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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 5, 1936)
ti.Au-.'ft.-iiU'Ji-iP.(iil'u PXGE ETrtHT MedfordTribune "Bvrrronc Id HnalherD Oro SUmOm the Unit Trlbtuw" Dully tfirept Saturday. Published by MKDKORD PRINTING Ca Sfr-3T- N. fir St Phoo ti. ROHKHT W. RUHU Editor. ERNEST R. OIL8TBAP, Uofr. Ad Independent Newspaper. Entered ft eeconrt-cleee matter at Hert ford, Oregon, under Act of March s, 1171 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mill Id Advance: Dally, one year 00 Datly. ell monthe Ml Deity, one month 0 By Carrier, In Adrejice Med ford. Aeh .lend, Jackeonvllle, Central Point, phoenix. Talent Qold Hill and an hlhweye. Pally, one year M-00 Dally, els moothe t.tb Dally, one month ... .10 All terme. oaah In advance. Official Paper of the City of Mm. ford. Official Paper of JnrkeoD County. UKMI1KK OP. THE AHHO IATKU f KEB8 Uerrlvlng Poll laard Wire Mervlrc. The Aeeoclsled Prese le eicluelvely en titled to the uie for publication of all newe dlepatchee credited to tt or other wlae credited In thle piper, and aleo to the local newe published hereto. All rlghte for publication Of epeolej dlepatohee herein are aleo reeerved. MEMUER OF UNITED HRHUS UEMHEH OP AUDIT BIIRBAD Or CIRCULATIONS Av.rtl.tns R.pr.ntatl... M. C. MOOBNSEN A COUPAMf Offlc. In N.w Tork. Chlca.o D.troit San Francisco. Lo. Ang.l.a, Ssattl,, PortlanrV Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur I'errjr. piscatorial onthuslasts got up be fore bresk-fsst this morning and rushed oft without any. to catch a l!h. In th rushing rlvera and the purling broom. Planing la a more popular sport In tf.-Me parte Is the sprint than getting ehot for a deer In the fall. 3. Kort Hall waa up 00 houra, with out taking off hla ahoee the lit of the week, while fighting Jackson K. Frost. The weather has been the target for considerable vehement talk, with out any praiseworthy reaulta. Walt Olmacheld got hla picture In the V. Shanglo display window laat week, along with a couple of fine looking little girls. ... A quintet of local Nipponese havo put their heads and pocketbooka to gether, and plan to go In cahoots on the purchase of a rlckishaw. ' ... Jno. Anderson of the C.Pt. district who was going to move to Salem, Jan. 1, la still here. Just aa securely as If he had a good lawyer, with a hip-pocket full of write. The 6th at. paving Is disintegrating rapidly, and badly In need of the re paving threatened by the city fathera. A Parents School waa held Tues. at the cthse. There was a good at tendance and the main speaker was not hit with a paper-wad. Erne Brltt of J'vllle towned Frl. He comes as regularly on Frl. as Hermy Offenbacher of the Applegate comes on Sat. a The campaign la underway, and the prospects a' bllm. the voters as a whole will get mad, or hysterical. There la not a good hellralstng tan trum thrower In the county. There la also a shortage of rascals In the cthse. ' The Elks feasted on roast beef Thurs. evng. and ate so heartily none waa left for hash. The bowling team Journeyed to Eugene Inst week and bowled cltlrens of that educational center, who don't like to mow the lawn. The men were victorious, but the fair sea were not so hot. x ... The C. Wig Ashpole boy can now Jabber. He was down town Wed. pm all dressed up. and arguing with his Psppy. The I. Coleman boy Is also getting phonographic. Both these lads have sisters trying to dictate to them. ... O. Hunt, the magic lantern prop has a birthday Thurs. Hla age Is nobody's business, but It Is close to 3A years since he amounted to any thing as a 3rd baseman. All Fooled Day passed with every body keeping his eyes open and not being bamboorled. All the empty pocketbooks were kept In the pock ets. Now la the time to look out for gypsies next August. Jim Stevens, the baritone, la run ning for the legislature on the Demo cratic ticket. Opponents who ran", sing, will do well to mind their high C's, and let their Ps and Q's do as they please. A Clnckamns county Democrat run. nln for Congress was here last week, shaking hsn1a and being pleasant. S. Morris, the T-Hock tiller towned Sst. braeone about his new grand daughter. He has advised her to smile and rote against the Sales Taj. The horse rhratnul Ireei on the Msln Stem are start ng to blossom. Mmy ran reiri.be. when they were colts and did not h.ive a chestnut to their nemo. ... There are rumors of a number of new coiistriiclion.. . other than gas llos, when the father's behavior will permit. Alderman F. Heath received word 8st. that H 17.000 had been approved for the airport. Good work, Freder ick! ... Bub Thelrolf of the younger set sported a pair of socks over the week end, that screamed so loud they were hciij at "O.rt Oretfon." When Mr. Thelrolf was about four years he punctured your rorr. with a hat-pin ill a ;.!ki!.i ..1 tpinner. O-C. Land Grant Lands (Portland Oregonian) "The attack of the American For estry association on the department of the Interior's policy concerning re vested Oregon U California railroad land grant lands would Impress Oregonlans more If It were couched In less rabid terma. Describing the federal government's dealing with the situation aa 'de structive" and "stupid," the state ment Issued by the forestry associa tion's executive secretary from its Washington, D. C headquarters went on to say the handling of the land since rcvestatlon In public ownership has become "muscle-bound by vic ious legislation and political lock jaw, with the reault that a great natural resource la being converted Into a costly liability." The terminology la too reminis cent of rampant conservationists, who are Inclined to see folly or skul duggery In all other efforts or Ideas thsn their own for use and occupa tion of western public lands. It has even become the fashion, under the new deal, to decry the pioneers of this region ss rascals, or at least tools, who misused the public do msln. There seems to be a notion the west should have been all held as a playground or reservoir of natu ral resourcea for the effete east. Twenty to thirty years sgo the O. it C. lands were a matter of In tense public Interest, especially In the atate of Oregon, where the prop erty In question Is situated. Subse quent to the recovery of the lands by the federal government by a suit against the railroad company, the matter Use been quiescent until at tention waa revived by this Inci dent, In 1B86, In order to aid the con struction and maintenance of a much-needed railroad from San Fran cisco to Portland, congress granted the O. As C. several million acres In the part of Oregon through which the railroad would pass, conditioned upon sale to settlers at 2S0 per acre. Some land waa sold according to terms, hut much was held off NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Arfru 4. On &n oc casion or bo when I have confessed here a fondness for perfume, I have Invariably r celved epistolary blessings from masculine fraldy cuds. One, Inci dentally, Is the manager of a big leaguo bull club and another Is an Industrial ex ecutive of prom inence. The tenor of such correspond ence Is for me TO to become a sort of lone crusader In a campaign to cnuh opposition. To lead the aromatic advance, as It were. Such a battle would be fighting shadows. Nothing ever happens to a man who touches up his kerchief with a scent. Everybody has a yen for certain fragrances, pungent, lush or fragile. Travel remembrances are chiefly ol factory. Such as the delicate melon ltko after smell of a London fog. Visitors to Java carry away one un forgetable memory of rich spices as they do of Jasmine. Msrk Twain once admitted he liked the hearty odora of a harnesa room. Napoleon, who was certainly not a sissy, always touched the tip of his ears with a mignonette flavor Jose phine loved. Even John L. Sullivan waa an addict of a German cologne. I like Herbert Corey'a frankness In explnlnlug delay In writing a letter. He said: "I did hnve a bone felon on my thumb at ono time but that was years ago and anyway I do not use my thumb in typewriting. But that la nearest to an excuse that I have." In our bedroom Is a sturdy clock that has passed the century mark. Only three times lias It been to the repairer. Every now and then It must be oiled with a feather tip In the old fashioned manner. My wife, her mother and also her mother have listened to the rhythm of lta tick, tock. It's decidedly tacky, but with a dignity. I, too, have acquired an affection for It. An essay 1 read In the Manchester Guardian Isst night msy explain why. In psrt. It said: "Because the clock has a voice, me. talllc though It Is, one Is more con scions of It than other household ornaments. Aleo glances at the clock are usually forerunnera of pleasant emotions time to eat. time to go vlstlng, time to sleep, etc." I've frequently thought thst one of the belter "human Interest" re porters wns Col. Jim Robinson In our town. He wont about with a pad In his hand and a pencil behind his esr. writing Ills Items as he went. He Is jione now, but In the "33 Veers Alio Today" column of the paper on which he worked wns this parsgraph of his: "Mr. licit Meigs, for the past four years with the street car people of Columbus. la here on a visit. He and his son, Vnnce, are doing nicely, mnklng their :l every dsy." The city born iiewnpsprr reader will smile at this. Bvit 10 those from a prong of some lost creek Hint is Jusl what we wanted to know -thclr pay. col. Robinson was a roly-poly gen tleman, a tnrtuulous user of line cut nnd wore In schnoh suits of white -tecr-uckpr. a brown stlsw hat and a blnek stmesliiiig tie. He uartl to tell a joke on liunsrlt thst sent our river town into a h.ip of laughter. The nature of hla calling was naturally In quisitive, s.ltlnmiih never maliciously so. One tlsy he was passlulg a vtne gnrlsh itians widow whose buitgy horse refused to move. "Why have you got him reined so lilshT" he inquired. She replied with a w.'.ff : "To keep his nose out of olh-r folks' uuslnessl" Utc Msil rniuiue Aniil 4ds SKI irEDFOTID MAIL the market and became valuable In excess of the price fixed. Fifty yesrs after the original grant the government recovered 2.300.000 acres, estimated to be worth 130,000. 000. Adjustments were made with the railroad company and with the counties,, wnicn nsa oeen coiiect incr tax, nn the lands from the rail road company and which would no longer do so when the lend returned ,n nnhllM Mom.mhtn. Thereafter the land was classified and the federal government undertook to carry out the original and primary inwmuuu a. nnmMB VlO nfferlTUr the land in small plots for sale to settlers, at low prices. njLrf Mnaress. the railroad people. the settlers snd other Oregonlans who Interested tnemseivea in matter been gifted with foresight as .. hindsight of the crlticsl conservstlonlsts. sll concerned might have done better witn tne propui inn Tfermttrti economle changes that could not be foreseen, such ss the slowing up of rural settlement In Oregon, plans for use or ine u. i.nri. t.vji not worked out as ex- rwtA. . Even many settlers who bought lands In full faith and actu ally put much labor ana money invo development have had to abandon their olacea because of Inability to make a living tnereon. Failure to realise expectations m this matter la not the fault of the i.. utt.t.lers. nor. necessarily, . a ntvinritlea who havs had the property In hand. It has been a com- k,n.,iAn nr eirrumat&ncea mat couu not be controlled, by legislation or otherwise. The problem remains to be solved, t ia nn-. nreMlno- at the moment and cannot be forced to early solu tion. It, calls for study, wunout vituperative discussion. And the first nneM.rol.n In all lUBtlce. ShOUld be the protection of the Interests and tne wenare or me peupie have Invested their labor and money hMiM in th. reirlona where the so-called O. is C. landa are situ ated." Communications Banwell's Bed of Roses To the Editor: The broadside fired by the learned Mr. Ban well, manager of the Cham ber of Commerce, and printed In your issue of April 13-13 under "Menace of Communism Stressed by Baowell," serves aa an excellent Il lustration of the bankruptcy of Ideas In the business mind In the vast domain of social evolution. The Big Berthas were aimed not only at the much misunderstood so-called com munists who are numerically almost & zero but also against all those having dynamic Ideas, It Is hero where the undersigned comas Into the picture. "The rap" la of course taken but not without protest, tt must be feeble 'since little can ' be accomplished in 300 words against Mr. Banwell's 3000. Nevertheless here goes: In common with most all business men, Mr. Ban well stresses the Im portance of social static aa all un- sclenttflo thinkers do and to their ultimate disadvantage. Anything, however good, held onto too long becomes rotten. This la as true of eggs as of Institutions. Nature ab hors the static condition like It does a vacuum and when the much de luded but well meaning Ban wells re act against change they court dis aster, not only to themselves but to all. Changes are Inevitable. The best that can be done Is to guide them Into channels most advantageous to all. This la a hard lesson for society but must be learned nevertheless. Mr. Banweli believes that changes In American Institutions threaten to do away with his bed of roses In which he luxuriates. He Is against those agents of Immutable laws be hind social transformation. But his own statements prove that he does not believe in American Institutions not the chief one, I.e., liberty of expreanlonl He tells the Lions that they "should bend every effort to see that a curb U placed on subver sive activities and that leaders are permanently muzzled, at least as far as talking Is concerned t" He falls to define subversive activities. It could easily be proved that hla are Just that. And where would America be If such a policy were followed while laying the foundation of her cap italism, Answer: Strangled In her cradle. Who can doubt It? He makes a strong appeal to relig ious prejudices an emotional appeal simply because he la incapable of making an Intellectual appeal. But here Is a subject that Is disbarred from these columns. Moreover, the 300 word limit Is passed which, no doubt will meet with much satisfac tion by others beside Mr. Banweli. R. HEONER. Gold Hill. .April 3. 1036. Free Speech To the Editor: High lights on the Townsend Plan Invent igflt ion now going on at Wash ington: Margett, manager, northern California, waa bad boy In Seattle twenty years ago. said evidence being very vital lo the Townsend Plan of today: Towneend Weekly selling too many pill advertisement. All newspapers take warning, if you don't want to be Investigated you hod better take tome of your pill advertisement out and say some thing against the Townsend Plan. What would Patrick Henry say if he was alive today? Talk about your Tree speech, and the rights of the pre. Becaune the Townnend people spent a meaMey 1700. Well they didn't (the com mittee) know what to do at flmt. but finally decided they would declare war on Japan or RusMa (Japan ;ire rerredl. Yeaterday the Republicans sent out a call for one million loyal Republi cans to send II each for a campaign fund. Mr. Bell, you had better call your committee off of the Townsend Plan and get shem to work on the l.epubltcans. It looks like there would be more money in the Investi gation. You know that It i.kr quite a hit oi ni-Hit) for eleven lawyers to Uvc TRTBUNMEDFORD, Personal Health Service By William Brady, H. O. signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease dlagnusls or treatment will be answered by Ur. Brady If stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In ink owing to the large number of letter, received only a few can be answered No reply can oe made to queries not conforming Co Instructions. Address Or. William Orady. 263 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Csi. HOW DO YOU HA In recent articles referring to the new treatment of chronic arthritis with massive doses of vitamin D (200.000 to 600.- 7rW"Mi 000 uniu 5ally) we alluded, cas ually, to calcium metabolism, that la, the absorp tion, assimila tion and utilisa tion of calcium in the body and Its excretion or elimination, (tpartlcula. re gardlng treat ment available by mall, If you provide the freight a atsmped en velope bearing your correct address, and "City" or "Locur Is not a cor rect address, the postofflce insist). Then In the booklet "The Ills Called Rheumatism" we describe the use of calcium lactate or, gluconate and also the excellent reaulta obtained In the treatment of chronic arthri tis by daily Injection of parathy roid extract. The parathyroid hor mone or Internal secretion controls calcium metabolism. Vitamin D either controls para thyroid gland function or in some way promotes or supplement the physiological action of the parathy roid hormone or internal secretion. Ultraviolet light, of which noon day mid-summer sunlight is . the richest source, produces vitamin D by converting certain fat-like sub stances called sterols Into vlosterol. Sterols In the skin are so changed by exposure to sunlight or to ultra violet from a mercury-vapor quartz lamp or an arc lamp and the vitamin D. thus produced Is carried by the blood from the skin to the places where It is required In the body. This booklet "The Ills Called Rheu matism." if J may be pardoned for mentioning, Is available to any read er who asks me for It and Incloses, a stamped addressed envelope and ten cents In coin. I don't care how thin the dime Is so long as it is legible and not all gummed up with glue, muci lage, adhesive plaster, binder tape, shoemakers' thread, balling wire or gunny sacking. There's still a puzzling point about calcium and how the body bandies it. that I hope we may spon clear up. That la why the foods which are na turally the best sources of calcium are poor In vitamin D or contain none at all, whereas the few foods which contain vitamin D are indif ferent or poor sources of calcium. This apparent discrepancy causes one to wonder whether nature did not on. Of course they are not living so high as us folks out here In the west (on relief). Well, aa the Hoosler Schoolmaster said: "Git aplenty while you're git tlng" aya I. as you won't always be there. P. J. KIRKPATRICK Star Route, Box 87, April 3, 1936. (Continued from Pegs One.) They say he rightly reasons that It would be better to be a quasl emperor, even If under League of Nations auspices, than to be a dead one. nils should make overybody happy before mid-June. A significant unmentloned factor behind the current European politi cal dickering Is the military weakness of the reds. Those who know something of the Inside of the red military altuatlon helleve It Is several yeara away from Its ultimate Importance. The Soviets have many new war Industries. They are now making their own planes and tanks and are beginning to make their own engines. Most of the Industries are located Just east of the Urals. The spot was selected because It Is about half way between what will eventually be the eastern and western fronts. Also It Is remote from air attack. But It la equally remote from the battle line, four davs by rail from the western front, six days from Vladivostok. No rosds worth mentioning supplement the double-track railroad. All that an enemy of Russia would have to do right now Is to keep bombing the railroad as far Inland as possible. A Washington real estate man strolled Into a hardware store In Carthsge. N. C, and found the pro prietor kicking around a stsok of mstled literature about four feet high. The proprietor explained: That's the stuff I have received from the federal housing administration dur ing the last 18 months. I haven't had time to open any of It yet." Top authorities on international finance say that Britain aaved the franc. The London stablllratlon fund la supposed to have been uned to the extent of iOO OtX- 000. according to unofficial (ruea,e tn oftw-lal quarters The actual amount, of eoure. is a British official secret. The battle is by no means over. There may be Boiuelhiiift In the fact that the death toll among WAsJiliton newamen this winter has been unusually lnrtte while that of official has beelt unusually small. Seventeen me inhere of the National PreM chth he-e died durlnc the lt utrec im'ii'us, & stint mcuiwin oi ( r re-, ti- I Vdivs OREGON", SUNDAY. 'APRIL 5. 1936. NDLE CALCIUMT Intend that man should expose him self to the sunshine or sky shine, In stead of covering himself with Imper vious clothing and confining himself most of the time In holes from which sunshine and sky shine are almost en tirely excluded, and throwing out constant smoke screens from factories and homes to intercept what little ultraviolet gets thru the fog, cloud and dust overhanging Industrial towns and cities, . All of this la probably academic and will not Interest laymen much. I fear It Is still quite true that even Intelligent folk who feel pretty well at the moment are not concern ed about hygiene or sanitation. They have to get sick or at least out of sorts before they will even dip Into a column Uke this. Ana that's too bad, because the conductor Is notoriously unsympathetic toward Invalids, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Milk Should pasteurized milk be boiled before giving It to the baby? I have been boiling It 30 minutes, as boiling Is supposed to break up the curds and render It more digestible, but does pasteurization In Itself do this? . . . (Mrs. 8. C.) Answer Pasteurization means the process of heating the milk to 146 degrees (par-bolllng) for 20 to 30 minutes, then allowing It to -.cool. This degree and duration of heating destroys disease germs In the milk. I should not advise boiling milk with a purpose of making It more -digestible; on the contrary, raw milk is probably more rapidly digested than cooked. Be sure the baby fed pasteur ized or boiled milk receives a dally ration of vitamin C to prevent scurvy In the form of tomato juice (fresh or factory canned) or orange juice, lodln Just how much lodln and In what form do you advise for a suitable "lodin ration"? . . , (L. L.) Answer Send three-cent -stamped envelope bearing your address, for de tailed Instructions. Temperature I understand there la one degree difference between temperature taken by a mouth and rectal temperature. Does that mean that If a child's tem perature . . . (L. E. O.) Answer I advise you to leave to the physician the Interpretation of temperature recordings. (Copyright 1036, John P. Dtlle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communlcoate with Dr. Brady should lend letter direct to Dr William Brady, M. D., 26A El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Calif. the Gridiron club. Less than half a dozen officials have died.' Apparently it la less of a hazard to health to be a new dealer than to try to keep up with them. PLANS TALKED FOR Various phases of 4-H club work were discussed by the Jackson county 4-H leaders association which met In the courthouse auditorium, Medford, Saturday. Attention waa focused on ways and meana of raising funds for the 4-H club summer school which la to be held, at CorvalUs In June. Leaders of the various 4-H groups outlined briefly whet their clubs were doing to raise funds for the summer school. Mrs. Prank Croucher. leader In the Howard district, reported that her club was sponsoring candy sales and that they already had made a small start toward a summer school schol arship. According to Miss Marjorle Flak of Oak Grove, the clubs In her district are planning to give an out door carnival to be held some time In May. Miss Doris Hitchcock of Be 11 view stated that the clubs In her district were well on their way and had al ready raised some funda for scholar ships. Mr. Dick Joy, president of the association, reported that the Ash lend clubs had gh'en an entertain ment and had made enough for two or three scholarships. A rery Interesting talk was given by L. J. Allen, assistant state club leader, stressing the Importance of leadership in the community and ex plaining how 4-H club work developed this qu.-flity. On Political Leave CORVALL1S, Ore., April 4. (Jp) U. S. Burt, head of the department of visual education of the state board of education, received permis sion to take a leave of absence In connection with hla candidacy for state treasurer, the board said today On Trip To Europe EUGENE. April 4. (Pi Dean Eric W, Allen, of the University of Oregon, will present studies ofWreglonal and national planning projects of Ger many and other European countries to the Oregon planning board upon his return here this fall. Kickerntrk Panties a.75 ai.00 4U.25 rTHELWYN B. HOFFMANN. BOWMAN'S BEAUTY SHOP 16 Miuth I'.ntral. We feature: New Ray (machinelcss Celo-Vision and other waves. Shampoo and Finger Wave 75c Marcclla Bowman Helen S. Lane Gladys Fisher Com ment on the Day s News By FRANK JENKINS B T a majority of M to one practi cally unanimous the "voter," of Germany endorse Dictator Hitler's remilitarisation of the Rhlneland. (Which means sending German soldiers back Into the zone along the Rhine which the Versailles and Lo carno treaties FORBADE German troops to enter), SURMUSDia? Well hardly. Suppose you were a German, and you knew when you went to the polls that If you voted AGAINST what Hitler wanted and the secret polios found It out you would get Into very serious trouble Indeed (even, possibly, to the extent of facing a firing squad on some trumped-up charge or other) how would you vote? I Why. you would probably vote as Hitler wanted 1 ALICE Robe, former head of the Rome office of one of the big American newsgatherlng associations, now back in the United States, tells an allumln&tlng story about the way dictatorships work. She knew a young Italian who had been carefully and expensively edu cated and whose future, apparently, was about as bright as a young man's could be. But, shortly after he fin ished school, he dropped out of her sight, and when she next heard of him he waa working as a common laborer In some remote point sent there In disgrace, somewhat as offend ing Russlana used to be sent to Si beria. What had happened to him? Merely this: ' . Voting at an Italian "election," he marked his ballot BY MISTAKE against Mussolini. His disgrace fol lowed. , EVER since the world war, broadly speaking, the world hss been In a, mess, and In mony countries the mess hss become so discouraging that the people, doubting their own pow eVs, have turned to dictatorships for relief wsshlng their own hands of the mess And saying to some INDI VIDUAL: "Here Is supreme power; see what you can do with It." It has been a terrible mistake. No matter what the ahortcomlngs of self-government may be, they CAN'T be ss bad as the shortcomings of ABSOLUTISM. When absolutism begins, liberty ENDS. ' Detective Plays Leading Role In Life Of Criminal BROOKLYN, April 4. (AP) For 18 years detective, now Sergeant Charles Hemendlnger followed the trail of Elton C. Wing, who was wanted for murder In a bank rob bery. He caught blm In 1932, help ed convict blm and got Wing a Job sfter he was paroled In 1834. Today Hemendlnger followed Wlnga bier to the grave after tak ing up a collection to prevent hla burial In potter's field. Wing died of pneumonia. cv Mill chief LONGVIEW. April 4. (fl1) Ap pointment of Charles Tobln of Long view to become superintendent of the Klamath Falls, Ore., and Dorrls. Cal., plants of the Long-Bell Lumber company, waa announced today by L. L. Chlpman, vice president. Ask Mine Water SALEM. April 4. J. C. and Eth el Myers of Portland tiled application with the state engineer for a permit to appropriate 10 second feet of wat er from an unnamed spring, tribu tary of Taylor creek, for mining In Josephine county. Steamboat Item THE DALLES. Ore., April 4. P) The Shaver Forwarding company said today that the river steamer, Uma tilla, will be remodeled to permit the handling of petroleum products. The host will be taken oft Its run on Msy 1. , . Peep Study riaiined PORTLAND. April 4. (P) Com mittees of specialists will study the legislative needs of varloua branches of government, Ormond R. Bean, chairman of the stste planning board, said today. hlp At Sea Afire PORTLAND, Ore.. April 4. ff" Fire blazed In a hold of the .8S0-ton motorshlp. Tricolor, while the four-year-old craft with 19 passengers and crew of 40 aboard traveled toward the United States todsy 1000 mites west of Yokohsms. Will share profit equally for busi ness short term loan. Box 3053, Mall Tribune, Reminding you that Next Sunday ii Easter Make anappointment for a beautiful new Permanent Wave Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years a co. TEN VEARS AGO TODAY April 5, 1926 (It Waa Monday) The Mail Trlaune Is enlarged from a seven column to an eight column paper with new type. Sen. Bruce denounces Prohibition laws, aa "hateful decelt-and a blight" In speech in congress. The first rsin in 40 days falls over valley Sunday, causing farmers to re joice. Portland plumbers strike for a five day week and H per day wages. Guy W. Conner, local fruitman and six children lost on Jaunt to Pilot Rock In Slsklyoua. John Conner and John Smith, two youths with the party find way to highway and re turn home. Sen. Pess of Ohio speaks at Port land. "Eight years of Republicanism finds capital Invested, and labor fully and profitably employed. Contrast these conditions with the last demo cratic regime." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April S, 1!)16 (It Was Wednesday) Clean-up la being quite generally cbserved In residential sections of the city. "Made -In -Medford" banquet Is planned, for end of month. "Williamson's Submarine Pictures" at the Page; "Life'? Blind Alley" at the Star. Ralph Baxdwell is re-elected a di rector of the Drama league, at the annual meeting. Army officer to talk before high school on "Preparedness." Ten carloads of new automobiles were unloaded there in March, and four carloads have so far been re ceived this month. Veteran Missionary Dead. NEW YORK, April 4. (P) Word was received here today of the death in Honolulu of the Right Reverend John McKim, D. D. until last No vember Episcopal bishop of North Tokyo, Japan. He was 84 years old and had been a missionary In Japan for 67 years. Save money on watch, clock nnd Jewelry repairing. Graves Jewelry Shop. Phone 182, 21 So. Riverside Ave Ose Mall Tribune want ads. tOO LATE TO CLASSIFY OARS painted. Spray system. Low cost. Guar. Auto Beauty Shop., ph. 1061. PHONE 969 -R. re-up mastering, re finishing, re-gluelng Thlbault. GOOD Citizenship requires that you register and vote. Registration for the May primary closes April 14th Jackson County Democratic Cen tral Committee. FOR RENT Apartment, 3 rooms and bath; lights and hot water tur nlshed; Frigid are. 810 S. Oakdale FOR SALE Few choice hybrid del phinium clumps. L. A. Mentzer, 703 West 2nd. FORCED TO 3 ELL 1 Hotpoint elec tric range, new and complete house hold goods, all excellent condition. General Electric refrigerator. Tel. 1522-Y. 009 Stevens. FOR RENT Furnished 4 -room house. Adults. 410 Hamilton St. CHISEL-TOOTH orchard cultivator, seven point. Good as new. 810 E. Jackson St. EXCHANGES Good $800 flrat mort gage and cash for small Improved suburban. Good modern Medford home, clear; want small well Improved suburban. 3 acres with 2 small sets Improve ments, clear; want 40 acre ranch. One of the best stock ranches In Jackson County, fully stocked and equipped; some trade and easy terms. Investigate this. THE REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE No. 7 N. Bartlett St. Phone 1496 FOR SALE Milk cows and 6 heifer calves. Powell Place. Mountain Ave. on Bear Creek. Ashland. LOST Knights Templar Masonic charm. Call 495. 489 ACRE grain and stock ranch. 1 mostly fenced, 150 acres plow land, springs, timber and outside range, j Price $5,000.00. 1300.00 cash, bal- I ance $250.00 per year, plus 6 no i Incumbrance. Consider clear ' rest- ' dence as down payment. Medford j Pipe and Mach. CO., 40 S. Fir St.. I Medford. Ore. FOR 8ALE 200 Barred Rock pullets 9 weeks. 50c each, part cash and trade for machinery, tools, livestock shakes. Geo. Martin. Gold Hill. FOR SALE Power shovels, screens. ' conveyors, crushers, pumps, saw- i mills, bollp.rA, and mining equip- ment. Medford Pipe and Mach. Co.. I 40 S. Fir Pt . Medford. Ore. 1 GREEN (LAB ?4J00 Big DOUBLE LOAD For Direct Mill Deliveries First come, first served! - Phone 7 Now TIMBER PRODUCTS CO. END OF NORTH CENTRAL AVENUE rfifiiiYiiiT "China Clipper" Lands ALAMEDA. Calif.. April 4.-(r)-Th seaplane China Clipper, Captain B, n n Sullivan commanding, landed here today from Manila Tta Honolulu. Oregon Mutual offers; you the STRONGEST of fire protection at a saving; ; of from 20 to 30 ' STRONG -RELIABLE' The company has grown ; stronger year by year, through-out its 41 years of existence. For each dollarj . of liability, the company has $1.70 in quick liquid assets. j SAVE FROM 20 TO 30" Policyholders save from' 20 to 30 on premium' costs. They dothis because only better class improved property is insured. Oregon mutual mh- INSURANCE COMPANY oi neiisiiiiiii Lelanti Clark, Agt. Fire Bonds and Auto Ins urn nee 7 North Bartlett, Medford, Ore. hone 149(1 MEDFORD S. P. Railroad Tracks Facing Main St. 2 DAYS ONLY Mon. Tues. April 13-14 GENERAL i f ADMISSION I U C FOR THIS DATE SEE Real Live Penguins Octopus Sea Monsters OPEN 10 A.M. TILL 11 P.M. PINE lip