Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 24, 1925, Image 4

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Medford Mail Tribune!
'RED GRANGE IS MISTAKEN.
AN mUEl'KNDENT NEWHPAl'EB
PUBLUUKO KVKItY AFTKIiNOON KXOIPT
t . . pUNWAY. II Y TIIK
MKDKOItlJ I'ltlNTINU CO.
The Mpdford Hututa Mornlnf Bun la fanilabed
rabftcribeni detiring U Kveu-tlii fUllf Mm
paper.
Office: Mall
Mortb rir itmet.
Trfbunt Building,
I'hotie 78.
A ronfloHrlation of tli Democratic Time, th
Mrdford M-ll, th Me.ifor.l Tritmna, U South'
r Oifgoman, Ui Aaliland Tribuiit.
SORKItT W. RIH1L, Editor.
& BUM ITER SMITH, Manatfar,
Br Mall In Advance:
Daily, with Hiiiidujr Run, year 7.A0
Daily, with Hut id ay Run, month 76
Dally, without Sunday Kuii, year , 0.60
Dally, without Rtinday Hun, month ... .06
Weekly Mail Tribune, one year 2.00
Sunday Sun, one year 1.00
BY CARRIER In Medford. Ashland. Jackson-
till, Central I'oiut, Fhoenli, Talent nd on
Bljrhwaya:
Dally, with Sunday Hun, month. t .76
Daily, witrout Huriday Nun, month 66
Dally, without Numlay Kun, one year., 7.60
Dally, with Sumlny Kun, one year,..,, 0.60
All term by carrier, cnah In advance.
Entered lerond-clnaa matter it Medford,
Oregon, under act of March H, 1970. ,
The only paper between Albany, Ore., and
Phieo, California, a distance of over o0
ml 1m. having leaned wire Associated Pretw
frrvir.
MRMBERfr OP THE ASSOCIATICD PRESS.
The' Associated Preiw Is exclusively entitled
10 me use ior repuuucaiion oi an news oii
patrhea credited fo it or not otherwise credited
in Oils paper, and also to the local news pub
lished herein.
All right of republication of sped dla
paienes Herein are aiito reservea.
Ye Smurjge Pot
Bj Arthur Perry.
Men's shirts foi Hprlni;, ' will only
have unc button, unci tlio luuntlry will
ge t it tho first trlli. ,
After reading tho fervid epistles
Ml, Lconnrd Kip Rhlnelnniler , the
rich and socially prominent JJow
York society chnp wrote to his Allco,
will somebody explain why the foun
tain pen failed to blow up spontane
ously? ! 1 '
:Tho leading lady moonshiner of
this Nttlto Is In the calaboozc, and will
probably bo paroled aa soon as the
(lovernor can get Into tho pulpit ajul
bawl u strong plea for law enforce
ment. 1
With putntoes J70 per ton. think
of tho watermelons raised In tho val
ley tills year! ' A potato, however,
Cannot be cultivated with a fishing
pole. ,
, Among tho things to. bo thankful
for Thursday, during the past twelvo
month, locally Is a shortage of Klca
gles, tramp lecturers, ex-nuns and
home-grown apologists for the hell
raising Ku Klux Klan.
UTy Kl)" GliANOK is mistaken. In liis oxjiliiiuitioii of why ht!
J-Vlcciili'd to leave eollefre before J,'rii(liiation to enter profes
sional football he declared that in five years he would he forgotten
anyway, and he illicit an well net "his" while the (retting is '(;oud.
Had "Jicd" (!raii(,'e stayed in college, and retained his amateur
status, he would not have been forgotten in five years or ten. . lie
would have been remembered as long as football sagas are sung, as
one, of the greatest college football stars who ever lived, and ho
would have been awarded n niche in the University of Illinois Hall
of Knine, worth more to him in future years, than all the two
thousand dollar fees he will get for performing circus stunts down
ill. Miami, Florida. ,
"AVIuit I have done, I have done," said Mr. Grange,
and no one can rob me of it. I inn Joyal to the university
now and always will be, but I have to make my way in the
world. This 'rah-rah stuff is all right enough, but it doesn't
pay for the pork chops." ,
.Wrong again. The only man who could have robbed Red
Orange of what he has done, was Hed Grange, and in selling out to
the highest bidder, and commercializing his collegiate record, tho
grand larceny has been committed, and the prize can never be re:
gained. '
This "rah-rah" stuff doesn't pay for the pork chops, nor is it
the most important thing in life. But it symbolizes something in
practical life which it is well to cherish.
This something is good sportsmanship, sport for sport's sake, and
loyally to the amateur spirit.
"lied" Grange may become the "Italic" Ruth of football. He
may some day bo as rich as Henry Ford. But he will never
again bo the hero of .American football or the hereof "Mini." -
Merc rah-1-ah stuff ! Quite true. But when genuine happiness
in this mundane scramble is appraised, one discovers that it is the
rah-rah stuff, the stuff that has a great deal to do with simple,
even childish, feelings, and very little to do with the bank account,
that really counts.
Personal Health Serrteo
t T7ILUAM BRADY. M. D.
Sifjnod lattera pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to dlteate diagnosis or
treatment, will ba answered bv Dr. Bradv If a lUmawi. ttH.miiArtttA .nw,in. i. nrio..n
Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to lha large number of letters received, only
a few fin be answered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming, to Instructions.
Addreii Or. William Brady, In care of this newspaper.o .
TIlo Arid Life.
A-pentuiy ao tho tcmperaturo . From the Hygienic viewpoint (I n
roconimoiuvoU by medical nulhoritieH
for hoHpitalH. nick rooniH nml nurHOP
.efi was "not bolow !0 nor above CO."
Thu comfort stitndiird was nbout 55.
Hut that was with
(1 1 re n t ra I ia n t h ea t
ripen fire places.
Today the comfort
Htandurd Ih around
70. .hut with indi
rect heatincr byfur
naees and hot water
or h team radiators.
Direct hoat from a
fire place warms ob
jects In tho room,
Including the bodies or clothing of
persons in the room, and tho air of
tho ; room is warmed secondarily by
these ' .warmed objects. The heat
from a radiator warms the air of the,
rootn 'primarily, and the objects or i
persons In the room secondarily. That
not qualified to compare the efficle
cy of heating methods,) the varlou
mothodH of heating now in use are
follows, in order of their hygienic
value:
3. ' Open firo place or a radiant gas
or electric stove.
2.- Stove, having connection with
tho flue, no matter what fuel be used
a., warm air furnace., f
4.. Hot air furnace.
6. itadialor heut steam ' or hot
water.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
', . Xcai'-slghtt'diichs, '. '
i urn nineteen and torrlbly - near
sighted. I am wearing glasses an
have just had my eyes examined. The
doctor said that there is nothing that
can . be done except to wear glasses
constantly. Without them I
scarcely see ten feet away, everything
Is one- explanation for the comfort is biurred. 1 have worn glasses three
QUILL POINTS
A balanced mind is one that doesn't slop over.
Yon can't flout all tho laws. 'There arc the in-laws.
In these sex days ,'t lie two- great interests arc form nud reform
The amusement tax seems especially unfair when the show
doesn't amuse.
An optimist is a man who has a blowout mid reflects that it
helps England 'to pay Uncle Sam and thus lowers his taxes.'
"What 1'iico Glory?",, tho realistic
war piny, revealed mono healthy
cussing, hut It might huvo hern
woi-hc. Nono of tho offlcofH Hnoreil
TIS lUTTr.lt IWII TON'KillT!
(Kimono (.mini) '
I.D.ST Suniliiy nlKht, on tho
KiniiiKrioltl highway, hotwei'tl
Kapiut huUHO unci SpiiliKflohl,
itiintH uml vphI uf dark ult, with
J'urltor fuuntuin pen ami keyti
Ki'wurd. T. U. 680.
, fl. WiiMh. Muddux, tho cit-Motho-OIhI
nud onilnont KhlnnliiRlHt hns re
turned from K. KiiIIh. where ho cut
n Hwiith and kept In tho huekground,
llko a strong cnndlduto for the legln-luture,
So fur IIiIh wlnler no 4d owner
eranklng hlH vehlele, Iiiih huen punted
out of lioiindH.
It Ih now proposed to curh Juvenile
dclliiiiueney liy the pnrentN going
Willi the children when they "ntep
nut." ThiH Ih n gooil Idea, ir I'.iw
and M.iw don't act woiho than Iho
kiilH.
Mont of the ilare-devllH, who ntdior
IihIh to inalnliiin their noelol HtnttlH,
lire now eoughlng loo hard lo keep a
hal on. If they did repent and return
1u normalcy.
AMI, WHAT OP IT
(kliinwlli lulls Herald)
While It luui been Homo tlino '
Hlmo o have sent In the iiowh
from thin phiee, yet SprHgue
Itlver Iiiih heen growing all Iho
time and within n Hhort time wo
will need n new suit of clothe.
J. Jerome haH had IiIh tonsilH
moved from their nntivo heiith.
ro-
IiiHlead of going to Ciilifornln this
winter to ewapo the cold, Henry
lililen will keep out uf IiIh Ijohbershop
for G wkn.
Ijuly l-'onl-t'oupe nrrtved nt the
huw hint night hefore tho IhI act
muiied, doggono Iho luck!
I am tnoro than ever convinced
Unit the better team did not win tho
"WltHhluglon r.-Hlulifoid content tit
Seattle, but thm every nionibcr of
the lliiky team had a IioihchIioo
pin Tiled In I he neat of IiIh punts.
tSF. Chronicle.) Interesting. It thie.
Tho gentlemen who wero the
IIouhcwIvcm t'otlnctl of I'oiilnnd."
for the purpose of nggrnvitllng state
ownership of electric power plants,
have evidently abandoned tho Idea of
being feiualo Impersonators.
You must hand it to Mitchell.
didn't plead insanity.
Even in the darkest hour ho
America developed few voices fit for grand opera until howlins:
ahoiit taxes became general.
If a girl is naturally pretty she remains pretty in spite of all she
(iocs to improve her looks.
As n last desperate effort to increase the birth rate, France
might try a more extreme form of poverty.
Correct this sentence: "I may get married some dny, mamma,"
said the flapper, "and you must teach me to eook." '
Among the things that should he kept still during an approach
shot are your head and your opponent's mouth. . , '
The time for congress to convene draws nearer, and as yet the
(Shipping Hoard hasn't interfered.
AVe onee saw a boiler explode, and our prayer is to live Ion"
enough to sec what happens to Mussolini.
The true story magazines are useful. They show you how rot
ten your taste is getting if you like that kind of stuff.
'Wouldn't it be awful if an explorer should
necessary equipment and forget a press agenti?
Lralher all other
from Indirect heating when tho air
temporaturo is 55, where It must bo
65 or abovo when the heating is indi
rect, to give comfort. .
But another factor of greater - Im
portance In determining comfort.
Tho amount of moisture In the air has
muclr to. do with It. In tho winter
time the outdoor air has an average
relative' humidity of from 70 to 80 pel
cent, nnd when such nlr is heated up
to' 70 th'o relative humidity is reduced
to 'shout. 30 per cent. That Is very
dry Indeed, almost as arid as desert
air, and air as dry ns that has a dry
kiln effect on tho woodvork, furni
ture, piano flowers, complexions nnd
tompej-s of persons living In It. or on
roou exposed in tho room. Many of
ficers In steam heated buildings show
a relative humidity ns low as 15 to
IS per cent. In air an dry as that It
Is almost Impossible for one to be
comfortable In any temperature.'
Moisture in tho nlr Is a good heat
carrier. 'Air nt a temperature of 100
degrees fully saturated 100 per cent
humidity) has the same heating value
as dry nlr at 300 degrees. This Indi
cates how ineffective nnd wasteful is
tho popular practice of trying to get
comfort by means of dry nlr.
,Many contrivanees'for the evapora
tion of wnter In tho air nro offered.
either In. connection with the heat
ing plant or independent humidifiers
placed on radiators, hut none of
years, having my eyes examined and
tho glasses changed, every year.
there any difference between an ocu
list and an eye specialist? (Miss B. L.
Answer Constant wearing of prop-
erly fitted glasses Is the best way to
conserve vision in near sightedqiess.
An oculist is a physician -who limits
his practice to diseases of the eyes.
j Many persons who purport to bo "eye
Bijeiuusis are not pnygicians.
Corn Cure Cures Vnrts.
Wo used a formula you gave a long
while ago for corns and found It ver
good. Kindly repeat it, as' we have
lost the furmula. Also, will you
kindly give a good one for warts.
(.Miss I. A.)
Answer. 1'alnt the corn or war
dally with a solution of thirty grains
of salicylic acid in hajf an ounce of
flexible collodion, in the case of warts
of course apply the remedy while your
grandmother is turning flipflops In the
dark of tho moon.
The Itch Invisible
Many many thanks for your Inval
uaule monograph on "Pruritus.1
selected the first formula In your list
and It has given me great satisfaction,
(Comrade S.)
Ans. The itch of bedbug bites, the
itch of scabies, the Itch of caterpillar
dermatitis, the itch of orthoform dor
matitis, these are not wholly discour
aging Itches, I can testify, for one
these qulto meejs tho requirements, can get nt them for brief but blissful
though all do f-omo . good. For In- . moments, but the Itch of nolaon iw in
stance a nine room house having the most Itchlngest itch I ever itched
about 20,000 cubic feet air capacity ' In all my ltchful career. Pruritus
requires the evaporation . of about must be a disconcerting Itch bcau'll
threo quarts of water every hour to fully appropriate, I should think, for
maintain anything llko a normal hu-I introspective nnd neurotic people, for
niiuiiy n nen me nouse is nented to 711 there you havo the itch, or at lenst you
degrees. If the moro hygcnlc. temper- ask folks to bellevt) you havo it and
aturo of 05 degrees Is maintained, not aa iota of subjective evldenco to
onij mo uunris or water earn nour snow for it. Sometimes I do not bo-
must be evaporated to maintain tho
normal 35 per cent relativo humidity.
Mere evaporation of a given amount
of water In tho air does not solve the
problem, for water vapor is slow to
diffuse nnd unless there is good ven-'
I ilatloa In the house tho air will bo
llcvo most alleged pruritus Is a fig
ment which therefore responds well
to a pood placebo. Hut the cream
praised by Comrade H. is this, sug
gestcd originally I think by Dr. Bulk-
ley:
lanolin 2 darms
lioroglycercd : 1 dram
lumpy moist in one spot and dry In ( Cold cream, made from whito pe-
nnother.
Air iiteated by radiators hot air
or steam becomes Just ns dry as air
heated by the hot air furnace. The
warm all furnames dries out the nlr
ess than the hot air furnnce does: the
w-arm air furnace recirculates the air,
whereas the hot air furnace receives
air from outdoors. .
troleum Jelly 6 drains
This should be placed in a collapsl
ble tube, for cleanliness. A little of
it may be applied to keep the skin
normally oily, night and morning. In
case of very severe itching after the
bath, for a. common instance, two to
four grains of menthol may be incur
pornted in tills skin cream formula.
Poems That Live
Correct, lliis sonloiicc; "I never put inori! elotlies on the chil
dren," kii id she, "if they say they av wearm -. enoiiKhV'.
TIIK WAMU.ItrU
Dunk nn n prithk' farm, a thousand
inllt'M from the ma.
Tho cows nro In and tho chore nre
ilimc. .
The Bttiix nro mmhiR nno by one,
Ami a ..I..,.,.,. I .....I t-
'l'hn fin nt tiMiiM.t fu.tr lib a a f,. I. v t
thing, ii iul a fiMoietl eoul goon
frtH
Kor ivp havo found an Islnnd south
ccihI of Anirttt
Whi Turkish plrntoa hid their
gold.
And nil the treasure caves of old
Are nought ronipnred with (hut
"Vi'Ji. Mil. 1'vo wontid the rnu'k nnd
RippltngRhtjmQS
; . Pft, ft.
DINGBAT AND I.
EG
D
1X(!1IAT lias a stately anto, ami he driven it with a grin;
tin; humble tourists it was made for, men ,who cannot make
display j but the blamed old thing is" puiil for, and I'm feeling
"blithe and pay. PiiiKbat has a gaudy palaee, it's the finest in
the town, anil I view it without nutliee, Phounh myihousc is tumble-down;
it's n shaek you'd hardly trade for, if you're fond of
pomp nnd state, but the poor old wreVk is paid for, and I keep
my smile on straiK'bt. Piuubat's dressed in KoritMous'rajmeiit,
he is wearing; green and pink, wjjtle the tailor shrieks for pay-'
inent my old t'ils are on the blink. Tto-y'ro unfit tho swell
paratle for, quifl unfit for fashion's pets, but the fierce old rags
nre paid fur, and I have no vain regrets. People say Oliat. soon
or later (i)ingbat 's luck will halteand pause, for his outlay's
always greater than his income ever vQi. Dingbat buys nnd
keeps on buying anything that is for sale, And ho Wastes no
time in?ghing, that he seldom has tho kale. If I can't afford
ii wagon I will walk the wiser plan;" if I have no jeweled
flagon I will drink oi fromoi can. , Savtf i;opccks1..toilmi)',
straining, I'll have rubles good to sec, when poor llinghiit ii
.l, !,,;. I,, ll,o l,n,il-1, tul v ' rolVive
SONNET.
', thou art for tlio grave; thy
glances shine
Too brightly to shino long; another
BPring
Shall deck her for men's eyes but
, iku for tlilno
Scaled In a Bleop which knows uo
wakening.
Tho fields or thco havo no medicinal
leaf,
And the vexed ore no mineral
power;
And they who love thco wait In
anxious grief
Till tho slow plague shall bring the
fatal hour,
("lido softly to thy rest then; death
should come
Gently to one, of gontle mould like
thee,
As light winds wandering through J
grovos of bloom
Detach tho tlcllcato blossom from
the tree.
Close thy sweet eyes, calmly, and
without pain;
And we will trust in Clod to see thoe
yet again.
William Cullen Bryant.
Charles began their legal careers in
Cincinnati while Henry begaa hla
practice In New York.
Who's Who
vi,, -''vv uyVj
18
owe
i i- v II'
asy wessons m
AUCTION
BRIDGE
(Tinrhn V. Taft, 2nd.
In tho llmellKht nt tho nroaent
time wo have another Prenidont Taft.
He iw UluirlPH 1. Taft, 2 ml, the son of
thief Justice William ITownrd Taft.
He hiiN Juit been elected president of
tho International
Young Me ni
Christian Associa
tion. Taffe Is jUKt
2S years old, and
ts the youngest
man ever chewen
to fill that office-.
The election t'
place nt Washlim
ton I. C, on the
occasion of tho
4 'i n d Triennial
Convention. q
) iiuiiR i an, wno
Is a InwytAiu Cin
cinnati. ?hio, is
following ; In the
footsteps uf his
relatives. Ills fathor practiced law
nt Cincinnati when a young man. His
hive uncles, Henry. Onirics and Hur-
-e Ptillon Taft. nlso practiced law In
rojj
It takes n feller fully thrvr minute
t' recover mifrit'lcntly V say CJoehut-
tlmtNKiHdli(uonhrmlyouKetlt?M hut
still (hoy drink It. It molars rausark
iM th l4tfo HihI home ycHtcnlny, enr-
rlnjr tiff three quart a o pre-war icln
nn' Mm. liiid's elncmciit ruml.
. RHEUMATISM-
Can not Y.xM In tle lltimnn It(Mly If
Vou Will I'w Trunk's l'ro?-rllon
It la preposterous; In fact. It Is a
shHtuc to suffer with .Kheumatlsm.
This Prescription does not ruin the
stomach, It does not depress the heart.
Knt all tho meat and go oil foot you
wish while taking Trunk's Prescrip
tion. CimtniriH no mercury, salicylate
oIh. oil wlnterKreen or narcotics, but
positively overcomes any kind of
rheumatism or gout on earth. What
more do you want? Jt Impossible
lo get something bettor. The greatest
uric acid solvnut known' nnd nlso a
superior liver medicine.
Trunk's Prescription sells for f I,?.
rtniv t oa nt rt-H.tr MWe
New Series by WYNNE FERGUS ON
yiumor of rerguson on Liucjvn jjrtuge
Cupyiijht I'M by lloyle, Jr.
a3
ARTICLE No. 35
Wliat are the otitis against a player
holding a hand at bridge containing
thirteen cards ol one suit? According to
' the mathematicians, about OUU billion
different hands may be dealt at bridge
and as there are four possible "perfect"
hands, one of each suit, the odds are
just four out of 600 billion. In ether
words, a player has one chance in ISO
billion hands to hold thirteen trumps.
Dr.- F. L. Jenncr, of the Quadrangle
Club of Chicago, is reported to have
neid thirteen hearts and to have bid
"seven hearts." This fact is remarkable
in itfelf but the report adds that another
inrinuer ui tne ciun, a proiessor oi
Chicago University, held a similar hand
in clubs about four months ago. If these
cases are authentic, they should be of
great interest to all card players. It is
very rare indeed to hold more than
nine trumps. In fact, the writer has
never heard of a player holding more
than eleven trumps until the Chicago
incidents. '
It's really surprising how often games
are lost Dy tne laiiure to make the sim
plest kind of bids or plays. The writer
was watching some very lair players
. the other night and in the first six deals,
' four games were lost; three by bad bid-
ning ana one Dy uaa piay. it tnat aver
. age were kept up for an evening's play
it would mean that only one hand out
- of three is played or bid correctly. One
of the greatest players in the country
' is authority for the proposition that
four out of every five rubbers are
"chucked;" that is, lost by bad bidding
or play; and the writer is inclined to
agree with him. If you doubt the state
ment, keep a record of bids or plays
iiuii iubc game uuu ruuoers anq you
will be surprised how they mount up.
Here are the four hands mentioned:
Hand No. 1
Hearts A, 8, 7, 6, 2
Clubs A, J, 10, 7
Diamonds A, 4 -
Spades 9, 5
: Y : ,
: A B :
: Z ; : '
No score, rubber game. Z dealt, bid one
no-trump and A passed. What would
you bid with Y's hand? A should bid
two hearts. It is an excellent example
of A justifiable take-out, one that is
practically a sure game in hearts but
problematical in no-trumps. As a mat
ter oHact, four odd could be niade in
hearts and only one odd in no-truntp;
quite a difference. j t
Hand No. 2 ?
Hearts 10, 6
Clubs A, J, 8 : Y :
Diamonds K. Q,8,7,4 :A B:
Spades A, J, 7 : Z :
No score, fir6t game. Z dealt and bid
one no-trump. What should A bid? Aj
should double with the expectation op
bidding two no-trump if his partner
should bid two hearts. A, however, bit!
two diamonds and only made three
odd, while at no-trump ne would have
scored game. A's partner held the fol
lowing hand;
Hearts A, K, 7, 4
Clubs 9, 8, 4, 3
Diamonds J, 7
Spades Q, 8, 5
ft is a fine example ot the value of the
informatory double.
Hand No. 3
Hearts A. I. 9. 8 .
Clubs K, 10, S t s Y :
Diamonds 7,4 :A B:
Spades Q, J, 4, 3 : Z ;
No score. YZ a eame in. Z dealt and
passed. A and Y passed and B bid one
diamond. If Z passed, what should A
bid? A should certainly bid one no-
trump. Mis partner ha9 made a fourth
hand diamond bid and should have a
very strong hand. At either diamonds
or no-trumps, AB can score four odd.
Hand No. 4
Hearts K, 8,4, 3 '
Clubs K, 7, 3
Diamonds K, J, 10, 3
Spades 9, 7
Hearts J, 7, 5
Clubs Q, 10, 9,2
Diamonds 9, 5
Spades K, J, 8,4
Y
A B :
- Z ' I
No score, rubber game. Z dealt and
passed. A bid two no-trump and all
passed. Y opened the jack of diamonds.
U played the five, Z the eight and A
won the trick with the ace. A now
played a low spade and won the trick
in B's hand with the king, all following.
B now played the jack of spades which
won the trick, all following. A now
played the eight of spades from B's
hand. Z discarded the four of clubs and
A played the ace of spades. What should
Y discard? Y should discard his eight of
hearts and show Z at once that he has
a stopper in hearts. His next discard"
should be the trey, thus completing his
echo. Il Y makes this discard, Yisave
game but if not, Z will be forced to
guard his heart suit and so discard dia
monds of which he held five. Don't hesi
tate to tell your partner by the discard
what suit you can protect and therefore
what suit he can discard. This hand is i
ad excellent example, so note it care T
fully.
Children's Pictorial ' '
Cross Word Pi,zy)e
Running Across.
Word.l. What part of tho maid's
fnce in the nursery rhyme and in
the picture did the black bird snip
off?
Word 4. An eastern state.
Word 6. The smallest coin now
in use in the U. S.
Running Down
Word 1. A city in Alaska,
Word 2. Backbone.
Word 3. A vegetable. .
- YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE
ANSWERED
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W I F I A 1 R fa5
Makes Foods
Taste' Better
SWIM
at the
ASHLAND NAT
CImh Aulohur Water
- I,
- CLEANERS
PLEATERS
DYEtS .
HATTEE3
o
Phone 244
23 N. FirJt.
SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Insurance
w
First Insurance
Agency
A. L. HILL, Manager
-i .
Phone 105 30 North Central
Medford, Ore.
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Wong Foo
Chinese
Medicine
For Treatment of
, Acuta and Chronic
Diieaset ' of Men
and Women
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lirrnlt, ni.ure, t-,,, (rm,, trouble, pif.
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trouble, rnt.unulir.m, ameiiorrhoea, ttiitre,
eonirumiitlon, caUrrh, pilea, tmlroccl, !
ouruin. '
Offkt Houm 8 A. M. lo 5 P. M.
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