Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 16, 1936, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE SIX'
MEDF0RD4JTRmUNE
'Evi7on Itt Southern Orvcw
Heads the Mail Tribune"
Dally Kscept Saturday.
Ptibl.irttx) by
HBDPORD PB1NTIN0 CO.
J.;7-: N. Fir St, Phont 7.
ROBERT W. RUHU Editor.
ERNEST R. OIL8TRAP, Unnmgtr.
An Independent Newspaper.
. Entered as aecond-claaa matter at Bed.
ford. Orfon, under Act or Mareb l. '
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Man tn .
null, on yaar....
... i.ii
n.i' An month
By Carrier. In Advance Msdford, Aah
land, Jackaonvllle. Central Point,
Pbonl, Talent. Gold Hill and on
hlB-hwayi.
Dully, one yaar
Dally, il montha
Dally, on month ,0
All terma, eaah In advance.
Official Papev of the City of MMforti.
Official Papev of Jackson Connty.
' M KM II Kit OF THE ArfBOCIATEO PKKSH
Recdrlnjt Full Leaaed Wire Hm-flea.
The Assoclatad Pres Is exclusively sn
titled to the use for publication of all
nswa dispatches credited to It or other
wise credited in this paper, and aleo to
the loca4 news published herein.
All rights for publication of special
dispatches herein are also reserved.
MEMBER OP UNITED PRESS
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Representstlves ...
M. 0. MOOENHKN A COMPANY
Offices In New Vork, Chicago Detroit,
San Francisco, Angeles, Seattle.
Pftrtlsm.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur I'erry.
Bis.buu of Oreion Democracy will
rally her tomorrow, and, at . thl.
stage or the fracas, It wouio o nam
to find a more pleasant bunch of
patriots and statesmen.
The major portion of the popula
tion with the use of. both their
hands, are busy playing "Handles,"
.....
Peoria BUI Gates ate welnle with
.ha .nnl0.t. OranDA lSt Wd.
svng. Candidates and politicians
. . . -.4
working I or me larmere,
chicken, and first crack at the giz
zards, thereof.
KNOOKI KNOCK I , . . Who's there?
. . , Elno Hemmllal , , . Hemmlla
unto hlmselfl
.
Ah, Banwell of the Chamber Is
rusticating at Prospect.
...
The Elk feline has returned from
the hospital, and la meowing about
Its operation.
...
H. Chllds la flaunting a tltlan.
haired mustachlo.
The wrestling matchea at the
Armorv tomorrow night will be stu
pendoiis, with nothing barred but
atranglo-holds, and cross-cut saws
Vets of the late war have been
. up to Rebg. all week In convention
assembled, reliving (he old days and
moat of the nights.
A machine was slated to perform at
the golf lynx, that knocks a ball as
far as golfers claim they do,
...
The eves and morns are a wee bit
chilly, but the afternoons are warm
enough to buy blanket for next
winter at all leading stores. John
Mann has fall coats for the women
folks on display.
0. Wig Aahpola Is splitting the
wind, In a new auto.
t
Masyer Richard Schuhard, bicyclist,
like the O. Codding kid, stops at all
Intersections, to make sure the ap
proaching motorist won't make
black marks on the pavement.
H. Boheffel. has averted going to
Bsaem to live.
Hunters have started oiling up
their tniity rifles to bag the elusive
buck.
The Older Olrl are all tending
to their knttMng these days.
...
There has been no shlvaree down
the Main Stem lor a month. This Is
either due to the lack of marriages,
or the lsst shot your corr. took at
the offense.
Cltlnene of Yreka. Cat., are raising
whiskers for a Oold Rush, and a
rush for the barbershops after It Is
over.
...
This Is National Beef Month. Sep
tember and October are expected 10
be more so.
...
The Dubb Wateon boy Is now In
the selling end of the newspaper
business, and enjoys his work, and
the yelling required, to negotiate a
deal
...
Trie men of Medlord high have
stared pigskin drill.
...
Marsh Oarrett of the K. Pt. dis
trict hsa acquired a white-faced
Hrrelord bull, that he can out-run
to the pasture fence, he hopes.
...
J. Kort Hull la busy with his pesra,
and giving a ijood Imitation of per
peuiai motion.
i
E Jackson street will be paved.
This Is a much needed Improvement,
and by Oct. I speed Idiot will be
catapulting through the bridge rail
ing, or mlMlng It completely.
'Yamhill' Road Hrlil
MoMlNNVtlXE. Ore.. Aug. 18.
(API An argument hinging around
sn oak tree, a road right-of-way and
two persons who effectively halted
operations of a construction ere
headed toward another circuit court
airing today with three Yamhill
county officials and a contractor
cited for contempt of court.
Miff sentence Meted
McMINNVlLLE, Aug. 15. (API
Charles Dotson, who recently escsped
from the Waahlngton county Jail, and
two accomplices were given prison
sentence ranging from one to fifteen
)nrt by Circuit Judge Frank R
Peters.
Knox Shares
HOWARD FISHER, cartoonist for the Oregon Journal, has
an offering in the Saturday issue, entitled "'What changes
time baa wrought 1" -
Colonel Knox, G.' 0. P. vice-presidential candidate is depicted
jumping off a cliff, through a thunder cloud, holding aloft a
banner reading "We areroing to have a real 'share-the-wealth'
development in this land!" - ,
On the brink of the cliff is a conventional figure of pluto
cratic Big Business plug-hat, paunch, .dollar-sign pants
and everything yelling in lachrymose distraction: "Merciful
Heavens, where i that man leading us I", while from aloft Uncle
Sam looks down in alarmed amazement.
1 ' ;
TPHE inspiration for the cartoon, wag the; recent statement
made by Governor Landon'g. team-mate, that he TOO, is
for a share-the-wealth programs .
Isolated from its context this WAS a startling and surpris
ing declaration, from the opulent owner of the Chicago Daily
News, but not to anyone who read the speech in its entirety.
Time HAS wrought great changes, and probably greater
ones in the offing, but not in the direction of Big Business,
and the dynamic but fascistic Colonel Knox.
DIG. Business does not judge
- judges them in their entirety. There were consequently no ' instead we regard any charac.
. . .. , . . w r., . terlatle ausceptlblllty or pecullai
shivers of consternation and alarm, at the corner of Wall Street Mnsitivity a a challenge to diagnos
and Broad, when the text of that Knox speech at Huntington,- "nd therapeutic skin. From egi
West Virginia, was released.
, 1 .Ai 1 1 ai
mcir cuiuuci, uul uucnune iney.
share-the-wealth doctrine; as they are with the inner workings
of Dun and Bradstreet. :
Not only familiar With it but they like it. It is nothing new.
It has been preached by Republicans in at least three presiden
tial campaigns, perhaps more, has in fact been in perfectly good
standing since the days of Mark
DRIEFLT it is this, Big Business and the increasing concen-
tration of wealth in this country, as a menace to Democracy
and American institutions is a myth, a horrendous Bogey man
erected by the radicals and demagogic Democrats, out of whole
clo(h in an effort to get votes.
believe and fake.
Whyf Because, who owns Big Business, A. T. & T., U. S.
Steel, General Motors, General Electric, etc., etc.! Morgan and
Rockefeller, the Vanderbilts and DuPont, Wall Street and the
Upper Bracket group t No! The great and glorious middle class
owns them the clerks and the school teachers, the widows and
orphans, the small town business and professional men, their
savings have gone to buy stocks in these large institutions, and
they represent by an overwhelming figure, a vast MAJORITY
OF THE STOCKHOLDERS.
Moreover mnny of these large corporations, sell stock on
favorable terms to their employees give them a financial in
terest in the business, and it was THIS practice that Colonel
Knox stressed, highly praised, and declared if elected, he would
do everything to promote.
This was his justification for adopting Huey Long's familiar
slogan, Share-the-Wealth I
KTO, that portly and somewhat apoplectic old gentleman, with
' dollar signs on his pants, suffered no heart palpitations,
when these familiar sentiments, came over the stock ticker.
Far from its The more generally common stock is lij-M, the
more widely it is distributed to the rank and file, up to a certain
point, the better for him, not only from a business, but from a
political standpoint. For every holder of stock has a vote, and
when his pocketbook is concerned he votes RIGHT.
But emphasize that "UP TO A CERTAIN POINT." That
point is passed whenever there is any danger of the CONTROL
of that stock, (which means the control of the policies and prac
tices of that company) passing from a certain inside group.
Let that point be reached and who is urged to buy stock!
No one. But those on the inside in danger of losing this control
do buy it, and assuming the company is a profitable one, they
will pay almost any price for it.
"PHIS i not demagoguery, it is merly stating a FACT, and
anyone who knows anything about Big Business in this
country, the way it is constituted and the way it works(
KNOWS it to be a fact.
The problem which Big Business represents politically, is
NOT who owns the stock but who CONTROLS it and how
that control is used as far as fair profits, fair prices and the
welfare of the country is concerned.
So whatt Just this: .
In the same speech in which
the-wealth program, Colonel Knox repeated his familiar casti-
gation of a highly centralized
effort of President Roosevelt to set up what his enemies are
pleased to term a political dictatorship. "The best government
is the government that governs the least, what control is exer
cised should be exercised by the states," etc., ete.
IN other words, Big Business
as stock is sold on the open market to employees and others
who can afford to buy it. If this pleasing bit of sophistry
should not get by, if this government should become more and
more obviously, a government by Big Business, subject to the
unsocial practices of Big Business then, barring destruction
of Big Business WHICH NO ONE WANT!?, there would be no
way of effectively controlling it.
For there is no political axiom more obvious than this: to
control highly centralized financial power there must be highly
centralized political power, The
strongest federal authority can,
but make it behave.
w
HEREUPON and to-wit:
everything is just dandy
It certainly is.
Had Mr, Fisher been something of a realistic satirist, he
would not have labelled that cartoon as he did.
Ho would have had Uncle Sam jumping over the cliff, to a
Big Business dictatorship; he would have had Colonel Knox
on the ciU'o, loudly linuiilnist ing his share-the-wealth proposal:
and he would have had that old boy, with the dolhr signs on
the Wealth!
speeches by isolated phrases, it
Not 'only because the boys know I
- . r l ' ... , v i i !
re as laminar witu mat type oi I
Hanna.
It doesn't exist. It's all, make-
he proclaimed this REAL share-
government, the un-American
and the increased centralization
states can't do it. Only the
i.e.: not destroy Big Business
if Colonel Knox has his wav.
from a Big Business standpoint.
his pants, up above, pointing a stubby forefinger at the tableaux
below, head back,-mouth open, his. fat -sides shaking with
ribald laughter! ' ' '"'.' ' ;
Personal Health Service
By William
ttigned letters pertaining to personal bealtb and hygiene not to disease
magnosie or treatment wlU be answered by Or. Brady If a .tamped self-addressed
envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink
Owing to . the large number of letters received only a few can be answered
No reply can be made to querlea not
or. William Brady, lies El Cam! no, Beverly BlUa, CaL
DISEASES CAUSED BY POLLENS.
In the good old days we looked
quizzically upon Individuate who be
came asthmatic from proximity to ,!
. dog or cat; pitied
the inept newly
rich who suffered
hives from their
earlier researches
in sea food: clas
sified aa anobs or
fuse budgets
those who made
much to-do over
the ir annual
siege of hay fe
ver. Pathology
changes with the
times. No longer
du we suspect
patient with Idiosyncrasies of hys-
migraine, the physician today haa to
be ever on the alert for allergic trmi-
. " '
persons are susceptible and others
Immune Is as definitely a manlfes.
tatlon of allergy as is ragweed polll.
nosls. Polltnosls Is disease caused by
pollen. "Hay fever" Is out, because
such trouble from the hay or grass
pollens Is so rare aa to constitute a
curiosity. Ragweed pollen accounts
for more than ninety per cent of all
polllnosls. Three thing popularly
blamed for the trouble actually are
rarely found responsible namely,
hay, roses, goldenrod. Probably the
harmless goldenrod . gets Its unde
served reputation from blooming so
gorgeously alongside of the unnoticed
but ubiquitous Abrosla (ragweed).
Other weeds or plants which may
cuuse late summer or early autumn
polllnosls are sage, Russian thistle,
lamb's quarters, Amaranths and Eng
lish plantain.
In 86 per cent, of cases dally In
jection of glycerin extract of the pol
len to which the Individual la sensi
tive, beginning with a homeopathic
dose and gradually increasing the
doso for two weeks before the begin
ning of the patient's usual season,
will prevent all symptoms or give
marked relief throughout the season.
This method la called immunological
treatment, but It Is homeopathic
nevertheless.
A good many polllnosls sufferers
have obtained great benefit from a
course of calcium lactate, ten grains
three times a day after food, taken
dissolved In water, sweetened and
flavored with fruit Juice If desired,
for six or eight weeks, preferably be
ginning a few weeks before the sea
son, An adequate dally ration of
vitamin D la essential for the meta
bolism or utilization of calcium. The
most economical vitamin concen
trate avallabto provides 300 unit to
the drop, Is virtually tasteless, and
may be taken In five to ten drop
doses dally (Infants are given five to
ten drops dally to prevent rickets).
The use of adrenalin solution ana
ephedrln solution as a nasal spray
for symptomatlo relief la well known
to most polllnosls sufferers.
Many sufferers have assured me
that they find plain boric acid solu
tion a rounded teaspoonful of boric
acid dissolved In a pint of boiled
water, used agreebaly warm, many
time a day, both as nasal spray and
aa gargle, glvea much comfort. I
believe It Is at least harmless In any
case.
QUESTION AND ANSWERS
nrlttle Nalla
Kindly tell me why my finger nails
are brittle. la It because a certain
f. V
JZ3 Srie:J
( I ti
it ?
I
f
,
L
ifei""' I.
V 1
The Incomparable ruljlne f !hl hotel li personally jupervUed by Mr. rurtl, formerly head
ihef of Tail's smart San Kranclve restaurant, the Washington Hotel and fashionable
llnliler elub of Prattle and the r.eorgle Hotel of Vancouver, B. C. William rurtli has
presided oer the kllrhens of famous hotels on the Continent, the Orient and the Philippine
lands,. , . HI foods, served by courteous, efficient attendants at the Hotel Medford,
all! be sure to please you. Special attention Is also given to private parties with privacy
and good service asauredt
DINE TODAY AT THE
HOTEL MEDFORD
P. Q. DENSON, MANAGER
Brady, MJ).
conforming to Instructions. Address
chemical Is lacking In my body.
(Mrs. O. C. R.)
An.: Insufficient data to warrant
a guess. Often faulty nutrition la a
cause of pitted, ridged, spooned or
brittle nails. Chiefly Insufficient
vitamin. You may find helpful sug.
gestlons In booklet "Building vital.
lty." por copy send ten cents coin
and stamped envelope bearing your
address. Ask alao for monograph
"Wheat to Eat," and lay tn a peck of
plain wheat, for you're going to
need It.
Lead Poisoning
. Not a few house In our neighbor
hood have lead pipe In the water line,
especially at bends. The water sup
ply I purified with chlorine, I won
der If that wouldn't tend to dissolve
letd lead chloride is quite soluble
and whether this might not be a
source of chronlo lead poisoning?
(W. I. H.)
Ana.: Sound reasonable. Lead poi
soning from such source ha occurred
In England, Germany and In Massa
chusetts. You will find Information
In Rosenau'a "Preventive- Medicine
and Hygiene" (Appleton) which book
should be In the public Ubiary,
Goat Milk
Neighbor who bought a doe re
stored a sickly Infant to health with
the goat'a milk. But we tried goat's
milk for our five montha' old baby,
and It didn't seem to agree with him.
(B. E. A.)
Ans.: Feed the baby goat'a milk
Just aa thouch It were the highest
grade cow's milk. I don't know why
it should not agree. -
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
cummunlrate wltb Dr. Brady
hould send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady, ' M. D 269 El
(.'amino, Beverly Iftlls, Caur.
-O.QMclntvre
NEW YORK, Aug. IS. Highlights
a the 20 year parade passed: Zleg-
feldi harassed by debt, spraying hi
' office at Inter
vals with an tia
an or,, scent from
Araby. Meeting
Valentino . In i
St. Louis ' news
paper office with
the u p p reased
contempt one has
for a supposed
gigolo and find
ing him a cul
tured fellow.
Wilton Lackaye
in a battle of
wlta and carrying off all honors.
Chaplin at a Ned McLean party In
Hollywood letting himself go when
the crowd thinned and the realiza
tion that here was the world's grand-
eat mimic. A fine talk with Doris
Kenyon In her garden at sundown.
Vigorous denunciation of the social
order by Dreiser a he rocked snd
folded his handkerchief. Diamond
Jlm'a locomotive ahlrt set with b!g
rubles for headlight. Paul White-
man's opening at the Palais Royal and
our pledge of a friendship. Mrs. Bel
mont's coach snd four on the avenue
at S p. m.
Irvln Cobb stretched out In a cor
ner of my study, puffing and giving
with casual off-handedness In an
hour column Idea for a month, the
moat fertile Journalistic mind I ever
'
DELICIOUS
FOODS
Prepared Under the
Personal Supervision of
William Curtis
Are featured by the
Hotel Medford
Dining Room and Coffee Shop
'1
Baaa1
encountered, will Haya In years of
Intimate association, never speaking
in of a human being. Yet always un
der fire.
Sinclair Lewis dropping la at my
apartment at the Rltz to meet hi
publisher, Alfred Harcourt with the
finished mas. of "Dodsworth" and re
marking: "I don't know whether it's
any good or not." Don Byrne writing
my most prized compliment from
Dublin about a Cosmopolitan vig
nette. Weekly poker games at the Ma
jestic with Dr. Oeorge Dorsey, Ray
Rohn, Harry Staton, Clare Brlggs, H
T. Webster, Herb Roth and K. c. 8
Listening to Slme, of Variety, when
be grew reminiscent. How he knew
Broadway and it phonies.
Lunching at the White House with
the Hoovers two day before he left
for Palo Alto, and my thought: "He
will not live a month." Charles M
Schwab standing beside hi Invalid
wife receiving guest at his Golden
Wedding annlveraary. George Oersh
wln and Irving Caeser, both unknown,
dropping In and Gershwin playing
bla the favorite composition, "Nobody
But You." Long after-midnight chat
with the learned Meredith Nicholson.
Gene Tunney, with no air of brag,
telling me at Miami Beach before bis
match with Dempaey how confident
he wsa of victory. Wlnne Sheehan'a
private office bath the first I ever
saw In the Fox atudloe on loth ave
nue.
Ex-King Alfonso, on an Itjpectlon
tour of the Europa at Southampton,
reaching down to pat my Boston,
Billy. Bumping smack Into hatleaa
Faderewakl In a leafy dell In the Bola.
Lunching-at the little inn at Doom,
Holland, to await a sight of the Kaiser
returning from Haarlem and the
gnome-like waiter who once eold pea
nut at the Polo arounds. vernon
Castle, riding down Broadway in an
open Rolls, hatless and with a plnx
silk sport shirt. Ollda Gray Introduc
ing the honky-tonk ahlmmy to a so.
clal Register crowd at The Rendez.
vous. The O. O. Mclntyre Handicap
at the Agua callente dog races-
staged, I suspected by Louella Par
sons. Knocking about the pun in
Houndsdltch with "Spike" Hunt.
Obregon strolling through Chapul-
tepeck Park on the fringe of Mexico
Citv and the parallzed sldswalk beg
gar who reassembled a clock with his
tongue. Will Rogers, the last time i
i him, leaving a diinner party in a
gay humor to make a banquet speech.
Marc Connolly dropping arouna to
hotel where I was pre agent, for
Items" for The Morning Telegraph.
My speech, whoopee, at Bob and Pat
Brlnkerhoffe wedding breakfast. Bay
Long's dinner for Edgar Wallace and
the fake murder Jim quirk stegea.
Dancing a waltz with Irene Caatle.
And did I hell her around I Starting
for Tokeneke at midnight with Ar
thur and Ethel Roche and lunching
near dawn before a greatj open fire.
Watching W. R. Hearst'e changeless
expression listening to a Roosevelt
speech by radio at cobble's. The 10-
foot alligator H. T. Webster sent sa
a gag from Florida. The mist slowly
reveallna the lovely fields of Nor-
manv on the boat train to Pari, and
Henry Sell's: "And there are still
smart boya who do not believe In a
Higher Power."
Rube Goldberg cockeyed cartoon
statuary In hi home In the West io s,
across, ahem, from Schwab. Ring
Lardner atandlng glumly to harmon
ize until dawn with a suddenly or
ganized barber shop quartette. Frank
Ward O'Malley complaining on rara
Row one blue Monday that the orange
Juice In the Bronx cocktail was kill
ing him.
(Copyright, 1036, McNaught
Syndicate)
Salmon Eggs for Finns
PORTLAND, Aug. IS. (AP) The
fourth shipment of the eggs of the
famous Columbia river Chinook sal
mon In a many year soon will be
speeding toward Finland, where an
attempt Is being msde to turn tne
American flah Into a flnnish Indus
try. .
1
Youth Drown
ASTORIA. Aug. 15. (AP) Carl
Gustaf Predln. 30. of Deer Island
drowned when he fell off a piling at
Bradwood.
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
FftOM Irun, in Spain, come news
that five rebel planes have bomb
ed San Sebastian .(held by govern
ment forces) while a rebel warship
he in the harbor wltb decks cleared
for action, ready to bombard the city.
Irun 1 a rebel source, so news com
ing from it favors the rebel side.
FROM Madrid, seat of the govern
ment, comes thl dispatch:
"Collapse of the fascist revolution
against Midrld's communlst-soctsllst
leglme within a few hours ws fore
cast by the government."
What the news 1 from Spain, you
see, all depend on where It comes
from .
MEANWHILE, note the more or less
Inconspicuous rumor, printed In
the papers the other day, that "some
western European power" (not
named) la backing the fascist revolu
tion In Spain. It certainly sounds rea
sonable. QECRETARY of the Treasury Mor-
av genthau, after a conference with
the President and congressional lead-
era, give out a statement that taxes
will not be Increased and "may be
slightly reduced."
Election day, you know, occur on
the first Tuesday after the first Mon
day In November, and voters the
country over are nervous about what
taxes are going to be. -
So, until election day Is past, It Is
advisable to give out reassuring atate
menta. BUT don't forget this:
If the government of the United
States goes on apendlng at the rate It
haa been spending and IS SPENDING
STILL, taxes will have to be Increased
No matter what the secretary of
the treaaury aaya.
THIS headline meets the eye:
"Throngs Oather In Kentucky to
Witness Publlo Hanging."
It la estimated that by the time the
hanging takea place the throngs will
number somewhere around ten thou
sand. SPEAKING for himself alone and
not wishing to reflect the opinion
of anyone else, about the last specta
cle this writer would care to attend
would be a public hanging.
.
Capital Awakes
PORTLAND, Aug. 19. (AP) In
quiries Involving capital Investment
of $313,000 were received at the land
development department of the Port
land ohamber of commerce In July.
R. H. Klpp, manager, said today. The
Inquiries totalled 318.
'
Champoeg Meet Set
PORTLAND. Aug. 15. (AP) A
meeting of the Champoeg Park com
mission will be held August 10 at
Champoeg, Milton A. Miller, park of
ficial, aald today.
to Sufferers Jronu
ARTHRITIS
. SCIATICA, NEURITIS, LUMBAGO
and Allied Ailments Dui to Ovtr-Acid Condition!
Qenuinej
from the United Kingdom
Now In MEDFORD
A Fa mow Sovelitf
MR. HUGH WAlPOll
uriteil
"In November, 1934, 1 wn
attacked in both hands by
arthritis. ..I was in hospitals
in Hollywood, New York
and London, getting worse
all the time ... I had alto
gether some fifteen doctors.
They did everything possible
for me. Nothing gave me re
lief. . .When a friend intro
duced RO-MARI I was in
such agony I was willing to
try anything. . .Within two
weelcsthe swelling had gone
down. I AM NOW COM
PLETELY WELL. . .This
is an exacft true account of
how Ro-Mari helped me."
Qenuintj
RO-MARI
from thl United Kingdom
Imported directly from Great Britain...specifically com
pounded to attack over-acid conditions
so often resulting in
ARTHRITIS SCIATICA, NEURITIS, LUMBAGO
Mlinilllj AND ALLIED PAINFUL AILMENTS
Genuine RO-MAW is designed to itrike at the cause of
these conditions, thus offering definite hope of real relief!
Arailible ONLY at
JARMIN'S DRUG STORE
Lb
Flight 'o Time
Medford and JacksoD Count;
history from the tiles of the
MaU Tribune 10 and 20 years
ago.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
August 16, 1936
(It was Monday)
, Attorney-General renders - opinion
holding that O-O. grand lands, not
taxable, nor amendable to extension
on the tax rolls of land grant coun
ties. Eugene to hold TralMc-Rall ccle
bratlon next week in honor of com
pletlon of the Natron cut-off. to
Klamath Palls.
Roof and floor of Rogue River can
nery damaged by fire; will not halt,
operations.
The Hall-Mills murder case in New
Jersey thrills the nation. The widow
of the Rev. Hall, her brother, and
cousin, are charged with his layii.
while holding a tryst with a choir
singer.
Movement started for the re-etab
Ushment of a Commercial club at
Oold Hill.
A Bulck csr driven bv John Dennl.
son of this city, turns over twice on
the 401 ranch, without Injury to anv
of the occupants.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
August 16, 1916
(It was Wednesday)
Baelc eight hour day Is employed
on nation's railroads as a means of
averting strike.
British unable to break through
German defenses on the Western
Front.
Charles Evan Huches. ReDubllcan
candidate for president will pass
through this city tomorrow afternoon
at 3:60 p. m., and will speak from
the rear platform of his car.
City water Is muddy due to a heavy k
rain at Fish lake. Water Superintend
dent Olln Arnsplger, said.
Chief of Police Hlttson returns from
the hills with the first deer of the
season. Two calves killed by hunters
on Lake creek.
1 5 TALKS ADDED
ESTBS PARK, Colo., Aug. 15.
(AP) Gov. Alf M. Landon Issued
today an Itinerary of the return leg
of his first eastern campaign tour.
aaaing 15 platform appearancea In
Illlnola and Missouri to more than
30 scheduled for the eastbound part
of the trip.
The presidential candidate contin
ued to remain close to the ranch.
near here, where he and hi family
are vacationing. Except for an .oc
casional conference with aides, he
did little but rest for the campaign
trip to start August 30.
Virtually rid of a alight cold h
contracted at Topeka last week, Lan
don looked forward to next week.
when he planned to devote some
time to his favorite aports fishing
arid horseback riding.
Oood buys In Used Wood Rancea.
Palmer Eleo. Store.
A Fantout Screen Star
MR. LIONEL BARRYMORE
u-ritet:
"I wasilricken with sciatica
during the filming of a pic
ture last November. The at
tack was very severe. My
friend, Hugh Walpole, told
me of his remarkable experi
ence with RO-MARI and
gave me a small quantity
from his private supply. I
took the firsl dose on Friday
night, By Sunday noon the
pain had entirely disap
peared. ... NOTHING IN
MY EXPERIENCE HAS
BEEN SO HELPFUL. . . .
I feel a deepdebt of gratitude
toward the discoverer of this
remarkable remedy."
T