Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 19, 1928, Page 4, Image 4

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    UEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE I
' Dally, Sunday, Weekly
Fubllsbrd by the
HKDftXJHi VMIUTIHQ 00.
Ift-IT-ZB . Vir bX Pbon It
BOBKHT W. HUHL, Editor
B, HUM ITER KM ITU, Msjisgar
"Entered afcond elm natter at Msd
lofd, Oretfou, under Aot of llarcb , 1S7V.
tt SUBSCRIPTION HATKS
By Mail m Advance:
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Wtwk.ly Mull Tr.vunc. ous yr. . . . .4.00
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Us Carrier, In Ailvanre In Medford, Attli
land, Jacksonville, Centra) Point, rtioenii,
Tslrnt, Gold Hill and on Highways:
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All U-rma, cast) in advawe.
MKMHER OP TUB ASSOCIATED PUIIHS
. Receiving Pull Uasvd Wire rirrvica
ftOnly paper in City or county receiving
new by telegraph.
The Ataot'iiitd Press; fa eicluelvely en
titled to the uae for republication of all
new dispatohrs credited to it or otherwise
oredltt-d In this paper, and alao to the local
newa publihd lierrln. 11
All right! for republication of special dla
patehee herein are aUo reai-rvrd. '
Hworn dairy average circulation for 111
noMba ending April 1, 4638.
Ye Smudge Ppt
Br Arthur Perry
Mi. Hoover cannot mnlce it
r.lVni'ch, it Ik claimed ( prnliinKe'l
cheering)." pn tho other hum!,
he himy wlnn buuH (Ki-oanii, gruntH
and RUffawn).
There wah a Hpectiieular and
Kni'Beoux HtthRet InHt ovenlnB, cen
tering In the (Sold 1-1 i 1 1 region.
There won it little (oo much pink
In the v'PPer left hand corner,
ni't'orillng to Toiniw Hwi'ln, hut
It looked all right to th un
trained urtlHtlc eye.
Orders of the federal enforce
ment bureau at "W'aHhlngton, I).
('., not to shoot hootleggerH, 1 Ih
Imlng Htrlctly adhered to hy dry
agentx. The luteHt virtilil Ih it
hoy. aged eight years.
The lighthotido which laid year
feloniously impropriated the Hav
ing account of a woodpecker, lo
Khnw the value of thrift, Ih now
flaunting the toll of heoH. Hcch,
' according to Henri Fnhro, a llel
gmn naturiillHt, who upent iio
yearn Htudylng them, are the
laziest of InnectH. A much better
exhibit would have, been Jimmy
YamiiKhlta'H mop.
Anyway, Gen. Mobile nnd crew
of Hlio wrecked Arctic exploring
dirigible, adrift on tho Ice, aro
making better time townrdH home
than a young lady with a now
;alr of hIioch, Htruggllng heroically
nnfl excruciatingly down the Main
Htem, tho very agony of her minc
ing r-tepH' cauKlug the cnrnH of
othiMH to howl with pulll. Hlzn
and BlgliH, '
Tho Dick Sherwood boy who Ih
aiming to he a rubbing doctor
arrived home yenterday from the
,onih. -"Tho valley looks green,"
raid Dr. Sherwood, "and I under
Hand yon havo another Hervlco
Mntlon."
' ' :l'
A reunion wnn held Informally
In the middle of the Htrect when
Mrs. P. l'eroy Tornado, driving
her olover geen nuto, met ono
of .the Spee'd glrlH coming out of
a ' liutchcr Hhon to get into her
vehicle, which wiih parked on tho
defunct Htreetcnr trackH. The nft
ornoon wnii npent In conversation.
Or WeHt, ono of the HmurteBt
fcovernorH thin Htnte ovp nerhlen
tally encountered, who heemue
cNtnmKod from the domorrntlc
jmrty heouiHe of tho Ronerul nll
nround cuHHOtlnesH of Al Smith
and tho tribe ho runs with, hIiowh
no hIkiih of I'eU'ntlnjr, The defec
tion of OhwuUI, while in tho na
ture of n tlevuHtatlnK cutuolyHm,
hnH not cuitned demorraey to an
nounce that It would hold a werleH
of ovanRellHtle meeting InHtead of
n convention nt llouHton.
Corn in the valley Ih prospcrlnR
nnd will run the umtul three ruI
Ioiim to tho acre.
Tho Klnn paya the eminent
Alabama windbag, Sen, lleflln,
tiooo per Hpeech. Ah the natlor.'H
leadliiR Itik'ot, he Ih worth $500(1
per Hpeech to whatever man or
meaimro ho oppoHes.
.ildH have started jumping Into
Jteytr creek raw, ' .
Ev, rtrayton Ih the proud and
hounclriR father of a hoy. He ha
nltto n bunted arm, which lucapac
(taten him from holdinR the heir
or' J)lcwlnff a bufflo In T.crIuh
iifrnin corp. in n flky-hluo unl
form.
pVheat In helnff Hhocknd, hut
Iady Ford-Coupe wild who henrrt
1ho story from a drummer at
(IfUnlR 1'llHH.
' f ttlllrlVU r:i.
tTVhon a perxon oontemp'nten the
l poi CnUHC. 01 iiiiiicrnii ur uiip nun
J of nnother, it l customary to
Inquiro -or tno salesman ir u win
Hni inK. AitnouKii HaieMpeopie mum
hear tnm inquiry ireiiuenuy, tney
1....h fnlt In Innb exi'endlntilv
hurt. In fact, they nppenr Juwt
n upnet na thoitKh yon bad anked
Ihenl if the material will fade or
Ifrthey nnd stopped heating their
wivcu. .
,A more , Hhnke of the hcA nnd
mention of tho word "ready
phi'iink' prenent to tho ImnKlna
llpn nome great field where thou
pandn nnd thouBandH of yard of
material have een wanned with
trtj oonrneit soap hy the mont
carolena waMherwoman until It haa
difawn Itaelf up to an mnny toot.
In the face of mich n guarantee
' yu forbenr the temptation t"
purclinHe aonethlng n aire too
rrgo with uleevcH that are too
hinff nnd a rollnr bnnd that mutt
he plentetl, and rejoice In a Hnr
nient that fits the first time you
pyt it on. , .
i -,' ., . .
- J.:. . :.
WILL SEED
4T WILL stop Al Smith, Says Senator Tteed of Missouri. A
L week ago today Senator Watson iihiioiinurd that he liatl
stopped Hoover.
Ueed is as eorree.t now and as sincere, ns Watson was
then. There is always a great deal of hiineoiiilio and twaddle at
national conventions, hut the supply this year, establishes a
new record.
The moment Secretary Mellow came, out for Hoover the no
mination of the Secretary of Commerce was certain. And the mo.
incut W. G. McAdoo retired from thV presidential race, the nomi
nation of Smith was certain.
Kveryone at all familiar with the inner workings of poli
tical conventions knew this, which needless to say, included
j men like Watson and Heed, with all their various camp fol
lowers.
Hut instead of following this papers sapient advice, nnin
in;r Jloover and Smith hy acclamationi, and calling off the con
ventions as a needless waste of money and wind, the powers that
he decided the time-honored procedures had to he gone through
with, and so the usual pre-nomimition hat ties are staged, just
as tho the fight were not over before it started.
The Democrats are going to nominate Al Smith, for the
same reason the Itcpuhlicans nominated Mr. Hoover, because he
is the strongest man (hey have. In fact there was more 'doubt
about Hoover than there is about, Smith, because in lyowden and
Curtis, the Republicans had two fairly available candidates.
The Democrats have none,
so much due to any innate superiority, us to the flatness of the
surrounding country. ,
When .McAdoo retired from the fight, the army of dry Pro
testant Democrats, who under his leadership and the leadership
of William Jennings ltryan, had twice prevented the New York
(iovernors nomination capitulated and disbanded.
That thousands, hundreds
oppose Al Smith, and will not
political observer would deny,
without leadership. And McAdoo
crat who could supply that leadership.
In fact the only opposition given Oovcrnor Smith, when Mc
Adoo retired, was from men, who politically speaking, belonged
in the Smith samp, Heed, a wet j Ritchie,' another wet ; Walsh,'
a dry, but a Catholic.
Walsh quickly withdrew threw bis support to Smith, today
(iovcrnor Ritchie followed suit, and now Reed, left alone, vali
antly declares he has slopped the
York."
Which fools no ope, least of all, the Missouri senator him
self. There will be a fight at Houston, for Democrats arc built
that way. It will probably be a more genuine fight, than the one
staged against Mr. Hoover, for anti Smith feeling, where it
exists is intejise. In fact, Smith can Kcarcelyenplicale, Hoover
performance, and secure the nomination on the first ballot. But
the noise and fury can't possibly change, the inevitable result.
So those who manufacture campaign buttons, can make up
their Smith lithograph now, and put on the other side some
D ocrat who is not an Easterner, not a Tammany supporter
and not a militant wet.
Tho prat open spjicps seem
body except itlens.
A pnrUinjr spnee is wliero yun
st nek on the kihh.
You can't avoid centvalied
a eeiilndized pap Kiipply.
QUILL POINTS j
Stop and think, In-other. How can she have brains if she
thinks you n wonder?
Knmes are inexact. The noiso
pound the rumble seat sounds more like a tattoo than n rumble.
No matter how much a wife has to spend, it isn't onouRh if
icr husband drives his peplo part of his earnings.
Almost everything has changed, nnd now the sins of the
children are visited on the fathers.
If you know what n Democrat is mad about, you know how
he is Kointf to explain Mr. Smith's actual defeat.
If he reminds you that early investors in Ford stock got
rich, the stock certificates he is selling nrc worth throe cents u
pound.
Con-eel this sentenee: "That
played my hull," suit! (he golfer,
MUTT AND JEFF
1 'rrf- ' l,ifttMV . it' ioUT OF TV IfLlSTCfJl I'M A Yl He'S A NUT.' I -r C&RTAlNby AT I
Uu Z Y I VV6 DoN'T 5ERVG StASON.cH nvoRKeR. t'M OSGU oH.VWetLl (FI IMPReSSG3 THAT 1 SAV H'S AJO J Ttte
pSHovW MO tC rrrfc at So THAT'S 1 TB 6TTIN6 WHAT I III TM&N'T TAK6 J uuAlTGRi Vwe PlKGfc. 'SIRl OYSrefcS
nIL, mrtAT T lpRSMT.'WS TH WAY L vAANlTl HCRGi SUP TH S HIS COlM Weua VORlceRS - HL UJAAJTS AM BfclMG
Vflr SOM ) (SCASON FOR KANSA C.TvJ kUero: ) , wol WAY ABoOT US V TR.pG, J
vcTpVk' THeM,sft: JC GH! J 1 !l r that, the . yf XjL-
STOP AL SMITH?
G'oycrnor Smith's strength is not
of thousands of Democrats
vole for him, no well-informed
lint mere numbers count, little
was the only prominent Demo
hero of the "Sidewalks of New
lo Imvc 1111 ntlrnulion for evorv-
leave Hie ear i liavo M2(i ads
Kovcriniieiit when vou eslnldisli"
made hy iJasseutM'S as tliev
wotnun in (lie foursome nhend
"hut T don't mind it nt nil
Jeff Impresses A Kansas City Waiter
Personal Health Service
By WILLIAM BBADT, M. D.
Hivned letfem perttlitlwr to personal health and hygiene, not to di-ae diatjU or
treatment. wiH b answer! by lit. Itiaily if a titimix-d. fclf-;ullre.-.-4 envelop la eiwlotted.
Lfliem fctinuld Im brit-l and written in Ink. Ouiiir lo the Ijrge numler of letter re
reived, only ir few n be-aruwer fd her. No reply can be made to urit not conform
ing fit inwtiudinnft. Ad'treM ir. tVilriaro Hrariy, in care of ttib newspaper.
JJTTU3 ClirXKS OF COM) UHiW
t. 3 The Jaw on Titklnc oll.
One New York ntlmy writen:
K'ud the enclosed and weep.
The uppHIUe division of tho
HUprem court of New York
uffirmH (with only one Jude
d I h Henting) a
holding by the
male Industrial
board thai an
e x p o h u r e'
caused the 111
ncsH and denth
in rtuestion.
I'm ono of
your diseJules,
having he pn
con verted by
you long since. I (tit now.
when four very able Jurists out
of five members of the court
hold" that exposure wa tho
direct cause of thiM man's
denth. It makes me hiver to
think of all tho chances I havo
1 iiken since my conversion.
Doctor, by the decision In this
case It Is now the law of this
state that a feller mustn't ex
pose himself and you mustnt'
tell n feller to expose himself,
because If you do you are 'li
able for damages lo hint or
his heirs, nnd both the feller
who exposes himself and the
doctor who preaches the doc
trine contrary to settled law,
may be guilty of contempt of
court.
Doctor, explain yourself.
' Your.s truly,
I 'S
Rented.
-Judge Kellogg dls-
is he related to you, or a
convert ?
Another New York attorney calls
(his court decision to my attention
and remarks: The law seems to!lieo
ml- iiKiunxi. ynu in inn matter or
"catching cnld." I thought you
might be Interested In this de
cision. Hlnce a precedent Is set by
fhe court
Phe cusp my lawyer friends men
tion is that of icrticr vs. Uump(mou salt for brushing the teeth.
Jiros., et al. supreme court, ap
pellate division, third department.
May fi, ill 2 5, appeal from state In
dustrial board. It seems that Wer
ner, n salesman employed in a
wholesale fruit and vegetable busi
ness, while showing fruit to a cus
tomer in the refrigerator, where
they wero for 10 minutes, received
a chill that caused a cold that
lowered his reslstanco ind ns a
consequence suffered pulmonary
edema, cerebral embolism, septic
endocarditis, and one thing nnd
another, which caused denth.
Kvedinco hud shown that the
employe had not been accustomed
to entering the refrigerator for
more than a- "second"' at a time,
and hence did not put on his nretic
suit or anything to protect 'him
from the dread rigors. s While In
there on this occasion he moved
boxes and things nbout and got
up a little sweat obviously a ter
ribly dangerous thing to do in a
cold place. Vllhjalmur Stefansson
ought to be warned against sweat
ing In the far north.
Tho unfortunate employe felt
cold when he left the refrigerator,
that morning. At nbout 3 In the
afternoon he felt "bail" nnd went;
home. Next day he sent for n 1
doctor, who decided the patient!
had "grip and sciatica due prob-
ably to his catching cold while in
the refrigerator." !
Nothing in the testimony tells
us what the customer had. The j
lawyers must have been dumb eggs
to overlook that feature of the I
case. The customer apparently i
peppered the pool- man In the re-
frigerator and then made a clean
getaway. Well. well. Probably the1
lawyers feared that if they quern
tinned the theory thnt an Infec
tfous disease such as "grip" could
aulse e novo, develop out of thin
coid air there In the refrigerator,
wll hout a human carrier to sup-t
ply the starter, It might annoy the
court.
This case sets a precedent, all
rfght. ft Is the first case of septic
endocarditis that ever happened
without Infection.
rt anyone felt any doubt nbout
these points .the employe's doctor
smoothed It all off neatly enough.
Ills testimony, which seethed to
Impress the court, was that the ex
posure to cold air In the refrig
erator, without heavier clpihlng to
protect the employe had n tend
ency to suddenly reduce the Sur
face tempera I ure of the body, to
shut off perspiration, and
Kight here, if we mny do so with
out offense to the court, T propose
j ihreo cheers for this doctor. All
jtogether now, Hooey, Hooey,
i Hooey!
i ... to shut off perspiration
' and cause poisons thus being
thrown off to be reabsorbed by
j the system
' Maybe It was right hern that
t Judge Kellogg asked the other
four Judges to count him out. I
, hope so. Our higher Judges ought
to tie compelled to take an ele
, mentary course in human physi
j ology just by way of protection
-, against hooey.
! The old guard In the medical
' profession will hall this legal de-
cislon as a great victory, for they
j have been fairly frothing at the
j mouth the Inst year or two trying
j tti butster up the venerable tra
dition about exposure "lowering
j reslstnnce."
i In all seriousness, and with the
finest Ion of cold and exposure aside,
I Isn't this case a convincing urgu-
ment for the establishment of some
i sort of medical expert body, if not
( Indeed a medical member of the
ij'aourt, to which such teohnicnl
t problems may be referred by, the
i court? If such a member had sat
1 with this court .that bit of pure
hooey about the "poixons being re
absorbed into the system" when
the perspiration had been shut off,
could never get by. That's a plain
question of physiological fact, and
if fact or truth Ih at variance with
the law, then the law should be
made to conform with .the truth.
on
:ktiok and axswfhs
JirttHhlfig Teeth.
I use common salt on a dry
brush to clean my teeth, but I am
told It Is too harsh and may dam-
Mm enamel. I also use a
pinch of salt In a glass of water
as a mouthwash. What Is your
opinion of these practices? K. C.
O.
Answer. Many good dentists
have recommended tin use of com-
I don't understand Just why, and
I had rather worry along without
It for my own teeth, but I doubt
It can do nny harm. The use of
a pinch or more of suit In n glass
of water for rinsing the mouth Is
equally harmless though I do not
understand what special benefit
the salt adds.
Jlclalcil Iteport.
lp until recently I have suffer
ed with severe headaches. Sev-
eral months ago I noticed an "ex
periment" you suggested lft weeks
treatment. I purchased the reme
dies and took them as you sug
gested for the 10 weeks period,
and now I have the headaches only
slightly nnd at long Intervals. I
fell grateful to you. Should the
headaches return shall I again
take the medicines, nnd if so, for
how long? K. P. rt.
Answer. I cannot ndvise you
without knowing you condition.
The experiment was finished
months ago. and I reported here
the In d I f f ere n t res tt Its. I f ou n d
that It Is not practicable to carry
out such an experiment. lOven in
your own case, you mention one
remedy which I did not suggest
at 'all. So the experiment Is a
Closed incident and we cannot sug
gest trentment for migraine.
Sweiil lug Hands.
Kindly print your formula for
sweating hands. M. M. ,
Answer, Paint the palms one or
twice a day for a week or 1ft days,
with a solution of 25 grains of
chromic ncid In one ounce of
water. Let it dry on the skin.
This stains the skin yellow tem
porarily. Tf the staining Is ob-
jecuonnnie. the next best thing Is
(a dally application to the palms of
a weak (2 to 5 per cent) formnl
dehyde ointment. - I
(Copyright, John P. Dille Co.) j
THE STATE OF OHIO
COl.U.MUUK. Ohio. June 5 . (VP) j
rornndoes ami wind storms that
Tornadoes and wind storms that
struck at three central and south-!
ecu Ohio communities today had i
left n toll ot oho dead, more than
n score ot ncrsons Injured and
dnmace estimated at $750,000. j
, Donald Thomas. 1 0, nenro. was
killed hy IlKhtnltiK when the storm j
struck at ColtimhuK late yesterday.
Rippling
Rhymes
(By Walt Mim)
X KM F.N IS
The bandit may deride the
law. which, being full of fault
und flaw, .permits him to escape;
when he is pinched by the po
lice he knows his loving aunt
nnd niece will not be wearing
crape. However horrid be his
crime, he knows that in a little
time, he'll be at large again; If
he draws punishment nt all, it
will he most absurdly small, a
short stretch In the pen. Hut
there's another law, gadzooks,
that Isn't written In the hooks,
which fills his soul with dread;
the bandits of some other gang
may trail him for a parasang,
and leave him lying dead. Tho
bandit must be circumspect; if
he's too anxious to collect more
plunder than 'his share, pome
other bandit, steeped in gloom,
will send him hurtling to n doom
more grievous than the chair.
Tho bandit must not talk too
much, or he is sure to get In
Dutch with other thieves
around; some gents will . take
him for a ride and In a lonely
countryslde his body will be
found. The bandit should have
mild desires; If unhappily as
pires to kingship of his clan,
some other fierce, ambitious
wight will shoot him up some
lovely night, and spoil his fair
est plan. I would not be a ban
dit bold, although somo pessim
ists may hold the Justice sel
dom harms: I'd rather be lock
ed up In Jail than have aveng
ers on my trail, equipped with
lethal arms. The bandits, be
ing dead game sports, may laugh
to scorn the laws nnd courts,
but still their doom is sealed;
If cops don't get- them rivals
will, and they'll be lying, dend
nnd still, upon a crimson field.
The stor mlhen traveled eastward
toward the summer resort colony
at Huckeyo lake, near Newark,
where a tornado cut a swath about
a city block wide for a distance jof
nearly four miles. T.
Tli1 now flhtolp-thrrc-liirli fc'lk
stockin's ought t' enable 'cm t', step
In a rumble scat without get tin'
sunburned. Tlr Idler that's still
'carry In tli' .same dinner bucket lie
started out with thirty years' ago
don't seem t' care fvr luncheon
clulw nnd mass thinkln.
(Copyright, John V. Dille Co.)
Brisbane's Today
(Continued from Page One)
Old kings fought ahout territory,
or somo trifling "point of honor."
Modem kiniss, of hteh finance, fight
more usefully.
The Rockefeller Institute fights
disease.
The two great electric companies,
General Klectrlc anil Westingliouse
Klectrle, are fighting lightning and
its dangers, showing how to protect
lives nnd property.
The htg companies may some day
harness the lightning, making it
work on its wny from the clouds to
tke earth, as the waters of Niagara
work on their way from the Lrfikes
to the Ocean. '
f
Classified advertising gets rpsults.
4
'-V"" fife9
Tho camp meeting at Jackson
ville. Ui increasing in popularity
I with the people of Jacksonville.
Last night the business men of
conference officers of the Seventh
day Adventlst church had a banquet
at which speeches of appreciation
were exchan-'ied.. The secretary of
the chamber of commerce, Mr. Lar-
i son, extended a hearty Invitation to
the AUventists to come back to
Jacksonville at some future date.
Elder Meyers, secretary of the
General conference, gave an ad
dress at the banquet which was
preatly appreciated to tne extent
I that many came to the tent to hear
more of this eloquent speaker. The
, tent was filled to overflowing and
the anticipations for the evening
services are good. Other speakers)
are coming In from the North Pad-j
jflc Union Conference so there will i
be no let-up In the interest until
I the last meeting. Sunday night.
These evening meetings are especi
ally for the public. One of the fea
tures of Interest at the banqttest i
last night was Elder Westbrook. I
: president of the Southern Oregon
conference who suggested that
Jacksonville grow into greater
Jacksonville annexing Medford as
; Its supberbs and Ashland as the
i southern part of Jacksonville. No
greater expectations -andi?oog will
could be expressed by any visitor
to the old town of Jacksonville. A
goog feeling of fellowship is
1 springing up between the officers
of the conference and the citizens ,
ot jacKSonvine.
Jt was announced that Rev. or
ris Lukens, president of the North
I Pacific Union conference, would
1 speak tonight on the question of
"Religious Liberty; do we need
1 blue laws today to make people
good and prepare them for
heaven ?
1-
iiiil sim
PORTLAND, Ore., June 19. (Pi
Stating that the plaintiffs had
"considerably over stated" their
losses to ilie Northwestern Nationa
losses to the Northwestern Na
tional bank through certain slow
or "frozen" assets, Charles A.
Hart, defense attorney spent the
morning with his opening address
in the suit brought by two stock
holders of the bunk against its
creditors.
i Anions the loans cited in tho
complaint brought by the stock
holders. Charles A. Burckhardt and
Fred A. Ballin. are those of the
! Dufur Orchards, A. Pupert and
company, the Bankers Discount
corporation, the Phez corporation,
'the Rock Creek ranch; Ci J. Smith,
Lav In Mlchellvi Sheep company;
G. E. Miller and company; A. E.
Sturnt. Sam Nemiro, J. E. Wheeler,
the Wheeler Timber company and
the MHcCormick Lumber company.
In nlmost every case the batik
still expects to collect the obli
gations and the national bank ex
aminer had -never asked their re
moval from the bank books.
.
COTTACiE GROVE. New gold
quartz discoveries reported from
Bohemia district.
4
Pendleton will build $05,000
memorial hall nnd auditorium.
Safest Way to
Stop Pain
It ll not necesiary to take heart!
P tea sing druga or dope of any kind t
relievo nerve torture caused by neurit tf.
neuralgia. ciatlca or rheumatltm. Jut
apply Tysmol over the part that hurta
and see how quickly- you will be frea
from discomfort.
Tysmol It a toothing, healing absor
bent that goes In through the porea
and drives out Inflammation- which ha
aettled in the nirvw, .The minute you
rub it on you can feel it beginning to
relieve. Pains and aches soon stop,
congastlon ta removed, and sorenesa
and inflammation gradually disappear;
Although Tysmol la put up especially
for nerve pain and' inflammation, suf
ferers have found it equally good for
taking the misery out of stiff, swollen
or aching joints. Also fine for lama
back and muscular sorenesa. Pleasant.
harmless and easy to use. Don't fail to
try it IT you wani genuine. lasting re
lief. You get a liberal supply for $1 at
any drug ator. Always in stock at
Strang's Drug; Store.
TH SMC
Stop Getting
Up Nights
If you eel UP lllny tlniM "
niKhl liy reason of J;niljci- Tfroii
Me. Wave pains in ba k. weaklier
or cllziinena. general ilehlllty. .Kiu
...nlni and .Jifficnll urina
tion, lark -of lonirol of urjne, or
: Kyminoma of prostate trouble, try
o.l vi n nNOliri.KH. This re-
murkaMe treatment has heen usetl
successfully hy lliousaiuls. So con
fident that it will succeed, we will
send a trial ircalnK-nt AU.sOU) 1 1
I.V KlIKIJ lo any .iiffi-rer who has
never used it. No olillRttlion or
cost. Write today.
Till-! I'AI.MO COMPAXV
IO Calhoun St.. llalllp f'n-rk. Mich.
t
o
CIRCLE
TOUcV
Victoria ... Vaiicpur ,
ver . . . Banff . , .
Luke Louise . ; ." the
Bungalow Camps...
Calgary .'. . Spokane1';
. . . home again! All
one trip - moderate in
cost with maximum
pleasure for every
member of the fam
ily. It's the Circle
Tour, by water and
rail through the
world's finest vaca
tion locales. Lou)
Summer Fares are ef
fective; get literature
now and plan this
summer tour!,
Pacific
W H Deacon-Cfn'iJyjnf Pass'r Dcpr
SiThlrdSt Portland Hulinoinal) llwc) Ulijp'
Canadian Pacific TVavtllrfi iUicaun '
Good t)it World Ouit ' J 1
You will like - V !
LOS ANGELES :
Better if You Stop at ,
SIXTH and SPRING STREETS
, New Million Dollar AnMx
; ' to Comferubh Room. :ii !
92.00 per day np without bath
2-50 per day up with bath
PERSONAL SERVICB
Popular Priced Coffee Shop
andGriil ' '
We One Tmv Car at the Daear
H. C FRYMAN, Proprteto
KARRT a WAOTTSBH
- RUstBu H. vaoinis
By BUD FISHER
WAfcTerJ I
-a
'V aav