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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 29, 1935)
tTii llll'HW PAGE SEX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD, OREGON, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1935. MEDF0RD2TRISUNE "Cveryone Id Southern Orsoa Bead tb Hall Trthaoe" Dallj Birept twtordar. PublUhed by MEDKUKD PRINTING) CO. JI-ST-:& N. Kir SL Phone U. ROBERT W. RUHU Editor. Ad Independent Nwepapr. Entered econdctet mitr a-t Med ford, refoo, under Act of Marob 1. left. SUBSCRIPTION RATES ifl. Mill if. Advanc: DZ$. one year JlZl'. all moathi lVlr, one month "j ft CJtrler, In Advance Vflird, " la.nd. JachaonvHIe, Central Pomt, Aoaiiis, Talent, Oold H!U and hlpthwaya. . Daily, one year Dally, aix monthe Dally, one month D All terma, cash in advance. Official Paper of the City of MTdfoA. Official Taper of Jarknoo County. a !1KK OF TUB ASMCIATISIi PI.Stt flnrlvlng Fall l-u"ed Wit Herrlce. The Aaeoclatert Pre la exoluaively en titled to the uee for publication of all uewa dlepatchea credited to It or other wiie credited In thla paper, and alao to the local niwi publlahed herein. All rlshta for publication of epeolal dlapatchea herein are alao raeerved. MEMBER OF IfNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU . OF CIRCULATIONS AdTerttelnB Bepreaentatlvee M. O. MOOEN8KN A COMPAW Offlcee In New York, Chicago Detroit, San Franciaco, Loa Angelea, Seattle, Portland. OH Ye Smudge Pot I By Arthur Perry. mi. aMirrnfc vear elaDSes TUCfl. at high midnight. It wa not good year, nor a Daa yw. it. wui have been better, and It could bava been a holy terror, like a couple these part have aweated through. The Dub Watson boy has a new bicycle, and right off the bat, an auto Juat did get out of hla road In time. e Tom Puson'a boy la back from tha Frozen North, whera he escaped being frozen. HoWa in the Eaat Main atreet pavement have been fixed, and onoo more good time la made by all. e e Everybody, even Pug Iaaacs. thlnka the Southern Methodlsta will humble Stanford In the Rose Bowl Wed. Like Sen. Borah, Mr. laaaea generally takes the opposite, on an Issues. e Col. F. TouVelle of J'vtlle haa utiirnnrl fffim trill to OhtO SHfl Florida. He had a pleasant journey, and his picture on me iron v many times. Ev. Brnyton of the H'w'd. O'c'rda. towned Frl, He aald 1038 had treat ed him fine, except for the time last summer, when llRhtnlng almost got blm on hla front porch. Christmas cracked down on John Russell Colman, the I. Coleman boy. He la too young to know what It Is 'all about. Some of the older ones don't know either. X, Ulrlch of Prospect came to town for the Tuletide, and forgot hla brakes at a street lntersectton Thls In the first time he haa ever bwn caught defying the traffic rules. e A knot of politicians met here the 1st of the wk. but were un knotted before any devilment start ad. e e The social whirl whirled at Q. RU1 last week, causing a number of the stronger aex to brave their hard-boiled shirts. e 8. Morris, the T-rock tiller Is In California, whence he chased hlm aHf, Instead of letting Wall St. do It. Wig Ashpola arranged with 8. Claua to brlnff his boy a drum, and since Chrlstmna feels like he la always attending a Salvation Army meeting. e Juveniles ate SO turkeys cooked for them by Peoria Bill Dates, and Bill Lydlard. Every little diner went home full and rejoicing. The firnt good citizen haa start ed acting like he was going to run for something. He was apprehended scolding the taxes, with an Older Girl, who had lost a nickel In a bridge game. J. Frank Wort man of Phoenix. ' and Pnp Gates completed 43 years or mnrrled life Sat. Congrats, boysl The University boya will return to the csmptis Thurs. after spend ing M-.e Yule tide with the home team Paw and Maw. A crank letter flew up and hit your corr. lat week . The Bob Fowler boy la making good as a fcoiball plsyer at Cor vsllls. The wind howled urmu the val ley lant nUtht, and before they thoupht. mrwt of the orchardlau re ported 03 per cent of the pesr crop had been blown off. i Tom Johnlin Is t)iwn In the ftouthlnnd, and don't have to come home until he gets ready. e The hs. bb. team beat B. Pali Frl. night, and they show promlne. If they don't pnlnt an Ashland barn In a vrlf-n. storm on omt. PORTLAND. Ore.. Dec. 38 (API Southenst storm warnings flapped todsv at olrnsl stations on the northern California, Oregon ana Wnshintrton roan line as the wea ther bureau reported a storm hover ing some 600 miles off the coast. The ancirnt ent of th Monteu ras, Chapultepec. ts located about two mtlra sou hn eat of the city o: Mexico, TeiflJJS&fc Historian Says tutorial Pagd Ee)temtf wmii ATLANTA, Dec. 3a. (AP) Many of tha aevaara of tit na tion haw "rt,. tka tlt r Hge" urka M 4im a tke Cmnn nsn CXmm.) Uvm taM Mb cm. Pta' atwa mr day. eaa UM torM ba came aaai eaa tha ti have ,paai thro tie iKy commercial phase aaa' have Veciaie institutional' "Today there su mo ipe than 10 year, am wease aellcles me et In tk, editor'a of(M. wkoae edttora write what they really Ihlalc, bellwe what they are eaylag and have a senae of social conecloua neaa In saying It." he aald. Toay'a edltorlala explain rather than coerce. The editor undertakea to relate an Item to Ita general Comment the on Day's News By FRANK JENKINS READING this paragraph, wo blush for our nation: "Jack Lalt, New York newspaper writer, asserted aat night he had learned Colonel Lindbergh was driven Into exile by threats that he and his wife would be kidnaped and killed If Bruno Richard Hauptmann Is electro cuted." r'S untrue, probably, for Colonel LI nd berg and his wife aren't the scaring kind where THEY THEM SELVES are concerned. But It's cer tainly a shame that such things can be aald In this country. 1 ' ' I THIS paragraph from an Associated Press dispatch of a few days earlier la nearer the truth: A close friend said Colonel Lind bergh told him he felt he could cope with the criminals In the United States and with the questions of pub licity, bue when the governor of New Jersey became active In the Haupt mann caM he decided to laeve the country." v' CRIMINALS alone Tre bad enough, but when criminals and politi cians get together It's TERRIBLE. A THOUGHT: " If the government of the Unit ed States kept out of all the things It haa no business to be in and de voted Its great energies to combating crime, which is the PRIMARY BUSI NESS of government, conditions In this country would be far better. ANOTHER Interesting paragraph: "Senator Nye, of North Dakota, returned to hla Wnahlngton office to day to emphaslre his belief that Sen ator Borah Is the msn for the Re publican Presidential nomination." Thjjs Insignificant writer, far out In the sticks, haa disagreed with many statements of Senator Nye, but AGREES with thla one. QENATOR NYE adds: J "While Borah Is the man for the Republican nomination, he muat formulate SOMETHING to taks the place of AAA." Why not supply and demand? ONE more paragraph from the news and we'll call It a dny: "Breakage of toys runs high with the vigorous tittle Dlonne quintu plets, and aa they reach a more ven turesome age new precautions are becoming necessary. Dr. DaFoe. their physician - guardian, haa Installed shatter-proof glaas in the hospital wlndowa and haa introduced un breakable dishes and crockery Into their cupboard." It's pleasing to learn that In spite of mountains of publicity, they're Still HUMAN BEINGS. GREEN EYEBROWS PAO OF ANCIENT EGYPTIANS LONDON. (irP) - V!a! tors to the newly dexrated museum of the Royal College of Jurgenns. In Lincoln's Inn Field, will conclude onoe more that there'i nothing new under the aim. There ts to be found the earliest known example of eyebrow pnint !n the world. In a gln.vi cae In the mummy room Is a shrivelled relic of antiquity, the ft.oon-ycar-old mummy of Ra. Nofer. a nobleman of the Old Kingdom of Rypt. The eyebrow of thla potentate are painted green. According to Profes sor Elliott-Smith, who haa carried out a cloee examination of the mummy, green point wa universally used on the eyebrows In ancient Greece. Income Shares Maryland Fund: Hid 17.53; asked 18 WO. Quarterly shares: Bid 1 4R. aMn-d 1 03. Claret and burgundy are nettled when thtj wine ha censed to ferment, out champHKue Is bottled at a much earlier statte and finishes fermenting in the bottle. The grounri-psmtt. a flight. em bird inhabiting New Zealsnd. In vailed "Kalupo" b the Mauri people. fnaue ti M6einace. laaaojn aa oqrtaMha art tMaaMI s tk M(i .w, laremia 'i In ii ?. Ota a kfl. eta al ft Hff aiM )vM-a Hie tM( KM, Man j,ard . f ! M jrtvva "it lra MM at wr (Mi iaapaiMat laamap ' imtfr than te give tift liraesMiEp a sa- lous IraperlaiBCc." M9 aiM. He coatrMBte meeKra erW viae, with thee of the want. "A century fm Aairrlctki JeuaiM Uat veia polemfc." he t4. "ea-ery editor had a party, heevd b1e Its candldatea and wrlee Its platform. He told his rea4era of a almple world of good men opposed by bad men. and he was alwaya on the side of the good." Book Reviews MEXICAN ODYSSEY The best book we have seen this year on Mexico la "Mexican Odyssey," by Heath Bowman and Stirling Dick inson, published by Wlllett Clark & Company. Bowman and Dickinson, two young Princeton graduates, the first & writer, the second an artist. decided to buy a second-hand flivver and hop into it, and see what they could see the other side of the Rio Grande. They saw, aa the saying goes, "a plenty," and It haa all been put between the covers of a book of less than 300 pages, attractively Il lustrated by 70 characteristically Mex ican block prints by Dickinson. To anyone contemplating a trip to Mex ico, particularly by motor, the book would be Invaluable as a reference and guide. Not that there la any ef fort to provide statistical Informa tion, or adopt the guide book manner. Quito the reverse. There is no effort to do ANYTHING but relate the ex periences of these two young men aa they chugged around Mexico, from November until April, while the speedometer clicked up seven or eight thousand miles . , . exactly as they occurred. But these experlencea are extremely Illuminating and instruct ive not only as to the practical mo toring problems in Mexico today, but as to the character of the people and the nature of the country itself. The chief appeal of the book la its absence of all pretentiousness pose either the writing up or writing down, that characterizes so many books of modern travel. For two chaps so young and we presume relatively Inexperienced thla entire freedom from self consciousness, and the very apparent honesty and sincerity, of tholr reportorlal efforts ts a very un usual combination, and a very re freshing one. There Is plenty of the ardor and freshness of youth In the book, but tho reader la soon convinced that Moasera. Dickinson and Bowman have a couple of well informed and un usually adult minds under their re cently ncqulrcd Mexican sombreros; and a quartet of eyes that can not only see beauty, but the essential quality in things, from landscapes and cathedrals to the men, women nnd children of our Interesting neigh bor on tho south. Just aa the temptation to do a little Imitation Hemingway haa been carefully avoided, so haa the tempta tion to draw conclusions and pontifi cate. The book is not a study, nor la Mexico treated aa a problem. Mexico la merely treated as a large, picturesque and entirely "dif ferent" country, sharing a Inrgo por tion of the northern hemisphere with Uncle Sam, which Is exceedingly In teresting and worth while to roam about In. Just what Mexico, socially, agriculturally and economically la, or what it is destined to be, tho authors do not attempt to say. They merely tell of their own experiences, and re cord their own Impreaalona, object ively. but above all else with what one feels Is absolute fidelity to the truth, aa they aaw It. M. W. YOUTH NEEDS AID OR SOCIETY PAYS, PEDAGOGUES TOLD PORTLAND, Ore., Dec. 38. AP) Dr. Frederick J. Kelly of Washing ton. D. C, told Oreon school teach ers today that 'Jf education doesn't find something for youth to believe In, sooner or later youth ts going to kick over the apple cart." Something must be Injected Into the school system to hold young people steady until the world 1 ready to accept them into business and (he professions, aald Dr. Kelly, chief of the division of higher edu cation of the United States office or education. "American students aren't bolshe vik by learning, but a sense of fu tility and hopelessness may over power them unless education pro vides something to tide them over the gap between school and a Jh." he told 1600 membera of tha State Teachers association, "It mu.st be something adequate to their Intercuts. Perhsps it Is to be found In vocational schooling, or apprenticeships which will tie them to stable Influences. "Society h been found guilty of neglecting youth on several counts. It haa allowed starvation wages to exist; it haa made no provision for young people to lesrn the problems of home making ana family life: it prevent them from marrying at the age when nature cslls for the assumption of normal marital and social obligations, and It permits distracting and deiuoratir ing Influences to exist gambling, saloons and Immoral literature.' 'klt'KKKNtVK' t)nc1-r,Mrmen' thit fit at Personal Health Service By William tflfpM lessvr pertaining to personal oealth and nyelene nut to disease (fayjtJV (f ewiatment will be answered Of ur. Brady if a stamped elf-ad-darfW evWaitf la enclosed Letters should be orlet and written in ink fVBTf hj AiV number of tetters received only a few can be antwerea ft eaptt 41 tB nftrtte to queries mil conforming to instructions Address Ur fttyfrtSVtfta 4$ arn an o. Beverly Hills. Lai. A FATaW.Y DISC tefciS A B?aat frem a family i wkeae Ut nertfti begins will en courage timid ones elsewhere to have a go at peck of wheat. The first i form In our household, writes the real boss, was . . . after my husband's opera tion for duode n a I ulcers, we sent for "Guide to Right Eating' . . . your mono graph, ' What to Eat" (readera may obtain ft, copy of the Guide for 10 cents coin or the Wheat monograph free on request enclose stamped en velope bearing your address). The girls talked so much about wheat that we went so far aa to buy a wneat grinder and a bushel of wheat. The wheat was dirty. After making several attempts to clean It, we fin ally found that by putting It between two window screens and using the attachment on our electric cleaner which blowa air through a steel tube flat and narrow at the end, we could air clean the wheat. The dust par. tides dropped to the floor and the bits of stalk we picked out by hand. We put the wheat twice through the grinder and then through our flour sieve to separate the flour from the husk. We use the fine flour for all baking purposes and cook the rest as a breakfast cereal, scorning ail fancy breakfast foods. The flour makes delicious muffins and excellent gingerbread. A whole wheat health pudding, steamed and served with a lemon sauce is all the Christmas pudding we shall be inter ested In from now on. (Mrs. M. R.) Ordinary wheat as it comes from the threshing machine Is quite clean and fit to cat. If it doesn't look clean enough when you are ready to use It, Mrs. M. R.'s way of cleaning it Is good, or the wheat may be washed with cold water by running the water through the wheat in a sieve. Here's a smacking good recipe giv en, among many other good onea. in Bulletin 301-R2, U. S. Department of Agriculture, bureau of home eco nomics (to which you may write for a freo copy), Washington, D. C. Hrowned Cracked Whole Wheat Porridge Pour the hot cracked whole wheat porridge Into an oblong mold that has been rinsed wun cold water. When cold cut into thin slices and brown In hot fat in OREGON PIG CROP FOR YEAR TO PORTLAND, Ore., Dec. 28. (AP) Little piggies will go to market In lnrger numbers shortly. The federal bureau of agricultural economics here estimated today that the fall pig crop In Oregon, Wash ington, Idaho nnd Montana was 33 per cent larger than the fall crop of 1034. The national Increase was about 31 per cent. Each of the Northwest states show ed substantial Increases In pig pro duction, which was estimated at 398, 000 head compared with 399.000 head the fall of 1034. "Many hog growers reduced hog production In 1934 below require ments of tho government corn-hog contract nnd are now Increasing pro duction," snld C. J. Borum, agricul tural statistician for Washington and Oregon. Replies from 1.469 hog growers of Oregon indicated 1U 1.000 pigs were saved from 18.000 sows farrowed from June i to December 1 this year com pared with 84.000 pigs saved from 13.. 000 sows farrowed during the corres ponding period last year. The bureau forecast about 34.000 sows will far row next spring compnred with 30. 000 farrowed last spring. Oregon's combined spring and fall crop this year waa 360,000 porkers, compared with 318,000 In 1934. This year's Utters in Washington brought forth 249,000 head compared with 233,000 head In 1934. The combined spring and fall crop for Oregon and Washington in 1934 was the smallest since 1935. DEAL COIN WASTE OMAHA. Dec. 38 .4 SejifttOT Ski- ward R. Burke tm. of Nebraska, pre dicted In an Interview made public today a group of veteran democratic senators would led a fvht "to cur- tall excessive expenditures of the fed eral government at the forthcoming session or congress The group, he said, would include .He nn tors OLw and Hyrd of Virginia. Adams of Colorado, and Bfliiey of North Carolina. "Of course.'" he aald. "1 can't put words In the mouths of these sena tors. But I am confident from -e- marka made by them that tiiey will Ied the fi;ht. Ti.ey all rvaile. as 1 do, that the new doal lias eone too far in Its spending " Senator aiurke. ejected in itU4. cn a new deal platform and whose defi nition of t:ie ,iew deal In a campaign speech in 1PH us veptd hv Presi dent Roosevelt as tw: ettiiig loita . .. 1 IH TV 9 DEMOCRATS PLAN OWN CURB ON NEW Brady, M D. OVERS WHEAT a frying pan. Serve with brown sugar sirup. And coffee, I beg to add. Now, for goodness sake, don't write to me to find out where to get the hot cracked whole wheat porridge for making this sovereign breakfast dish. It isn't on the market. You have to make It yourself, thus; Cracked Whole Wheat Porridge 3 cupa caacked whole wheat. 4 to 6 cups boiling water, Teaspoonul salt. Stir the cracked whole wheat Into the boiling water until thor oughly mixed. Cook slowly over the direct flame for 20 to 30 min utes, and stir occasionally. What, you don't know where to get the cracked whole wheat? Well. that la easy. You crack the wheat yourself. That brings us back to the land, the farmer. He grows the wheat. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Calcium Have been taking calcium aa you suggested and believe it has done me a lot of good. Can calcium cause the arteries to harden? (G. S.) Answer. No. Cholesterol Please give your opinion of the question of cholcsterln In food as a factor of gallstones. (O. M. R.) Ans. I think it is a secondary fac tor. If a factor at all. Certain foods contain a fat-like substance called cholesterol, and from this cholesterln Is derived. Some gallstones contain considerable cholesterln. The foods which contain most cholesterol are cream, yolk of egg, sweetbread, liver, brain, kidney, fish roe. All animal fats contain small amounts. The bile In many cases o chronic cholecystitis or gall bladder contains an excess of cholesterln. Persona with gallbladder trouble or gallstones should eat a good deal of fresh fruit, fresh greens or salad vegetables, and drink plenty of water and roll themselves a couple dozen somersaults every day. Bad Breath Please suggest the beat remedy you know for a heavy odor from the breath. (Mrs. W. S. E.) Ans. Thoroughly rinse the mouth and gargle with solution of one chlo ramtne tablet In one ounce of water. Do not rinse the chloramlne away water. , (Copyright, 1935. John F. Dille Co.) Ed. Note: rersuns wishing to communicate with Ur. Hrady hiMild .end letter direct to Ur. William llrocty. M I)., ii El Cnmlnu. neverl; Hills, Cal. the purposes of tho administration, sold he believed the new deal "has been a success as far as some of Ita pro?rnm la concerned, such aa the banking and farm legislation, but it has been a failure In excessive expen ditures." In his definition of the new deal. Burke said "it seeks to cement our society into a voluntary brother hood of freemen, striving for the common good of all." ON NEW FEES FOR SALEM, Dec. 28. (AP) Earl Snell. secretary of state, requested the at torney general today to hand down an opinion on the validity of the law Increasing license fees on pickups and light delivery cars. Snell said he believed there was a possibility the law did not reflect the intention of the members of the leg islature. Inasmuch as the fee on all vehicles of this type was Increased from $6 to $10 without making pro vision for special farmers' license fees, as provided in the case of other truck type vehicles. Numerous complaints charging pro visions of the law were unjust and discriminating had been received by the motor vehicle department. Reports received here Indicated an upstate attorney would start a friendly suit to nullify the provisions of the act, especially as It applied to the farmers' license fees. It was pointed out that trucks used strictly for farm purposes, with a combined weight of 4.000 pounoa or over, were now licensed for one half the fee charged commercial vehi cles, and It waa contended that the same basis should apply to the lighter type vehicles used for the same pxirpose. Ethiopian currency Is the Maria Iheresa and Menelek dollars of a nominal value of about so cents, but In parts of the country bars of salt or even cartridges are used. Use Mall ITtbune rajit ads ELKS OPINION SOUGHT VSa DANCE TIL 2 For Elks and Out-of-Town House Guests ADMISSION SI. 00 NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Dec. 28. There are times, I presume, when almost every dub of the writing clan longs for a stab a.t being serious, evees p n d e reus. Te ellcte em eae of those Meetaag iribjrtents sis a WKs, WpMaLg a uoatao, i sat J down at the j tspeavriter flirt- lncr with atioVi a lantasy. But a few de- Blllterrv t.na avf the space . bare. an aimless neat en In g of the desk, a stare out of the window and the ballooning ego sags Into wrinkled dilemma. 8m here I am. rarin' to go but with nothing Important to say. A donkey, a to apeak, with the mental heaves. From a tent, in Arizona the other day I received a note from a lonely valiant fighting back, to health: once read In your column of a fel low named Rocky Watterson Raddy Wath acker, it's one or the other. I know, but which?" Well, it Is Waddy Rothacker to be precise, It strikes me that's about as near ly right as anyone Is about any thing. I've yet to meet the 100 per cent correct human. Indeed I would shrink from meeting one who had reached that perfectness. I have definite hunch he would be a ter rific bore. I warm to people who accept a few things by faith, too. They are moti vated by & feeling they cannot ex plain and despite high nosed sniffs of the self-anointed they get along, packing a serenity the faithless never attain, to boot. Most drunks, hop heads and assorted perverts I've run across have a Jeer for the blessed promises. Any crack-pot can make & seriously religious fellow took fool ish in debate. Such emotions are not debatable. But those with faith have a happy conviction the doubter rerely attains. New York Journalism has a carp ing omniscient who frivols of his working hours beagling for the blun ders of his fellow writers. And his gurgle of ecstasy In finding them reverberates In his writings. Every psycho-analyst knows that flaunting such a text book auperlorlty la a fix ation with those who feel Inferior. It Is the oldest of the recognized complexes. I woi'M not care to write, even If It were Intellectually possible, a col umn that was air tight grammati cally. That amacka too much of a fear of one's audience. A dally col umn Is not & sacredotal anthology requiring great thought. It has a hit and miss hurry that never attains formality. In informality is often its charm, if any. Readers like to feel one-up on a spilt infinitive, mixed metaphor or prepositional ending. I'm quite conscious, for instance, that beat should not be used for de feat. But back In our country we never inquired "Who won?' a ball game. We asked: "Who beat?" I like and use It when the copy reader Isn't too nlbby. I get a kick out of stTange and often obsolete words, too. Not to ap pear mentally la-de-dah. Any fool knows 1 wangle them out of a dic tionary at my desk side. I like them for the way they roll off the tongue, their euphony. I cannot recall the topic of a single essay by the icono clastic Brann. but I like the Hit and pomp of his phraseology. He made words march, lie down, and swing on the flying trapeze. Much of writ ing is shed carpentry and there's a sizeable five-dollar Dodd-Mead book to show the moat skeptical no one has written anything Important that has not been written before In al most Identical language. Hemingway notched a place in lit erature by ehucklng polished flub dubbery and socking the reader with what the finicky call viscera but which he called guts. Hla mile-long. Involved sentences would not escape a freshman's correction In a Petti coat Gulch high school. His books are flocked with grammatical awful ness, but Hemingway manage some how, indeed the report Is he's alttln pritty. He did not grease hta wares to slide by. He festooned them with thorns, thistles and cacti, and they stuck. Wilt Rogers, Ring Lardner and H. C. Wltwer didn't do badly making literature of Illiteracy. Neither has Sam Hellman. Shakespeare had his flair for redundancy. Meredith double-negatived all over the lot and Joseph Conrad had no knowledge of grammar. I enjoy the works of the masters and have probably read them as much as many living contempor aries. But I'm not going to try to compete with them in the helter skelter of a daily column even though I could. And which, as any one must know, I can't. phont 54'i We'lj haul away four feuare City Sanitary Service ELKS New Year's Eve ?2n 1 Eei ri PARTY Tues.. Dec. 31 TEMPLE Plenty of Favors Good Music! Flight 'o Time Medford and Jack ton Count) BUturj from tba rue of tbt Mall Trlbnoc 10 and to Year. a to). TEN YEARS AGO TODAY . December 29, 1925 (It waa Tuesday) Iiolfr & Din In. "Pair o- Pools" at the Craterla tomorrow. 1 nteat, to set tee oen kag dan er te gouern Oxgt NaamaX saheol at AalMd. Fl; CaolMfca, in asweh, usges "scate aa: economically sound farm legislation at the hands 01 congress." Deplores "governmental extravagance and lack of thrllt amang our people." Cold fog blanketa the valley. Coach Calllson of the high school announces Medford squad "will play teams that It la a credit to defeat, or be defeated by. I am not lookmg for the soft spots. They will either be ft basketball team, or they wlu be something else." George B. Creel blames "movies and the world war for decline of religion." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY Dec-ember 29, 1015 (It was Wednesday) Ed Hollenbeck of Prospect was here Tuesday after supplies. He re ports that the roads In hla district are In good shape and stock on the range la doing fine. (Table Rock Tablets). Eastern states again In grip of storm king. s Chris Gottlieb, who has been confined to his home for some time with Illness, ts again on the atreets. Tuesday NIGHT y And What A Show! What a story! . . . what names ! . . . what music ! . . . what romance! ... it's the ideal New Year show . . . in the 1936 manner ! J? inthJW6jnjuMjeH X)DICK POWELL ' r ANN DVORAK JKLWl lf' FRED ALLEN L 8 RUBINOFF fdalpJ and His Famous Violin y ,Iyfffjf fjf : i f PAUL WHITEMAN 'Tffiffiig;! I -O d and Ban1 """ Rnmons gfeaT ?3 jWH ; 8 : 1 (jjk. PATSY KELLY pip' I PHIL BAKER J" m A happy, peppy, group of short subjects, E especially chosen for this one big show! m Show Starts at 11:15 P. M. A All Seats 35c I v ; Tickets now on sale at the I r m boxoffice of the Craterian ! ! and Rialto Theatres! f Tha ground la covered with anow and the poll" hA t0 put a top to boya snowballing pedestrlana on Main atreet. Supreme court rulea dtlea have right to regulate Jltneya. Superintendent C. A. Briscoe U elected Tlce-prealdent of the Ore gon Teachera association. 1 Friday Few Prfa.rWt aaat NEW YORK, Dee. 27. (AT-USft) Pear auction market. 7 cars a rlved: 3 Oregon cara, X Washlngte. I Colorado unloaded; S cars om track. Oregon Bosca: 801 boxes extjo fancy, $2 2.90, average 2.39: 538 fancy, 1.0S2.80, average (2.31; 717 fancy and better. (2.20 .J 2.70, aver age (2.53. Oregon D'AnJous: 361 boxes extra fancy, (2.05 ur 2.80. average (2.29: 1070 fancy, 11. 90 a 3.60, average (2.29. CHICAGO, Dec. 27. (AP-USDA) Pear auction market. 1 Washington car arrived; 2 cars on track; 1 car sold. Oregon Boscs: 289 boxes extra fancy, (2.05 2.35, average (2.23;. 430 fancy, (1.95 32.25, average (2.15. 4 President Oetulio Vargas of Brasll took a leaf from President Roosevelt in vetoelng a bill providing bonus payments to disabled veterans. "Not only would the measure weigh oner ously on the natlrn." his veto mes sage read, "but it would be unfair because It would not include all army and nvty ranks." : 4 . The Ethiopian mule thrives In every condition of climate. Is fever-proof, travels- over the most difficult moun tain passes with security and carries a load of from 150 to 200 pounds. IU KSriM. BAI.LOO.NS Danclnr to the timo nf It ay music! Confetti falling in minnow snowrr anion the o I o r f d hnlloons! iJiiiRtiter . . . cxrltrmeiit t . . life at its hlchct Hut, rrmrm tier, -long mnlinunl tenlon may hp n contrib uting, on dm- of high hi (Kid prt?urf. You may ffrt se cure after a thornuch med ical examination by mnr ptnMrtnn: A Prescription,: F11U R. Carefully at HEATH DRUG STORE Medford Building Phone 884 1 LMJU II TT