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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1936)
J PACE FOUR. MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1938.. MEDFORDTRIBUN "Etwtod In Houlhero Oregon Beads the Mul) Tribune" Oallr Bicept featurilar. Published by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. R.T-3 N. Fir St. Phon Ti. ROBERT W. RUHU Editor. URN EST R. OILHTRAP, Manager. An Independent Newepeper. Entered ee Mcond-cU" matter e-t Med ford, Oregon, under Aot of Merch I, 1S7. SUBSCRIPTION RATES U.n-Tn Ailvinci: Dally, one year Dally, elx montha , Dally, one monin v r trier. In Advance Medford, Aih land. Jackinnvllle. Central Point, phoenix. Talent Gold Hill and ),lhwIVi Dally, one yenr Daily, elx monthe Dally, one month All term, caih In advance. Official Paper of tie City of Mwilord. Official uer of Jackson County. MEMBER OF THE ANBOt'l ATKII VUKHH ReceUlna; Full Letter, wire eervice. th. Aaanpiamd Presi le exclusively en titled to the uie for publication of all news dlipntchea credited to It or olher irlie credited In thla pnper, and alio to th iiii fiMva mi bl lulled herein. All rlfhte for publication of tpeelai dUpetchae herein are alio reservea. MEM HER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT RUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advert Ifrlns HVpfienla M vee U. C. MOtiKNHKN i COM PANT Offlcea In New Vnrk, Chlcngo Detroit, San Franclaco, l,oe Artgelte, Seattle, Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Jem Owens, negro gprlnt ac. Ohio University athlete, and triple winner At the Olympic games, plane to com' morclMlM hl running ability. It la atlm&tod by to doing, h will har vest 9100,000, awl lose nothing but hlB amateur landing, and three montha of ache. II he doea not grasp thla opportunity, rugged Indlvldual lata figure, there la no need of fur ther schooling. It tnkes a lot of sloping car tips to total $100,000. e IS THIS AMERICA? (Del mar (Ore.) Itctni) Mora talked about hero than the next president of the United States la the planning of a new grange hall." , The Bend dletrlct that a fortnight ago reported a deer chasing a bob- i oat, now reports the sight of two Jack-rabbit chasing a coyote. The rabblta were probably chaalng the coyote, to paaa the time away, white ' watting to meet a wildcat, and sptt In 1 It eye. It la not known what the timid creatures of that area drink, but blue-Jaya have not atnrted rob bing eagles of their tall feathers. Ail epidemic of "Hand tea" is now raging among cltlaons of all ages, snd both sexes, who a couple of years ago were busy writing "chain let- tors." Or. Wendell O. Bennett, curator of th American Museum of Natunrl History, from extensive studies con cludes, th Indians came fom r line al a, via Boh ring Bea. Moderns de sirous of reaching Russia do not favor: th rout used by the Indians, They i expect to get there by standing on i the street corners, cuaslug their own govenrment, There was a Democratic rally and a wrestling match last night. The Democrats figuratively rammed tut Republicans through the floor head first, and the wrestlers treated noh ether that way. TOTAL LOHS IT KM, (Southwestern Oregon Kens) Monday night's stamp meeting waa fairly near to a flop, accord ing to the general chairman of the club. Only a few actual members were present, and they were lat In arriving. Th place for the next meeting was not set. 'FRnWDLY KETTLE CAMJ5 POT BLACK TILT" (Hdtine Merrill Hc oid) Don't you mean the tin-cup called th pie pan rusty. A rblsom prison convict, due to be released In eight days, after serv ing a lfl-year sentence for burglary. la implicated In an escape plot. No explanation has been advanced tor such behavior, but It looka Ilk he minted to avoid all the work snd worry of getting back in again. A number of vacant lots, with heavy Stands of weeds, are patiently wait ing for a careless cigarette. The wool Industry of America is now profiting by the "new found fondness" of men for "air-cooled pants," the aslea thereof being ftO per cent higher than last year. The ventilation of men's pants Is lees Im portant than the news wool Is once more being used In woolen garments. The first squirrel hunter haa mis ts (ten a fa; calf for a chipmunk. A Lfta Angelea youth has won s 1200 print offered for a campaign poem. A similar amount should b awarded on condition he don't writ another one. noosTF.it Mrrr. "If all the towels made In one year I ft North Carolina were fastened to gether, fringe to fringe. Into one great towel, th man who dried his feot with one end of It on tne rocKj coast of the Rtrnlts of Magellan would with an agitated elbow, overturn a pearl fisher's sampan In the calm. warm waters of the f '.dlan ocean, and find himself wiping his surprised and distance face with the olher end of It on top of the highest peak of Greenlsnd's frosty, famous, and far-flung mountains "(Chamber of Commerce pamphlet.) Phon Ma. We ll haul away roui refuse, city Sanitary Service Another Idol Fallen 'TMJ0SE who follow this column may recall, that we closed our report of the Republican convention at Cleveland, by declaring a certain red-headed delegate from Kansas, one John D. M. Hamilton, stole the show. Hamilton, we declared, had what it takes, and what so few Republican leaders possess, vim, vigor, bounce, punch, per sonality. We predicted he would be heard from in the campaign, and we were right. He is being heard from, and a a human dy namo, he promises to be heard from, until the campaign is over. But we didn't, at the time, report a conversation we had with our next door neighbor in the press .section, a veteran political observer, who lost his enthusiasm, long before he lost his hair; and possessed that sardonic cynicism which is so char acteristic of the higher-ups in his profession. We believe a resume of that conversation, would be timely in view of recent developments, as far as John D. II. is con cerned. "IITE spoke our piece : ' ' Well at last I A real person, with some- thing on the ball. Forceful, clean-cut, dynamic, what a contrast to pudgy, Tammany-branded Jim Farley here the Republicans will have it all over the Democrats anyway. Three rousing cheers for John 1" TTHR old hoy next door gave us a sour pitying smile. "Oh yeah I" said he, "since when has an ex-eorporation-lawyor and Kansas machine politician become better than Jim Farley! They are all alike, all alike. Some are smarter about it than oth crs, that's all. But they are paid to get votes, and that's all they DO get votes. And barring hari-kari they will get them by any means, fair or foul. This talk about Farley being a cross between Al Capone and the old-man-of-the-sea tied around the neck of the pure and undefiled Roosevelt administration, gives me a pain in the neck. HOOEY! Farley is no saint, but he's suarc, and that's more than can be said about some of the other campaign managers I have known. Just keep your eye on this Hamilton sure he is good-looking and full of 'it'- but before this campaign is over you will find him playing the game just, as Farley plays it Rim just as all practical politicians have played it since the world began. It isn't them, its the game and believe you me it's rotten." IITB thought of that statement when we recently read of V Hamilton's airplane flight into Utah. The high point of Hamilton's debut at Cleveland came when he stuck out his jaw, waved a telegram above his head, and read the wire from Gover nor Landon. In that wire the Republican nominee boldly and unequivocally modified the party platform. He insisted upon child labor leg islation and he also insisted upon a sound currency convertible into gold. Great was the rejoicing thereof, over the candidate's cour anemia and incisive action; John D. M. again stuck out his chin and beamed as the delegates roared. The gold pledge was par ticularly pleasing to the big bankers .r the eastern delegations, Only a few of the silver radicals from he Rocky Mountain ureas, remained glum. A Cleveland newspaper the next day declared the telegram from Topeka, had put now life and hope in the Republican party, the most heartening incident of the entire convention. That was only two months ago. How about that ringing message on gold NOW! Well, the redoubtable John proceeded to repudiate it when faced with direct fire from the pro-silver lads in Salt Lake City. In fact he switched completely. Said he: Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. signed letter, pertaining to perioral health end hygiene not to disease u.ujnuai, or treatment will be answered bj Dr. Bred; If stamped nlf-ad-a reused envelope I, encloted. Utter, iboald be brief end written In Ink Uwinf to the large number ol letter, received only few on be answered Mo reply can be made to queries not conformlnt to Initroctlons. addresi Ur. William Hrady. MS El Carol no. Beverly Hill,. Cau WHAT TO FEED THE BABY W0 , '&- iMit 1 "The mere establishment of the told eUndard doea not Im ply that a fair price can not be maintained for silver, and aome arrangement can not be made regarding allver. Currency bleed, on gold would not preclude consideration of the silver problem. Moreover I andon will not favor a return to the gold standard, until-end unless It can be done without Injury to our producer of agricultural produota and raw materials." Silver is a raw material, ergo and toiwit; that dramatio and stirring wire from Governor I, andon, now means exactly NOTHING. To all intents and purposes, the Republican stand on gold is precisely what the Democratic policy is and has been, from the outset. Silver will be favored, gold will not. be return ed to until it can be done, without injury. YkTF' wonder what the New Tork delegation now thinks of V that great victory for sound currency and the gold stan dard. It is one thing at Cleveland and in New Tork; it is en tirely another thing in Salt Lake City, Utah. But politics being politics, this will lose no votes in New Tork and it will gain them from Denver west to the California line. That old boy next door was right. Regardless of the label the professional politicians are all alike. Their job is to get votes, and there is practically nothing THEY WON'T do and say to get them. Poor Zioncheck IT is no credit to the American people that for six months they have been grabbing the papers eagerly to read of the antics a roll of a madman. Representative Zioncheck was mad as a SI hare. His capers were not news any more than the delusions of any other ninniao. It would have been equally enterprising for a newspaper to go to any hospital for the insane and report the eccentricities and ravings of any poor, sick neurotic. Yet, all the press associations regarded Zioncheck as first page news. They took this attitude because a large section of the people were morbid-minded. We have a democracy here all right, but it is as full of blow holes as the limhurger cheese. The wonder is that it works as well as it does. Kmporia (Kansas) Gazette Gun Repairs. Expert mm Sims Bros.. 23 N. nr. Cm Mail Tribune waul "art. LUMBER LABOR CHIEFS START NEW CAMPAIGN ruOEVK. Ai. 18. (API Re porta circulated here said today labor lead er, were making an Intensive cam paign to organlr the lumber lndua try between Salem and Rnseeurg under the lumber and sawmill work era union. Meetings were said to be In progress in Tlrloua localltlea. with the hope of unionising about 8000 HT.rkere. The Willamette valley and eastern Oregon were described aa the only aertlona of the atste which had not been organlred. MEETING TO OBSERVE IRRIGATION PROJECTS BFND, Au. la (AP Robert W. Sawyer, president of th Orenon Reclamation ronrreaa. aald today the Jeth annual meeting of 1rrlRatlonl(tt will be held at Vale on ept. 4-A m obmrance of the completion of th Vila and Owyhee projecta. Sawyer aaJd It aaa hoprd that John C. P(t. acting commliilontr of the U. . Reclamation bureu, would Mtend th meeting. For a baby up to a month old take the upper third of a quart of freah mux which haa tood a few hours (un til cream begins to rlae). For each feeding uae one-third of thla top milk: and two- thlrda b o 1 1 d water. The young Infant will take from three to five ouncea of thla mixture at Intervala of three houra thruout the day (except one feeding omitted In the night). Sweeten the mixture with 1 teaapoonfula of cane augar, or two teaapoonfula of lactose (milk augar; or aextrimaitoae or corn syrup. At the age of two montha mix the aame top milk with boiled water half and half, and aweeten with tea apoonfula of cane cugar. After three montha use two-thirda top milk and one-third boiled water, still aweetened. After four montha uae whole milk and boiled water, half and half, atlll sweetened. After five montha uae two thlrda whole milk and one-third boiled water, with only a teaapoonful or less sugar for each bottle. At the age of six montha the baby should take whole milk without dilu tion and without sweetening. But now some cereal gruel ahould be addod. beginning with a tablespoon ful of oatmeal water or barley water In each feeding. Oatmeal water or barley water la a thin gruel made by boiling a tableapoonful of oatmeal or barley In pint of water for two or three houra and atralnlng thru muslin. Ostmea) water la rather more laxa tive than barley water. At the age of four or five montha begin feeding the baby ripe banana dally. The akin of rip banana la golden yellow, flecked with brown spots, not black bruise marka; the pulp la yellow, sweet and soft but not mushy. Only about a teaapoonful day at first, gradually Increased week by week until the baby takea half a banana at the age of eight months. This solves the constipation problem and mnkea puny, sickly, bad ly nourished Infanta thrive. When the baby can take pure fresh whole milk undiluted, other foods should be added, one thing at a time. Soft boiled egg; freshly cooked, clear meat broth; cereal gruela; vegetables well cooked and. strained thru coarse sieve. Every Infant ahould receive aome fresh or factory canned tomato Juice daily from the age of one month, or orange Juice, or nny other fresh fruit julct in senvm or nvatlnble. begin ning with a few drops dally In a bottle feeding or In a drink of water, and Increasing to a few tea spoonfuls dally when the baby la six montha old. Thla prevent scurvy, and la especially Important when the diet la confined to milk and cooked food At the age of nine or ten montha a baby ahould take aome bread or cracker or twice toasted bread (Melba toaat, awleback) with gravy or meat broth or milk. Every Infant ahould receive a dally ration of vitamin D from the age of one month to the end of the flrat year, either fish liver oil or one of the vloaterola. such aa oondol, five to ten dropa dally, either with the fruit Juice or In a milk feeding.' Thla pre vents rickets and favors the develop ment of sound teeth. ' Certified milk, If available, li the finest, purest milk for a baby. Next choice, in my Judgment, la raw milk from tuberculin tested cows. Third choice, any raw milk, boiled for one minute. Last choice, pasteurized milk. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Saleratus , Whlcb la better to take, baking soda and vinegar and augar In water, or baking soda alone? . , . M. 8.) Answer Baking soda (aaleratus, bicarbonate of soda, sodium bicarbon ate) la leaa harmful taken alone. Country Milk Oolng to the mountains for two weeks with two year old baby, would like to know what to do about his milk. He haa irradiated vitamin D milk here. In the country there will be only milk direct from the cows. , . (Mra. F. O. H.) Anawer Unless the cows are tuber culin tested, better boll the milk one minute, then let tt cool again thla will make any milk aafe for a baby. A drop or two of oondol In milk will provide more vitamin D units than a whole quart of Irradiated milk con tains. Don't. Fnih Yourself Contrary to the usual experience of arthritis suffers, X perspire eaelly and copiously, and hare always done ao. If one aweated out "poisons ' I ought to be Hly-pure by now . , . (Mrs. M. C.) i Anawer Physiology doean't teach j that poisons or waste matters are ex creted or eliminated In the aweat. , That la a notion which eharlatana use 1 to btmuae wiseacre prospect. Send 3 -cent-stamped envelope bearing your addresa and ask for monograph j on Arthritis. Or Inclose ten cents coin for booklet "The Ilia Called Rheumatism." counterpart of the maternal lnatlnct. I am one who doea not lova any ma terial thing until X have saved lta life. A blood brother of New England spinsters who uaed to cut holea In their table cloths, Just to mend them, t have some old pajamas, mended by a mustached crone of a concierge In Parle, that are my favorltea. My bedside table haa often collapsed from overweight. Alwaya I've tenderly mended It myself and treasure It like a loved but wayward child. Conclu sion: Mending la the triumph over chance and circumstance. Sometlmea. Indeed, f. believe I'm a chimney cor ner knitter at heart. - Comment on the Day s News Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should tend letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D, 265 El Camlno. Beverly Mills. Calif. aO-Mcfntyre7 NEW YORK. Aug. 18. The auper- glgolo seems to have outridden the depression In New York. I do not refer to the dancing boya for hire, those who alng for their suppers or make themselves ao Agreeable as week-end guests. Rut the gloaaily polite and broke 1 e h a a who awing from one rich wife to an other, I notice In th prlnta thla morn ing that one of the moreexpertof the guild haa Just purchased a 100- acre estate on Long Island. Not many years ago, between marital drtfta. he waa locked out of a room tn a hotel where I lived. For not paying hla bills and borrowing from employeea. Three tlmea he haa been In th big money as the result of fruitful marriages. He flies high for a time, dropa like a plummet and goes soar ing again. It la not easy to loathe such human sponges. They have made agreeablllty an art and offer the charm ao often found among the utterly worthlesa. I have known four you meet them usually aboard ahlp and found them corking company. Their metier with srtlee la the old hand-kissing formula. Their chief asset la their good looks phis aavolr falra acquired by knocking about world capitals. But behind their suavity is damnable cruelty. if said to be wavering over a decision to return to the Rial to for dramatio re viewing permanently again. Hla suc cess In th comedy shorts haa been one of the atirprtse box office punches of the Industry greater Indeed than those of seasoned comedians. Thoae who know aay they are th aame capera he haa been Indulging among friends at private partlea for many seasons. The parlor comedian la Just that, as a rule. When people tell htm he ought to go on the atage and he takea It seriously h 1 a flop. Bench ley haa been th lllustrlou exception. His running mate and also a card at partlea for years haa been Donald Ogden Stewart, who also found a se cure place aa a film scenarist. Wonder note: I am puaaled to know If the onrush of yeara haa caught up with Charlie Chaplin and parsed him by and up, leaving him splay-footlng It up the road Into the j distance and Irlslng him out. I took two teens ters to see him at a aubur- j ban theater the other day. X expected to aee them roll in the aisles. They were horribly bored. One. Indeed, ! sleeping through most of It. Adrian, the fashion designer out In Hollywood, gives hla friends a roly poiy type of monkey, auggestlng a ball of fur, that la known aa a Wooley. Among those he gifted are th writing pair. Florenc Ryeraon nd Collns Clement. The Wooley Is friendly with dogs but personified destruction to gardens. Yet ao allur ing la their cunning that once a part of an establishment, from then on gardens may go hang. Oet a Wooley nd acquire a hanging garden, aa It mere. D Uiul Trlbuut rant ada. Be correctly a a Artist tthelwTD B. corseted a Model by Boffin my The first lady to adopt th Riviera slack evening costume In New York waa spotted at the 8tork Club. She had Just loped in from one of the ong Island spss and was dancltw with that accomplished and beaming quirer of dashing damonels, Steve Hannagan. T!ie slacks m-er white with black bolero Jacket. And against an autumnal leaf tan made a foolish not In a tortld evtnlng. Robert Benrhley. regarded by aom riefteM c-f the critical quipater, ta MODERN WOMEN Nttd Net Svtftf twdthtv pa b4 du V r;u,tKnt itio.ttiircoiiM ran. ("bwhierlim.TvlHTrvillsffa.rtit, In the popular word contest "out standing" la atlll selling high In the pools of 43nd street. But stenogs and phon girls In downtown district have awltched from "surely" and "O. K." to "definitely." For example: I asked the operator today If her boss had gone home. "Definitely." she re piled. And a lady In our building telle of asking a aa lee worn an If that waa the best price. Her answer was "definitely." The top In all the phone slanglams waa "All right!." It Indeed msde everything sound all right. I fell In long distance love with a down all rlghtle girls. Mending It. one Imagine, the male He am. alldnuiri.I.tfmef tr&r. Atfefw TQ tl IHiiHiimpijaS .? fMi imonp taaNB-Jjf A NAME THIS NEW MEDICINE AND WIN $50 A JO eaah prlre will he given lo nie person who aunmlta th, best name for thla sensational new stom ach remedy. This new remedy has many montiia of research work In our laboratories hark of It and la fully ruaranteed. Thla new medicine Is re markable In Rlvtnjj prompt, effective relief to stomach sufferers. This time tried, perfected, remedy available at very moderate coat, haa been especial ! prepared for Excess add. eastrltlu. constipation, biliousness, sick head achea, sour stomach, flatulence and any condition that la associated with acidity , . . one or two teaspoonfula directly after meals la an effective dose which may be Increased If nec essary without III effect . . . Relief l Immediate. Consistent lise for a brief period of time will correct acid condi tions Wt guarantee that I simply purchase a bottle of this fine remedy and submit your supitea tlon for an appropriate name In this cash contest. This remedy la fully Ruaranteed and If you are not Im mediately relieved your money will be cheerfully refunded. Call at our store NOW with your stlRiiested name for this remedy . . . Closing; date will be nnouneed soon . . . We uree vou to enter at once. For sale at Heath Drue Company, Mt-rtford, or McNalr Broe.j Aah.lau4. Br FRANK JENKINS. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT eaya ao many things with which conaerva tlve thinkers can not agree .(such as thinly yelled aneera at the constitu tion and the aupreme court) that It la a pleasure to find him aaylng thlnga with whloh agreement la eaay. Thla paragraph, for example, from hla address at Chautauqua, New Tork: "We are deply concerned about tendenclee of recent yeara among many of the natlona of the other continent. It Is a bitter experience to us when the spirit of agreement to which we are a party la not lived up to. It la an e more bitter ex- pealence to us i the spirit of agreement to wh..., we are a party la not lived up to. it Is an even more bitter experience for the whole com pany of natlona to witness not only the spirit but the letter of Interna tional agreement violated with Im punity and without regard to the simple principles of honor." contemptible to make an agreement, sign It, shake bands on It and then go out and violate tt at the first mo ment when self -advantage 1 to be se cured by violation. Among nations, this la the accepted thing. We can't go very far In the direc tion of International peace until we go a LOT FARTHER In the direction of plain and simple Internatlonnl honesty. A LOT Is aald (some of It true, and r most of It untrue) about the dishonesty of business men. If busi ness men were HALF a dishonest ss the general run of diplomat and politicians, things would certslnly be In a bsd way In thla world. excellent' Chau tauqua address, the President aald "W (of America) are not Isola tlonlsts except Insofsr a we seek to isolate ourselves completely from war." This Insignificant writer Isn't o sure of that.. The older he grows, the more of an Isolationist he be comes. This country la DIFFERENT from Europe different In every way; in lta ldeale. In its methods and In Its objectives. Since that la true, the farther we stay away from Europe the better off we ahall be. .4 1 HsTi REFERS, of course, to sll the various International agreements of recent yeara to limit war. European statesmen have entered Into these agreement with emlllng facea. friendly words and CROSSED FINDERS. When these solemn agree ments were made, there waa no In tention on the part of European dip lomat to keep them. As the President suggests, there can bs no peace where there Is no honor. " a- A MONO Individuals of practically f all countries. It is regarded as Flight fo Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of the Mall Tribune 10 and 0 years ifo. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY August 18, 1926 (It Waa Wednesday) Rapid fall of water In Lake O' the Woods la laid to fissure at bottom of lake. , drli- Raln falls In the hills, and 7,le In this city. Corsa M. Kldd on visit to Portland, la Interviewed by Oregonlan reporter and city and valley boosted no end. Score of autolst report the motor metera have been atolen from their cars the past week. Anti-Saloon League Investigator re ports Oregon Is the "dryeat" atate In the Onion. Rudolph Valentino, male film star and Idol, near death from Infection following operation. .Tack Dempsev and Pane Tunney FINAL Summer Cleanup Pness BALE Hurry I These fine summer dresses will not last long at this price! Values to $10.75. Pastel and darker shades. Jacque Lenox Corner Main and Bartlett Sts. AMBITIOUS YOUNG PEOPLE lVllMRFR ft ' l""hes of Oregon boya and girls who are plumper! c) doing things laving sound foundations for success in life. ITWWIJB Jnia''nn. win S IN ft. t f S - j EUa Wafler "A Story of Suceess" pfany worth while accomplish ments are credited to the record of Ella Wadcr.of ScippooscOre. Ella, who is 14 years old, manages the home for her father, carries a full course a, sophomore in high school, and still finds time to be a leader in -H Club work, in which she has won many local, count)-, and state prizes for can ning. Sale of products of her can ning skill has provided her with Income of her own. She deposits s part of her esmings in our St Heleoi Branch, which swsrded her s rummer course st Corvsllis for outstanding work. .itcrallv thousands of alert Oregon boys nd girls liki Ells hsve joined the Thrift Circle of The United Ststes National Bank. They save regularly t reasonable part of money earned, or given to them. Thus, they make sure of getting the worthwhile things they wane. Start an account , with is little as $1 today. When your balance reaches . it will begin to earn substantial Interest. neo. T. Frey, Manager - Dwlfht L. Hmifhton, Assist. Mgr. Medford llraiich of tho United Stoles lat iounl Bonk Hmd Office Portland. Oregon sign rtlclei for heavyweight cham pionship fight at Philadelphia, Sep. tember 33. TWENTY YEARSAGO TODAI August 18, 1918 (It Was Friday) Rail chlefa reject president's plan for settlement of railroad strike. First "keep us out of war" buttons appear on Democratic coat lapels. Nurml bakery on Front street to bs open for public inspection tomorrow. Jitney drivers start price war, two fights result. Charles E. Hughes, Republican candidate- for president, spoke to crowd of nbout 1000 people, who gathered between showers on the rail road right of way at the Medford depot Thursday afternoon at 4 o'clock, while applause greeted the appearance of the candidate, silence greeted his remarks and his reception was as chilly as the day. As the new owner of the formr Rogue River Greenhouses, corner 14th and Franquette Sts., we offer you a 15 cosh discount on all August business, so that you may get ae qu ainted with us. Try our Funeral Sprays. Baskets, Designs, or sick room bouquets. Phone 184, Meyer Greenhouses. KIDNEY BURNING ROBBED OREGON LADY OF SLEEP "Nights Made Wretched By Kidney Rising Awful Pains Broke Up Sleep I Am So Grateful I Found Van-Tage," Testifies Well Known Oregon Lady. Thousands of people her In Med ford are now taking 'the great com pound known aa VAN-TAQE, which Is being Introduced to crowds dally In this city at Young's Drug Store. And at the same time, many men and women some of the best-known cltl- i "Van-Tage helped me so won derfullr that I nam all my friends to know alioiit this medicine' states Mrs. C. M. Danlelson, prom inent rortland Indy. eens of Oregon are coming forward dally with Remarkable statements publicly endorsing VAN-TAGE. For Instance, Just a few days ago, Mrs. O. M. Dsnlelson, of 7311 s. E. Insley St., Portlsnd, made the follow ing statement about Van-Tage. Mra Danlelson la a Long-Time Resident end Wldelr Known there. Read her Ame.zlng Testimonial, which follows: Sleepless With Pain "Vsn-Tsge helped me so much thst I want all my friends to know about this medicine, so I gladly give this statement, endorsing It." said Mrs. Danlelson. "When I started taking Van-Tage r had weak. Rluaslsh kid neys, which caused frequent night rising snd broke up my sleep every night, and also caused such swful pains. I tried a great many medicines. . but could not get relief, and then It wsa my Good Fortune to find Van Tsge. Now my kldnoys are relieved and I don't have to get up at night any more, and the pains are a thing of the past." 21 Natural Herbs It la the Natural Herbs 'in Van Tage. skilfully blended with Sclentlflo Medicaments, which enable It to pro duce the Amarlng Relief described above bv Mrs. Danlelvon. Herht rt almost like magic on Human Beings. .nr.- Liriu..e me dowcis, clear gas ani bloat from the stomach: flush excess Impurity from kidneys snd bladder. VAN-TAOE contains 31 of these Won derful Natural Herbs. And there you have the reason for the Surprising Action of this Great Medicine. uunerersi Due lo the Immense volume In which it sells th. nn r.i Van-Tage Is reasonable, tt la within the reach OP AM.! So don't hesitate. Oet Van-Tace NOW and trt. t.k. Ing tt Sold at Young's Drug Store MMX and s. t KNTRAL PHONu 6S