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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 24, 1936)
PAGE FOUR lEEDrORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY. AUGUST 24. 1936. MEDFORDiTRIBUNE "TTon la Southern Oreto Bwdi the Uall Tribune" Daily Except Saturday. Publlihcd by urnrnnn PHINTINO CO. Jl'IT-ll N. Fir U Phon 71. ROBERT W. RUHL, Editor. IUJEST R. OIL8TRAP, Mnf-r. Ad Independent Newspaper. Kotertd aa aecond-claM matter at Med ford. Oreaon, under Act of March t. I87i. ford. Oreion, SUBSCRIPTION RATES Daily, one year Dally, eia montha . rtaiiv rtn month so . In Advance Med ford. Aeh i.nrf Jx-kaonTllle. Central Point, Phoenix, Talent. Oold Hill and Dally, one year Dally, al month Dally, one month , All ttrma, aaah In advance. Official paper of tha City of llcdford. OfflclaJ Popr of Jarkeoa County. tIEHDER OF THE AHBO(!IATBll PKKSS Recelrlnc Fall Iaeea wire orrnw ki.. i..nniBid Prin i excluilvely en tilled to the uie for publication of all Afmnntrhm credited to It or other wise credited In title paper, and alao to the local ntwi publlihed herein. All rlrhta for publication of apecla dlapatchea herein are also reeerved. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUIIBAU OF CIRCULATIONS Adverllfln Rapreientatlvei m n. mnflKNHKN A cOMPANt Offleea In New Vork. Chlcaro Detroit. San Fraoclaco, Loe Ana-elee. Seattle, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Ferry. Politic, hai atarted malting ttrange bed-fellows, and a number of Demo mi. r astounded to find them .lv. rooming with the Mayor of Klamath Falle, their conaiaaie ior th. US. senate, opposing the veteran, Charl.l L. McNary. The Mayor, In hla campaign monkey-ahlnea, I. tond ol taking hi. audiences how many time. thy hv. caught .Ight of Sen, Mc Nary in th. laat 15 year.. Th. low visibility of the aenator la a burning lasu. with him. A mor. interesting and pertinent queatlon would be to aak, how many true-blue, dyed-ln-the-wool Democrats Intend to rot for MY. Mahoney when alon. with their conscience and a lead-pencil on next November 8. In th. Mayor of Klamath rails' local appearance a week ago, th Democratic war-horses all nsd tore wrists when It came tlm. to applaud Mr. Mahoney. Cttltens who have been busy all trimmer ohopplng down the stately fir and .awing up th. mighty oak to re pel th. wintry blest., at so much pr cord, report th. first vlsiu while they war. away of sHare-tlie-wood advocates. Ptolfio Coast banks report "an ln- u n nti.tomars the past quarter." They do appear livelier. Some go In v and eom. to fill their fountain pens. Thi is the Mason of the year when ' careful nlmrods .tray Into the tim ber, and get prematurely mot ior hofnra th. hunting aeason opens. . Th. ferocity and general all-around ..urines, of Communists participat ing In th. Spanish civil war has caused a declln. In presenting alibis for communism, by th. auegea iiueroi pres. of upstate. It wa until re cently argued that Youth afflicted with 'a mild attack of Bolahvlklsm should not hav. his right of free tpeta "throttled." Inasmuch as he was only trying to get at "th. tap root of Communism," and do some thinking for himself. ' It waa 11 rl.ht to advocate the overthrow of th American form of government, aa long aa h. Just thought about It, and Indulged In no direct action wnn dynamite. ... A Canadian Jurist has ruled a hus bsnd has the right to spank his wife. If breakfast Is not ready when he want It. No opinion has been render ed In this country, on th. legality of what happena to a husband, with the nrv to aak hla wife to get up ana cook breakfast. ... Atty. R. Moore and O. John Patton awapped yarna Saturday. A night aasalon of court was held for learned counsel to finish, and three extra Innlnga were necessary for Mr. Pat ton to conclude the ball game he waa re-playlng. 'Home From School' (In Just Two Weeks) "Let us plsy awhlls at living, you and m; In laughter and labor let the fleet year flee tor the happy heart can hold Just so much of shriven gold as buys a rood of clover In the fax countree. There are cups the sirens offer, brimming o'er, flowing clear all may quaff of folly, though til. price be dear: there are ronda the aagea travel to the Dead Sea shore, where the fslr drams ravel to en- weave no more. Let us drink the star at evening, you and me. from the cup the spring hath fashioned, flow ing free: let us hold our dream awhile. Juat to walk a pleasant mile by God's clean, open meadow and the good gre.n tree. Let us plsy awhile at living, you and m.; till th. twilight ahadowa lengthen by the tree It la something Juat to keep to the lsst the boon of alorp: It It something Just to labor and be free. It the cynic and the coffer, doubling hope, railing fat., cneasur league, of world together by the scale of hate w. will greet the April weather with the wlsdrin of the fool, seek the plessant path together and come home from school. Iet ua Journey horn, at evening, you and me. by th. trail across the meadow, where th. first flowert be with th lesson just begun, watch the low descending tain flood across a rood of clover In th. fsr countree." (Ben Hur Lsmpuun In th. Oold Km News, 31 years Ago, ) Editorial Correspondence CHICAGO, Aug. 21. A 14 year old girl who got on the "Streamliner" at Portland alone for her first trip on a train hag been ill in her berth ever since the first night. She col lapsed in the dining car and had to be carried out by the steward, both conductors assisting him, and the porter of her car made a fourth. A search of the train was made for a doctor but none found. Finally a middle-aged woman who had served as a nurse overseas, came to the rescue and applied first aid. She acted as nurse and mother throughout the trip assisted by six or more solicitous and kind hearted women pas sengers. Nervous indigestion was given as the cause, but the noor kid improved slowly, on a diet of beef tea and toast, and she looked far from well when be helped out and' placed in a livine in Chicago met the train relief. Throughout the trip solicitude was constantly expressed. How's the little girl I " was day or night. No one had ever seen the her again. Tet had her parents been there we doubt if she would have received any more tender care or.constant loving attention. Take, people as they come GOOD sort! A man cot off at Pocatello, and didn't realize a three minute stop, on the Streamliner MEANS a three minute stop. He bought a paper, a cigar and some postal cards and when he came out the blunt rear end of the City of Portland was disappearing around the curve. He wag a resourceful gentleman however and after 30 minutes telephoning, assisted by the station master, was in a second hand private plane, piloted by 27. Catchintr a common garden calcmnc? a streamliner capable another. particularly in an antinuat'.-d pnst-Denum crate. Had dinner with the resourceful train chaser last night, naturally full of his trip. He Streamliner was sighted and the pilot had to give her the gun to net ahead far enough so they could land at Green River, Wyoming, with time enough to first a r trin also. Said he had beetles from the air the City yellow caterpillar, answering a three-alarm fire. Asked him what it costf Ho shrugged his shoulders and said: "Plenty, but the company will pay for it." The company should. A young man with that determination to get there, WILLI The train made an unscheduled atop in western Nebraska. in answer to a wire from Omaha. A young boy, 17 years old, seriously injured in an auto home in Grand Island for an or four minutes, the stretcher bearing the victim of the accident had heen placed in the baggage car, accompanied by a doctor, and the young man's parents, and away we went. At. this part of the route, the grade is straight, slightly down hill and the .roadbed perfect. The old "egg and reached Grand Island on the dot. It had started to rain and it was a mournful little procession that proceeded to the waiting ambulance. "He's still alive, but terribly low" said the conductor as he came back. The-amhulance started up the street in the rain at a perilous A few weeks ago, we were chasing Lnndon. Now he's chasing ns. At Urand Island mere were Dieacners near tnc siauon, hunting and flaas irettinB nicely soaked Por "Alf"i also at North Platte and stations in Iowa and Illinois where his "Special" stops for brief speeches tonight. Judging by the number of sunflowers seen on linen suit lapels at the hotel along Michigan avenue, they are preparing for a receplion to him here. The Chicago papers, however, insist he will arrive in tlio wee small hours and his car will be shunted into the Pennsylvania while he sleeps. "We trust no over-zealous sup porters will be so discourteous as to invade his privacy and wake him up" remarks the strong G. 0. P. Tribune. "If Chicago wakes him up" wisecracks the Tabloid Times, "it will do what no one else has been ablo to do." . If late rains can save the corn orop, then northern Illinois corn must he saved. Thev say this is the third heavy rain in a week. PUT THE HUMIDITY AND THE HEAT1 D6 in the shade Ht noon and not a breath stirring. Only matters of supremo moment could ever have persuaded ns to return so soon to this hell on earth if any curiosity seekers wish to know what thev are, thev can call 1292-W and perhaps find out. R. W. R. (Continued trom rage one.) waa 736,407 cars being made in The prophecy Is the face of the drought. The breakdown on the August 16 figure shows the Increase came In miscellaneous freight lumber, ore, livestock and coal, drain loadings were off about fl per rent and similar small decreases were registered in small lot merchandise and coke. Nothing on the Spanlah civil war caused as mucn excitement within the state department aa the pub lished report that Mexico waa ship ping 30 carloads of American ammu nition. Diplomatists have been twisting tlKHtwlvrs In knots trying to main tain the solid non-intervention front. They kept the wires to Mexico City Mraltng until they received word that th munition were at leant Mexican owned, even though they may origi nally have emanated from this coun try. Threats made by England. Ger many and Italy, about the same tlm. stirred comparatively little InMde In terest. No official hurrahs hav spread the newa, but American military officers are currently being given all those foreign medala held up by the state department for many years. The de partment la distributing 117 In th navy alone. Naral Chief of Opera tion Stsndley la getting the Order of the Crown of Italy, For some reaaon not yet clear, con gress. In an off-moment, pawed a law at last aeu'on releasing medals previously denied to officers of the army and navy. The Democratic speakers' bureau Is choosing lt Maine stumpers with great care. A few years a?o. a noted New Yorker waa sent into Maine, Tn th fullnesa of hi dignity, addrcMlnj we reached Chicago, having to wheel chair. When an aunt every one breathed a sigh of the question hoard on all sides, girl before, or is nicely to see . ' and they are a pretty darned Idaho early the first morning a young man oE focntciio agea variety of train is one thing of 120 miles an hour is quite said it took until noon before the run and catch it. It was his Heard motor cars looked line of Portland looked to mm like a crash, was to be rushed to his emergency operation, in tnree yolk" hit 107 at one stretch pace I an audlenoe, he aald: "Now, I know you will not understand this, but ." He waa probably correct, becauae tt waa an Intricate subject, which he did not fully understand himself, but Maine Democratic arrangers have not forgotten It. I IN MANY YEARS: EKPECI 297,000 BU. PORTLAND, Or... Aug. 2. (APt Th. Jln.at Oregon tomato crop In wwrsl yrars began to mov. to msr K.t this month, with production sa llmatrt by th. U. 8. ct.partm.nt of agrlcultur. at 307,000 bushels. Th. expected yield exceeds the. 1038 flRUit by 133,000 bushels and runs Sbor the 19381033 average by iee.000 busliels. In a survey, th. department point ed out thst erop conditions lor to matoes generally were 10 per cent under mas In most sections of the United States, giving th. Oregon grower the benefit of an Improved market. All ststes except Oregon. Utah and Wsshlngton reported eatlmsted yields under 103S or at the best no Isrger than last year. Favorable conditions enroursKTd cabbsg. growers, although the de psrtmcnt's report estimated the 1936 yield at 10,400 tons, 3.300 tinder the 1038-1033 average hut (loo above 1935. A watermelon crop exceeding both th. 1938-1933 average and the 1933 production was forecsst. The de partment fixed the yield at 114.000 melons against 84.000 lsst year and an average of 7S.000 over 1938-1933. STEEL OPERATIONS IN ADVANCE DURING WEEK NKW YORK, Aug. 34. (API Oper ations In th. steel Industry for the current week advanced .3 of a point to 73S per cent of capacity, com pared witn 732 lsst week, the Ameri can Iron Stwl Institute estimated ledsy. A month ago opsrstions averaged 71. S per cent or cspsi-lly while a yer ago Hi. tat. ts 7.g per cut. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. signed letters pertaining to personal health tnd byglene Dot to disease diagnosis ot treatment win be aniwered by Dr. Brady If t ft s raped aelf-ed-dressed envelop, it enclosed LMter. should be brief tnd written In Ink Owing to tb. large oombef ot letters received only few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Addrett ur. willlim Brsdy. get El Camloo, Beverly Bills, Cat, WHAT'S A DEAD TOOTH BETWEEN DOCTORS AND DENTORS I It true, aak Miss R. X. L that a "live" tooth, no m&ttr what an X-ray Bcemi to show, cannot be th aourct of focal Infection? Should a "dead" tooth be removed, even though X-ray shows no partlc ular evidence of abscess? I am ln tereated becauae my doctor la try ing to locate the cauM of a heart d 1 a t u r b a nee, great eye Irritation oculist says trouble does not originate In the syee, a bad case of "dry Joint," and numerous other manifestations, all of which he be lieves are caused by focal Infection, Doctor and dentist do not agree on the above points concerning teeth. (R. E. u.) Tot that matter, the den tors them selves do not all agree about the treatment of pulpless teeth. Some excellent dentors hold that destruc tion or removal of the pulp doea not mean that the tooth Is "dead." Other excellent dentors hold that any such pulpless tooth Is a menace to health and should be removed from the Jaw. If I were In Miss L.'i plice X be lieve I would gamble one tooth, that Is, sacrifice t, to see whether It would bring any relief to the condi tions which the doctor believes are caused by focal Infection, that Is, septic focus or nidus somewhere. from which harmful bacteria and their harmful toxins are carried through the blood stream to damage other tissues or organs. If extraction of the condemned tooth does drain and clear up the septic focus responsible for th con ditions the correspondent describes. Improvement In these secondary con ditions may fairly be expected to be come evident In the course of two or three montha after extraction of the tooth. Sometimes pstlenta experience relief of sore new or pain In or about affected Joints within a faw days after eradication or disinfection or sterilization or pasteurisation of the focus of Infection, but definite In auguration of the recovery process takes several weeks, as a rule. The negative phase or Interval following radical disinfection of the septic fo cus, unless frankly and plainly ex plained to the patient, often leads to unfortunate errora patients become disappointed because they experience no Immediate cure or marked relief, and drop the Idea and take up some thing else, perhaps something fool ish, and presently, while still mon aQMclnfvre NEW YORK, Aug. a. Diary: Some bravely writ notes on communistic undermining from Roacoe Peacock, Yet few seem awake 1 So across town to break f aat with the knobblly - dreeaed hotel ler, John Horgan, but he away. And called up Arthur Sam uels who took me to "No. 31." desolate bistro at It a. m. Home and ground out my piece. And lady and I drove over the Washing ton Bridge Into Jersey and by the gloomy Lindbergh estate, tn the park on the way home came upon Lulu and Ed Simpson, whom we love but ao rarely see. Then sitting awhile with Maybelle Manning at her gown boutique. Dinner In the Rita gardens and talked to my old landlord, Albert Keller, swapping pretty compliment. And bowed to the actreas lady, Ina Claire, and talked a moment to the crltlc-bachelor-poet, Charles Hanson Towne. To bed early listening to the wireless, so dull and monodlc X soon doeed off. Among celebrity curlosa like Fan nie Briee'a dead pan atooge Roger Davis that now collecta at smart soi ree la Gypsy Lee Rose, queen of the strip teane ladles in contlnuoua bur lesque. She Is an eyeful in a showy way, but not quite the over-carmlned type one might expect. J5he occupies an apartment, a perfect bijou, on the north side of Oramerey Park, a rendezvous where people strange to the serenity ot the leafy aquare drift In and out a Jiggled mostac of the Broadway pattern. Oypay Is of an In telligence belying her calling, quick on the conversational trigger and In clining to the Shakespeare line, "full of wise saws and modern instances." Her big draw la with the boys In town from out yonder on a bust. One critic called her "th hill billy Juliet." Miss Rose's constant companion 1 the lady with the rocking chair name. Nlta Naldl. one time a headllner of the silent films and now living In seml-retlremen at the fashionable Si. Regis. In her day, she waa champ movie vamp and today a study in cynicism, with especial tarty re marks for the species known a male. She. too. Is a party attender and cher. ished for her extramural barb. The Shuberta have hired Ovnay from bur leaqvie. The story being she la under contract for the next Folllee where she will dn. of all thlnca. "a burlesque of her strip tease." Personal nomination for "th man Broadway forpot." one of the greatest altowmen of all Roxy, The theatrical world In which she haa been such a hlgn spirit received the newa of Elule Jams' poverty vow with varvlng reactions. Pome thought her determination to shuck herself of material goods a publicity plant to f y$y v e n an .Aajjg, keying with the foolish business, be gin to feel the Improvement which la actually the result of removal of the septic focus, and childishly at tribute It to the new remedy or treat ment, whatever they have moat re cently "tried.' That's the hidden truth about many testimonials. If extraction of the tooth falls to do any good, well, It was not a bad gamble anyway. ' At least I should take that view of the ,matter If I were the patient and I place a high value on every tooth I have. The presence of tender or swollen "kernels" (lymph nodes) In the drain age area of the tooth In question, say under edge of Jaw and down side of neck, In my opinion, evidence of a septic or Infected state. I should give this greater weight than a mere shadow about the root, In the X-ray film. QUESTION. AND ANSWERS Keep Your Hair On What do you think of (a humbug hr.lr growing treatment)? I am 37 and already beginning to show thin on top. I'd like to keep some hair if I can. . . . (O. T A.) i Answer Send three-cent stamped envelope bearing your address, and ask for monograph on "Care of the Hair and Control of Dandruff" Yawning I yawn continuously all day. It Isn't from loss of sleep as I generally get eight hours. How can I stop It? . . (E. a.) Ans If you're under 30 you prob ably need nine hours of sleep every night No "making up" for lost sleep. If you are accumulating a little slacker flesh, you should follow corrective, protective regimen, aa de scribed In detail In booklet, 'The Regeneration Regimen," for which send ten cents coin and three-cent' stamped envelope bearing your ad dress. Meanwhile you should start taking an lodln ration and absorbing oxygen at the rate of from three to six miles or more dally on the hoof, INwIhlfT la It poulble for doctors to mistake a case of brain tumor for Parkinson's disease? what would be the outcome If such a mistake were made? . . . (M. H.) Ans. Anything la poulble except a mouse's nest In the cat's ear. Such a mistake would have not very serious consequence, unless the doctors In sisted on removing the brain tumor which Isn't there. (Copyright 1936,, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr Brady should lend letter direct to Ur. William Brady, M. D 263 El ('amino. Bpverl; Flllis, Calif. sell her famous but long burdensome country estate near Tarrytown. And othe'a thought It a sincere gesture of a lady who haa never cared much for worldly riches and has been generous to her profession. Her marriage to he husband so many years her Junior la clicking. But her life of late has been cloistered few have seen her at such haunts as fhe Algonquin and other forums she used to frequent. An auto accident made It necessary for her to walk with a cane. She Is no longer "Little Elsie." the Joyous, hoyden with the world (tcnuflectlng at her dancing feet. The year go by. Charles B. Drlscoll Is the writing world's modern Joyce Kilmer. It waa aald of the poet and author of "Trees." he could keep a down lit erary Jobs deftly Juggling at the aame tlm. Drlscoll. Kansas born, la editor of a syndicate, turns In a dally col umn, WTltes a pirate book yearly. slgna up new syndicate features and shepherds them out of their wobbles, makes t least one trip a year to such far off places aa Russia and Yucatan and ha time, on the aide, dally, to heckle th banker he In t mated un wisely with aavlnga. They are fellow commuters and every morning Drls coll circles him hawk-like .with Jeer ing epithets. It's the beet free act on the commuting circuit. Ragatellea: Willie Howard collects stuffed parrot, of all thlrurs . , . Martha Deane always registers from Paris. Missouri, with Missouri in block letters . , .'Achmed Abdullah la a midnight movie fan ... As Is his wife Jean WUk. literary agent. No one la more amusing than The Timid Soul caught In traffic Jay walking and going Into his dance, One today waa doing his Jig near St. Thomas when a driver leaned out to leer (I'm going to trill through that again, leaned out to leer) : "I like Bill Robinson betterl" (Copyright, 1036, McNaught , .Syndicate) NEED CANVASSED SALFM. Aug. 34. (API A public hesring was conducted lodsy to de termine whether the Oregon farmers and fruit growers desired to hsve the stat agricultural department put Into effect the so-cslled stale msr kellng act of th. lsst leglslsture. Ofticlsls declsred that only a few farmers hsd Jotnrd In the request for operation of th. marketing act due to the recent Increase In agricultural prices which In many Instances wer. higher than those in effect under the code In 1MJ. "Our purpo in holding th. hear ing." Solon T. White, agricultural di rector. Mid. "was to glv. the fsrmers and fruit growers sn opportunity .to b hesrd. If they desire thst some phss. of the sgrlctulrusl act he plsced In Operation w. may act on their suggestion." PORTLAND, Ore.. Aug. 34 (API Th. condition of Carl Clsrk, 17. suf fering from a broken neck as t re sult of diving In too shsllow water nesr Hermlston, was reported ss "fair" bv Multnomth county hospital offl- clsii today, SOVIET CITIZENS Nine Put to Death, 28 Others Sent to Prison for Alleged Plot to Attack Manchou kuan Government Officials Associated Press Foreign Staff. TOKYO. Aug. 24. (AP) Japan' general army headquarters In' Hsln- klng, Manchoukuo, today announced nine alleged Sovlefcltlzena had been executed on the outskirts of Hallar. The executions, the communique said, were carried out last Friday. Twenty-eight other were sentenced to prison terms of five to 30 years. A Dome! (Japanese) news agency dispatch from Hslnking asserted the condemned Russian were "remnant of a secret delegation which the Soviet sent to Manchoukuo In 1934 and 1935, charged with soviet! zing the Three Rivers district," a colony lying 76 mile north of Hallar, near the Argun river on the border of Siberia. This colony always ha been con sidered white Russian, and hostile to the Moscow government. The Domel agency dispatch aald the Soviet emissaries posed a white Russian and, In 1S34, began the or ganization t a "shock battalion," enrolling 300 member. ' During the frequent period of border friction, the dispatch contin ued, the shock battalion "daringly planned to attack Japanese-Man chukuan public office, to commit plunder, Incendiarism and other vio lence to facilitate the operations of the Soviet army." The 37 prisoners were convicted by a special court sitting at Hallar, More than 300 persons astertedly were Involved with 30-odd leaders meeting frequently at the home of Chief Sharugradrov and communi cating with the Soviet across the border. Japanese military leaders dominat ing Manchuria were especially ner vous, the paper reported, over the -alleged espionage and sedition activi ties of Russian and Mongols In : north Hslngan province In recent montha. The Soviet embassy at Tokyo said It was Ignorant of the affair and denied the alleged Russian activity In the Hallar district. MOTHER ADMITS I Continued from Page On) not find the dsughter, reporting to the sheriff's office. The girl, lying In bed. wsa appar ently hit on the head with a double- bitted axe, Bodla aald. and her throat then cut with a bread knife. The body wss wrapped In burlap and wired and carried to a clump of salaal bush, about 300 yards In the rear of the home. Showing no emotion, the mother was taken to the therlff't offlct at 4 a. m. todsy tnd told "we'Te found your daughter's body." Lived I.Ike Animals "Rose and I had to live like ani mals." she esld. "I've been on relief, getting 110 a month, for a year and a half. What chtnet did Rose have to be anybody, or hare anything?" The girl went to t party Thursdsy night, a party given In honor of her birthday that day, despite her moth er's objections, she aald. On her return and retiring about 1:30 a. m.. the mother ssld. she "felt her mind snap." She got an axe and a bread knife and went to th. bed and killed the girl. The mother said she planned to commit suicide, wsnderlng along the beach and over a bridge, but ".nap ped out of It." She added .he feared that If her mother, Mrs. C. Olson. 60, learned of her deed It would kill her. "so she decided to keep ,It a secret snd so burled the body. 4 l CROP WILL BE LIGHT The wheat crop of the Rogue River valley la light; th. barley crop Is fair: the corn and oat crop good, snd the ha;- crop ample, despite a light first cutting. County Agent Robert O. Powler, reported today Most of the grain crops have been harvested, tnd threshing Is now un derway. "Prices are looking up." County Agent Powler ssld. The aggregate of til the grain crops Is about the same as lsst year, the county agent Mid. Weather Northern California: Fslr tonight and Tuesday, with local morning fogs on the coast: high temperature In the Interior: moderate northwest wind off coast. Oregon: Fair to-night snd Tues day: warmer In west portion Tuesday; moderate northwest wind off coast. TILLAMOOK. Or... Aug. 34. -(API A sample of Oregon's famous cheese sent to President Roosevelt brought a letter from the chief executive say ing he would visit tha. Tillamook country on his first tnp up the coast hlghwsy. He did not Indlcste when this would be. although the presi dent la bllerl to b considering a testern trip In October, I Comment on the Day sNews Bj FRANK JENKINS IK YOU art observant, you may hav. 1 noticed this brief dispatch from Washington: - "Th. United BtstM tonight courteously declined th. Uru- . guayan Invitation to participate with other American natlona In ffort to mediate th elyll war In Spain." Wise old Unci. Sam I H. hat ob served, probably, that the neighbor who Met to stop a family fight Is usually turned upon by ALL tht com. batants tnd la apt to come out of It with a broken head. r 1 w UNCLE SAM Is as wise at his white whiskers should Indicate, he will stay clear of these European ruckuses. He had a foolish ttreak in 1917 and let himself be drawn In, and hasn't recovered yet from the bruises he received. .4 QICTURES from Spain show mere 1 boys (and girls, also, for thst matter) fighting In the armies on both tides In the bloody civil war. These children appear to be still In their 'teens. . In the papers the other day was a picture of a southern Oregon baby beef 4-H club member and his Short horn steer which for the past 109' days haa averaged 3.3 pounds gstn per day which la a pretty good gain tnd shows that the steer hat been ex pertly ctred for. In this wrlter't humble judgment, boyt are a lot better off htndllng steera and making them gain weight steadily than carrying guns and fighting In a civil war. REMEMBER, please, that stirring up claw hatred for political pur poses, as hss been done to persistently In Europe, lesds directly to CIVIL WAR, and civil war meant fighting and dying by mere boys who ought to be doing something far better tnd worthier. FOR montht (almost for yeara) the papers have been telling of mo mentous decisions by th. tupreme court of the United States. Here Is a momentous decision by t minor Ca nadian court: "The right of a night worker to spsnk his wife If breakfast Isn't ready when he comes home wat upheld to dsy by Magistrate J. S. McKeasock, ot Sudbury, Ontario." The night worker In question spanked hla wife soundly when he came home from the night shift tt the mine and found no brenkfast ready. His wife sued him for assault and battery. The Judge dismissed the suit, thus tpparently upholding the right to spank. STILL, If breakfast when he comes home la what this Ontario miner really wants, hell find that spanking his wife la a poor way of getting It. Wives have their ways of getting even. courts or no courts. F EYED BY POLITICIANS FOB ELECTION EFFECT ST. PAUL, Aug. H.(jPi Party lead ers surveyed the shifting Minnesota political scene todsy to gauge the ef fect of the death of Governor Floyd B. Olson upon the fall elections. A military escort wsa msrshslled to bring the body of the Farmer-Labor leader from Rochester, where he died of cancer Saturdsy night, to St. Paul for a stste funersl Wednesdsy as these developments took shspe: The Fsrmer Lsborlte ll.utentnt governor, HJslmer Petersen, wss sworn In ts governor. The Farmer-Labor party's state cen tral committee planned to meet soon after Olson's final rites to discuss Its program and make necesssry changes In the November ticket. The members did not Indicate their stsnd on Olson's recent statement, urging all "liberals" to support Pres ident Roosevelt for reelection. 96 STEAMERS TO LOAD FRUIT FROM PORTLAND PORTLAND. Aug. 34. (P) Llbell and Clarke. Inc.. Portland freight for. warders, said S refrigerated stesm era will losd fresh apples and pesrs here In" the next four months for Mediterranean and European ports. Sli of the vessels will be making their first call here. PORTLAND. Ore. Aug. 54. (API Oregon produce markets lost a fa mous figure todsy with the desth of A. J. Hoover, for meny years head of the egg division of Swift & Co. here. He was 68 years old. Lost River BUTTSR Insist On Delicious SCREEN DOORS WINDOW SCREENS Made Right-Priced Right Trowbridge Cabinet Wks. Jr. ii ii Flight 'o Time Med ford and Jackson County hutory from the files of the Mali Tribune 10 and 20 years ago. TEN VEARS AGO TODAY August 24, 1026 . (It was Tuesday) Arthur Hess of this city, while at Crater Lake ' Sunday, saw & sedan plunge off the rim and crash to the lake's edge. The car waa a total wreck. A few minutes before Mrs. James Swensden of Klamath Falls re moved her sleeping son from the rear seat. Prohibition fund of state la ex hausted. State press flays candidates "who talk dry, and drink wet." Agitation renewed for closing Rogue river at next legislaive meet. .VaTArV iirtt oftata y OA viainr hnt .-n j -" w v ..vn uuv 1VU starts In valley. , . Mrs. Ernest Scott and . Mrs. Jean Brault leave on motorcycle trip to Vsncouver, B. C, Survey shows local poatoffice Is 1, 382.3 feet above sea level. - TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY August 24, iHlfl (It was Thursday) Railroad presidents agree to eight hour day and nation-wide strike la averted. Federal Reserve bank law "spur to business conditions." held ' Bulgaria wlna victory over allied forces In Macedonia; British retain gains on Somme. Harley Hall, postmaster at Bun com, Is business visitor in city. Huge poster picture of Candidate Hughes la received by county Repub lican committee, 1 Attorney F. J. Newman returns from vacation trip to Crescent City, Calif. , Mr. and Mra. Nick Klme of Grlffen Creek leave on a visit to Goshen, Ind.. via Los Angeles. They will be gone two months. WORLD'S QUICKEST CORN CURE NO PAIN! NO BURNI Your corn comet out In 10 MIN UTES without one bit of pain or soreness or your druggist gives MONEY BACK! CORN-OFF is the MODERN corn remedy no messy pads or daye of painful wait, ingl Get rid of your corn TODAY I ft CORN-OFF For Sale it Jarmln't Drug store EVERYONE SEEKING A HOTEL IN SAN FRANCISCO AT WHICH TO STOP-OR IN WHICH TO LIVE SHOULD LOOK FIRST AT THE NEWFAIRMONT NO OTHER HOTEL IN THE WEST CAN OFFER SUCH LARGE LUXURIOUSLY FURNISHED ROOMS AT 80 REASONABLE A COST. V All the old cultural distinction of the fimout FAIRMONT atop Nob Hill pervades its newer popularity. Smart Night life in the dever Circus Lounge iddj sparkle to tradition. Spacious, narine-view rooms gain refreshing charm from modern decoration. Raw $,50 up. fftW art mdiaUy ntntrd to tmpfrt tbt Fahwmt. Only I minutn fnm ihtps mnd ihtattrv garagt ritbhtlht htfildiHg. it GEORGE D. SMITH. : HOTEL . SAN FRANCISCO 1