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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 8, 1928)
NranFOTtn MTb TCTBnyR, medpord, bT.p,cioT, Sunday, aptctl 8, i?3p THREH A NEW SPORT: MANASSA MAULER'S" GIFTTOTIIE MRS. According to an official an- ; nouncrfh'ent received from the fac- tory at Detroit by C S. Kakln, uf thft Hakln Motor Co., local Dodge I lUolherri dealt-r a nw spurt type : Ktnlur cabriolet roadster Is now in pnudueliun and shipment are ro- ing forward to UealeiH iw rapidly ! tin posnible. I v The new car is equipped with ' wire wheels, the two npures being t carried on the sides, renting in wells in the fendem and held In I place by nickeled brackets extend Ins from ihe cowl. It is tin at tractive companion car to the Dodge senior sport sedan intro duced In January. The rumble seat which affords comfortable accommodation tor two, extra passengers is uphols tered in the same fine genuine leather used in the front compart ment. The rumble seat cushion and back nre both built over spring frames and ample leg room Is provided. A door on the right affords easy access to the space provided foe carrying golf clubs, tennis racquets or small parcels. As Is true of all the senior types this new sport cabriolet roadster is offered in twenty-odd distinctive color combinations. The equip ment is complete in every detail Including bumpers, shock absorb ers, renr vision mirror, automatic j windshield cleaner, stop light, cowl lamps, dash fuel gauge and clock. The ammeter, speedometer, gauages nnd clock nre attractively grouped under a single glass. , I Jack Dempsey believed by millions to be the itrcatest ring champion of ail time, utnt ccrtuinly otic of the "light ineat" tighten that ever drew breath gives hiind 6ome gilts to his beautiful wife, Estelle Taylor, the movie star, famed for her work in "Dun Juan'' with John llurrytnorc, and in many other notable screen successes. Certainly he never gave her any more powerful gift than the 1 r2-horse power Chrysh-r liiijwria "fcO' Roadster which he recently bought for her, nor any tiling on wheels tliat to well exemplifies his own lithe grace, speed and nigged driving power. At the left, the great fighter and Mrs. Dempsey are seen, in a composite pic ture, while below is a snapshot of the happy couple in front of their charm ing Hollywood home. . Kir fc-v , t I ! and fttablished charge fur tho particular operation necessary. "It required many months of careful analysis on the part uf t j Nash service men to arrive at the I exact cost of each of the scores ' I of adjustments and minor opeia ' lions to which an automobile at various times may be subjected; It required also a long system uf in tensive training of dealer's service managers and mechanics and stan 1 dardized equipment of the must efficient design before tho 'flat rate system could be installed by ; Nash dealers on an extensiv : scale. m I The Highway Motor Co., the local Nash dealer, operates under ;the "flat rate" system, and has a J repair and service department operated under the supervision of . an expert Nash mechanic, with a shop as completely , equipped as I any In southern Oregon. World Rejoices in Miracle of Easter door Cuisine far -4m si tour- j Brilliant Sttfle, Nash 7-e.i FLIVVER SAM Wm HOME EDUCATION 'The Child's First School Is the Family.' Froebel Issued by the National Kindergarten Association, 8 West 40th Street, New York City. These articles are appearing each Sunday In the Mail Tribune. V FREE TIME FOR CHILDREN Viola Woodville That Old Fleet Car of Mlno By James Edward Hungerford I love my car, because to me It means sweet surcease from dull , care; It takes me where I' want to be, And smoothly, swiftly gets me 4V there! In silence, when I wisli to brood, And from distractions flee away, My car responds to every mood. And wheels me down some quiet highway! My touch upon the steering-wheel, It answers like a soft caress, And somehow always makes me feel Its fellowship, in calm or stress; My ev'ry whim, it swift obeys. And creeps along, or fairly flies! It's quite accustomed to my "mays" And lets me be a fool, or wise! I've steered it into accidents, And missed disaster by a hair! It's suffered scratches, mars and dents, And been laid up for much repair! Hut always it comes back to me Tho same old "stand-by," as of yore. And I just greet It lovingly, And we nre "pals" again, once more! 1 call it "Old sweetheart o' mine", Like Riley did his "girl o' dreams"; 2 love it with a love divine, And it loves mc or so it seems! Kometlmes it "balks" hut not for long; It's "cranky" for a time; but then, Hn motor hums to me a song; I smile and we are off again! No mother ever loved a child better than Mrs. Winter loved Margery nor tried harder to give her every advantage. That was the whole trouble. She tried too hard. "She stood up so straight that she leaned over back wards," as my dear father used to say.: Well, Mrs. Winter nearly killed Margery, and I'll tell you about it, just as she told me after Margery had become a rosy-cheeked high school freshman. "Margery grew so thin and list less," said Mrs. Winter, "though she was faithful to all her work, that I saw she wasn't well. Yet considering the scientific caro that I gave her, I couldn't understand it. One morning siie wouldn't get by any American firm is n deposit of that amount of money to the credit of the soviet state to bo used In America to overthrow our gov ernment. This is the keynote of the en tire volume, although some of the other chapters deal with America's relation to other countries of the world, such as that labeled, "The Nick In Nicaragua." Tho book is rather well written despite the" fact that one usually connects a gentle irony with tirades as force- one or both of these fully directed as those of Mr. Coun. MA URI A f ; E M A I J IS EASY, b y Webster and Hopkins, New York. Century. "Marriage Made Easy" is a rare party book. It Is full of helpful suggestions arrived at through a creative In lines.' "When ho questioned about Imr diet I could tell even to the num ber of calories she had in her well balanced meals. Tun you wonder, Doctor,' 1 asked, 'that I am sur-nris-ri Unit with nil inv cni-i she is now in ImhI wlili iu.tl.liiK much the """lcm ot I"1"""' Imiuialliim mill 1 or ,f' l,lu-su aircmiy iimrrien '"Nothine but nervous nrostra-i a,,out to choose a lifelong mate tlon!' he burst out, 'a ridiculous condition in a child with a mother t as intelligent . as I though you ( were, -Caroline. Poor little thing! Even her walk a study period. No ; time to herself. A little slave to i her mother's ambitlo.' I " 'Careful, Doctor! I had to ' throw in. I After asking the render a long list of questions, the book undertakes to pick out the exact type of mate for the prospective plunger Into matrimony and then to explain how he can get along with t he other half of the argument. About the only thing left out 1h the name and address of the see- Springtime is tho season of hope the budding time promising the full bloom of glorious summer a little later on! In defiance of ordinary law, water dances up millions of tree i trunks and flower stems; some ! hidden unexplainabie mystery of i life sends herbage up from myri ads of graves, renewing plant lives in their own order, wini ry death has given place to resurrection lite; the sowing time has come with its promise of fruitful bar vest. It is earth's Easter-time, the ris ing nuain to renewed life, the veg etable kingdom printing upon the world's surface the all-important 1 news for mankind: "Hecause I live, ye shall live also!" For the spring awakening is j purely typical nf the return of the I Hie principle lo the dead body of the second Adam or Head of our j race at the "Spring of Souls," when He too came forth from the ground with the promise, of anoth er summer and a blessed harvest time for mankind. It is that sure and splendid hope that makes Easter a festival time. It Is founded mi the (inget's tncs sage to the women, "Christ Is risen from the dead!" It carries the logical corollary, confirmed by the Divine Master's own words man as we arc men. Clod a s well "Hecause 1 live, ye shall live also!" Nature's snrinir nromise of bone or those j iK established ns a e.ertniiuv f.,.- men by the Spring Resurrection of ring performance and exceptional comfort for 5, an amai'mg price You'll thoroughly enjoy the Nash t-l)onr Coupe, Its Htit; is exceptionally charming. Its price exceptionally low. Its performance, tho kind xhich has nuule Nusli one of the great leaders In the business uf building tho World's motor curs. It is an interesting car lo drive, with its big, powerful uiul exceptionally smooth "-bearing motor with tho flexible, effortless Htecriug, typical uf IS'aedi with Nash i'-ieuy 4-whecl Delivered In Medford Fully Equipped brakes for ctrn safety and Nash alloy iteel springs plus ho k absorbers, front and rear, for untibiial travel comfort. The exterior la done In beige and brown In the new Nash dcrp-Iustra finish. The big, built-in, nickel-strapped custom trunk at tho rear la very decorative and very practical, when you prepurc lo tour. T T . . Wire wheels, including two side-carried spare ii ud tirvs, ure optional on tbe 4-door Coup, at slight extra cost. , , Linguistic Evolution New Co-ed (out on her first auto ride): Don't you dare! Same (out on her fifth): I dare you! Same (out on her fifteenth): (weakly) Don't. Same (out on her fiftieth): You dear! up to do her practicing and there ."'Now, Caroline, yftu are going ! nn" l':ui-v in uu' "liirrmge nusiness. was nothing fur R but to call the 'to let your old friend tell you that! 1 he ,moK UH already Had a tre doctor. ; no good Intentions are going to "Dr. Stevens was as much like alter the fact that you have put an old-time family physician as this child to a program that few exists now-a-days, and 1 had grown people could stand. J let known him ail my life. He scarce- i whole nature has rebelled. No ly knew Margery, though, because she had always been so well. AVheu he came he merely had a little visit with the child nnd then talked with me out in the hall. 'Is your daughter usually nn active child?' he asked. "'She used to be a little dream-' er,' I answered, 'until I trained her out of it. 1 wanted her to get the full use of all her lime, and now she accomplishes a great ileal.' "'I meant, what exercise does mendous sale, following close be hind the previous party hook of the two authors, "I've (Jot Your .Number," which has reached its 5llnd hilarious thousand and is still going stning. iFLAT RATE SYSTEM she get?' "'Her play time is supervised at school. uid I see to It lhat she has a walk very often. I go with her myself, and we study birds and plants. With her extra lessons 1 want her to have plenty of out doors.' "Then I told hiin how murh tal ent Margery had fur drawing ami music and how I saw to it that she had opportunities that very few children enjoyed. 'She has accept ed a very high standard.' I added, 'as the goal she is working to- used In wards, ami I fee! that she will be ! jyistepi. mutter how exactly you weigh her footl it isn't going to nourish her body if her spirit is In a cage. " 'Children need time to dream, I time to plan their own games, time to do nothing at all. They may have little duties Hbould have them -but not the large responsi bilities that you have put on your child. Think it over, and you'll know T am right. fiive Margery wholesome food, but let her choose i "Service facilities for the utlto fur herself what she likes, and how j milc owner In thorn keeping much, for a time. Stop su many , wi"' advancement in motor extra lessons while school is ini'111' "VwlKn and manufacture are session, and above all let the child '"egarded by officials of the Nash alone. IJecause her mother loves ! Motors companyas of vital impor her, she'll be all right soon. Eet!tl,1,c0 to continued success nf mo see her again before long.' i lno automobile industry. What '"The good old doctor took him- j nait been, perlmps, the most not self off, and I brought out a hook ,,l,kC "dvnneement In sorvieo work of fairy stories that I had hidden ! ('il,no wu" tho adoption of what Is nnd gave it to .Margery," conclud ed Mrs. Winter. And 1 will sny for her ihnt she used the same intelligence in re laxing her vigilance that sh holding Margery t Book Review expose the great chains of newspa pers and magazines which mold Ily Ardcn X. Panghorn. SAWIH-ST AND SOLITl'DI' Lucia Zora. . Jfoston Brown & Co. Not content with merely subdu- the mass of public opinion In the . I'nititrl Uhil.iu Tl.n ..ii ....,1 ..i..,.t J magnates have learned to wield by; the bludgeon of nronasranda thru J,ittle, j t he controlled presses, he declares, pointing with a vivid pen to his known as tho 'flat rate' system by Nash dealers thruout America and abroad," says Mr. Drew of the Highway Motor Co. had I "The owner is the chief benefi n(1,.j clary of the 'flat rate' system ns ! he may take his caro a dealer for a given adjustment or operation land learn, before work on the car ! has begun, exactly what the cost will be. This applies to practically all kinds of labor. Jn other words, the dealer after making a thnro diagnosis, eliminates 'guess work' by otiotlng the owner the definite "Hey you!" yelled the .traffic officer at the young driver with his arm around his girl, "why don't you use both hands?" "J'm afraid to let go of the steering wheel!" grinned the irre sponsible youth nt the wheel. ing elephants and Hons, Madame Lucia Zora chose to subdue the bitterest of all foes old dame na ture herselfand in this volume she tells the story of that fight. Many dangers beset the animal trainer on the circus lot-n nil in the winter quarters, hut they shrink to ! , own bitter fights with this force. If the reader Is afraid to come In contact with socialism it would be wise to leave the book unread ; otherwise it is of decided interest. APPKNDH'ITIS, by Thew Wright, A.M.. M.D., K.A.C.S. New York Allen Hose ft Co. Gladys Whv did you call IlilHc the size of a peanut when rmn- ot iiialii!. a. coupe boy? j pared with the dangers which Zora j by Stanley M. Itinchart, M.D., Ilch'n Oh, because, I coo and 'overcame in the wild adventure I harden City. Garden City Pub lic nn vt , oi numexiciui tug in i.oiuiauu, i Wrote Dr. Pierce Now She Is Well 1 V "f "the man Christ Jesus," in Arima theau Joseph's garden nt this very 1'aschal season nearly two thou sand years ago! HIGHWAY MOTOR CO. 123 So. Riverside QUALITY CARS Phone 254 JlkcMAdtmm "Sawdust and Solitude" opens I The purpose of both of these "Buying an automobile on the i with the sharp eYack of the train- volumes is to present a picture of .installment plan Is a terrible ers" whip as the big cats are forced : disease. Its causes and prevention, strain." remarked the impecunious ' und cajoled to learn their parts in - Medical science has advanced at citizen. jthe net in the big cage. It ends '""t to that stae where the mysti- "H certainly is. How many In-! with the resourceful trainer at lat ' fism of the ancients, who substi stallments have you paid on your J gaining .the whip-hand over the. luted superstition of knowledge, car?" I nature which almost defeated her. rn disappear. Yet the purely Perhaps the bravest portions of i technical medical volume is still the book nre those bits of self-ex- i fjir over tbe head of the average posure which the author gives the j reader. header. It takes courage to tell the Appendicitis, or course, deals I world how brave o'ie Is In the no wholly with that ailment. It clears "The first one is due tomorrow.1 The Motor Muso She rides with me at evening-tide. In robes of silk and pearl, Wtv ever was lovelier, A more entrancing girl? There's sun and laughter in her eyes That every heart must stir, You think I am a poet. No! I'm only her chauffeur! uncertain terms that Zora uses. "P many of the erroneous Ideas And Zora nllows no sense of false which people have long entertain modcHty to prevent her from giv- :1'' concerning this trickiest of dis ing the picture of her experiences ! t'aseM and it does so in a strafght ,ts she saw thr.se experiences. She forward, simple Knglih that any- ;.. C .....,,). nn,l W)n f.m ti hi liitnf ; nil "Thf. f'n, corking una' 1o.ii-t caro who i mon tne of 1 1, alt I wnimn In i ' B"'r,,"'l ommtimtly from weak (.rove Sluillo Mrs. Clara Showers Uoiso, Idaho "For several yenrs The nutomobile certainly Is re- ; placing the horse," remarked the ' I finds it out. i conversational fashion. Using 4 O ! simile and humor to good effect. : MfiVI'V U'lllTKS l.w fntnn R!n. .i,..o.. ...t.t. ..i... man when he found a piece of 9 H(lir- LongJearh. Sinclair. iurh a? cohN, pneumonia and tho tire in the sausage. -Money Writes" id a book which ; fever-? which are not yet generally Co Feature Synd.. wm l" !"J,"rim" " understood ny me general public Copyright, fnr Mail Tribune. return for his time. Sinclair is 4- nne of the most sincere writers ! ttl-OOD MONK Y, by Ittnlr Conn theQf the present nge: he 1st fo sincere j Washington. D. C, Coan. has i that a nB''rny oi nis reader pro- i-mou .ione- ny mair oan is Sincp the sixteenth century 'ivtx....L r k, , .Vint i;fi '-n InVrwiMd from twenty-o'no to i lal.ly oc.iii.l.-r him the most blcot-jn vehpin-nt protoul OK.-iinst the en- -1 writer fiftV.n.l.a vnnra n crnlfl i HIT tO tllttU l.r.....,.lj I... Pun.,.vlr.nnU ,,,. ma nlll with lwtmer.lt of health. Better llvinB l eonilllloilfi. more effei tive ways of ; eomhatiiii nn.l rontrollini; iliKe'tse , "h'i niori' extensive health e.lura Inn are Athe chief faciorn respon-j HiMe fur i-ilili lengthening of Ills. alive. It Ik Win-lnir to almost n 1 eroarhmentH of ovl"tlsrn upon the le-lunk 'lndlnK countrlew of the worlil. and Ameriean capita!it and to give thd faets aloot the nation's money mukers. lie rnnke no effr.rt to shlt lil farls or namew, hut Inelud.' 'both in his scathing Indictment. , Is particularly hilter BKalnxt the : soviet uf Hussla. ! "Kvery hale nf cotton." writes 'o.m. "every nutomohlle, every iiohb and a run down condllliin. A f i lend ndvlneil U me to write to I)r. I'lerce. I Boon purchased two hot. ties of Dr. 1'lerce's Favorite 1'res-crl-fion and one hottle X the 'fioiden Medical Discovery, and after the first week's treatment I was better, amonth's treatment I was well and began to pain flesh. Now I am the picture of health. I always recommend Dr. Tierce's remedies." Mrs. Clara Showers, 115V4 Main fit. Ask your nearest druggist for Doctor Pierce's remedies, In tab lets or lliiild- or send 10 cents for trial pkg. of ?ny of Ir. Pierce's 7"'i Landau Sadan Botty by FUhm Its American Standards of Performance "Luxury and Style In every Heclion of America. A wnve of udiiiirtttioii fur llic All-A mcriiiiii Six. Ailmirution for its liemity, for its Hlyle, for llic niUHtcry of FiHlier cnifl-iiriiinsliip rxprc'HBctl in every deftly executed line, i i And equally marked in appreciation of its) HpueioiiH comfort ... ils generous i.e. Of the lef; -room mude MHnillc liy its 117 iuch M lieellmsc. Of its deep, Bif I-ciimIi-ioned Heals . . . und other elements which contribute to rcHlful riding case. No onc-ttided ear . . . this Oakland All Americutl Six. Nothing's left out lliut nn owner might enjoy. Style goes hand in hand with comfort. Size combine with handling; ease. Power is balanced with all the speed you'll ever dare un leash. Sluminu is matched by a thrilling change of puce. That's why t he All-American Is winning Mich fuvor in every Hcetion of the land. That's the result of the All-American principle in automotive design. That' why, after you conic and drive it, you're sure to wunt this brilliant General Motors Six. tractor, and In fact every article Medicines In tablet form, to Dr. Money Writes" aims chiefly to of value sold on credit to Kussla I I'lerce'i Clln(c, Uuffalo, N, Y. i-ftmtr Srilnn, $104!t (ini.ni Coupe 0.7i Sport Rttmlntcr. 07J Phnrton, $1075) 4-Door SenV.,1, $ll-i.tt Cnbrinlvt, $1155; Lotulau Scilan, $1265; (irir u-hrrlx npure lires. and trunk rack extra), AU; I'outific Six, $745 to $H75. Ail prirvH Mil factory, llcliverrti prit'en oirfjie minimum hundling charge,. uy to pay vil the Ctuterut Motor, Time t'uyment I'lan, SANDERSON MOTOR CO. SOUTH BARTLETT AND 8th STS. PHONE 1385 AKLANB-.' ERICAN SIX ATMAM PRODUCT 01' CENEIIAL M O TfO R 9