PAGE FIVE
Sentiment Returns in Lacy Garb
As Valentines Wax Affectionate
nUMLUU IU LIUIL.U
arEDFORP MAIL TRIBUNE. fEDFOKi). OREGON. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 13. IMG.
if fait
P
The following description of & t
mot camp 1 teken from the latest
Issue of tht Medford CCO District
yews:
The most J moisted CCC camp. In
the United States I
That Is ths claim of ths man of
Co. 9538. Camp Agneu. and few who
hare made the boat trip to this re
mote outpost will dispute the stste
t Kent.
V There are no roads to Agnes. The
''only way In to this mountainous re
gion la by trail from Grants Pass or
by motor boat up the Rogue rlrer
from Gold Beach, colorful frontier
town on the Oregon coast.
To the men from Ohio who make
up the majority of the CCC enrol lees
t Agness. the trip uprlver Is a thrill
ing adventure. For the first time
since the start of CCC. Agness Is be
ing maintained as a, winter camp. It
has previously been occupied as a
tent camp during the summer
months.
The camp Itself Is located at the
forks of the Rogue and Illinois river,
half mile from the ARness postof
flce, of which George P. Rllea Is post
master. Rllea Is the father of Briga
dier General Thomas E. Rllea. com
mander of the 82nd Brigade, Oregon
national guard and president of the
National Guard association of the D.
8. He came to Oregon 34 years ago
and has been postmaster since 1907
Business at the postofflce has quad
rupled since the arrival of the CCC,
he says.
Captain James O. Wanzer Is com-
and the army staff Includes Ueut.
John O. Rosen baum, Lieut. Henry A.
Barrls, Dr. Harrison M. Pierce, camp
surgeon and George Schmidt, educa
tional adviser.
The forest service staff Is headed
by George A. Davis, project superin
tendent, and Includes T. W. Barber,
superintendent of truck trail con
struction; Fred Gardner, who has
charge of the Gold Beach spike camp;
Bert Blgelow, road construction fore
man; Stephen Mann, blacksmith; and
U- R. Shsmpang. mechanic. Agness la
In the Siskiyou national forest, with
headquarters at Grants Pass.
Eleven trucks and four tractors are
Included In the mechanical equip
ment, sJl but one tractor being taken
up the river by small river boats.
That tractor last year was the first
vehicle ever to reach Agness overland.
Two projects are being handled at
present, the most Important of which
la the Coqullle river road, which will
eventually connect with the road be
ing built by the men of Co. 1637,
China Plats, and which will lead
through Powers to Coqullle. The oth
er project Is the construction of a
new ranger station at Gold Beach,
ed.
Projects already completed include
ft 350 foot low water bridge over the
Illinois river, and a bridge over Pos
ter Creek at Illahee, north of Agness.
NAZIS ROUNDUP
- BERLIN, Feb. IS. (AP) Charges
f collusion between Roman Catho
lics and communists were heard
In Germany today as at least 100
Catholics and communists were un
der arrest after simultaneous raids
by secret police.
Catholics were particularly charg
ed with conspiracy with commun
ists in the Rhtneland, the center
of the police roundup.
The grip of the secret state polios
en public life was tightened today by
s law made public through tne
official gazette.
The law orders district governors
to take commands from secret po
lice headquarters, which will. In re
turn, supply ths local police de
partments with such directions
may be desirable.
PLANE PASSENGER
JUMPS 10 DEATH
OAKLAND. Calif., Peb. 13 (AP)
A nun Identified u Harold A.
Bprague, 88, metal worker, com
mitted Milelde today by leaping
from a commercial plane 3000 feet
bote the Oakland municipal air
port. Pilot Emanuel Rendereon aaid
Spragus hired him for a tail night,
then euddenly Jumped overboard.
Henderaon waa unable to leave hit
control, and prevent the act.
The body fell Into the bay t mile
from the airport and a navy plane
and boata aided Henderaon In at
tempt to loeate It.
Spraeiie'e employer at an automo
bile vrrerktng eompany aaid Sprague
ted peculiarly after eendlng a tele
tram to Chicago and falling to re
ceire an anewer. A wife and child
are believed to be In Chicago.
Harper Airport '
Grant Approved
WASHINOTOM. b. -S. (AP) The
bureau of sir commerce of the com
merce department approved today 18
additional airport projects and three
air marking programs.
ApprrtTsl designated In projects ss
technically Mtiafsctory. so they way
be developed with state WPA funds
Approved projects Included: Harper.
Ore , 57.
"K1CKERMCK"
Cndergarraent snst fit st
Etoeiwyn B Bufrmannt-
Pnone M2. We 11 haul ay your
refuse, city Ssaltaxj Berries,
By CHARLES NORMAN
HEW YORK. (AP) An arrow
marks the spot for St. Valentine's day
greetings this year, and It's right
through the heart.
Sentiment la back, adorned with
wings, frills snd curlicues. Even a bit
of lace flutters here snd there, to
make somebody's heart respond In
kind.
That Is the story of the latest Val
entine greetings, chapter one. Chap
ter two, of course, recognizes that
this la Leap Year, and some of the
cards make the most of it.
Friendship gets slmost as much at
tention as love, snd children are pro
vided with cards to send to Mama and
Paps.
In the first category. It should not
be hard to guess the sender, if the
card sent bears the following V6rse:
Do you know how very ofen
My thoughts turn to you alone
And X think of happy hours
That together we have known.
Another pretty sentiment also Is a
"give-away."
You are so very thoughtful
In sll you ssy snd do,
You are so understanding
So dear and kind and true
That It isn't any wonder
I think so much of you.
One card, shaped tike a heart. Is
for a young woman a blonde to
send to some young man who likes
his sentiment straight possibly as
follows, which Is the legend on the
card:
A rag, a bone and a hank of hair
Salutes s guy who's on the square 1
(We know it's s, blonde because the
pert young woman pictured on the
card Is adorned with a tuft of blond
hair attached to the paper).
"Hello Wlfey" Is the greeting on
another card; inside the sentiment Is
expended to (with illustrations):
Here's to the girl who saves the
cash
And keeps the home and cooks
ths hash
And tells me all the news each day
And mates me think I have my
way
She put up with every whim
She's clever snd she's neat and
trim
She's just ss dear as she -can be
And gosht she means the world
to met
. Punctuation Is sn unnecessary frill
in the world of valentines.
OLD WELL LAUDED
AS AID 10 COOKS
MACKINAW, 1U (UP) A hundred-year-old
well Is still functioning
here. Housewives in the vicinity say
"good old well wster beats other wat
er any time for making tea or coffee.'
The well la 65 feet deep snd owned
by H. B. Huff.
Huff said the well's water supply
has been unbroken since be took It
over shortly after the Civil war. Con
noisseurs ssy wster from the well Is
excellent for making coffee and boil
ing vegetables. Families come from
nearby towns to tap Its supply.
- One housewife living st Miner,
near here. Insists on well water for
cooking or making coffee. She srgues
vegetables cook quicker In it snd re
tain s better color. One woman bases
her reputation as s coffee maker on
use of well water.
Early In the history of this village
it was customary for two or three
families to Join in digging s well for
their common use, with the result
that st one time the community
boasted about 40 old-fashioned buck
et welts.
Now only seven remain, some hav
Ing been curbed over and pumps tn
stalled or converted to other uses.
Others were filled snd the well houses
allowed to stand for artistic effect,
or are used for coolers, taking the
place of ice-boxes.
Death In Klamath
Not From Plague
PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 13. (AP)
The death of Jerry Lee Motschen
baeher, 5 years old, of Dorr Is, Csl.
was said today by ft state board of
health specialist to have been caused
by pneumococcl laryngitis.
Ths boy died st ft Klamath Falls
hospital Saturday and a tentative di
agnosis Indicated the death might
have been caused by a type of bu
bonie plague.
PAN-AMERICAN CONCLAVE
PROPOSED BY ROOSEVELT
WASHINGTON, reb. 13. (AP)
Preeldent Rooeevelt haa aent a let
ter to the heala of orernmenu of
all Latin American nationa concern
ing a proponed Pan-American con-
The preeldent declined at hie preat
conference to rereel the conienu
a hi. communication nendln Ita
receipt by thoee to whom It wee
addreaeed. Nor would he indicate
the eubject of the propneed con
ference. TRANS ATLANTIC PLANE
MISSING OFF BRAZIL
Bin r JANEIRO. Feb. 13. (flV-
Two alrplanee and three cutter, atert-
ed out today to eearch the area off
the northeent coert of Brertl ror the
ininer "Vine de Buenoa Aire.," mle-
Ing ulnce yetterday on a transatlantic
flieht.
On board the Vllle De Buenoe Alrea
were the crew of fire and one pea-
eenter. Imlle Bamere Buenoa Al.-ee
director of the rrancn amine. Air
Prance, operator of the miMIni ea
plane.
CM Mall irlfiune ul aOa.
m -5 l - i
VY4
Here are a few examples of the
busy Frldar. St. Valentine's day.
VAGABOND SPECIAL
QUITS CALIFORNIA
WITH 50 ON BOARD
YUMA. Ariz., Feb. 18. (ft Fifty
vagabonds. "deported" from Los An
geles, rolled eastward In Arizona to
day In ft railway box car.
They constituted the first shipment
of Indigent transients out of Cali
fornia, in the campaign by Los An
geles police to rid their city of "un
welcome guests."
Forty-two convicted vagrants, of
fered the alternative of the box car
or Jail, left Los Angeles yesterday ac
companied by volunteer police officers
who purchased food for them along
the way. Others Joined the exodus en
route here.
KLAMATH FALLS, Feb. 13. (P)
A denial that he had been told by
Sheriff John Sharp of Modoc county
to "get out and stay out" was made
today by Sergeant Robert Bergman
of the Los Angeles police patrol sta
tioned and Tulelake.
Bergman, who said he had seen re
ports In various newspapers that he
had received such an ultimatum from
Sheriff Sharp said:
"He made no such statement to me
and he didn't give that Impression
at all."
Bergman said that his operations
are partly in Modoo county and part
ly in Siskiyou county.
COIN HARVEY. FATHER
OF FREE SILVER IDEA
OF
MONTE NE. Ark., Feb. IS. (AP)
William Hope (Coin) Harvey, 85.
economist and politician who draft
ed the Democratic party's famous
"16 to 1" free silver platform plan
before the turn of the century, is
dead.
Stricken with peritonitis follow
ing intestinal influenza, the veteran
champion of bi-metallsm, foe of
modern finance and one-time presi
dential candidate of the Liberty
Party auccumed late last night st
his Ozark mountain homt here.
Harvey achieved nsttonwlde at
tention on several occasions, but
reached his peak during the decades
Just before snd after the turn of
the twentieth century.
A book, "Coin's Financial School,"
published In 1894, was widely rcsd.
About the same time he drafted
the "16 to 1" plank ss chairman
of the ways snd means committee
of the Democratic party snd he
later campaigned with William Jen
nings Bryan against McKlnley.
Hurt In Plane f rah
ALBUQUERQUE. N. M.. Feb. 18.
f APf Miss Vivien Skinner, 23. Dune
din. Fie , was critically Injured snd
three others, including her fsther. B.
C. Skinner, were shaken up and bruis
ed when their private plan crashed
iu an emergency landing at A com it
M mile wef of here. tvmv.
If rim prefer not. (trope, or
throAt epnry, rail for the
MIW MEMTH0LATUM LIQUID
In hendr bottle 1th
nasal
1 IRRITATION
Relieve the dry"" "
IrriMtlnn by appMnfl
MenlhoUlum nlfjhl
III and morning.
BCAfE AND A HANK
OF HAIR
OALUTES A CUV
KHOS ON THE ,'
'I
5 QUA RE ,W
TO M V
VALENTINE
greetings which will keep the postmen
TELEGRAM SALE
BARDE FAMILY
SAN FRAJJCISCO. Feb. 13. (API
Sale of the Portland Telegram to the
Portland News In 1831 was assailed
as "farudlent" In ft new suit filed
here in federal court today by the
Barde family of Portland.
Suit was brought by Rose. Ewith.
Soph ye and Hirsch Barde against Her
bert Flelschhackcr, San Francisco fin
ancier, snd C. H. Brock he (ten, pub
lisher, described as controlling own
ers of the Telegram at the time of
sale.
The Bardes ask an accounting of
cash and bonds received by the San
Franciscans In the sale, a court ruling
that the transaction was Invalid, and
recovery of 844,615 they claim Is due
them ss Telegram creditors.
The Bardes were owners of the
building which housed the Telegram,
and charge that with the sale and
moving Into the News building the
lease was left unpaid. They brought
suit In state courts snd obtained some
Judgments.
The suit chsrges the newspaper was
sold for 865,000 In cash. 84RA.0OO In
bonds, and an agreement that the
News would pay 8200,000 of the Tele
gram obligations. They say the lease
was never paid, snd charge that
Flelschhacker and Brockhsgen "con
spired to strip the Telegram of Its
assets" In the sale.
Oysters Freezing
On Oregon Coast
PORTLAND, Ore.. Peb. IS. (AP)
The protracted cold weather la caua-
Ing much damage to shallow water
oyster beds slong Oregon's coast, city
oyster company offctala said today.
Firms here opening the shellfish
found the gallonage per sack was
considerably reduced because some of
the stock was frozen. Oysters In some
of the shsllow beds sre left out of
water between tides and consequently
exposed to the freezing temperature.
No Jury Required
In Douglas Court
ROSPTBURO, Ore., Feb. 18 (AP)
For the third time within a yesr s
term of circuit court is to be opened
here without a Jury. Circuit Judge
Carl E. Wlmberly last night Issued or
ders to County Clerk Roy S. Agee
that Ju rors d ra wn for the re gu 1 ar
February term of court, called for the
17th, will not be required to report
as no cases are ready for trial.
LITTLE MISS MUFFET
tm ON A TUHfT . . .
AND lArl "I WANT NO WHIrl"
I'VI OOT MY TUMI
W tOUe STOMACH COMII . . . .
I'LL I AT MY FlU, TODAY I"
"YOU NEVER KNOW WHEN"
SO... CARRY.. .TUMS
pEOPLE every Here'ere eorprlvlng their
frond by eaung lood they have lone avoid
ed hy cauryinf roll of Turns rtfht to thur
pvkpL Mil lions have irarnrd thN quick, ml
ar to eliminate heartburn, anur rtomath. fas,
aciil InrlireftKW, in thn piannt wty. TuMS
rpre"nt a real snnnfie Srlvancemf-rrt. They
contain no harth alkali. Instead a remarkable
antacid that never dot imri than rmitaliaa
ttnnwh aoo No dangf of over- kalut nf the
stomach or blood. The cmtora of carryiaf S
rnll of TUNIS in your pocket will aave tnaoy s
day VJ- TN-y r econonfcal--olr tOt
until sik any druggist.
TUMS
roe tmi tuv
TVU l
ANUCID..
HOTAUUATTVt,
fwHAT? NO WHEY) I VOU HEARD Mt
I REDUCED j jjr3 x1f5 I "UCED 1
SEAGRAM'S "V.O."
&otthd '.in $9fid
UNOea CANADIAN GOVT SUVSVISKy
WAS
$235
NOW
'V
75
A Statement of Policy
from the House of Seagram
Every penny of tariff saving is
passed on to you. And in addition,
substantial further reductions in
price have been made to place these
finer whiskies within the reach of aJL
Similar Redactions on:
SEAGRAM'S "S3" SEAGRAM'S PEDIGREE BOURBON
Whittled in tmVadet Canadian Gov't Supervision
"I know it's good
I bought it from
Honest Abe Lincoln"
HOUSEWIVES in a little backwoods section of Illinois
a century ago knew they could buy with complete confi
dence from the storekeeper at New Salem. His name
was Lincoln; and he was known personally to nearly
every man, woman and child in Sangamon county.
Life is more complicated today. You could not
possibly meet all the men and women who make and
sell the things you buy. But there is a way you can
know them . , . and that is through the columns of this
newspaper.
Every day these manufacturers and retailers place
important messages here for you. There are announce
ments of interesting new products, and of improve
ments in old ones. News about unusual values. Sug
gestions for ways to make your home more comfort
able, and your work less tiring.
It will pay you to read these messages . . . and get
acquainted.
SEAGRAM'S STRAIGHT
BODRBON WHISKEY
ftott&d in Bond
imott outaeuN oovr eueeivwow
WAS
$23
75
NOW
IK PINT