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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 7, 1925)
PAGE FOTJTJ IvfEDFOftT) MATTJ TRTftTTKE, TlfEDFORD. OKEflOX. FRTDAY. AUOUST 7. 192.') Bedford Iuail tribune . AW INDEPENDENT NEWflPAPM RTUJBHJtD KVEttY AFTERNOON azoiP f , BUND AT, HT TUB ' MBDKOUU i'RlNTING OO- Th HnHatd flundav llarnlnff Sun i fantlabet nbcvribera del 1u4 tU wwidj dilj Mf Offlc: Mill TrihuM BuildlDf, II-I7S Worth Fir atrcrt Phone 76. A qoniolldailon of the Demoeriae TlmiW, th ediord llftili tno Mfoiora iriuunv, ui www ira prrcopian, Ui Ash land Tribun. BOBKItT W. RUBb, Editor, fl. SUWrTKR KH1T1I, Utnsgtr. H ifmll Lin Arlanr Dill y, with Sutidnj Bna, jftr f.7.60 Daltr, wltb 8unlr Nun, month .74 Dkllr. without Hundir Hun, ytr o.fiQ Dai It, without fluinUf Hun, ipoiiUi . . . WeAly Mll Tribune,-od yeu t. Bundar Bun. one rtir .00 T 'flABBIPn In Urrifnrif. Aihlind. JackaOD tflle. Oentril Point, Pfaoooil, Talent and on Dally, with Sunday Hud, month $ VTA Dally, without ftmviiy Run, month Jit Dally, without Sunday Hun, oo year... 7.60 Dally, with Kunday Bun, one year 1.10 AH ttnna by carrier, caab In advance. - Entered aa aecond-rlaaa matter at Madford Oregon, under act ot March , WB. Official paper of the Cliy ol Uedford. Official paper of Jackaon Co'inlj. Sworn dally averr , en-eolation tor all mnthm nlinr Arirll 1f. 1024. 8009. more Oif double the circulation of any oUnr piper pub tiebafl or circulated in Jutktoo Vwutj. The only parser betwir. ATtwnu Ore., end Ohlci, California, a d lata nee of over 400 anllAe, having leased wire Aaaoclated Preae MKMBKRK OP Tni. AfnrouMTne TOERS. The Aaaociated J'rwa. f edulve)y entitled to (he use for republication of all newa dla pa toil r a credited to it or-ftofr othenrfee-eredite fen tola paper, and alao to Uie local nawi pub Habed herein. All righta of republication of apedal die aatdbw herein are alao reaerVed. ,Ye Smudge Pot Jl7 Artlior Perry. The iilKKoat pear alo of the year was consummated yesterday. Tlic prlcp hnH not liccn made puhllc, but iho grower broke oven. SI2I2K WlIKHKAIiOUTS OF MIKK INU CHICM1HT (Hdllno Sacramento Hoc) Look in tho laundry. - "Tho Modern Cinderella," arcu 18. JH, ami 22 ycara, respectively, the daughter ot .poor uarentn, with nil in conuo of only $700 per month from an apartment house, like the original Cin derella, BceniH to have put her foot In U.' Tho 182fi Cindy walked four nillos before j breakt, to greet tho New York millionaire, who received a bill of Kale i for her, In a city where It 1h pomdhle to ride all day for elht centa, on u street cur. Thin one- Incident. Houijded pathetic, but flnhy. It now developer that the lute mode) Cinder ella, knew her onlonH. It waH a pretty Htory, HuvorinK Homewhat, hh the facts developed, of u trunuuctlon in Turkey, before haroina were uhuliHhed. - JilTTriK! T'WAM Tit I NO. : . - lola (Hum.) i-viM'r.) Uohh Fitch, who Ih cmployoil ' with Fred Jiarrrtt'H cement KanK on tho HtatuVoudH, had a little ex 1 pijiieneo at Uavla City, Tueaday, which he will not noon forget. Me ,was crankliiK tho guHoltno enKlno nn tho cement jnxer when the bib of IiIh ovcrullH caught on Iho fly wheel, JiiHt nil tho ciikIdo Ktarted, and It whirled him over it mi over, tearing .off practically all of hlx clothing- About all thut waa left was hia ah oca and sock a. A Jury haa dec lured ItiiKaell Kroll, convicted inurilerrr of Chicago, twice reprieved, liiNune. I nalrnd of koIiik to tho kuIIowh. MivHcolt will K" to the nayluiii. Now (lint he can't, of com rue. he would bo delighted to Jmiiff. The vordie,t lu enough to inalio every mint, who ever paid tho Htiprcino penally at the end of I he rope, turn over In his sruve. WANTKI) Ijidy with no Incumbent, for luniaekeeper and to earn for H-yenr-old Klrt. Write "W. II.," care News. (Marshfleld Newa.) llua banda have been called everything else. The lilKhwaya are not wide enough for two cr to pasn. ff the tourlatit hnt a bedroom act laahed to Iho rtiuntUK board. Indictment by n Klamath rounty krnnd Jury, polltlcatty Krenaed, of blh Htuto dry a Idea, la creating a tornndu In n coffee pot, and thero aeenta nuth Ing to do. but limine "iho boat He prenn of dlatortlng the facta," and drop the matter. now co.Mi;t (GitMMivllln (M. '.) Tlmea.) t)f the forty neroea In the dreciivllln count y ha stile y eater day, tlilrly-lhree were whltea. Jteaaon ftd'Mhla i-ondltlon h rather vague, nlthoiiKh the pcrcnntaKe of white population In thla section may partially exdala It. (('out. ly It. F.) "I'll Junt bet ahe'a not raiintnp peachea." la heard lu the ioaldentinl urnaa aa the opening romurk. of the autumn Kuaalplng. A hotter jilanet than tho aun hnH been dlacovered by natronomera. Thin may bo ho. but many doubt It. The Coolldge Idnn on the con I atrlke, Hoomfl to be thut tho public can free so. aa long aa the inlneia can tnla meula. Next (o Peoria- Utll tlatea. who will bo the flrat radio enthualaat to get MacMtlhin, on Jilt wnv to tho North lole? , Tady Ford-Coupe )in returned from ine Hnore, hh orowu a a nui. nor mvi n lot of Itrltlahern from rorllaud, and tho cuticle iccl)l off ghaatly, on both ahouldora. t loifts llko (he muale to vers would intnaaaacrelng "Don't Hng l.ulu." an loii(f ua they alaughtered, mi Klude lu F.. tin executed S yearn mku by the Mluneupolta Kymphony oreheatia. HiM'klelM'rrlr?, Fine and ft lean, 1.00 per gallon. Tnvi your order nt IVonomy flroee. terln. O 111 Cook wth 0.0. SCOTT RUSSELL SCOTT; frenzied financier, licurl-hrcuker, niulei'world waster and bootlegger, was' not hisano wlien ho Hhot and killed i, defcniselcsH dniK clerk in Cliieago during a holdup a few months ago. i lie waH not insiino when he escaped and eluded1 the police for many weelcH.' 1 1 ' . ' He was not insane when indicted, lie was not insane when brought to trial. . . He was not insane when convicted. Nor was he insufno four or five weeks ago, when he ebulliently and rationally, denied the crime and placed it upon the shoulders of his long-loHt brother. ' Jiut when everything else failed, when his own attorneys had giVen up the ease, when fake telegrams and fake confessions failed to secure more than a brief reprieve, Itussell Scott suddenly went eni.y, became a pitiful victim of something new in criminal pro cedure "cell-shock" and yesterday was saved from the punishment the law provided through ut jury verdict of insanity. Chicago is the most dangerous city in the world. Human life is cheaper there than in the jungles of darkest Abbysinia. Murders arc more frequent and convictions for murder-less frequent than anywhere else in two hemispheres. 1 The good people of Chicago deplore such a situation. They hold indignation meetings and clean-up campaigns and law-enforcement rallies. But as long as jurors in thut city, do what the jurors in thje Scott ease did yesterday, there is no relief and can bo none. Ah previously pointed out in this column, back of the courts and the laws, back of the power of money and the wars moral reaction, lies public opinion which is the ultimate and controlling factor in all Such things. Until public opinion in Chicago reaches a point where justice for criminals is placed above sentimentality for them, where the feeling against crime is stronger than the feeling against punish ment for it, such travesties on justice as the Scott verdict will con tinue, and the most scandalous orgy of crime ever seen in the civilized world will also continue. No right minded person lusts for blood, even though it be in ex piation of a bloodthirsty crime.- If this verdict of insanity meant that Scott would spend the rest of his life in an insane asylum, t!iei-u would porliups ho no pnrticuliif cause for complaint. ' But everyone knows it tlocsn't mean tlmt, or never litis. ) It means thut a perfectly .snnc through the generous use of mony, soli-stuff and legal buncombe, been granted u brief vacation in u well-appointed hospital, and that when this murder is lost sight' of in the flood of subsequent crimes, Iho sanity never lost will be regained, and Russell Scott will be free. ... 1, "Legal oiilrage," under the circumstances, is a mild term. QUILL And the stmirl boys in Jerusalem poked fun at Nazareth. 1 1 ' skinny one. to make mntters worse. The Iliffians desire liberly or death, and An.eri.uu flyers ilijXd'X'y.tTe goJus" whu" CI've tl.cm. j w'ionever I so' a pleasant word to her i fat sister, and believe in e, good people, I he writes letters which I tile away It must be nice to be a coal operator and watch the miners and 1,8 'deals to pattern after when occa- consumers di There are now 87,C12,:i21 innocent bysta.klers, includiii", lariff Commission. The insec.s at a resort sting call il service. Honrs!, Dayton not all of the mill supercilious boors. Ah, well j a great many people who sleep in iinreiueDibercd graves,' poked fun at the ISiblc. The poor suffer everywhere. golf until after work hours. The story of u deaf man who A lot of the dumb speak over it. i ne ci in sex, piciuros is closiig. t lie supply . ul -nuugcsiive wljectivwi for iitloi 'wsbohUihwMtod. , ? ' '' ' . . v RipplingRhumos THE OLD TTOW I'OITLAR the ancient gent, who views this modern doings wit hunt a sign of discontent, and with uo vain be shrewings! lie is no niiuMo ei'y, "Alas!" no prophet of dejec tion; (lie merchant princes, as they pass, regard him with affec tion! the children gather round his knees to bear the old man twilter, the housewives list, wlole shelling peas to this sunshiny critter. Ton many men when they grow old, arc filled with in diguulion; they shake their hoary bends and scold the rising generation. All things are going to the dogs, true worth is disappearing, the poor old world.is slipping cogs, and stripping all its graying. The boys are headed for tho dump, where mod ern customs send them, and any delegate's a chump who stands up to dcfid them. Tho girls arc vain, the dotard rants, they let cheap things ensnare them; thcy're0so unlike their tainted mints it's folly to eomure tliem. All virtue died some years ago, all merit drooped ami wtihercd; so often has this tale of woe by sad old men been blithered! So-when u' ninn of. wintry years gives modern thiugappruvalawe greet bis blithe remarks with cheers, and weep at bis removal. If you are old and if you enteli j-iffirsi-lf thus sourly jippiug, 'twere best In. ser the booby hatch you mental works are slipping. FREE1 man who committed murder, lias. POINTS , the, you more or less, but .boy l....'l.&tor Xl In ",M rcW'soilie' outside world is filled with cranks Kveu in America they can't play heard over (he radio may be true. OPTIMIST. CROSS-WORD PUZZLE STORY GOING TO TOWN "There goes a 10-11-12-13-14-15-16!" cried Sally to Joe. "Is 6-10 the one we should take?" asked Joe. "1 should 5-9-16 not!" exclaimed Sally. "That's going the wrong way! It 1-2-3-4-5 way out in the country and we want to go down town! I wish I had taken my baby 3-8-14-18 along with me. here is plenty of 1-7-12-17 in the car seat for three!" Answer To Last Puzzle . i . . ; . )' ". 1-2-4 (sit), 4-5-6-7 dune), 8-10-13 land), 3-6 (In), 8-9 (as), 10-11-12 j ; (not), 13-j (Jo), 9-U (so). , - . Cooirlght, ll)2, by The International Bindlcalo Personal Health Service By WILLIAM BRADY. M. D. SlfliMd ltUra ptrtainlnf ts mtmmi ntaith and hyrw. Ml to Ium 4lanols or Vfmnt, will b vvwd by Dr. Brady If a lUrnptd,' Mil addMtod tnvalopa la aftolotai. Utttrt ahouldt briat and wrlttan In Ink. Owing to tha laroa numbar at lattara faoalvad. nly a raw can ba ancwarad hvra. No raply aan ba mada la uarlaa Ml aonfarailna to laatrwotlaaa Addraaa Dr. WIMtoaa rady, lr tv of thla Mwapaoor. Fat and Health. , Skinny readers will give me credit fnr Imvlnrr eodl nnllifhc at nil In diin-iL- jot ln the past few molltllg auout rnt folki God bless the latter. Some peo- I"0 1,HV0' u-urIous notion that I am sarcastic. 1 neither affirm nor deny, but when it comes to blistering, burn ing, blinking sar casm, my hat's off to tile skiqny old ituaid who has Just lead a trifling com plimeut to a l'at 'woman. The poor ink woman has com paratively a short limn to livn. ncrni-rl- Ing to the life exiicctatioiL-tables of tho .American casually experience, or souiothitig like that usk .any insur- unco' agent lor particulars-! and the imuu un&es ior a mean, airty cracK at something or somebody. A young man wrote mo recently that he believed .. Ul OUI!.U3lll, Ullll nUIUU 1 kindly publish a fow remarks about the deplorable habit of open-faced snoozing, his father being an offender In that ruspect hut a man of Inex.ille- of these Inttora from skinny female wnei. tno Hiiecx.iug soason opens. Mighty few fat persons seem par ticularly concerned about the effect or oboslty upon health, ut tho time they are busily engaged In accumulating tho slacker flesh. Not very many of them give tho minor consideration of health much thought even after thev have commenced ! experiments with soap, sails, lemon juice, sweat baths mid mail-order specialists. Hut about the time they get all these diversions paid for and settle down to the plain if painful realization that the way to reduce is Just the reverse of the way ono - acquires the superfluous sub stance they begin to be exceedingly solicitous about not taking anv chnnccs with Injury to health. "I nm willing to do anything." they wrlto. reelllielV ":mtthlnir nt all I J Pornto. Semi on your No. 1 Symphony vn,f,rns.0,?1,.?.rs'!,,1.t.c?u1'"ao ,r',Dy.ll,1"R ou can suggest, thnt is. wltiinut nny risk to my health." Well, that is natural enough, after all. Kew of us begin to feel particulnr regard for, our health until we have good reason to believe wo have lost n good hit of It. it skinny folk wore just n wee hit less peevish I could got off a fow .smarting remarks about the fatuous , .....,.-h ..,.. v miiiici minus ur sympnoiues 'can reduce fat. Certainly I have never jlntlamted thnt those pleasant pastimes i would reduce weight or nnvthlng like that. To my inlud It would bo about as ridiculous for a fat peraon to use nr. miliums Hedtielng Soap or Solltin Sokein's Until Salts in tho fond hope of ontoring a beauty contest as It Is for such h person to play the No. 2 Symphony or Join tho Soniorsultauqua WIIU such an object. Tho morning uud evonlng rolls are rather a test If you can roll yoursolf half down over tho haro floor you're still young. The No. 2 Brady Symphony Is merely a 15,niiniito dally treatment to koop volt young. If you have some reducing that posi tively , must ho donn, that's another story entirely. Mayho the Karoll regi men will help tho work along. Hut I do not advise Hint .Indiscriminately. Do not ask nip for nny advice or in structions a bout reducing, unless you glvo In your letter those data: Your ago. height, weight, title and address. Then If I think you should try It. and you haven't forgo-n to send a stamped, seir-addrassed envelope. I MAY rorwsrd tho Instructions, but I do not bind myself to. do so In any case. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. No Booi Cure. I am Informed that you offered to "end anyone a formula or medicine for dipsomania. I would like to have your remedy. (L. L.) - Answer 1 have no formula or rem edy of that kind. In fact I can assure you that anything purporting to be a cure for alcoholism is a humbug. If the alcoholic victim desires to be treated for his condition, there are methods which may assist him toward recovery from the disease, but the ad ministration i of such - treatment is always an individual problem which requires Individual medical care, whether the patient be treated at home or in some institution. I have seen some abandoned bums restored to so briety and Industry by the Bimple method of treatment given to the medical profession 15 or 20 years ago by Ur, Alexander Lambert. '. This method is not secret and not nioro expensive than any other medical treatment, and any good doctor can administer it , successfully anywhere. I should be glad to give your doctor a reference to Lambert's original con tributions on this subject, but I can give no detailod information about it to laymen. Any notion of curing tho dipsomaniac secretly, or without his own co-operation is unworthy of a moment's consideration. Guaranteed.. Is there an appliance or limb straightener that is guaranteed to straighten bow legs in the case of a young adult? (Mrs. S. R.) Answer There are such contriv ances, I believe, but of course no ap pliunco will straighten bow legs lu a person over 0 years of . age in unv circumstances. People are too credu lous ubout tho word "guaranteed." They forget tho Joko which was made of that word In tho trick legend uuarantoeii undor the Pure r ood and Drug Acts." The catch in that was that so many poor goofs thought it meant something. Sour Mouth. ' I am a young man 17 years of aire and In fine health except that I have an excess ol acid in my mouth. 1 tested my saliva with litmus paper and found It to he acid. My dentist says my teeth decay so rapidly because of the acid state of my mouth. I have been drinking a solution of baklnc soda but it relieves only temporarily. Can you tell uie tho cause mid treat ment of my condition? (U. II.) Answer Normal saliva Is alkaline to litmus but acid to phenolphthaleln. The starch-digesting ferment (ptyalln) in saliva is as active In digestion when the saliva Is neutral to litmus as when It is nlkaline to litmus. This nivalin digestion of starch goes on for some tnno alter the food has entered the acid chyiho. ( Perhaps your acid jhouth Is nn effect Of ' fermentation Of food particles about the carious t'oeth. jumps OVERBOARD, LEAVES l'KTlIRNIUIlUI, Alaska. ' Aug. 7. (A. V.) Federal authorities declared hero yesterday that two girls, five nnd three years old, hail told lliem thnt Tom Itlso beat Ills wife on board his boat, threw her overboard nnd then Jumped Into ttao water himself, leav ing the children on tho moving craft alone Monday. Itiae recently married Mrs. lli'gu, widow of a wealthy Pitts burg merchant. The v.snel beached Itself and the two girls crawled off the ship when the tide went out hml walk ed to a cannery three miles up the bench. The Nv yeur old child. whbS was an ndopted dsugbler of the two adults. wMid her parents had been drinking. ino authorities have been drngirlnc Wrangell narrows, south of here for I Me Itoilicjt. Only few days left special electric jrango offer; get yeur's now! !!! t'Muw, if you'll take a tuck In this skirt ait' clean ..my.. -wJiUc.-'eJiliw I'll liulnL you up ami' Itikc you clown town Konm day," wild Miw Pearl Moots I' licr mollicr this moriiin. A woman ill Iuh lins tli' last word uiUcsb slirV tnlklii i another woman an' Ulcu she quits even. . Timely Views on World Topics IuiCM'iiaUonal-Mimlcdurss" Still Far Off." Says. Harvard Government Professor. The League of Nations is havlnj? a uood effect on. the world In Keneral. but there Is a bo&ic weakness in theory of it- Sueli jK'Oie opinion of Prof. Al bert Bushneli JJnrt. professor of pov urnment at Har- "w.ti'H iinlvpisit Hn says iu a veecnt ar ticle: . "No unbiased person can deny the pood effects of the Leiieue of Na tions as a means of common purposes and aa an evidence that many nations may agree on de cisions on some questions. Hut such a feeling toward the present League JKBST? &.M?r of Nations - Is not . . , that all tjie nations of the world ' believe they can be made safe by a complete international union, sufficiently organized, and pro vided with necessary powers suporor to those of all the members. Kor it assumes that Jhe world jih a whole wants to be saved; that It can pre sumably be saved by proper machin ery without bloodshed, and that In the last resort war can bo "outlawed" by compulsory arbitration, backnd up when neccHsary by armies and navies and airships. I "Who can question that the success of a general peace movement depends upon tho conviction of a considerable majority of the governments of the world, representing a large part of the population of the world, that they will bq better off under an International system than on their present footing The feeling stands in the way of world (peace and world organization: "In- 'ternatlonal-mlndedness" Is, as yet, fur from the beliefs and habits of tho hu ma nrace. Many different countries and peoples in the world passionately resent the Idea of submitting quarrels (o arbitration or court, which may ex orefcto authority over tbelr heads, t backed up by external armed force. j "We talk about 'the world' and ('.mankind' as though there was 'a con Heimis feeling of world citizenship and world responsibility. As a matter of 'fact, tho world is so divided by race, language, religion and economic' inter ests that it Is difficult to frame a con- Iccption of a permanent governing or ganization of which shall fairly repre sent the various peoples of the earth. .Without that, no world union can be in a position to understand everybody's problems and to find a just remedy for everybody's ills. . Strength of Nationalism "The peace mnps show an antdnish Ing success for the cligue of Nations, .Inasmuch as- representatives appear nt flenova frm the whnlte globe, excopt ( Hums tan nnd Turkey and (Jermany and the united States, and a few scattered small pbwers. That Is a very large 'except,' because it includes nearly lOO.UOll.OO)) peoplo. miostly of Euro pean stock, and possessed of very de cided Ideas 'as to .the- advantages of self government. Jn these countries,' nationalism is a sense of mental and niornl superiority ocer other nations.- and n hereditary preforeneo for one's own ways, is still a vastly ' stronger fnrro than the sense of world kin ship. "Jn fact (he Family of Nations Is made up of unequal numbers. How over . unscientific may be rnco con sciousness an drace hatred, they are the deepest of all influences on, the human mind.. And they have been an unceasing cause of wars from the ear N rim iLaiiu iiimcnuin ui mc jjcague or Nations Is Kuropean-.and the, tnter nntlonal Inws upon which It ret- are . - I ,. . . nl nrnctlcally a European science liml system. Even Iho Japanese snu inu Chlneso representatives m t-i".i. with 400. ooo. 000 people behind them, do not connldor Hint they are rocolvert on terms of equality -by tho eLaguo of Nations. ' ' ' "Just now most of Inc aaiK races outside of Japan and China have sub mitted to Iho control of the whites; but It does nut seem conceivable that tho lOust Indians or ho Malays of tho .tui..nn i.-i.imlu Iho natives of At? ilea will Ioiik continue to accept thu decisions of a lianiirul or wniiu imu. sent out to them from afar. And whoro Is tho physical forco In tho world, even when marshaled by a league, which can permanently keep -....Co mwlnl. 1 lw fOlltrol Of WOSt- lern Uurope, it they are set on the real equality of govoriiliiv tnemscivf , - ' 7 '- Children's Tictorial - j : Cross": Word .FtiIc Running Across. I j Word 1. In the picture. j ! Word 3. The insect that pro-' duces honey. . ' ' Word 4. Used In catching fish. : ! ' Word 5. A thick black sticky substance derived from coal. ; Running Down. : Word 1. A case or set of draw ers. Also what the group of ex ecutive officers appointed by the president to head the main govern mental departments is called. Word 2. The place in which plays and other entertainments are usually held. h- YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE -nj r ANSWERED. , COMMUNICATIONS Grange Meeting Tonight. To tho lidltor: Tho ; Itoxy Ann Grange has proven definitely that a grange can be a success In this local ity. Members are so often met with the statement thnt. a grange, formed hero In tho past, failed, that they no longer pay any attention lo the state ment. At the last meeting a largo class of candidates were admitted to the order and many more will be re ceived ut the next business meeting. Friday evening, August 7, an oien meeting will bo held ut the W. O. VV. hall at Phoenix. Many grangers from each of the other four granges of the county will be present, l'ast and pros pective grangers and those of the public who wish to know more about the grange will also be welcome. . S. M. BUCK, Socy. Why Not Murder Monkeys? ' To tho Editor: In the paper of yen terday you Wrote an excellent editorial on tho subject of crime. In other edi torials you have contended that we are monkeys-or thoir near kin. If that Is true, will you please give one good reason, to enlighten an Ignorant fellow like me. why we shouldn't kill another monkey at anytime when wo think it Is to our advantage. It is at least a sure wny to renown, bouquets and slop; seldom to Uie gallows.. For example, why shouldn't 1 shoot you if I thought 1 could make it? WM. M. CARLE, Rogue River, Aug. '5.' LEE WATKINS has opened his store at the old stand, 397 8. Front, with a full line of' FEEDS AND SEEDS Call and see me. Bring your cg(js. Will pay market prices. - Phono 146. I don't doliver. : Medford Plate and Window Glass Co. Automobile trlass ntwl itIqc- V' rUirposes. Wo repair broken win. dows and resilver old mirrors, make mirrors any size. Complete Una beveling and grinding machinery employ nothing but experienced bclp.- ... V- M0GAN, Manager 118 8. Gartlett Phone 140 1 RTrfrH