Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 09, 1930, Page 5, Image 5

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    MEDFORD MIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREfiOX, WEDNESDAY. JULY 9. 19.10.
PAGE FIVE
mm
OPPOSED
BY BANKS
Medford' Independent Can
didate for Senator Also
"Opposes" Farm Relief,
Chain Stores and Tariff
Senator McNary's Defeat
Is Demanded in Nomi
nating Speech.
The Independent candidacy of
Lewellyn A. Ranks, local orchard
man, for U. S. senator, was formal'
ly launched at the armory laat
night, following speeches by Mr.
Jiunka and H. E. Kelly, chairman
of the meeting, when over 100
members of the audience Higned
petitions asking him to run.
These petitions were circulated
at (he meeting before the speaking
and entertainment program begun
mainly by Howard Hill, or el mid
man; Al Panzer, general, manugdi
' of the Medford Daily News, UHd
. 11. T. llubburd, who aids Mr. Banks
In looking after the latter's' local
fruit interests.
A mimical program of which Ed
Andrews, well known light opera
comedian, was in charge, with Mrs.
tieorge Andrews as accompanist,
and vocal solos by Kllow Mae Wil
. son, Mr. Sutherland of Roseburg
and Ed himself was IntentperRed
between the speeches.
Mr. Sutherland sang what some
of the ardent Bauksites deemed a
prophetic rendition, "1 Hear You
Calling Me," and Ed Andrews sung
the famous ditty "TltwJUow," from
"The Mikado' and gave a. tecita
tion.
Chairman Kelly Introduces
E. K. Kelly calied the meeting to
order and stated its purpose. A
motion prevailed that he be made
chairman and Mr. Hubbard secre
tary. . The Bpeaker declared that the
time has come to inaugurate dras
tic changes in government and to
elect men of character to public
ofiice next fall. Then he presented
Mr. Hanks ns an independent can
didate for U. S. senator and as an
"Idealist," whose ideal is conform
ance to the Constitution and un
"standing for a square deal."
Mr. Banks was applauded and
IiIh utterances also met with ap
plause severul times throughout hts
address of 30 minutes; which he
read from typewritten pages.
Mr. Banks spoke, in part, ns1
"" tnko this occasion to de
clare that the greatest oncmieH
lo -Individual efforts and to agri
cultural America ore the emis
enrieH of our -infamous federnl
reserve banking systom.
"Hank examiners have become
the very, terror to Independent
hahktng . enterprises. '' They con-
: Htltitte a veritable system of spleu
and have declared' that securities
backed by first mortgages on land
an unsafe security. They have
advocated plneing rtoney on call
on the stock market. Thoy de
mnnd that the bankers invest the
great deposit entrusted to them
by the people into quick assets,
nil of which has made it impos
sible for an honorable banker to
render any assistance to Agricul
ASSOCIATED
EQUI-FRACTIONATED
GASOLINE
and CYCOL Motor Oil
i i
turists in his respective commu
nity. - - "Th KreateHt- 'Bingl obstacle
today fuetnr (he farmers of
America Is the whipped doe atti
tude of the hankers.
'Mr. Herbert Hoover is a guid
ing KBiiiuw hack of this movement
to merge American finances into
the hands of a few large Institu
tions. , Opposes Chain Stores.
"The development of the chain
store" system, whi-h ' has swept
Atnerlcn like a great tidal wave,
rolling In from the Atlantic to
the Pacific, is another one of Her
bert Hoover's pet schemes for
centralized control.
"Honverlsm h:i' risen up ns n
challenge to our Democratic form
of government. If the people be
lieve that democracy is a failure,
then they will support the Hoover
Policy, but if they still believe
that the t'nlted States of America
should have a 'government of the
people, by the people, and for
the people, they will rise up to
a man and overthrow his bureau
cracies. "America must return to the
faith of the founders of our na
tion. IJfe, liberty, and the pur
suit of happiness must be re-
eptnhllshcd throughout the land.
Therefore, ni n candidate on an
independent ticket for a seat in
the United States Senate, from
the state of Oregon, the first prin
ciple that T will enunciate, and
which should be the governing
principle in all that will follow is:
Asks ltctcul of Irohlbition.
"The eighteenth amendment to
our constitution was a war meas
ure. It was passed by the people
under the hysteria of the world's
greatest conflagration. 13 1 e v e n
years hnve pa rood since the peo
ple enst their ballot on this
amendment. :
"Eleven years of disrespect fol
low. Eleven years of crime. Eleven
years of the debauchery of our
public offlclnls has proved beyond
nil question of a doubt thnt this
amendment to our constitution
has boen overwhelmingly repu
diated by the. people nnd is re
garded by them ' ns an abroga
tion of their constitution.
"It can no longer be received
n a measure of temperance. The,
results have been exaggerated in
intemperance. It has made Amer-j
lea a nation of hypocrites. Alco-!
hollsip has been popularized. Thej
saloon has be'i removed from!
the corner into the sacred pre-
clncts of the homes. The debau-
chery of the home is the scandal j
of America. The disrespect for;
the eighteenth amendment sur-l
rounds the fireside of hnlf thft;
population of our nation. Dis-
respect for law and order stalks
through' tho land.
In nil our great cities the dis
respect for law and order not
o'nly has developed among the in-1
hnhlrants, but the law-enforcing
bodies have beer) so corrupted
that a condition of anarchy reigns.
Murders, on an . unprecedented
scale, racketeering, bribery, are
the fruits" thereof. " 1
"The eighteenth . amendment
provided the first great violation
of the constitutional rights of the
Jienple. .. ,w ,
"Tho eighteenth amendment
must be, and will be, repealed.'
. "The farm relief act was- a logi
cal sequence to the- eighteenth
amendment. It: provided jthe sec
ond (trent movement , to deprive
the peoplo of their constitutional;
rlghtH. - ' ".
'"This measure -was an, act of
political expediency;' provided with
a name to catch the imagination
of the farmer.- - Designed by a
band of heartless' conspirators:.
popularized ' by : an intimidated
press, propagandized by a new
political fungi known as college
profen-jors, entomologists, patholo
gists and bug hunters of nil kinds
and descriptions who fatten at the
expense of the toil of the very
people they propose to victimize.
"The farm -relief net constitutes
LEECATHEY
For His Plymouth Economy
Drive Selected
I I '4 ?
I have Faith in these high grade Petroleum Products,
as they withstand "Endurance Beyond Belief"
' , ., ,t ,. . . ' .
I
the most duutardly effort to dht
I franchise the - agriculturists of
America ever 'attempted' In . the'
I history of tho Wurld. Tha Rus
; sian communist scheme is a mild
effort in the same direction by
comparison.
AftTfenilturnl College I Rapped.
"Our agricultural colleges, and
many other colleges, hnve become
the hotbed of political Intrigue.
They are working In perfect hr-
mony with bureaucratic domina
tions. They were the originators
of the farm relief act. They are
the foundation of th evils that
beset agricultural America. They
frame our agricultural laws thru
out the Htates and have the sup
port of the Hoover administra
tion. These colleges must he di
vorced from politics before tran
quillity and peace can reign In
agricultural enterprises.
"It is inconceivable under a
democratic form of government
and under the constitutional rights
of the people for our federal gov
ernment to enter business enter
prises in direct competition with
its constituents.
"The Interferences of federal
government with private business
enterprises must be removed.
"My nppenl Is not addressed
merely to the sovereign people of
the state of Oregon, but is nd
dressed to the sovereln people
of America. The Hoover admin
n-trution must be impeached by
the entire nation. The wicked
conspiracies against the constitu
tional rights of the people must
be overthrown, not only in Ore
gon, hut in every other state In
the union.
McXnry Must (in.
"Charles L. McNary, the senior
senator from this state, ia an in
tegral part ttf tho Hoover admin
istration. Ity his failure to de
fend the constitutional rights of
his constituents he has alienated
himself from nil rights to the con
fidence, loyalty and support the
voter in the state of Oregon.
"Charles U. McNary stundti as a
sponsor for the infamous farm
relief act. He stands ns a spon
sor ; for tho' greatest conspiracy
ever nttempted In nil 'history
against the constitutional rights
of the people.
'Charles U McNary must not
only he defeated, but so decisively
defeated that all America will
know that the stato of Oregon
repudiates the wicked conspiracies
against their rights by the Hoover
administration.
"Knterlng the field ns an inde
pendent candldnto for the United
Htntes senate, opposing Charlea U
McNary. I am governed by a sin
gle motive of patriotic duty.
"I have never boen in politics.
Have never sought an office. My
ambitions and . Inclinations nnd
life's work, from childhood hnve
been toward the soil. The urgency
of the performance of a patri
otic service compels me to leave
temporarily the field of a life
time nctlvity and devote a por
tion of my time to the patriotic
services of my country.
Party adherence has no place
In the political drama that will
soort b6 enacted throughout Amer
ica. Americans nre now facing
but ono' Issue, whether they arc
patriots to their country, whether
thy believe In their constitutional
rights, whether they will stand
in defense of their property rights,
or whether they nre aliens to
their institutions nnd ' negligent
and disloyal. In defense of their
citizenship.
Wonts Ovcrwliclnilnff Vote.
"I not only nsk the sovereign
people of the State' of Oregon to
elect ' me to the United States
sennte,,Jto supplant Charles t.
McNary. but I fifk for such an
overwhelming endorsement to the
principles I have enunciated that
nil the people of America will
understand thnt Oregon repudiates'
the Hoover administration nnd Its
conspiracies." ' 1
.. 1 -
Ctnswlflert advertising irets results.
Says This Nationally Known Driver
MEDFORD GOLF
CLUB 10
"Quite a tlelvRiitlon of member
of l lie Mutlfurd uoir club plan lo
leave Suturdny to play with the
MarshfielU iluli nil tlay Sunday.
It will not lie a team match, nnd
a many of tha Medford memlier-s
an possible nre tu-Ked to partii'i
pale. There will lie n match for
all. rcKnrdlera pf experience or
ability. Member planning to make
the trip nro requested to notify
Joe Moselle, profeiutionnl Al the
Medford eourn. by Friday.
The finals In the first flight of
the Chandler Kuan isolf trophy
tournament were won last week
by H. J. Mc.Mahon from C. J.
Semon with a score of threw and
1 two. An enxrnved sterlinK silver
V-latter was presented to Mr. Mc
.Mahon. The finals In the second
flight nro to be played next Thurs-
rdny afternoon between Homer
Marx nnd 1. H. dray. A close
match I expected.
44
PORTLAND. 6re., July 0. (W
CInido iTlnrdclll, ''Young Flrpo,"
Rurkc, Ida., added another victim
to his Mring of knockouts when he
disposed of Hoy Jacks, Omaha, in
the fourth round hero last piglit.
Jacks, with his long legn and arms
and nmbltlextrous style of fighting,
puzzled the forme' miner in the
first three rounds, bnt whon h did
solve it. he made short work of
Mr. Jacks.
In the seml-ftnal. Mllllo Milletll,
and Swede Nelson went ix rounds
to n draw. : ' ' :
Kred Hu rebus won a found-rounil
decision over John Mack after n
hard fight ; Hoy Morgan knocked
out Freddy Welsh -in tho fourth.
and Jimmy Anderson. Astoria, wns
disqualified in the third round of
his bout with Johnny Gravey, Los
Angeles. Anderson was plainly mtf
in condition. ,
LENHART GIVEN EDGE
SPOKANE. Jjuljfr ; Wp-Fred
Lenhart, Spokane, took;-a close
six-round decision ' ,pvert Ni 1 1 e
Brown, Philadelphia,, he'o ' last
night. They are jiligiiheaVy
weights. Hrown used n stinging
left hook to the Jaw with good
effect, while I-oVihart employed n
two-fisted offense to both hend
and body thnt gnvo him the edge.
Sailor Denny Ijenhnrt. Portland,
knocked out Hal Mulllns, Detroit,
in the second round of the semi
final. THREE CHILDREN PERISH
AS MOTHER ON ERRAN0
CALGARY, Alta. July 0. (VP)
Three children, left alono while
their mother went to a neighbor's
home for milk, were burned to
death lost night hy n fire which
destroyed the family's home.
The dead are Birdie Olllard,
4-yenr old; ISilcen, 2, nnd Allan, 1.
- 1
mam
in n1 fi
7:30 to 7:46 p. m Amos n' Andy
(Transcontinental from (.'hlcaicov
NHl." service to . Kcto, KHQ,
KOJIO, KtlW, KF.CA, Kr'SD.
7:45 to n:ou p. in. Sarah Kreind
ler. violinist, SliC service
KOO.
to
S:OU to S:SH p. in. Let's (let As
sociated. fCHC service to Kill),
KOMO. KtlW, KI'O, Kl-'I.
8:0(1 til K'.IO 11 in P,iruln 01
tet, NIK- service to KC.O. KKl'A.
s:30 to :llll p. m. 1 1 II 1 Hilly
Hoys. NUO service to KOO,
Km.
: to 9:30 p. m. Miniature HI-OK-rnphles,
NIK- service to KOO,
Krsl.
S:3n to 10:30 p. m. Camel I'lcas
ure Hour. NHC service to KOO,
KHQ, KOMO, KOW, KKCA,
KI-'SIl, KTAH. KSL, KOA.
10:30 to 11:30 p. in. Cotton Blos
som Minstrels. X BC service to
KUO, KHQ. KOW. KOA.
11:30 to 12:oo p. m. Oannp or
chestra, NRC service to KOO,
KOW. Kl'I, KKMD.
Radio Program
KIY1ED -
(Mall Tribune Virgin Btitlon)
Witliimrtiiy Ji
- r. si. -
6ito 6:80 Popular Itecnrd-
IllRS.
fi:30 to fi "ProsperlraphH,M
presented ly Medford -S
I'hamhor of Oonnnerco.-
6 lo 11:15 Fruit dispatches
liy Myron itoot,
0:111 to 0:30 News nnd Mar-
kels hy Mall Trllnine. .
0:3o to 7 Porter Lumber Co.
7 lo 7:16 Tom and Wash,
presented liy Atwocluted Oil
Company. '
7:16 to 7:30 Ceoll nnd Sally
In "The Funniest Things." '
' lHiurMliiy
A. M.
7:65 to 8 Breakfast Ijroad-
cast of news hy Mall Til-
liune. ' -
8 to 8:30 "Kyho Hour" liy
Kconotny Oroceterirt.
8:30 to 8:46 Southern Oro-
(ton Kabblt Ureedors nssoci-
ntlon.
8:46 to 0 Gold Hen! Cream-
ery.
lo 9:30 Mnstcru'orks Ser-
les.
9:80 to 10 Oolden West cof-
fee,
10 to 10:80 Medford Sheet
Metul Works.
10:30 to 11 Style Gossip
Hour by Adrlennes.
11 to 1 1:30 Popular Record.
Ings.
11:30 to 12 Jnrmlno and
; .' "Woods Drug Htore.
1.2 to 11:30 Orator Lnko
Auto Point Co. '
12:30 News Flashes by Mall
Tribune.
12:80 to 1 R. V. Williams,
realtor.
1 to 1:30 Popular recordings
1:30 to 2 Pan Dundy pro-
gram by Beck's Hakery.
6 to 6:30 Popular recordings
6:30 to 0 Firestone one-Stop
' Hervico Station.
8 to 8:16 Fruit dlspntches by
Myron Root.
0:16 to 0:30 News and mar-
kets by Mail Tribune.
0:30 to 8:46 Jackson County
Hldtf. & Loan association.
0:46 to 7 Farmers Kxchantfe
Cooperative.
7 to 7:16 Tom and Wash
presented by Associated Oil
Company.
7:16 to 7:30 Cecil nnd Sally
In "The Funniest Thing."
Brisbane's Today i.
(Continued from peg ono)
(Continued from Pago Ono)
Mil s liisiinild out and wilcx
it,. you don't know whether .he
will turn to tho left, to the
ritsht, Htop deiul or buck up;
Conon Doyle's family expect mes
sages from Ji I in , ami they will net
messages, many, but thuy will not
come from Conun Doyle.
Mediums, sincere or fraudulent,
cannot Invent anything from the
dead that sounds plausible. i:
Merely to say "Mamma Is vory
happy," or "Papa sends his love" Is
not convincing. i
Men cannot really Imagine a
spirit life. Therefore, they cannot
Invent any reasonable message
from a soul separated from its
body. '
Work has actually started on tbe
lloulder dam. Unotl news.
Probably the power and water,
In tho end, .will be owned by pri-
vuto Individuals, paying a small
i sum to the government In proKr
i tlon to cost, peddling the inwer
land water to the public tor all the
traffic will bear.
Rut, at least, the water and the
power will bo used,. That Is a atari.
Later, If tha peoplo have brains
enough to run their own affairs as
efficiently as the corporations that
exploit them, they will know what
to do about lloulder dam, Muscle
Shoals and other properties. Once
men did not own even their own
bodies or lives. They do not yet
own their national resources. Hut
they will, soma day.
In the Imperial hotel at Prague,
Czechoslovakia, Ingenious thieves
stole tOtiil.OOil worth of Jewelry
from a Chlcogo'lady. A 1200,000
pearl necklace was Included.
Yon could not persuade the lady
hat she Is Just as well off without
the Jewelry as she was with It. As
well say to a peacock: "Yuu don't
OF MAT SE
I
Whnt will' prolmlily he the lMt
wvt'HtllnK ninleh of tho bouboh.
next Muiutny niKltt will present
John K i' p li u v k. tht "Terrible
Swede' of Seattle, nKtnt Huh
Kruse of l'ortlitml In a finish
mutch. This mutch prumtaeH to be
a fitting .iimu x to thu eunun timl
it in expm'teil to he one of the
roiiKhest ever teen In Jleilfortl.
Pi-u muter llerh Owen in plunuinK
it to he htu bit nner eurd and Is
Having no effort to ussuro funs of
ft bi evening' entertiilnmont.
In the put, funn have looked
upon Kruttu na the rouHhNt man
in the ring, hut they haven't seen
anything: until Kreburg Ih In no
tion. He becomes mo exrited he
lornetn to wrestle and start n
rough house that Ih pot stopped
until the referee, whieh. an usual,
will ho Harry KUIott of Eugene,
takes netlun. Kreburg won' hl
last match In Seattlo from n Oer-
mnn ehumpinn, throwing him' In
the fourth round of an Australian
miiteh.
lreburg thinks n lot of himself
nnd thinks he Is eupuhle of throw
Ing any of tho ohamplons,
HUNTER 10 KILLED
MAN FOR DEER FREE
Saj;M. OreJ, July .A., W
Hurry Newberg of haOrunde. re
ceived nt the state penitentiary in
November, 11128, In servo flva ynr.H
for Involuntury manslaughter, wkh
pardoned by (lovernor Norhlnd yes
terday. Xewhorg ami Ceorge Tlluck.
Hhoollng after dusk at what they
thought was a deer, kilted Leonti.'d
Olseit.
Al
Mrs. Ilolln llolierts. mother of
MIsh l.,illan' Kobert, Rorrottipy! f
the Jackson Crtunly Chapter of tho
American Hed Cross, died at 1
o'clock this alternoon at the Rucred
Heart hospital, whore slto had been
receiving treatment lor the past
year.
'iineiul arrungemenls will be an
nounced later from the Perl Fun
eral Hume. . ..
"The Border Legion"
Now at draterian
"Tho. -13 order4 loglon,."' J5nhe
Oroy's thrilling, story of romance
and outlawry in tho early days of
tho west, opens on. the talking
s o r e o n at tho
'. . . Foi Cruterlan
. ' theater today.
In addition
'I familiar and
popular Jack
1 Holt, playing
his first talking
i Zone Orey role,
tn the enst. Fay
! Wray, seen re
, contly as the
,f
1
gorgeo'-tH iten-
Fay Wrnjr. orltn of O a r y
Cooper's "The Texan," has the
only woman role of Importance
In the picture. Kugene I'nllotte,
famous nS tho Horgennt Heath of
the H. a Van Dyne thrillers, hns
n roln similar tn the one he por
trayed In "The Virginian."
really need Hint tall," or to ft lady
dancing In Benegnmhla's hot sun
light: "You don't need that nose
ring."
Senator Swnnson of Virginia,
who accepts the theory that for
eign nations should be allowed to
tell u what ships we may have.
says that rejecting the pact would
bring upon us the world's enmity,
und we should "lose moral leader
ship by rejecting that pact."
We should lose more than that
If war found lis unprepared. ,
There are many things more Im
portant thun moral leadership, and
they Include airplanes, snbmurlues
nnd fast cruisers.
COULD HARDLY
DO HER WORK
Strenarthanxl kW LvJla rE.
iPinkham' Vegetable Com
pound
Mission. Tex. "1 have used a Rood
ileal of your medicuio and always find
11 gives wonderful
help. I was feeling
so weak Mid miser
able that I had to
lie down very of
ten and 1 could
hardly do my
housework. I read
in the )iiwr how
I.ydU 10. Fink
liani'a Vegetable
Compound had
helped other
women who were
in the same condition so I said I will try
it for uivseU. I am very much fevtter
now and I recommend this medicine.
and will answer let ten from women aide
ing about it." Mrs. J. W. Albhrthon,
1U1S Miller Avenue, Miwion, Xexaa.
sm. to Hit-hard Ar-
. v - len nnd Fay
K' Wray, In the
Jlf lending rn-
Jfc mantle roles.
' " Z I "Tho " ri1 9 r
nJ?' f legion" hnstho
I K -
f stf
BEETLE CONTROL
IN DIAMOND LAKE
AREA EFFECTIVE
DIAMOND LAKE, Ore., July .11
(Special.) Only GO beetle-Infested
trees wero found In the
eight miles of water front of Dia
mond lake this year, where 2000
were four years ago. A. J. Jae-nlt-kle,
InKfOt control ttpeeinliat of
the United States foretry nerviee,
whom has J tint completed n heetle
Hurvey over this dtntrirt. states that
the Mtin-uure method recently pet-1
feeted has proved highly sueceiw
ful.
As the lake shore Is used hy
thousands of campers every year,
tho todgepole trees which make
u p m u.tt of the forest nea r t ho
lake nre considered hy the for
estry worvlce to have n high rec
reational value. Diamond lake is
lit the Untpuuu national forert nnd
Is therefore protected and admin
istered hy tho forest service. They
propose to continue this protec
tion for tha Diamond lake forests.
Most of the infested trees are
from 10 to KiO years of age and
it costs lesa than a dollar a tree
to stin-cui-e the heeUe. attacked
trees,
BUnER WOBBLES AS
nnnf Aln nun t..i.t h ')r
The huttor ' market wtiH barely
Htemlv tmlnv wllli ntihttnonta tn mil.
Ride marketR uniiHUally light. r
The aumiMou In the murket was
ton trrndPA. HilHtiiMUR vnu rmmrtnil
ju modei ato with rocolpt some-
wuni ngiuor.
THE MARKETS
Livestock
tie: fill, calves 10,' quotahly steady.
Hogs 200, steady. - - - .
Sheep 400, steady.
I'l-ottmv Ktenily
PORTLAND, July 9. (fF) But
ter: Burely steady, unchanged.
;ggH, milk (hutterfut), poultry,
country muats, unions, . potatoes,
wool, nuts, hay, cascara bark and
hops ftteudy and unahanged.
Wall Street Report .
NEW YOIIK, July 9. (P) Be
coming bored with iess.lmlsm some
traders endenvored to stir up 'a lit
tle bulllshnoHB in today's stocK
market, but found the speculative
fraternity Inclined to he simpletons
and apathetic. The short covering
which appeared yesterday was car
ried further, and rhare prices- gen
erally made fair progress, but erod
ing progrearsd nt a snail s pace.
The weekly report lor freight car
loadings covering the week ending
.lune 28, showed a gain of nearly
18,000 cars over the previous week.
The list generally absorbed the
profit Inking well. The close was
strong. Bales approximated 1,400,
000 shares.
Today's closing prices for 16 se
lected stocks gollow:, . .
Am, Can 118a,
Am. Tel. & Tel . 207
Anaconda 49
Col. Gas 67W
Cprtis Wright 7'A
General Electric (new) . 074
Kenncot Copper 38 Vi
Mont. Ward 34Vi
Radio Corporation 3574
Sears Koehuck .... 04
S. P 1154
United Aircraft 60V4
U. 3. Steel.. .j.., 167U
Int. T. & T. i.i.. ... 4H
- Nollnr-injured.
flAI.EM, Ore., July 9. W) (1.
a, Hlrsoh. sailor from thai navy,
hern nn riiflniinh uina ilirn,n A K
feet when his motorcyclo collided
last night with an automobile
driven by V, A. Johnson, Her I
pusly Injured, Illrich was taken ti
a hospital.
JOHN H. LOOK
Painting Decorating
Fin Intarler Work
Specialty : -.
PImim 111
, Women' Hom
$1.00 pair
lilk' from top to to with
Trrteb Rto!
Insurance
First Insurance
. . Agency
A. U HILL) Managar
fhooe 108 ' M N. Central
Madfora), Orageai
J 30 V
Coming to Medford
DR. MELLENIHIN
Special Attention
' i ;,i :. to i, i
Internal Medicine
DOES NOT 'OPERATE
Will be at
Hotel Holland
Tuesday, July 15
from 10 a.' m to 4' p.f m.
ONE DAY ONLY
No Charge For Consultation
Dr. Mellenthln's visit are great
ly appreciated and patronized, es
pecially by those who are suffering
or ailing from troubles of the in
ternal organs, in the chest or abdo
men; also head, ear, nose and
throat. The Doctor aecepta only
those who can be treated medicin
ally with the aid of correct diet
and hygiene for which a nominal
charge is made.
Women if married please bring
their husbands.
Whatever your complaint may be
it will bt of interest to consult the
Doctor on this trip..
Below are the names of a few of
his many satisfied patients:
Mrs. Harriet Anstadt, Astoria.
Alfred Clemmens, Corvallls.
Chaa. Desch, Portland.
W. G. Grubbe, Albany.
Mrs. J. G. Huntsucker, Toledo.
W. E. Hanklns, Mt. Hebron, Calif.
Denver Klncald, Ashland.
Bert Lampa, 8t. Helens.
L. H. Martin, Moro.
F. O,. Pollard,. Yreka, Calif. ;
E. F. 8mith, Heppner,
Mrs. Wm. Schuanlng, Helix.
Lee Oey, North Powder,
T, L. Shewn, Goldendale.
Emma Turner, Mikkalo.
Henry Trowbridge, John Day.
J. H. Wood) Eugene.
V. P. Harris, Athena.
Mrs. B, banks, Klamath Falls.
Mrs. Walter Scott, Mt. Angel.
Henry Sohulti, Pendleton.
Mrs. O. N. Kimball, Crabtree.
Mrs. Frank. Simpson, Hood River
Lee Slucher, La Grande.
Note above the exact date and
placet Permanent address: '268
So. Serrano, Lea Angeles, Calif.
G ood Pictu res of ,
Good Times . . .
YoU'RE missing lot of
fun l( you're not taking
Kodak snapshots of your
good times. Fun In seeing the
piccurea ovist
..now and later.
If you baa
Kodak, alwaya
remember tot
take itwith you,
If you haven't
on, let ua beta)
V i vnu Hlerr vourl
' roiay from our ompleW
stock. Brownie cost aa llttl
a tl. Kodaks, 15 up. Lot
models la colors her also. .-
. KODAK FILM
Bxptrt Photo Flnithfng '
Kodak, Gift and Book Store
S.H.FRALEY
"616 Pennsylvania, Medford
Vu art Invited to - nt tNIa aou
son at tho Mail Tribuno offloo anf
receive twe , ' ' . - '
TICKETS
TO A TALKING -PICTURE;
. I PROGRAM AT THK
A a Subscriber Guest of ih
TRIBUNE
WATCH THIS SPACE. If yen ere
a subscriber to the Mall TrlbuiH
your nam may appsar her temer.
row I Only aubaorlbera name will
be published and, during the dura,
tlon of this offer, all eubeerlbara
will be given an opportunity to
oy FREE .hows a QUESTS OP
THIt PAPER. - ;;
NOW PLAYING ' '
Sharkey-Schmelinj Fbt
TALKIES ,
SWEM'S
-FREE
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