now 50. awy from his typewriter, spends moat of his time In a fast motor boat. Josephine Baker, the sand-toned gal from deep Harlem who went to Parts, became a famous dancer and innexed a waxed muatsrhed Italian count, finds her return to America something of a triumph. And hss been invited to many smart teas and after theatre binges. She sppears in gasping creations and rattles away In rrench like a born Parisian Josephine has salted her earnings, too. And has a peck of Jewels to boot. Personal nomination of the meet etpertly tvped man-aKMit-town William Rhlnelsnder iVeTrart. Vx-Klng Alfonso fe-rta Americana almost solely in his lighter moment In Europe. Hi especial itklng for Yankees began when Alexander Moore became American ambassador to his country. Through Moore he became familiar with draw poker and later chummy with several Americans, in chiding Ersklns Owynne. for Incog nito rounds of Psrts, Tor wversl vears he h hen esrer to visit the Uh? paxticuiajiy HUywood, tie J Si. f" m i FROM INFECTED MILK One magazine writer advocating pasteurisation of all milk aa a meas ure of prevention against undulant fever, asserts arbitrarily1 that "All statement that the food value of milk 1 appreciably lessened by pas teurisation have no basis in fact The only vitamin that 1 affected by pas teurisation 1 vitamin C . . . That statement 1 a confusing a the whole agitation of which it U a part. No one Imagines that par-bolllng Improves milk or renders It more effective In nutrition. The sole pur pose of pasteurizing or par-bolllng la to destroy the harmful germs the milk is likely to contain. ,If I am In doubt about the source of the milk, I prefer to bring the raw milk to a boil for one minute my self then I know the milk haa been made safe to drink. The only raw milk I recommend is Certified Milk, or Grade A Raw from cow or herd that has been both tu berculin tested and Bang's disease tested. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ,. Beer I am a girl 16 years old, five feet four Inches In height. I would like to know the answers to these two questions: 1. I ordinary beer fattening? 9. Is It harmful. I drink about two bottles a day. I like It very much. I weight 116 pounds. I drink plenty of milk and water too. But mother thinks beer Is harmful and will In terfere with my health. (Miss B. C.) . Answer You are fixe or six pounds underweight. Your mother la quite right. Better switch to milk, the real health beverage, before that craving for alcohol grows up. Fruit Seeds I have been told twice recently that eating fruits with seeds, such a grapes, whole currants, berries, figs, or accidental swallowing of pips when eating orangs, cantaloupe, etc., will cause appendicitis later on . . . (CO.) AnswerOn the contrary, the seeds of the first four-fruits tend to pre vent appendicitis. The larger pips or pits, accidentally swallowed are quite harmless. Refreshing . You any the itkln cannot absorb liquids. How account for the extraor dinary gratification I felt In bathing when I waa parched with thirst and could not drink the water which waa suspect? (C. H.) Answer Certainly you .absorbed no water thru the skin. The gratification waa probably from the cooling and re freshing effect of the bath. (Copyright 1935, John P. Dille Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wlshlnc to communicate with Dr. , Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D., 865 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cat. a pronounced movie fan and among his favorites sre Loretta Young, Mar. ion Davtes, Joan Crawford and Ruth Chatterton. For laughs he likes the flltterlnga of Edward Everett Hor ton. The most auspicious up-from-the-sldewalk hero of the night clubs la Eddie Gaar. the Impersonator, now wangling fat pay aa a polished floor entertainer In evening dress and silk hat. Not many years sgo he was a night club employee, but In 'one of the most Inconspicuous posts. He opened and closed auto doors for ar riving and departing guests. The Rlalto again has two of Its former stage favorites Lee Tracy and Jimmy Durante after several sabbatical years In Hollywood. In the msnner of Wslter Huston, another forthright actor who won film dis tinction, they come back to their early love. Like Houston, they were appearing In too many pictures and too often miscast. Houston's experi ment resulted In a flood of new movie offers. Bagatelles: Dean Harper, of the Texas University, Is a red tie fan cier . . . Prank R. Adams was the last s of Ray Long's friends to see him alive . . . Morris Gest appeared In the London Savoy recently with out furay hat and btsck bow tie . . , Nobody recognized him . . . Ltly Pons' parrot can Imitate Pop Eye the Sailor Man . . . Frazler Hunt started for the Ethiopian war on two hours notice. Bob Davis was talking about the pnastng of red-hot profanity. It's rarely heard any more, save on barges and docks. As a matter of fact, some of the moat alrallng epi thets are cussless. We had a grizzly, choleric character Grandpa used to say he looked as though he had been chewing tobacco all day against a strong wind In our town, who. when angry, would anort: "Snarlrrocketl" Try It out loud the next time you fly Into a real rage. It'a the real thing. (Copyright, UKIS. McNaught Syndi cate) I ALCOHOL DEATHS WASHTNOTON. Oct. 1 (tTPl Repeal of prohibition haa decreased tne number of deaths from alcohol by SO per cent, repeal associates, an onranlrstlon which sdrlaea stAtas on ho to frame liquor l. said last nieht. It published the result of a sur vey conduced anion phra'cian. This survey, according to repeal associates. confirmed census bureau figure showing that the death rate from aloohol during the prohibition years waa 3 44 per 100.000 and since prohi bition a 73 per lOO.OoO. One physician Dr. F. J. Douglas. Utlra. N. Y id he believed more persona were drinking now than be fore repeal but that there were fwer vue. of chirr hofis of the ltrr and cAbor aiimanv Menbuftad to ejcoooi. Comment on the Day 'i News By FRANK JENKINS A N American sailor, In Shanghai f (which Is in" China) is alleged to have pulled down the flag at a Japan ese shrine and trampled upon It. Japanese consular authorities are declared to have demanded apologies for tha alleged Insult. (Plea not the us of the words "declared" and "alleged." Tha report comes by way of the Japanese new agency, which quotes Its correspon dent at Tslngtao. You can't always tell about these foreign new agency report, because you cant' always tell what is propaganda and what isn't. In most foreign countries news is "doc tored" by government. It Is only when news is free and Independent that it can be relied upon.) BUT If an American sailor did ac tually did pull down a Japanese flag at a Japanese shrine and tram ple upon It. he should be severely punished. If your son should desecrate and befoul something your neighbor held sacred, you would turn him over your knee and give him a spanking he wouldn't soon forget. (You would, that Is, If you are right kind of par ent.) The same principles should apply to nations. SIX thousand delegates assembled in Chicago for the first annual convention of Townsend' clubs are told by their leaders that they have back of . them 31 million people "enough vote to elect any congress or any President In 936.,, They are urged to elect a congress and a President who will mak the Townsend plan Into law. THS Townsend plan proposes to pay to everybody over 60 $2400 a year. There are supposed to be 10 million people over 60. $3400 a year to 10 million people would be 34 bil lion .dollars a year. That, of course, would bankrupt the country and ruin everybody. Spending 34 billion dollars in three years has nearly bankrupted us. DO the Townsend plan supporters WANT to bankrupt the country and ruin everybody? Of course not I For the most part, they are sincere, honest and well -meaning, but MISGUIDED, people who have been told by the politicians that a nation can spend Itself' rich. " It Is the politicians, and not the' masaei of Townsend followers, who are at fault In this matter. v YOU cant blame anybody past 60 for wanting $200 a month. And you can't blame anybody who believes j It is possible to pay 34 billion dol- i lars a year to the 10 million who are I past 60 for going after It. Tha fault lies with those who have made millions of innocent old people believe that such a thing Is 'possible when it ISNT. (Continued from Page One) two big new dealers are already be hind the project. You may hear much more or una shortly. Mlncellaneous tax receipts have been eliding for 0 days In the treas ury daily statements. As a result. stories hare gained wide circulation thst business Is easing up. A coupie of congressmen have hinted as much publicly. The truth seems to be almost exactly opposite. If you dig Into It, you will find that nearly every item of excise tax ation haa increased. The decrease in the total Is due to two factors, a sharp decrease in capital stocks tax receipts and the repeal of the bank check tax. The decrease In capital stocks taxes Is due to a new regu lation permitting delay in payments, In the end, they will probably amount to more than last year. The only business taxes showing any significant decrease during Sep tember and October are those on autos and accessories. That is due to the pre-season lull. If tha num ber of cars now being sold armind here Is any Indication, government revenues from this source will be far more than estimated before the end of the year. One local dealer haa sold 90 per cent as many cars during the last three weeks as during the whole of lsst year. The rest of the excise taxes are running generally about 10 to IS pr cent above last year, which la ex actly how business la running. President Rooserelt looked awn- better after hia vacation. Me ws not only bronned. but It appeared that he had been required to 1 his belt out a notch or two. Vor obvious was the improvement in his disposition. He had been athei sharp and sarcastic on occasions be fore he began his vacation. Note The president got all tn ftsh-catching publicity during r trip bv wnSlnfi hi Hi-tvjtind 1 rtih to the must urn. Vnhera'rted an lunittUoetf a b Uca lu bodyguard, Ou Genneiicfc, caught on is noumii heavier, which will not b mounted in museum. Kew deal politico will confess off tha record that they are very fidgety about Georgia. That la what 1 be hind arrangmenU now being made for Mr. Roosevelt to deliver an ad dress there around Thanksgiving. Tba sit In mind 1 Tech stadium, at Atlanta, which la under Governor Talnifcuge'a nose. Their apprehension hav been les sened by private word from a moat Influential Georgia leader that he can "take" (hi word) Talmsdge any time the new deal wanta him. QUINTUPLETS GET FIRST MEAT: AT 1 7 MONTHS OF AGE CALLANDAR. Ont., Oct. 26. F) The Dlonne quintuplets, 17 months old today, added meat to their diet for the first time. It's only a small quantity of care fully selected and prepared veal liver served once a week but It marked the youngsters' first move toward a grown-up diet. The liver and Marie's development were highlights of the famous ba bies' 17th month. Marie has prog ressed remarkably mentally and phys ically In the past four weeks. Dr. Al len Roy Dofoe, their physician, said. Within a few months Marie, who was the smallest of the five when they were born May IB, 1934, and haa tagged since, will equal her sisters In every way, the physicians believed. - The bit of liver they are fed Is only a morsel for the Dlonne children. They eat all they are given and often they cry for more. Sometimes they get it. Their main diet consists of vege tables prepared In several ways, fruit, bread and butter and milk plenty of the latter. Dr. Dafoe emphasizes. Thriving on that fare, three of the youngsters Yvonne, Annette and Ce cile, front runners In the wetghtder by are attempting to walk and oc casionally manage a few steps. i , By 10 PARK AI HOMES ClAWSON. Mich (UP) Thai local village council ha, ended a squabble that threatened to split the town by declaring that villagers may sleep with their pigs, cows, milk goats and ohlckens 11 they desire. Recently the council received nu merous complaints that persons were taking animals Into their homes with the approach of cooler weather. An ordinance was passed providing that persons keeping livestock with in the village must have modern barns with cement floors, drainage and all the niceties a city-bred cow or pig might demand. Furthermore, they declared all barns had to be at least 7 jet from any house. Enraged livestock ownera banded together ind circulated petitions de claring the ordinance worked a hard ship on them and that their livestock was necessary to enable them, to Hve on their present earnings. Some 349 names on the petitions caused the council to reverse Itself to the extent of allowing livestock keepers to build their barns as close to their own homes as they liked as long as they were hot within 75 feet of the home of any neighbor. Weather. Northern California .Increasing cloudiness, followed by light rain i tonight extreme north portion and Tuesday In north portion: snow over northern mountain ranges: cooler Tuesday; moderate west wind off the coast. Oregon: Occasional rain, turning to snow tonight: Tuesday local snows and clearing; colder Tuesday and in northern and central por tions tonight: freezing temperature north portion tonight; fresh to northwest winds off the coast. He Found Out. BROOKLYN. N. Y.. Oct. 28. (UP) William Robinson, 37, phoned head quarters and reported a murder. Pit teen patrol cars rosred to the spot, but nobody was found. Today, Magis trate Vincent Sweeney fined Robin son S10. Aa a taxpayer, he had wanted to see If the police radio cars i were worth the money. ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.. Oct. 38 (UP) Malcolm Solsberg. 4, seated In front of his home Sunday, was about to lick a lolly pop when his police i dog puppy fell from a second story balcony Into his lap. The dog was un injured, but Malcolm's extended tongue was cut by the puppy's paw. . 4 t fox Hose that Wear ouy NOLDP& HORflT Ethelwyn B Hoffmann. Phone M2. We'h nul away your refuse. City Sanitary service. Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang. On No matter how many medicines ; you have tried for your cough, chest i cold or bronchial Irritation, you can : get relief now with Creomulslon. Boric-ns trouble may be brewing and ' you cannot afford to la fee a chance with anything leas than CreomuJ Bon. which goea right to tha seat ot the trouble to aid nature to : soothe and heal the Inflamed mem- i branea aa the germ-laden phlegm ! Is loosened and expelled. I Even If other remedies have failed, dont be discouraged, your : druggist ia authorized to guarantee ' Creomulslon and to refund your i money If you are not satisfied with rults from the very first bottle. Oct Creomulslon right now. (AdrJ Flight fo Time Hedford nd Jackson Count; history from the files of the Mail Tribune 10 and Z0 lean o). TEN VEARS AGO TODAY October 28, 1935 (It Waa Wednesday) teague of Nations restore peaca In the Balkans betaveeji Greece and Bul garia. Local merchants agree to close at 11 o'clock on Armistice day. Jackson county cities to observe "Apple Week." Mid-west shivers In record cold: forest fire rage In north Jackson county. Highway commlaslon orders ton nage of trucks reduced on Jackson oounty roads.. Stat P.-T. A. adopt resolution condemning "rodeos and wild west type of entertainment." - ' The first fog of the season cam last night, and was quite dense. Three minor auto crashes were reported. Children warned "not to get too boisterous celebrating Hallowe'en." TWENTY YEARS. AOO TODAY October 28, 1915 (It Was Thursday) , Children of the Roosevelt school to ' have a Hallowe'en party. . Greece denies treachery to the al lies; Germany Insists that one of the peace terms shall be a "free passage down the Danube." Dr. and Mrs. S. H. Porter and W. A. rolger return from a trip to th San Francisco fair. Delinquent taxes In Jackson county show gains over last year. Drive for sugar beet acreage con tinues. O. A. O. football team arrives at Lansing. Mich., for game with Mich gan State Saturday. Probation Officer Charlea B. Gay start round-up of boya who refuse to go to school, i HOllZAlSlRSI FOR SCHOOL CHILDREN CHICAGO, Oct. 38. (UP) Chi cago safety organizations started home Inspection drive today because "only 9 per cent of all school child fatalities occur while pupils are golug to and from schools, whereas 3'J per cent occur In the home" due to Insecure porch railings, unscreened fireplaces, littered and hnltghted stairways, careless placing of matches and hot liquids, and other home hazards. PASTOR GIVES RULES FOR KEEPING YOUNG AUBURN. K. T. (UP) This pre scription for keeping young was given Klwanlans by the Rev. George R Da vies: Keep your eagerness for new experi ences. Keep the confidence of youth. Never despair. Do not try to keep up with youth In your living habits. Take to heart youth's ability to overlook petty annoyances. Make a life, not a living. RAY HUSON IN CAVALRY HILL MILITARY SCHOOL PORTLAND. Oct. 28. fSpl.) Ca det Ray Huson. son of Mrs. Ina M. Huson of Med ford, has been accepted as a member of the cavalry at Hill Military Academy, here, according to Joseph A. Hill, president of the aca demy. The cavalry, under supervision of Harold C. Tobtn. major of U. B. A., retired, familiarizes the cadet with the proper care and use of a house. Cadet Huson Is one of a group pre paring for a horse show and society circus in the nenr future. iaBBjaBBrm"9arsaBVV 3 - For Permanent, Lasting: Color in various shades for your wooden shingle roofs or sidewalks Timber Products Company Medford No. end Central Ae. Phone 7 X i M