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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 26, 1937)
EIGHT MEDFOKD frfXTL TRIBUNE, HfEDFOKD, OREGON, THURSDAY, 'AUGUST 26, 1937. MEDFORDwi&TBIBUNZ Hdi the Hall IVlbm' liUUVURU PBINTIMO OO. 11-11 l N. irtr sl Mom t ttUBKHI W.BUUL Bailor. HNDBT ft. OILTRA, Hull in n .pendent Newspaper. for, Oroo. obi lot ol lUreb I. till SUBSCRIPTION RATBfl Dally, oos rr.... Dur. )i mooth. t.il Dftilr. oa month v n-rrlar. IB IdVMN MedfoM. J Uod, Juk annv.l!. 0 I r ft I Poll.. phMDts, Talent, Qeld BUI iM bciiy. oa rv liu Daily i months. Dan, on month AJI Urms, eub to adraaoe, Official Papw of Jac&: WoaaQ UKMHKU UV I' HA AMOCLAIIUi f HJUtk Bmalvini rail lwng win Ph luMitMl Pram la aiOlQlel M' titlaa to tha dm (or pubiioatioa of alt . .tintflha artwlltael to II Of Other- wIm orarlitart to thii papar, eaa aiao w tna looal nti pnblltnao aarwm, Alt riahu (or publication of apaolai dlspatchai harain ara aiao MBIMBBB Of UNITED PR CM UBUBOH OP AUDI1 BURBAD or circulation! advertising lUpraoaotattrao Otric.i In N.w Tort CtileaaA MUMt. BaD rranelaoo. Lot In fin Portland, it. Lrfiola, Atlanta. anoii B. 0. Ye Smudge Pot BT Aitnoi Perty. The Lew Angeles Jury la the trial of a human hyena, who ooniessea the murder and ravishment of three girls of tender yoare, did noble. They have dedlDeratea jive mania v w ty expense, when all the evidence and testimony Indicated they ahould have been home for supper. The President has been' presented with the hide of a wolf, upon which la Inscribed an Invitation to attend the opening of Bonneville Dam next winter. The pelt I symbolical of the notorious varmint, lurking around many kitchen doora In 183i, end the Republicans who showed up at the last election wearing Democratic clothing. 1 A man by the name of Mahoney li running for Mayor of New York City, causing the rumor to arise n is the Oregon political upstart end perpetual white-haired boy on the burning deck, or the same surname. Orandpaw and Orandmaw. you ought to know he's not that gooo. Bob feller, youthful pitching won tier of the Cleveland team of the American league waa labeled 'a com plete flop" by a porta experts. Yes terday this sublime time only struck out 18 men, In a game with Boston. HOPE AND FRAIL1TY. Press Dispatch. Erneat Booth, Oakland author, as he left Pol som prison on parole: "I won't be back this time. I have learned there'a an easier way to make a living than steal ing." Warden Clar ence A. Larkln (in reply)! "I have heard that before, but I hope you mean It. 1 wish you all the luck In the world, and lt'a entirely up to you." The Chinese, supposed to have only a "Chinaman's chance" In the war with Japan, are doing quite well bv themselves In modern wartare, according to reports from Shanghai. The proverbial snowball, and tallow. legged cat may yet ahow up, Intact and unacBthed. e "Law and order" has been sug gested as a slogan for the reviving and resurrection of the late Republi can party, and, by no stretch of the imagination can aatd a 1 o g a n be charged with sprightly originality. The phrase has a laminar twang In these parts, for once upon a time there waa a terrific oratorical de mand for "law and order," un abridged and ala carte. At long last, came "law and order." but lol the recipients did not want It, and were heavily distressed thereby. With an amendment, the proposed OOP. slo gan might be remodeled Into a fairly lively, but no atem-wlndlng battle on', to-wlt: Law and Order For the Other Fellow. ... Ideal weather conditions prevail. The nights are too nice to go to bed. and the mornings too fine lor sleeping, to spoil by getting up. ... "'Puffed' Rice returned from a visit In Portlsnd wlttt friends." (Heppner News) Nicknames run to strange pieces, but not to patent medicines. KKfLINK OF lUr'r'INr.lS "The reason Is not resdlly appar ent, but for whatever cause, this country hss gone Its wsy tor severs! months without any of those unac countable seasons of mass go'tness which used to be an annual summer occurrence. Remember the year It waa tree-sitting? All over the coun try small boya and girls, and others not so small, went In for roosting In the brsnchea of the fsmlly shade tree, sticking to their lofty perches dsr and night until exhaustion or provoked parents finally took a hand. Memory also brings up other silly seasons when all of us were agug over deatb sirugKlra between spiders and young snskes. Jigsaw purxlea, marathon dancing, mah Jong or min iature golf, trousered females, male beauty contests, yo-yo tops or chain letters." (Longview iWesh.) News). Cm Mall mo una want ads. Editorial Correspondence . ST0NINGT0N, Conn., Aug. 23. Came up here for the week-end to cool off, and succeeded. With the aid of a good old-fashioned thunder storm it not only cooled off, it wag so cold Sunday night, we regretted having brought only Palm Beach regimentals, and no knitted vests., A grand and glorious feeling however, to be shivery once more, and for the first time in over a week, ye editor had a yen for something more sub stantial than an iced cantaloupe, e We secured rooms at the old Manor Lnn, where we spent several weeks last summer and were glad to find the venerable and kindly Heath sinters, still in charge, where they have been so many years. As related a year ago the Manor Inn dates back to "befo the wah" the Civil Wa if you please, when it served as the summer mansion of a wealthy Southern slave bolder, who was wiped out not only financially but physically, by that sanguinary conflict. Aside from bathrooms of the Gay Ninety brand (with the old familiar flushing chains nnd outside plumbing), the family mansion has changed in no vital particular. But the food is excellent the prices reasonable, and the entire atmosphere of the place deliciouBly nostalgic and soothing. Victorian, is the word for it. . . Went over to the yacht and tennis club, but the weekly race was over, the tennis postponed because of rain, and everyone was having afternoon tea. Met a number of "old friends", and took in a "family dinner" under aucb circumstances, we felt as though we bad never been away. And the conversation after dinner, was acutely reminiscent. As was true a year ago it was politics, with the same one-sided alignment, the one man who was pro-Roosevelt then is still sticking to the ship today, so there were two of us, and only two against the field. To our surprise the Roosevelt haters were fully as malignantly intense as they were in the midst, of a presidential campaign, in 193G, and even less inclined to show the remotest suggestion of a sense of humor. However with the election visit; we didn't feel impelled vigorously as was true a year Franklin D., on the labor and more points of agreement. But as was true last year, the longer we listened to that sort of bitter and bigoted "hymn of hate the farther we were until at the time of departure, defender, and if it hadn't been raining cats and dogs we would have been all for singing "Happy Days Arc Here Again," and making a Bourbon toreli-ligut The "other man" as before successful Boston lawyer, whose background is quite as respect able as the wild-eyed "Economic Royalists" opposing him. And as was true last year so this, made what impressed us, as an excellent case. This is written in haste for New York in a few minutes, so spots, in slap dssh fashion. However hero goes for a few dots and dashes: "You boya are as blind to the realities, as pitifully confi dent, just as surely riding to a of the Old South, when they gave glasses to the fall of Fort Suiupter. Certainly they were going into the Atlantic ocean, and White House door, weren t one of them the match for any ten or them damned Tanks? Wasn't the only true America the America south of the Mason and Dixon lino ? And wasn't that corn fed abolitionist Abe Lincoln responsible for the whole damned mess, raising one class against the other, inciting the slaves to armed revoltt, etc., etc Why they would rather die than live in a country ruled by tluH dirty blankety blank, and his penny pinching dry goods clerks and green grocers, money grubbing with the pigs and chickens of Wall Street!" "And that's what they did. They DIED. And their world died, yea, and (slavery died. And that's what's going to hap pen to you and your world if you don't watch out. Oh I don't mean literally I don't mean there will he war or revolution, or that most of you won't live out your allotted time. But when yon curse out Roosevelt, and rnve and rant,ahout what America is, what it always has heen and what it always should be, and you would rather die, than live in a land ruled over by any such and such and so and so. You are merely repeating the time honored erv of the old order that is passing out but DOESN'T KNOW IT 1 "Roosevelt didn't originate the New Deal, for it is world wide if you could only see it. He is merelv the medium through which irresistible forces released by the World War, are work ing, to bring about a new freedom for the human race. It is not freedom from human slavery as it was 75 years ago, it is freedom from economic slavery. And as Lincoln was a mod erate as far as human slavery is concerned, so is Roosevelt, but you cfln't see that cither. He wants to destroy ecouomic servitude, WITHOUT destroying the capitalistic system; just as Lincoln wanted to destroy slavery without destroying the UNION. He is really fighting to preserve what you want to preserve, and in the only way it can be done, by bettering the conditiou of the masses, through reform, rather than revolution, through modernizing democracy rather thau destroying it, and in your own self intore yon should be on his side, instead of trying to destroy him. hut all you can see is the threat of change, and you don't want change, you would rather die than accept it. And if you birds win out that's all you will get an EPITAH1 1" There was more of it but that may give an idea of his argument. And while there is not a perfect analogy iu the Lincoln-Roosevelt comparison, the essential principle thus em phasized, we think, is sound euongh. This Boston barrister is one of the few "Economic. Royalists" in the country, who sees the world as it is today who realizes the good old days have gone never to return, and is acting on the wise principle, that half a loaf is better than no loaf at all. But iu Stonington he is hopelessly outnumbered. In striking contrast with the situation hero in 1770, the Tories hotd the fort, and the revolutionists are the outcasts 1 R. W. K. ram and JUST LUCKY' NEW YORK, Aug 36 Pf Steinwsy hall, where Lawrence Tlbbett and Htchard Bonelll have sung liquid notes, rang with cheers today when Alfred Salmaggl announced neither of them can really sing "they're just lucky." The occasion was a meeting of the Orand Opera Artists association, sf llftate of the American red-rtlon of Labor, whleh frowns on the Ameri that night. As so often happens over, and only on a week-end to enter into the discussion, as ago, and having departed from supreme court issues, we found driven into the Roosevelt camp, we joined the other New Deal procession of our exit. stated, is a well known and we have to catch our train to can only give a few of the high fall, as were the gallant sons the rebel yell, and raised their to drive the damned lanltces tack Abe Lincoln's hide on the can Qutld of Musical Artists. Tlbbett and Bonelll head the guild, and other high-priced stars are mem bera. "Tlbbett can't slngv He's Just lucky I" said Salinssgt. maestro of the New York Hippodrome opera, "and that goes for Bonelll. too. "Why. neither of thero could sing In my theater for more than 915 a nlghOand they hsve the nerve to call these artists mediocre 1" Bonelll angerd the artists associ ation when he said recently 'No one who doesn't earn 910.000 a year has a right to call hlmsetf a grand opera artist." John Cabot discovered Newfound land, the oldest English colony. In H7. 4 JO JOHNSON teaching popular piano playing. Baldwin Piano Sboppe XI 830. Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertalnlnf to personal heaJlb sod byglcne. not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a i tamped seU addreaaed envelope ts enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number ol letters received only a few can be answered. No reply ran be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly, Calif. VITAMIN D AND RESPIRATORY INFECTION Formerly we thought vitamin A waa the "anti-Infective" vitamin or at any rate moat essential for the pre vention of so-called "colds." Influ enza or grip, si nusitis and other respiratory Infec tions. Tbla as sumption la now questioned and. from all I can learn about the practical use of vitamins (not animal experi ments but human experience) there la no good evl dence to support the Idea, The evi dence seems to ahoy rather that vita min D, not vitamin A, aids In build' Ing Immunity agalnat respiratory in- fectlon. This, conclusion la based not only on human experience but also on animal experimentation. In one experiment (out of many on record, references to which I am glad to give physlctana on request) a group of rata well fed except for lack of vitamin D were given Injec tions of rat typhoid germs and 63 percent of the rats fed succumbed. A control group of rats fed a smaller diet but adequate vitamin D, wero given the same rat typhoid Injections, and only 27 percent of these sue, cumbed. Insufficient vitamin D Is the cause of rickets. It has always been rec- ognized that infants or children with any degree of rickets are correspond lngly weak In Immunity against pneumonia and other respiratory In fections. A great many persons who have adopted the habit of supplementing their ordinary diet with Irradiated yeast tablets, which are rich In vita min D (produced In the yeast by Irradiating with certain wavelengths of ultraviolet light) have noticed and reported an Increased Immunity and a decreased frequency of "colds" (to thee, crl to me). Vitamin D Is apparently a defense against pneumonia In children af flicted with whooping cough, Among 3.462 esses of whooping cough, more than half of the children with mark ed rickets contracted pneumonia. 37 percent of the, children with mild rickets contracted pneumonia, and only 39 percent of the children with out rickets contracted pneumonia. In children with measles there Is the same tendency to develop pneu y-O.O.Mclnf vre NEW YORK, Aug. 26. With the legitimate theatre having to fight every Inch of the way for existence a tautness has d e v e 1 o ped be tween the pro ducers and crit ics that may end In open revolt. The producers nay they have a legal right to bar destructive crit ics, and may do It. Alexander Woollcott and Percy Hammond were excluded legally for what pro ducers said was constant fault find ing. Even Brock Pemberton. who used to be a dramatic editor. Is outspoken In his belief that some of the critics have gone too far and should be barred if the producers feel like barrfng them. Perhaps the greatest offender from the showman's standpoint Is Oeorge Jean Nathan, who seldom turns In a favorable report. It la the plaint of many producers that many shows are knocked in the head at premieres before they have a chance to Jell. However, the critics have their side and are standing pat. They ere agreed thst any censorship over their critiques will not only be opposed by newspaper editors but will end the usefulness of reviewing. There msy be some Interesting show-downs the coming season. Not all the blggltles rich and powerful eat at the elaborate res taurants with siisen entrance ropes and trained European servitors. Owen D. Young lunches regularly at Chtlds on Lexington avenue. Post master Parley eats and very lightly at a similar place on 8th avenue. Mrs. Helen Gould Shepherd dines rrequenlly at Alice Foot MacDou- pall's and Amelia Ear hart and her husband often occupied a table at one of the avenue Schrafft's. Kate Smith Is a regular diner at Lebua and John D. Rockefeller now and then drops into Susan Painter's. In the old Park Row days Charles Q. Danta lunched on a bowl of milk with crackers at a. 2ft cent luncheon place on Park Row. Will Rocers ws often a guest at a Chill Villa, as were Irvln Cobb and Joe Cook. I was assigned one time as a reporter to watch for Hetty Oreen at a down town restaurant. She came In one day. bringing her lunch In a paper bug and ordering a cup of coffee. I mas near enough to see she left a nickel tip. My two column story about It was shaved to a stick. central Park at sundown suggest Rotterdam going from work so as tonishingly has the bicycle crare been revived. stae folk, held In town by engagements, are among the pedal enthusiasts. Harlem, due to its proximity to the park, turns out a targe cycling parade. Inciden tally, someone tells nir Joe Jackson. the te trttnip cyclist, gets his I exri-c.se and relaxation on a bicycle, t but minus hi niadeup no one rer- ogmwi htm in public Col. Lind-j i kx io.aaikdHKaHM Brady, M D. monia if there la a deficiency of vita min D. When you say "colds" you dont know snd nobody knows what you are talking about. Just one or an other Illness, usually communicable via conversational spray more com monly than via open-faos sneeze or cough spray. Only fault I find wltb call lug the Illness or Indisposition "cold" la that the term Implies an Intention or desire to disarm the Ig norant or Innocent folk around you and a callous Indifference concerning the fate of those you Infect. I urge you to have a spark of decency and call It crl. "I have crl" (pronounced kree) means I don't know yet whether It Is simple coryza, diphtheria, meas les', Infantile paralysis, but I'm giving fair warning govern yourself accord ingly. There Is a golden rule of hy giene, too. Of a group of children with diph theria 13 percent had no rickets, 62 percent had some signs of rickets. The former class had a 'deth rate of 33 percent, the latter a death rate of 63 percent. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Drought Needed. Both of our children, aged 6 and 7, wet the bed. The older boy only be gan to do so after he had measles last fall, but the younger boy has always done so. (L. T.) Answer Send stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for In structions for correcting the habit of bed-wetting. Hemorrhoids. Please send me any literature you have on hygiene for hemorrhoids. (Mr. A. R.) Answer Send a three -cent-stamp ed envelope bearing your address and ask for monograph on hemorrhoids. Wet Drying. Just what Is a "wet dressing" and what Is Its purpose? (H. M.) Answer Say a mass of loose game (cheesecloth) kept constantly moist ened, on any infected or painful or Inflamed or throbbing wound. Moist ened with salt water, strength of tablespoonful of common salt in the pint of boiled water. In which tea spoonful of boric acid Is also dis solved. Applied as hot as endurable. Purpose is to favor drainage and re lievo tension and soreness. (Copyright. 1937, John P. Dllle Co.) fcd. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D.. 263 El Camlno, Beverly Mills. Calif. bergh and his wife are also doing much bicycling In England. One of New York's most self effacing tycoons Is Messmore Ken dall, so frequently mentioned as the author's friend and adviser In Ar nold Bennett's Journals. As a young lawyer out of Michigan, he organ ized the Braden Copper company and made a fortune. He has the most notable collection of Washingtonia outside the Smithsonian Institution and is president general of the Na tional Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. He lives In a colonial home, a Washington land mark at Dobbs Perry, in the sum mer, and in a Grand Central sized apartment over the Capitol theatre, which he built and owns, in winter. He also has a villa at Palm Beach. Thingumabobs: Bud Fischer was the first comic strip artist to make $50,000 year. . . . Maxwell Anderson, highbrow playwright, enjoys vaude ville Juggling and balancing acts. . . . Clare Booth Is wrtlng a new play in Hawaii. . . . Walter Huston is to be Mr. Tutt when the drama tization of Arthur Train's chsracter la brought to the stage. . . . Booth TarklngtDn's favorite type of dog Is the Prench poodle. I have a letter from a fraldy cat smoker In San Francisco that may Interest the cigarette makers In di recting programs. He waa for years a contented puffer. Then began lis tening to air blurbs about various brands of cigarettes and of a sudden became "throat conscious." The medical documents stressing only this brand or that so confused him that In panic he quit smoking alto gether. (Copyright, 1937. McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) Comment on the Day s News By FRANK JENKINS THE Japanese, as these words are written, are attacking aTong a 1000-mile front in China putting into it, apparently, aU they have. Japan wants a QUICK victory, fear ing that If she doesnt win In a hur ry she will go broke. Wars cost a lot HELP KIDNEYS PASS 3 LBS. A DAY tOftor lit- roilF tHitnav Mslaia t ihMm f liny lube or Alien whirl, help to purif tha MhxI fttul keep tou henhhy. Mont neopla pia Shout .1 pints s dy or Ixtul 3 poiiDtla of wtvt. Frcment or wanty umt with martins ltd burning ikowa Ihert mir hs tomalhinj ronj- miri your ki.iiMvi or bUd.lw. n riret m ci u or poiftoo in year Mood, muvuniai wunfT a ison'tri, may be tha cua of nts"it bafkachs, rhumija puna, lumbifo. Ie puns, lou of pep an-1 en tv. llin up o:hv, ellinc, pufllosM n.ter tha e. bda,h o,i diiiiDMs. IKiat wan' .k your dniit for Poan'l , h "T" T.Vn K.i;r.i. s mie of kidner t-ies fu.h out psaour tt9m saa s Pu of money, you know, moat of which baa to be borrowed, and Japanese bonds havent been selling too read 11 y since the fighting began. HXRX have been plenty of rumors 1 that Italy's adventure In Abbys stnla haa been none too profitable. If it SHOULD TURN OUT (don't be so optimistic, however, as to expect any such thing) that Japan's attack on China proves a disastrous drain on her finances, tt would do more to promote world peace than almost anything else could. Nations don't go to war Just for the fun of tt. They go out for 8WAO. If modern experience could only prove that the swag costs more than It Is worth, a long step toward peace would have been taken. ANOTHER curious slant on this war business: Our so-called "neutrality" law Isn't actually a neutrality law at all. In practice, If applied, It will line us up on the side of Japan and AGAINST China. Here Is the way It will work out: If we apply the neutrality law and refuse to sell to either side, Japan will be able to carry on the war out of her own resources, because she has armament and other factories with which to supply her armies, but China HASNT, and unless she can buy from other nations she will be seriously handicapped. f TERE, of course, Is the BIG thought 1 1 to keep In mind: China, In one way and another. has made herself so WEAK as to In vite seizure by Japan. If we ever MAKE OURSELVES WEAK, we too will Invite seizure by some stronger nation. There la no such thing as Justice in international dealings. Whatever progress has been made by individ uals, NATIONS are still raw savages DR. ILaSEY BOONE, secretary of the American Sun bathers asso ciation, says: "The great taboo against the human body Is beginning to give way. When It does, nudism will become common in the United States." Ratal If the ban on going without clothes is removed, nudism will from that moment be as dead ae a dodo. Who would want to go around naked if it were PERFECTLY LEGAL! APPLEGATE HOP PICKING EMPLOYS 150 WORKERS BIG APPLEGATE. Aug. 36. Spl.) Harvesting of hops on the B. M. Clue and Herriott yards is In full swing with 160 pickers employed. A good yield Is reported. The season will lsst another two weeks. Mercury Is the nearest planet to the sun, and the smallest In the system. GUARD that MILK! with the even, constant cold of an 4 E PROSPECTS EYED FOR BOYER'S POST AS EUGENE, Aug. 3 (AP) Dr. Fred erlck M. Hunter, stste chancellor of higher education, will attend the meeting of the national education policies commission In Chicago In September. Dr. Hunter said he waa not at liberty to say whether he would In terview prospective successors to Dr. C. V. Boyer as president of the Uni versity of Oregon while In the east. The names of men being consider ed, he said, will not be revested until he reports to the state board of higher education after his return from Chlcsgo. It was understood here that the names of nine men were under con sideration by the faculty advisory council. They are: James H. Gilbert, dean of the col lege of social sciences at the uni versity: Wayne L. Morse, dean of the law school: Orlando J. Hollts. acting dean of the law school since December: Victor P. Morris, dean of the college of business administra tion: Circuit Judge James T. Brand, of Marsh field: Harold Benjamin, for merly of the University of Oregon and now of Minnesota: Justin Miller, associate Justice of the federal court of appeals, district of Columbia; Donald Erb, acting chairman of the Stanford university economies school, and Homer L. Dodds, dean of the graduate school of the University ol Oklahoma. HELD AT GRANTS PASS GRANTS PASS, Aug. 26. (Spl.) Two boys, one 11 and one 9 years of age, finally admitted to city police Wednesday that they had run away from thir homes in Med ford Tuesday night. They were taken off the freight train by police here at 10:25 p. m. Tuesday on advice from the railroad company at Gold Hill, Chettle Glass. 11, and Sonnle Ken dall, 0, ate a hearty breakfast after deciding to tell police that their homes were In Medford. When taken off the train, the boys steadfastly de clared thlr homes were In Ashland. but a check with authorities there showed this to be false. City police said Mrs. Verta Kendall of Mel ford was to come for the boys. Term h Suspended For Ex'Army Flier TACOMA, Wash.. Aug. 26. (AP) Capt. Robert Lee Whitney of Salem. Ore., plaeded guilty In superior court here to a charge of larceny by check and received a 00-day suspended Jail sentence. Whitney, a former army aviator, told Judge E. D. Hodge he had lost several Jobs as a reysult of garnish ment proceedings. at ELECTRIC Refrigerator The milk which is such an important sum mer food may also be a health menace unless it is kept at an even, low tempera ture. That's why it is doubly important for every, family with children to have an automatic refrigerator. There' is no food leeping problem in the home that has an electric refrigeator. And summer menu problems are a thing of the past, wirh the refrigerator always ready to turn out tempting frozen desserts and salads. Best of all, there is no food wasted, which is real economy. The California Oregon Power Flight 'oTime Medford and Jackson Count? history from th flies of too Mail Tribune 10 and 10 jean TEN YEARS AGO TODAY AUflMt 26, 1927. (It wss Thursday.) Game commission seta bearing date In Rogue fish dispute. Paul Red f era starts on plane flight to Brazil. Pair Jailed for setting fire la Klsmath county. . Robert Hart, a Crater Lake park ranger, spends day In the city. Temperature continues to decrease from dsy to day, and 80 was the max imum yesterday. Delilah Stevens Meyers quit Jubi lee Queen contest. John A. Perl makes a hole In one at the golf club. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY August 28, 1917. (It was Sunday.) Smoke from forest fires bides the raya of the sun In city and valley. City firemen threaten to resign unless their pay Is raised. Alfred carpenter left this morning to Join the officers' reserve corps at San Francisco. Russian collapse laid to German apy knavery. Campaign started to compel all autos to have headlights for night driving. New Chevrolets arrive in city. War expense million dollars per hour for Uncle Sam. Dse Mall Tribune want ads. BABY'S FEEDING PROBLEMS VARY Don't let a friend, or some one else's friend, tell you how to feed your baby, especially If they raised their babies before modern feeding methods were developed. And even though they may be feeding a baby now your baby's feeding problems are different from those of other babies, even In fact vary at different times. Your physician Is the only qual ified adviser In these matters which vitally affect your baby's health and future. Periodic examination of your growing child by your physician Is not only of Immediate benefit, but preserves physical fitness by pre venting the development of diseases which damage progressively with the passing years. In the end, it also saves money. Insulin 10 c.c. U 40 Is 1.13. We give S. H. Oreen Stamps. Heath's Drug More, phone 884. Compan,