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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 2, 1936)
fsef PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON". WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2. 1936. MEDFORIvy$iTRIBUNE "ETi7ona In Sootfiani Orem Read! the Mail Tribune" Daily EiMpt Saturday Publlihfl or MEDFORD PRINTING CO. Jf.. 11-18 N. Fir St. Phoo H ROBERT W. HOHU Editor ERNEST R. OILSTRAP, Maniftr. An Independent Newspaper Filtered aa eonde!iaa matter at Mad f'jrd, Oregon, under Act of Mareb I. 1171 8UBSCRIWJON RATES It? Mail In Advance Dally, one year H-40 Dally, air monlha 1.7 ' Daily, one month 80 Uy Carrier, Jn Advance Madford, Aah Irnd, Jackaonvlll. Central Point, ' Phoenix, Talent, Gold Hill, and on hlfhwaya. Dally, one year Ifl.OO Dally, als montha 1.8 Dally, one month . . All terma, aab In advance. Official Paper Ol Hie City of Medford Official Paper of Jarkeoo County MEM HER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Recelvinr Full heated wire Berrtee The Aaenclated Praia la ezolualvely an titled to the uae for publication of all nwi dlapatchaa credited to it or other wise credited In thla paper, and alao to the local nivi publlahed herein. All rlfhte for publication of a pec let dlapatchaa herein are alao reaervad. MEMBER Ok UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertlalnfcr Repreaentattvae WEHT-HOLMDAY-MOOENSKN CO. Offlcea In New York, Chicago, Detroit, San Franctaco, Loe An galea, Seattle, Portland. IMS': I ORCCON rlrll STAT e CD tOAi TO AfefaC KftON Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. The "Fan-America group" th. press 1 talking about then daya, should not ba confused with tba ona on the atraet corner. A number of adltora at tha state have tnalated In a gentlemanly man ner ttiat It rain, and, their UeUca have availed itiem naught. They atiould pout like Mussolini, and holler like Hitler, to get a 1 1,000,000 rain, chat for once would be worth that mudh. e e The Brttlah cabinet haa unofficially announced lt disapproval of the klng'a girl-friend Mra. Simpson. Her opinion of the British cabinet might turn out to be Interesting. e Baker county will eetabllah "two rather extensive experiment plota" under the auspices of a farm assist ant, to study weed control. Long ex perience shows the weed puts up Its beat battle on a vacant lot, when not known as an "experiment plot." Old fashioned farmers atlll experiment with a hoe, under the auaptoet of their oldest boy, In weed control. The next legislature ahould pai law prohibiting any candidate who has been defeated lour times for oi floe from taking another licking at the polls. His Inability to break Into the win column classifies him as a habitual loser, and ahould be re strained from taking up any further time of the election counting boards. e e A Ban Francisco lawyer, In a com munication to hie favorite paper, twits and complains anent the simi larity In humor, alleging "there la much re-haahlng of used Ideas." A member of a profession that haa been a Simon Legree to the word "whereas" and uses It with reckless abandon, should rush to the rescue of wanned fiver Ideas. e e HE'l.l, MISS Till! DANCE. (Cove (Ore.) News) Dan Morrow who haa been pret ty atrk Is doing nicely consider ing the condition he has been In and It Is believed that he Is going to fully recover and be coming to town again horseback In spite of his 04 years of age. A stranger called yeaterday wearing a "pancake beret," and waa In need of pancakes. as The wintry weather haa brought forth a hardy feminine type, via: The rider on the rear aeat of a motor cycle. Thla Is cheap transportation, and keepa the woodcutter busy, see Daffodils are reported blooming In these parts. A number of down-In--the-mouth robins, who stay here all winter, have returned from the south land. see Dock Oreen reports that while re turning from J'vllle laat night, near the echoolhouee a rain drop landed on hla windshield. There were no other witnesses to the phenomena. e e civic riiAoniN mount. (Coos Bay Times) "Two prlae examples In town: That lot between Lou Diane's snd the Coos Bay National bank, located across the atreet from the Chandler hotel aup- pmedly a nice part of town, good business block, ft looks like h-l If you want ua to be frank and tell the truth. Our good friends over at the stage terminal certainly maintain a messy lot next door. They do burn him of the Junk they collect oeca slonslly and that's more than many of these glorified dumpers do. The Hsll building la No. 1 office building In the city, but tske a squint st the lot next door, riled high with every kind of corruption Imaginable or at least It was the last tlioe we looked at It. And the lot next to The Time, building Is pretty bad." The duck ahootlng senson ended Monday eve. No hunter Impersonated a green.headed mallard, and was shot for ssme. like Thefts Set HoiHd. PORTLAND, Dec. a. (API The Portland police bureau of records had another all-time hlirh mark to put In Its books today with the theft of six bicycles. The average for auch ciimea Is one a day. Join IrTHELWYN B HOPTMANNS HqHerj CluD Cverjr 13th pair lrs. A World Gone Mad "It la no accident, that because of these suicidal policies and the suffering attending them, many of their people have come to believe with despair that the prlos of war seems less thsn the price of peace." That is a very significant statement in the address by Presi dent Roosevelt when he opened the Inter-American peace con ference in Buenos Aires, Monday night. Back of this terrible civil war in Spain, back of the war spirit in Germany, lies the discontent and misery of the masses, and their belief, that only by war can they achieve anything ap proaching a tolerable and secure human existence. Better risk death in war, than suffer the misery and deprivations, of their day-to-day existence. , As the president further states: "Lack of social or political Justice within the borders of any nation Is always cause for concern. Through democratic pro cesses we can strive to achieve for the Americas the highest possible stsndard of living conditions for all our people. "Men and women blessed with political freedom, willing to work and able to find work, rich enough to maintain their families and to educate their children, contented with their lot In life and on terma of friendship with their neighbors, will defend themselves to the utmost but will never consent to tske up arms for a war of conquest." In other words the elimination of war today depends iifon the elimination of those factors which make war, and those can be placed under one heading, the discontent and suffering of the people, which unless removed, ultimately brings war, be cause it breeds that spirit of desperation and hopelessness which welcomes war. Therefore it becomes clear, the path to world ponce is the path to world betterment, not within the boundaries of one nation, or a few nations, but all of them. Something of a chore 1 I Tet, as we see it, that must want world peace, clearly understand the underlying causei of war, and are willing to pay the price that peace demands. A EUROPEAN war ia threatened today, by those nations which lack the natural resources, the room for expansion, and economio betterment, essential to a secure and satisfying national existence. Under their dictatorships they have been led to believe, that only by war, by armed force can such an existence be achieved. This is untrue of course, for under modern conditions such a thing as a successful war of conquest, benefitting permanently the victor at the expense of the vanquished is impossible. It is merely to stupidly yield again to that great and tragic illusion, that the world that has passed away for all time, can return. But the people en masse can't see it, and because they em't see it, and it is to the interest of their dictators that they do NOT see it, the nations of Europe continue to rush headlong toward a catastrophe that promises to spell doom to all their civilization!. T is really a ghastly, a grotesquely terrifying situation. It is as if all Europe .had suddenly gone mnd, and stood poised on a precipice, yielding to forces it could neither resist nor under stand, when the briefest lucid interval would make it clour to all, that war ii the one thing, that to the aelfish interest of all, should at all costs be avoided. But reason apparently has gone. The four horsemen are riding on. Only a miracle, some sudden spiritual awakening un stop them, and one looks in vain over the surface of the earth, for any such manifestation. IJOWEVER aB long as there is life there is hope j and as long as another European war has not actually started, there is still a chance of averting it. President. Roosevelt in calling this Inter-American confer ence of peace has made a step in that direction. A short step, but perhaps it will grow into something formidable, and effec tive, before it is too late. . At least that is the only hope as we see it, of preventing another world wide catastrophe. War is bloody and cruel, ruthless and terrible, in the world as it is, it can only be followed by calamities worse than those threatened before the swords were drawn. But before all and above all WAR IS UTTERLY FUTILE AND USELESS." It is as out of date, as the dodo. War settles nothing, because of the nature of the modern world, it CAN settle nothing. 'When it is over, when all the blood and treasure has been spent, all that was to ba decided by force, still has to come before the bar of reason and adjudication, for the only decision that csn be permanent. And yet there is Europe on the brink of war, with the present conditions in Spain rendering its outbresk on a wide spread front, nearer than it has been, at any time, since Musso lini started his invasion of Ethiopia. And the only sane, rational, authoritative word for peace, is-that of President Roosevelt st Buenos Aires. Let the European powers get together now, consider the demands of the underprivileged nations, and see if their legiti mate wants can't in s,ome pesceful way be satisfied, Aftei all normal man is a reasoning animal. And as the president pointed out, war doesn't just happen, war is the product of internal conditions which have, for one, reason or another, become in tolerable. Let the material conditions in Euro) e return to normal, and the political conditions will soon follow. It's a s!m chance, but the only chance of saving half the world from destruction! SALADS TO BE TOPIC AT EXTENSION MEET Med ford Home Bconom.es Kxtin alon Unit will meet In the court house auditorium Thursday. Decern ber 9 at 10 a. m. The program for this meeting Includes a demonstra tion on the "Preparation of Salads" by Mrs. Mabel C. Mark, county home demonstration anent. assisted by Mrs. O. C. Matist and Mra. O, R. Meyers of Med ford. The bu tnen session will Include election of officers and installation of new officers (or the year. This la the first regular meeting of the Mod ford unit which was aranlr-rd In November, Any hornet, taker In Med ford who is interest fri In trie Mudy of i3.mt economics or all phase of 1 be the goal of those who renlly HEALTH SEAL BUYERS Tht Medford Ministerial assocta tlon has made the most generous contribution In Ita history to the thirtieth annual Christmas sral sale, now underway In Jackson county. Mra. J. C. S. Wellls of the aomitln t committee announced today. Ksch : year the association has contributed through seal sale to the battle sgainft j the dreaded disease, turnrottiosu, but ! thla year's donation haa far exceeded those of previous years. Among the first schools to report sale of the 1930 quota of stamps Is Oak Grove, preceded by Just one. Ant loch, which reported Saturday, l-.imn-nkmB is urged to attend this meetlnf. Personal Health Service By William Brady, MP, blgued letters pertaining Co personal health and hygiene, not to disease, diasnusls or treatment, wlU be answered by Or. Brady If a stamped, seU-ad-dressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In ink Owing to the large number ol letters received only a fen can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady, 263 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, colli. THE CHILD BORN In the article "Fate ot the Blue Baby" we anawered a number of in qulrlea from parents. Today we are answering a number of almtlar In quiries about f wifcr child r e n born with dislocated hip. It Is misleading to call congeni tal hip defect "dislocation" of the h 1 p. That Implies that some Injury haa dislo cated the hip Joint. The truth Is that the hip Joint falls to de velop completely. the cup or socket remain fUt or nearly rimless, so that the hetd of the femur or thigh bone does not stay In the socket as It should. The hip la not dislocated, for It never has been articulated in a proper Joint. The rim of the socket has simply failed to develop. Ood only knows why a child Is born with this defect of growth or development. No one can fairly as cribe It to any particular fault or cause. These statements apply as well to all other congenital that term means present at the time the child Is born) defects, such aa hare lip, clubfoot, cleft spine, cleft pal ate, heart defects, etc. Only the su perstitious and Ignorant attempt to explain congenital defects aa due to "marking" or as reflecting somehow on the family, and whoever utters such superstitions or Insinuations de serves public whipping. In most Instances congenital hip defect becomes apparent only when the child begins to walk, when a. limp or lameness Is noticed pain less. The earlier any congenital defect j la recognized and treated the better the final reault will be. Alert par ents may notice long before the child tries to walk, long before the child , Is six months old, that the crenses i on the Inside of the thighs are deep er on one side than on the other; or that the leg on the affected side cannot bo drawn so far outward as can the normal leg; or that when the baby lies In hla back on a firm aurfftce, with knees flexed and feet together on the table surface, the normal knee will be higher than the knee of the affected side, when view ed from below or the foot of the table; or that the bony prominence of the hip (trochanter of thigh bono) Is greater on the affected aide. Whpn NEW YORK, Dec. 2. Thorn living Shouts who haunt the gTpat hotol lob bles' Fugitive ahadowa from an opu lent pnst. Only in the onxy and gilt splendor which Is free do they aeem able to get away from the drab baclt hsll room now and rekin dle memories of prosperous days that are gone. There is, for example, a aeedy but once mag nificent n a d e who hovers In the barrooms of the Plawi. He sits musing In one of the big black leather chairs. Every hour, or so he rlrwe and totters to the news ticker, still for all the world the noble patrician. Adjusting an ancient steel-rlmmed plnce-nea on a trernbllng moist nose end, he carefully reads the market reports. Replacing his plnce-nea he returns to hla deep-cushioned chair. Fifteen years ago he was a guest who agitated for the installation of that same ticker. He never orders, but now and then a waiter, an old rrlend. Insist on coffee and sandwich. He accept flut terlngly, a membrane of memory re leases some flare-back, and he fum bles for money. The waiter: "Oh. you psld the check." From him: "Oh. yes, thank you." Smiles. A faint crumple into shadowy memories a 1 ghrvstl i Speaking of memories, Henry Sell it. id I have been puiwled for months over a sign, In gold outlined with pale blue, in the entrance of the dance place known as Rowland. It reads; "A place where you csn turn Rolclen moments into idle memories " U must mean something, but we have muffed It. Sometimes I wonder if hurrying Sew Yorkers along Fifth avenue pause long enough to notice changes in the town's oldest congregational reunions edifice The Church of St. Nicholas st the 48th street corner. Organlrid In ltW3. It Is the oldest church or ganlrjitlon. Indeed. In America with continuous service. The old Iron fence and the shrubbery have been removed and the sidewalk widened. Vr years It has offered a Jet of pleas ant erenlty. The pulpit, or preach ing desk, ts nn anciently carved Oolhic tec Urn. The vista l of quaint an tiquity utnlnM a background of ultra modernism. tcar or the Waldorf, known fm and wide as a chef, isn't a chef at ail and doetWt cre for the appellation, On re he wrrie me so when I clawed hint thus. A compliant ol recipes rears ac, under the title "Ovar's Cook Ik-ok' gave him thst standing and he haa never been shle to shake It. Nearly every writer refers to him as a chef. He has occupied a nlclie a (relet h?et in h!. caM ol fwr.l c II- pt. snd ar.T.: c, hm qucts and huge dinner parties nt -.O.O.Mcinfyre L WITH HIP DF.FRCT any of these signs are noticed In a baby a few months old, an X-ray pic ture should be made to see Just what the defect Is. The value of such recognition of hip defect before the child begins to bear weight on the hip la that correction may be Instituted before the head of the thigh bone la pushed far out of place. Bloodless reduction is accomplished by simple abduction (drawing outward) the affected limb and retaining It in that position by a plaster Cast. This Is kept on for per haps two months. Then another Is applied, holding the limb In leea wide abduction. And so on, gradual ly getting the limb back to normal position. The infant may be taken out In go-cart or automobile while wearing the cast. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Prevention of the Cii Where I work every employee Is urged to take one dose a day tor a week then one dose a week until spring, of (certain vitamin tablets) to prevent cold. This costs six cents per dose. Is it advisable? . . . (T.M.) Answer It Is purely experimental. However, It can do no harm, may do good In cases where the employees happen to be short on vitamins. There are more economical waya of getting the same amount ot vita mins. As for prevention of the rea piratory infections that keep emplay eea absent from work, send ten cent coin and atamped envelope bearing your address, for booklet "Call It Crl" While vitamin A la theoretically help ful for prevention of respiratory In fections, practically vitamin D seems more Important, to me. ' Cataract Must a person be totally blind In order to undergo operation for cata ract? . . . (Mrs. R. M.) Answer No, good occullats oper ate successfully aa soon as vision In the poorer eye becomes so reduced that the patient can no longer read. What harm to mother or baby If a pregnsnt woman takes capsules of ergot and later decides to go through with It? (P. B.) Answer No harm. Ergot may poi son a woman but would not be likely to Interrupt pregnancy. (Copyright 1936, John P. Dllle Co.) lid .N'ule: Pej.uro nisuinc to communicate with Ilr. Urud? should send tetter direct to Ur William Btodv. M. I). 2(1S El Camlno. Heverly Hills. Calif. known much about cuisine, but has never actually donned the chef's uni form. He Is past 70 but at his desk every day among the last of the hoteliers known by name. The passing of James Whltcomb Riley's sister recently revived for many the poet's mention of her aa "Baby Llswlc" in "The Polka at Home" poem. Nothing, to my mind. In poetry has so enchantlngly described babyhood. It runs the quotation is from memory something like this: Bnby Lizzie with her lisp. As though her velvet lips had caught some wisp Of floss between them aa she strove for speech Which ever seemed Juat in, yet out of reach, etc., etc. That "velvet Hps had caught some wisp of floss between them" Is the sort of at uff for which poets strive. Certain wrltera Wodehouse, A. P. Herbert and Tacktngton occur to me -have the true light touch. Seldom do they bring In the heavy brasses. But keep tickling the upper keys and using the lighter wood winds. This makes for delicious humor. Car toonists have It. Brlggs with the tag ging tyke in need of nose-blow. Peter Arno. more modern, with the uni formed flunkey or mustaches of the window club Major. I roar at their sweeping ram's horn curves. I don't know why but I do. That is playing on the upper keys. On the oboe rather than the double brasses I It's been moons since T succumbed to that gesture of looser evenings the Turkish Bath, But for the heck of It. I did last evening. The rubber. a ringer for Man Mountain Dean sans whiskers, gave me. the big bum. hla entire routine. I no longer look upon mynelr as a tough bird. I not only bruise, ouch, like anvthlng. but tear easily under the wing. They almost had to tote m home In an ambu lance. (Copyright. W3fl. McNaught Syndicate) Ml REEFER CARS OMAHA, Neb., Dec. 1 in Csrl R. Oray, president of the Union Pacific railroad, announced today the Union : Prtclllc and the Southern Pacific , ute If the two conflicting person railroads will spend more than 410.- Mltles of John Lewis s-.d William JO00O0 for 1 000 new refr gerator cara Green were eliminated." Then he and to recondition 1.750 additional ' hastened to add: "Of course, there ra- might not be much of a labor move. Construction of the new cars will ment If they were gone." be divided between the Oeneral American Car Co.. Chicago; Ametlcan Correction: Prof. Tugwells name Or and rmndry Co., Chicago: Hull- waa next to last on the (arm tenancy ninn standard Car Manulaeturtnc committee becatise all but two of Co.. Chicago, snd the Pacific Car and roundry Co. Henton. Wa.h. Each company will culld 500 cars. The new cars will tc used by the Pacific Print Rxprcw Co., owned Jointly bv the Union Pacific and Southern Pacillc. The reconditioning work. Oray said. will be done In the Union Pacific shops at Rcsevllle. Calif., and Los : Aiviele... Th's work will crwt about l 17 COO. j - 10 8) TrlDuna want ads. I Comment of the Day s News By FRANK JENKINS HEARST'S Seattle Post-Intelllgenc-er, closed for month, aa a result ot labor disturbances, opens again, and President Roosevelt's son-in-law will be the new publisher. What of It? Well, here In Portland (where these words are written) the Impression seems to be that William Randolph Hearst la fully as smart aa he haa been credit for being. PORTLAND, as already suggested In these chronicles, Is experiencing a drought of more or leas unprece dented proportions. With the first of December Just around the corner, the skies are cloudless (except when there happens to be a fog) and when the wind blowa It sends dust clouds scur rying before. Umbrella and galosh merchant might as well close their doors. The power companies are running auxiliary steam plants to provide elec tricity, and the Willamette river Is at a scandalously low level three-quarters of an inch below sea level, this morning's report shows which means that Instead of piling up against the tide, aa Is normal, the waters of the Willamette are actually lower than the level of the tide. PORTLAND Is Just-beginning to feel the pinch of the maritime strike. Because of lack of transportation (In seaports, you know, nearly every thing comes In and goes out by water) many Industries are either closing down or reducing their operations. Then, In the seaports, the ships j themselves provide a big payroll FTom the time a ship arrives until it departs It Is working at high tpeed to get Its cargo discharged and an other cargo taken on. It la buying j UPP" ' almost every kind In pre. j paratlon for putting to sea sgaln. All this goes on under forced steam, for ships can't make any money for their owners while they're lying in port. The quicker they get out of port, the more profitable they are. THEN there are the ehore organiza tions of the shipping outfits- offloe force, Ate. These shore organi sations are neceasary to keep the ships going Just as ground crews are necessary to keep airplane In the air. But with the ships tied up Idle, there Is no need for office forces. So stenographers, clerke, bookkeepers, etc., are being laid off. Some of the shipping outfits are reported even to be taking their telephonea out. All of thla affect buying power, and while business In Portland la still running ahead of last year It Isn't running aa far ahead as people would like to see. BUT the city la bright and active, and the holiday season la in full awing. The street are attractively decorated, and the stores axe gay with Christmas displays. The hotels are crowded. The Christmas spirit la in the air, and it la a pleassnt city. But It does eem funny, at this 5aaon of the year, to get up in the morning, with the sun shining, and walk right out into the street with- ! out an umbrella or any need for one. ; (Continued from Page One ) to you as the son of my father, or aa the representative of the Hearst interests, for. aa you know, they arc slightly divergent." Better syntax form would have been: "I am slightly divergent." . . . All that was before Son.lnLaw John Boettigcr signed up as publisher of the Hesrst paper In Seattle. "Di vergent" Is no longer the word. It means "receding further and further from each other." BoctMgcr was really selected as a frli-ndly gesture by Mr. Heant to reconcile nil differ ence with the new deal. They will be moderately reconciled. A leading labor spokesman for the new deal says: "The union labor turmoil would be settled In a min tlie names were in alphaoetieai order Nr slight wss therefore Intended, " ,h Of nnan-Japanese alliance mmns ""'y what It says, no one would worry much. But there are many unprlnted as well as public ,alM bc,v'1 srflv Provision. All the 0,f,cll denials In the world will not 'm; he out Most disturbing Is thr on' that Oermany and Japan are agreed not to play ball with any nit'.on which U not a party to their agreement. Only tutu- subsequent rain Mm action will prove whether thU one t true. Rising demsnd to put aU govern ment workers under civil service is not causing the 300,000 emergency employes much worry. The president csn blanket them Into civil service, or the puiely polltlcel employes csn take a comparatively simple civil ser vice exsm and be called to duty. It has been done before, under Re publican and Demoaratlc adminis trations, and will undoubtedly be done again next year. The housing program la heading up Into the same old Inside fight which hss always sldetrscked any elective government plan. Slgnlllcant In this respect I the return of Peter Grimm as a member of the new housing committee of Mr. Roper's business advisory council. He waa Mr. Mor genthau' housing expert who de parted this government a year ago. Senator Thomaa of Oklahoma will assert next session that the govern ment has expanded currency over a billion dollars through Issuance of silver certificates. ... A dark horse to be reckoned with (but probably not elected) In the house floor lead ership dispute la Representative Woodrum of Virginia. . . . The Town send organization claim only 110 friends in the next congress, of whom seven are senators, indicating the election at least had a conservative effect on clslms. What will some of Dr. Stanley Hlgh'a churchmen say when they learn that one contributor to hla good neighbor league waa it brewer of national repute? . . . president Roose velt may take advantage of a unique opportunity to send hla second term annual and budget messages to con gress before he is inaugurated. There la need for haste in renewing some expiring new deal powers, and it can be done, as congress meets January A and Mr. Roosevelt's second term doean't begin until January 30. PUBLIClCAUlNEO ON SOCIAL SECURITY JOB REQUIREMENTS "Contrary to popuiar Impresilon. no lsrge number of examlnatlona hss been snnounced primarily with a view to filling positions in the so clsl security service," It is stated In a bulletin received today by Post master Frank DeSouza from J. C. Lackore, district manager of the United Statea civil service commis sion. "It is not known that there will be any considerable number an nounced," the bulletin continued. "Positions subject to civil service re quirements, have been filled from many existing appropriate registers from which certification may be made to any service, bureau or de partment. "It la, of course, possible that some spec l al e xam i na t Ions mm in d ue course be announced aa the person nel neoceasary to carry on the work la expanded In the field or at head quarters. Beyond this, no statement aa to the number or kind of needed personnel can be made at this time." It waa Indicated that the bulletin waa prompted by a recent advertise ment by " so -called social security counselor" which "left the Impres sion with those malting inquiry that auch sooaJled .counselor could se cure employment In the social secur ity board for them.' The bulletin emphasizes that the civil service commission employs no agents ot solicitors, that no special course Is required for civil service examinations, that no "school" can guarantee civil service Jobs, that no "school haa civil service information that la not available to the public and that full information regarding civil service examinations may be procured at any postoffice. 4 PROSPECT. Dec. 3. (Spl.) Mrs Etta Robertson and daughter Louise spent the Thsnksglvlng holidays with Mrs. Katie Grieve. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bean of Klam ath county were guests for Thanks giving at the Nelson Nye home. Mr. and Mrs. Emery Nye and lnfsnt dsnghter are staying at Wlldwood camp until their new home Is com pleted. Mr. and Mra. Charles Manning spent Thanksgiving In Medford as the guests of Mrs. E. H. Kurd. The evening of December 5. the Prospect P.-T. A. is sponsoring a ben efit card party to be held at the Prospect hotel. All are Invited. December a. the regular bi-monthly meeting of the Upper Rogue Orange will ba held at the "Log Cabin." The new Orange hsll la being rapidly con structed by Orange members and will be ready for occupancy by early spring. Twelve men worked on it sll day Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Rlehey and fam ily were among those driving to Dla. mond and crater lakes Thsnksglvlng day. sir. and Mra. Earl Ulrlch were guests for Thsnksglvlng dinner of Mr end Mrs. Lelsnd Brophy In Med ford. The Prospect Townsend club met Saturday night at the Nelson Nye home. Mrs. Frank Manning and Miss Dency Manning spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs, Ludo Grieve. MANN'S HK.U1TY SALON Thursday special Flnrer Ware and Shampoo for "V CARD READINGS Madame A. Mueller. Honest and Reliable with het of references. Jin Sherman street, rhonr 9HJ-J.2 Headings Jl.oo. 1 I UJJGll l Flight 'o Time Medfard and Jackson County history Iron) the files ot the Mull Tribune 10 and 20 years ac.o. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY December 2, 1026. (It wag Thursday.) Charlie Chaplin, film comedian. and his second wife In domestic rift Heavy - rains continue over valley and streams flooded. Ten years s;e Medford was covered with an inch of snow. Two youths caught stealing gajo. line, are lectured by Juatlce of the peace and freed. Prultmen to meet tomorrow to dli cuss spray residue program for com mc year. Medford favored to defeat Grant high of Portland In game Saturday at Portland, for state title. Stormy weather delays airmail planes. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY December 2, 1016. (It was Saturday.) Short session of congress will opes tomorrow. Anglers meet In public library, but meeting Is "packed," and effort to form the "Live and Let Live Anglers' club" falls. Judge Kelly and T. E, Daniels made speeches opposing the closing of Rogue river at this time. Men's wrist watches offered for sale to Christmas trade by local merch ants. . Medford Elks to hold memorial services tomorrow. Porter J. Neff will deliver the main address. President Wilson to ask S8OO.OO0.- 000 for national defenses coming year. COTTAGE GIVERS COTTAGE GROVE, Dec. 3. Standardization of the aection be tween Cottage Grove and Yoncalla was put up to the state highway com mission by the chamber of commerce and the city council aa prior impor tance to the proposed rerouting of the Pacific highway through thla community. The commission, headed by Chair man Henry P, Cabell, said It waa es sential to determine the location of the tentative change for the informa tion of prospective investors. If the I proposed route L constructed parallel' to the railway, the Southern Pacific company has urRed that a 100-foot atrip be left aloni! the tracks for In dustrial development. The project, deigned to eliminate two right angle turna In Cottaa Grove, can not be undertaken until late next year, the commission said. s HOLLYWOOD. Calif., Dec. J. p) Offlclala of aoth Century-Pox studios were the first to announce a Christ mas bonus for employes, but other major companies were expected to broadcast more good news today. A 500.000 "present" will' be divid ed among non-contract workers at SOtli Century. Sidney R. Kent, pres ident, said, aa a result of the "most profitable year In the history of the company." At M-Q-M studios the decision on a bonua for workers will await the ar rival of Nicholas Schenck this week. Paramount. R K.O.-Radlo. Warners snd Universal probably will follow suit, officials said. 4-H CLlffllERS CHICAGO, Dee. a (p winners named at the annual dinner of the National Fotir-H club congress here Included : International Grain and Hay show Clayton Nyberg. Tualatin, Ort.. second for corn, region 1. Marie Meyer of Portland. Ore., was one of the four girls who prepared and served the meal at the annual luncheon given by the national com mittee at the International Livestock exposition. The girls won cooking championships during 1036 In com petition with 250.000 others all over the nation. THE OTHER WOMAN LIVES JUST AROUND THE CORNER IT mar seem unreasonable, but mew nipn cannot undfWand whr TiB15n wbo u uaualiy happT and lorlna should have renuTtck Periods whm her whole dwecter win chartTrd. Hp cannot appre ciate the d-strcM. the dlwinfort that al womm must endure. He dow not know what It Is to do hoiisoworlc with an achins back fcnd failing eneriry. All he dof know in that otlipr women awm more cJWrfui hv oimpartvin wit"9 "VOU tl"urt,e tVm'i 1h the nrdai that all jomen face ra-isf. yoU avoidable aiconirort or endanger tout home. Io a raacj women have try J.ydla F. Pinichara Vee. tabh' OmpoMnd. For three- iieii.TJ.tion! nne wom an hM told another how to go nnHins through" with I.ydJa E. pnkham'i V.-table Compound. It htip Nat-ire tone up the sr. J'm. thai ksvnin the divo'm ror'et. from the Tincrlnnal d.snrdTt which womf-n num eudorv in the ibjw ord-aU of life: l Turning from rrlhond to womanhood 2. rrppunriai for motherhood. 3, At prorvchlnfi "ijiid.lie aue. won i y ft iw.n.., 1 a three T.iirtcr wife; VEOETARI V- rn tti-i v. K . I YULE BONUS FOR STUDIO WORKERS n.-T t 1