' ' BEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD,. OREGOX. MONDAY. AFOrST irt 10:11
:,. 1 : : : :
mm- am m ,, . i . 1
mrmaay
PAGE three;
hover s
Characterized by
Usual Hard Work
L of President. Marked by Poverty, Richest Glory
r j nicinnninfmfints: Fpia Varafinno cn; i
JHU Uisaff" . ""iiuiio unjuyKU
- During Tenure of White House-
: Bv KAYMOM) CLAPPER
,' ." ; ' ' United i'rrw SlHff Comsponilciit.
'.iSHffOTON- Aug. 10. (UP) One more year haa' added its erindlns
Jin president Hoover.. .
have been of all varieties. Some were marked by povertv
iricbes. some My. glory; some by. heartbreaking disappointments'
fJoCtMin by hard,,wor)t,.nd..very little play. And as the years 8o
rgoever no doubt la more and more Inclined -to. agree with the
to ' the 'if st-.hundred years were the hardest.
tsnovsr u -rs. , .wuJa XIK uues not mnke
m.nervlEOd the bak-
. little modest tun
'I. . ..In ;the . presiden
tial .circle which
was spending the
week end at Hap
Idan camp.. The
last year Ilia
thrown, heavier
reap o.nslbUlties
upon the Presi
dent;. Ilurd Worker.
1 Washington
r 1 I cannot remember
V I a. Prcsident who
II I ; worked so
f ' hard,. In peace
.. ti me as Mr.
"T" Hoover.,
Lsu tk" aa vacation this year,
U MssJea-day cruise. ;to Porto
n list spring, no wub. i ...
. nation last year. Only his
j, nit end trips , to Rapldan
0Hve served to take, him away
s u problems on his desk. Even
ei tn i frequently Interrupted,
rig the debt moratorium nego
tiia ewn at camp he was con
iilj using the telephone and oncj
(to cut short his stay to get back
fisllnfton.
Rilt tils anxieties have been
ij. Hoover has stood up physically
& Diem to the satisfaction , of
ipbjslclan, Captain Joel T., Boone.
5. K. Mr. Hoover continues his
ieiM ball it Is actually a form
! idle; ball played with a heavy
a-nery morning. Tha is an
imnent-in Washington's almost
5,1! nattier. His hair Is gray
ijpidly and It Is thinning. Bu',
it holding his weight down and
1 disposition holds up herocally.
Exderlng what It has to contend
1
i Annoypil at Anecdote
fcwotly Mr. Hoover- became an
al it publication of numerous
ol Items about his . personal ac-
6, 'Yney'were mostly little hu
a iwcdotes. One most objected
iu to the effect that, worn out
istdebt moratorium negotiations
iiiwnpted an afternoon nap and
satemipted by a carpenter ham
as; outside. A servant) was dls
nad to declare a moratorium on
1 sat. There was a slmllle In the
etal which showed that the great
I n subject to the same, annoy -u
humbler folk. But Mr. Hoov
xgarded this as an Intrusion on
i1nte affairs. .
la public affairs, he displays
1 Sellnatton . to take the public
an Into his confidence. Seldom
atgotlatlons been conducted so
Wj is ere those attending the
rum proposal.
Attacks In 1,11.11.
.5o ns one of the big events of
litem's administration and the
"mad acclaim he received from
a In both parties brought about
time being a cessation In the
attack which had. been
on without Interruption al
n the day he took office.
7W is regarded by many B3
critical of the President's
It tends to set the Issues for
, Presidential campaign. Re
leaders are practically unan
"a l predicting Mr. Hoover's re
gion next year. They are pre-
2 w a hard campaign and are
aat a business pick-up will
b 1 'lmlnlstrat1on'8 aid be
rj 5,111 birthday arrives when
'Wibly will be In the midst of
fwpusn for re-election.
ifiris
IN BY DEATH
Howard Alwell, wife of J. H.
Site!!1 lown resld0"t of Med
t iT ,1e bas- resided tor more
Jra. passe,, n,.ay Bt thelr
Inwn. ' Elevemh street. Sun
nL!"" ""Bering Illness,
ttioj r" WM born at Acrln-
n ',, " " 1858. In 1891.
"rated in marriage to J. H.
H0 lUrvK'B. n u-
ne leaves one sister and
lh E- Rutledge of
yaaa; T. H., J. c. and
Ku-r; " ot Medford. ..
Vh,!'CM wm b held t the
fr A V?' 3:00 P- m- Tuesday
"aori.1 " me mea
"1 mausoleum
KtJ Vyuic House baa en-
01 1 'nciuae a com
! tZ m rlc aPPnces In-
1 ourners, washers.
t! d.n; ... ...
lH ,,,,llclt Will DC
'of Vdmion tne
prcs-
g, a. uonara
HBtu, ' no were form
a J" with th u,..t,.
4 af1?lmtr Music House
MRS. WALT ANTLE
A DESCENDANT OF
At the Holly
1 A
-. v' .-V ... St.."
Other Men's KWn
dran,t,c piay comoining a powerful
wmi a iaie of daring and
sacrifice, is now showing ftt ,
It orfcrs Grant Withers, Regis Toom
ey and Mary Astor.
Showing with the feature Is a news
reel, a novelty reel and a Sidney and
iu.iy ramiy entitled "All Hot and
Bothered." Several old-time fiddlers
will appear on the Holly stage In a
novelty presentation tonight.
.
Brisbane's Today
(Continued from Page One)
A store ot romantic hlstorv handed
down vtth, family heirlooms Is re
vived for Mrs. Walter Antle of this
city In an Item, recently published
in the Oregonlnn. It traces the his
tory of Portland cement.
. And while there Is nothing fanci
ful about cement Itself, the product
held a picturesque place on Mrs.
Antie's family tree, before It fell
from the branches, when ancestors
failed to hang on to their patents.
Portland cement was invented by
Mrs. Amies great grandfather, John
Aspdiu, a bricklayer of Leeds, Eng
land. In 1824. His son. William
Aspdln, put the product to Its first
great commercial use. when during
the reign of Queen Victoria, he con
structed the first tunnel under the
river Thames.
At the opening of the tunnel he
walked through the giant construc
tion with the queen herself. On
that occasion one of her ladles In
waiting gnve Mrs. Aspdln the beau
tiful hand carved lvorv fan. now
prized bv Mrs. Antle. !
William Aspdln was a contractor
of Cravcsend. Eng., but evidently
failed to keep the patents on the
product invented by his father.
"That's why we nre here," MT3.
Antle, who with Mr. Antle, recently
opened the Smoke House on East
Main street, said this morning.
Mr. Aspdln was also the grand
father of J. J. Osenbrugge, auto
denier of this city.
Speaking, of the history of the
product, the Oregonlan says " 'Port
land' was first applied to a cement
made In 1824 by . John Aspdln,, a
bricklayer of Leeds. England, who
mixed clay and lime In definite
proportions, burned them In a kiln
and pulverized the resulting mass.
He called his product Portland ce
ment, because concrete made from
it resembled Portland stone, a fa
mous building stone obtained from
the isle or peninsula of Portland on
the coast of Dorsetshire."
WEDNESDAY AT Y.
The French class to be conducted
by the Y. W. C. A i will open Wed
nesday evening.- Miss Dorothy Mit
chell, secretary, announced this
morning. The class will be taught
by Mrs. Walter Kress of Paris and
New York.
Anyone Interested may register for
the class, which will be held cacn
Wednesday evening. Mimeographed
copies of text material will be fur
nished and the students will not
be required to purchase any books
Beginning next month the Y. w.
C A will offer nnother series ol
classes, including advertising, sales
manship, dramatics, tap dancing.
French and Spanish.
EARLElNDHISGlRLS
Earle and his Fox Craterian ushcr
.,n fnminh sevml numbers
on the opportunity broadcast over
radio stat on i""" ,
rauio :.., n,.pnine bv remote
control from the Fox Craterlan su.ce.
Arthur Hnrdesty. tenor
several solo,, and other loca artist.
wlU be featured, according to Earle
Davis, in charge of arrange..
t
Maurice Chevalier
Delights Fox Fans
Maurice Chevalier again "P";"
. it hi. latest hit.
local movie - -
playing at the Fox craterlan th
aire Maurice Chevalier made c
"and sang. Ernst Lubltsch de.iclou.iy
sly comedy creai
. . ...ntf beauty eom-
dttte toioena u. HiD-
peted for favor., with Mnrlam Hop
kins' vivacious iove....
Tonight on the stage o the Fox
Craterlan will be held the regu
lar weeky Amateurs'
Radio Broaaciu", F'"- n
group of local t E-ie Davis
officiate an ni-'
will
nie3
. . - - A a Ir elnftji U-
KrvtniKiow, - .....
prem.. The Peasley. opp. Holl)
theater. .
Portrait of distinction. T h
Peasley. QPP- l"-
Broken win do" bT
Trowbridge Cabinet Workt,
Is a government undertaking. Ar
bitration, should settle any question.
One complaint Is. that mechanical
drills. Instead of hand drills arc
used In tunnelling. Days for , ob
jecting to .perfected machinery have
gone by.
The French, when the government
was involved in a railroad strike,
lost no time. The government draft
ed the strikers into the army, and
said to go to work, or be shot for
mutiny. They went to work.
French methods would not suit
the United States, but no union,
no I. W. W. or group of other work
ers, should be allowed to check the
Hoover dam construction,. Labor
questions should be settled by arbi
tration, and no time lost.
,
Europe notices the peaceful tone
of Mussolini's recent speeches. He
made enough speeches of the other
kind to make Europe realize that
Italy Is an independent nation. Now,
he reaches out a friendly hand, go
ing to Germany to visit Chancellor
Bruenlng.
Mussolini announces that ' Italy
will buy German oil. . Good news
for Germany, bad news for Britain.
Italians have not forgotton the price
they paid for' coal-during ' the war,
or the difficulty , with which they
were able to get ANY coal.
Times and crime have ' changed.
Bill Sykes, with his heavy club, bull
dog. and his pitifully small earnings
would not recognize his fellows of
the criminal world today.
New York, police have arrested a
criminal, whose records Include nine
months in college, nine months la
Jail and robbery, of many stores
which he visited In a 15,000 foreign
made automobile. He lived at ,t
fashionable hotel, kept liorses for rid
ing in the park. In his apartment,
the gentleman had many suits of
clothes, fifteen pairs of shoes. Yet
he Is a. beggar compared to the really
successful criminals of today, whose
takings run Into the millions, and
whose gifts to public officials, from
Judges down to prohibition agents,
make the salaries of those officials
seem small. ' '
, 4.4 .
Nmr Amarillo. Texas, scientists of
Michican university have dug up the
complete coat of armor of a giant
pthytosaur, a croccdllc snapea c. fu
ture, weighing as much as an ele
phant, that had Its day In the Trlas
siac age. fifty million years ogo.
Nature, evolution, and tne powers
that control us. are never In a hurry-
The ancient monsters have gone.
Troubles that disturb us will go
gradually. What we shall look like,
after evolution finishes it work with
us and we become a race, with no
harder work than to push a button.
we cannot guess.
We probably shall look os llltlc
like men of today, as the North Sea
whale looks like a small tree shrew,
from which It deneends.
An lntercstln7Ptu of clvlllz
.. . m vmk City. I uncover-
lion. m
ed by Judge Seabury. Investigating
lo-al politics, who finds that politi
cal clubs are more than social gath
ering They are gathering
places for gangsters, cr.mmau, ......
mcldeutallr. gambling
which those that gamble are swlnd
,cd. not even having the gamble.-
usual chance.
Profits Irom these Interesting
clubs, which usually call themselves
patriotic, are divided between the
criminals that manage the gambling
and the political "leaders." that sup
ply the clubs and the victims. What
politicians would call a "very !
fifty-Ilfty"
Jn.-kntiin Men,
SEASIDE. Ore, Aug. 10. (API
Judscn P. Van Hauten. lormer.y
well known stockman of eastern Ore
gon slid New Mexico, died at bis home
here Sunday. -: -.
Brill Sheet Heul Works, in
expert repairing, fender anil m
bvdy repairing.
Mr. anil Mrs. Hopkins
Receive Congratulation.
Friends In this city of Mr. and
Mrs. William Stephen Hopkins read
with pleasure the following Item
in the Oregonlan:
"Mr. and Mrs. William Stephen
Hopkins of Palo Alto are receiving
felicitations on the birth of a son,
William Stephen, Jr.. on July 2.
Mrs. Hopkins will be remembered
as Miss Anna Katherlue Chapman
of Portland."
Mr. Hopkins is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Hopkins who lived lor
many years at the Snowy Butte
orchard near Central Point, playing
a prominent part In the social Hie
of southern Oregon.
sltfney Smith. Leave
Tmluy ft:r Iowa
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney S. Smith and
eons. Clyde and Stanley, left this
morning by motor for Washington,
Iowa, where they plan to make their
home.
Their departure Is 1 regretted by
many local trends who have enjoyed
their presence at social and sportB
events.
The Smiths formerly lived In Iowa,
and although they are returning to
their old home, promise to share some
of their time in the future with Med
ford friends.
MtsriuniPM Patterson and
Prestou Entertain
Mrs. Stewart Patterson and Mrs.
Black Preston were hostesses Sunday
evening at a delightful picnic supper
served at T. Sinter Johnston's ranch
on Rogue river.
Guests for the affair were Misses
Rcxaune RuM, Peggy- Humlll and
Eleanor Egan and Messrs. Ernest
Hamill. II, Bcu Crawford, Tom Boal
and Stewart Patterson, who are here
from Chicago to spend the summer,
and John Wellls and Carle Preston.
Rev. and Mrs. Brown
Leave for Victoria.
Rev.- and Mrs. Leonard Brown of
Santa Clara, Cal.,. who were guests
last week of their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. P. Brown and Dr. and Mrs.
Frederick Johnson, left on Saturday
for Victoria, B. C. They will return
in two weeks to spond the remainder
of their vacation in Medford.
-
Vacationing at ...
Lake 'o the Woods.
Mrs. Walker Mason and Mrs. Hnr
old Sinclair and their two young
sous left yesterday for Lake o' the
Woods, where they will spend the
coming week. ,.
-
Mrs. Chapman
Visits Here.
Mrs. Prank Chapman of Portland
arrived In Medford by train this
morning to spend two or three days
as the guest of Mrs. Leonard Car
penter. Miss Hcnsh'V Hi est E,
Of sister Hero.
Miss Bernyce Hensley of Portland
is in this city to spend a week
as guest of her sister, Miss Mar
garet Hensley. having arrived Sat
urday evening.
MIkscs Hayes Return
From Portland Trip ,
Misses Mary and Patricia Hayes re
turned Saturday from Portland,
where they were guests of friends for
two weeks and the inspiration fr
much entertaining in the rose city.
NolliiKkys Hpend-4
Wtek Knd l city
Superintendent and Mrs. E, C. So
linsky left this morning for Crater
Lake, after spending the week end in
Medford.
I
TENGWALD TELLS
The cast doesn't" want any smal
poors this year. Carl Y. Tengwald,
who recently returned from Chicugo,
where he spent much time In the
fruit auctions, told members of the
Klwanls club today at the Hotel Med
ford. '
"The marketing of our pears here
is done in a very childish way." Mr.
Tengwald also told the club In his
address at luncheon. "There Is obvi
ously something wrong when one
can't buy peors from the leading
stands of the city, when carloads of
them are coming in from the went,"
he explained.
Mr. Tengwold encountered this
condition and also met many pro
prietors of stands, who had never
heard of Oregon pears.
Trafric and police regulations in
Chicago received much praise In Mr.
Tengwald 's talk. "I would rat.'ier
drive a car In Chicago than In Med
ford" he stated, describing the sim
ple system which haa been worked
out to handle traffic problems. ;
He also found the 10 cent price of
gasoline pleasing and says that altho
the school teachers are receiving only
script for money, it Is accepted by
nearly all firms and works no hard
ship upon the staff.
There are 01 banks In Chicago
closed, but most of them should
never have been opened. There are
also many stores closed. Mr. Teng
wald admitted and the old law ol
the survival of the fittest is working
itself out at a rapid pace.
A. J. Johnsen, new district man
ager of the Standard Oil company of
California, Informed the Klwanlans
that he Is mighty glad to be In Med
ford and has never found a city
Him this on In hmpiulltv -
The pause that refreshes,
at Heath Drug Store
Fountain the coolest
store in town.
s
(raduate Nurses
INtttuoue Krvlon.
Miss Jane Qavin, executive secre
tary of the State Nurses' association,
will be unable to meet with the
Graduate Nurses' association here
Thursday of this week so the after
noon tea announced Sunday has
been postponed. Tho affair will be
held later and the date will be an
nounced SOOlt. '5
Miss McCollom
Is Honor (iiiest.
Misses Joyce Gage and Mar J or ie
Lindley entertained at luncheon Sat
urday in Ashland at the Uthia
Springs hotel, honoring Miss Esther
McCollom of this city. Included
among the guests were Miss Ca
rtta Oifford. Miss Carmen Hlttson,
Mrs. Nyle Oifford. Mrs. Arthur Hess
and Mrs. B. R. Pinch.
Mrs. Harvey Cclchrales
r.tU.v-Tiriid Birthday
Mrs. A. L. Hnrvey of Ashland,
mother of Mrs. E. M. Wilson of this
city, celebrated her Sard birthday
Tuesday with a little party at her
home. ,
Guests were Mrs. Emma Bennett.
Mrs. Ada Rice, Mrs. Anbury Beall.
Mrs. Jesse Richardson and Mrs. Wil
son. Medford Polk IHne
Alt LI Mutt Cabin
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hill and
daughter Carlon Jane Hill, Mrs. Edith
Plf.'i Thompson and daughters Mary
and Patsy, were dinner guests yester
day of Dr. and Mrs. B. R. Elliott at
their river cabin at Shady Cove. The
Thompsons were guests of the Elli
otts for the week end.
supper Party Tonight
To Honor Miss Thompson
Miss Mary Thompson, who sails
from San Francisco for Korea Friday
will be feted this evening at a supper
party for which Miss Josephine Bullls
will be hostess. Fourteen guests have
been Invited for the evening,
IteiT of Honor
Met ts Tuettday
The Degree of Honor will meet
Tuesday evening, August U. at
o'clock, at the hall on the third floor
of the Medford Pharmacy. Mrs. Loul
A. Oelser, original director, will be
present. '
. -
Rlckerts Entertain
(ileitis nt Culilu.
Guests of Dr. and Mrs. Jud Rlck-
ert at their river cabin Sunday
were Mr. and Mrs. John Mante. Mrs.
Evelyn Walters and sons Prank and
Walter of Medford and Mrs. T.
Franco and two daughters and Reg
inald Thompson of Ashland.
Mr. and Mrs. Porter
Are ttnroiite Home ...
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Porter of this
city, who have been vacationing In
Victoria, B, C, are now in Portland
en route homo.
Mrs. Piatt Returns
From Trip North.
Mrs. H. L. Piatt returned Saturday
evening from spending a month in
Eugene, Monmouth, Salem and Port
land, where she divided her time
between business and pleasure,
duetts at Crater
Luke Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Pease and
daughter Jean, and Miss . Colista
Jchnson spent Sunday at Crater
Lake. i
Iturelwuis Spend
Week -K ml at lake. , ,
Mr. and Mrs. E. T, Burolson were
among Medford people who spent
the week-end at Lake o tho Woods.
KOPPES HEEDS CALL
GREAT OPEN SPACES
Medford restaurants nre threat
encd with extinction during the next
seven days, as Romeo Koppes, ever
hungry scribe and theater napper,
lett yesterday for hl annual vaca
tion. The move was forecaat lost
month when other Mall Tribune
workers noticed Mr. Koppes had
started to clear oft hla desk. The
task came to a grand finale Satur
day night when a garbage truck was
called.
Mr. Koppes went to Crater lake
Sunday. He will spend Severn) days
there and later come down to Pros
pect for another rest before return
Inf? to the city.
IEST ORCHARD TO
F
C. C. Lemmon. chairman of the
executive committee of commerce
and, agriculture, and A. S. V. Carpen
ter, conferred with tho county agent
this morning , anent funds for the
Southern Oregon Federal Experiment
Orchard, and the listing of the same
on the 1933 budget.
No definite action was taken, but
assurances were given that "purely as
a business proposition it would re
ceive favorable consideration." The
county would expend 3500 per year.
on the basis of the federal govern
ment expending from 15.000 to $20.
000 annually. The state also shares
in the expense.
As the tendency of the times is
rut, lless tax reduction some minor
opposition has developed, but the
plan has the endorsement generally
of fruitmen, businessmen, ami bank
ers, who feci It has high merit, from
an economic standpoint, not to men
tion educational value. It is figured
It Is sound financing to spend 3500
for an expenditure of $16,000.
County officers nre busy preparing
the budget estimates for the coming
year, to be in the hands of the coun
ty court by a week from Wednesday.
The budget committee for 'the com
ing fcycar will be named before Sep
tember 1, and the work of studying
the 1932 budget will start shortly
thereafter. Retrenchment to the last
penny will bo he order of tho day.
The personnel of tho budget com
mittee has not been decided upon,
but they will be selected for their
conservatism, knowledge of Jackson
county conditions, and representative
of the fruit, farm and bunking and
business Interests. Tho budget com
mittee acts with tho county court In
fixing the budget.
Lovely Perm, waves M.60. Finger f
avuig .65. Prevost's, Bio W. Main i
Phone 308. , I
Auto glaus replaced while you wait.
Medford Plate Olass Co.
ROASTING CAN MAKE
OR SPOIL THE
.FLAVOR OF COFFEE
Hills Bros.' Patented Process
Removes Risk of Ruining
Roast Assures Match- ...
less Flavor, Always
Roasting determines the flavor of
coffee. Too much or ton littln pan
cause dissatisfaction. But there is
a perfect decree of ronBt! Hills
Bros, invented and natcnted a nrnc
ess that insures that degree for
evory pound. It is called Controlled
Roasting.
As the accuracy of tho hour-glass
depends upon un even, continuous
flow . . . n little at a time . . . so a
perfect, unvarying degree of roast
is secured for Hills Bros. Coffee by
Controlled Roasting tho patented
process that roasts evenly, con
tinuously ... a little ai a time. The
rare blend passes through the roast
ers in a steady, unvarying stream.
And instead of guessing as is
necessary with ordinary, bulk meth
ods Hills Bros, control tho tem
perature of the roast automatically.
Every berry is perfectly roasted.
As a rosult, every pound has a
matchless, unvarying flavor.
To keep this doficlous colTee fresh,
Hills Bros, pack it in vacuum cans.
Air,"fchich makes colTco go stale,
is removed and kept out of tho cans.
Ordinary, "nir-tiirht" cans won't
keep coffee fresh. But Hills Bros.
Coffee can t go stale. Order some
today. Ask for it by name, and
look for the Arab trade-mark on
the can.
Hills Bros. Coffee, Inc., San
Francisco, California. last
i A .1
CV- it
Drrss Making Special -1
All work guaranteed. 811k dresae
3 5ii. Knsemhlcir H OP. Tel. 638-W.
YOU LIKE
ACTION!
THRILLS!
ROMANCE!
vor Wll.l, 1.1KK
THIS PICTI'KK.
IT IS
SUPREME
ENTERTAINMENT!
oraM
'
. , ' '. . '.
AIko -New
Novelty
Sidney-Murray
Comedy
; TONITB
On the HI ago
"Old Time Fiddlers"
WOMEN
MARY ASTOR
GRANT WITHERS
f REGIS T00MEY, .
' JOAN' HI.OMlKl.li J'HEir
KOIII.KK JAMBS, CAONEV
IT'S A 1'tCTI'RB TUB WHOI.K
FAMILY Wll.l. ItNJOYI'
NOW PLAYING! '".
ORCHARD LADDERS
Wo are offering; the bent ladders that wore' ever lised'
in Rogue River Valley at prices neW known' before.
BUY AT HOME AND SAVE MONEY
MEDFORD LADDER WOKS
Ono-hulf Block West of Lincoln' Schbbr
O N G EM
Funeral Parlor
v , WeSt jjWiain at Newtown
Office County Cbrbfier ;
A Big Free Goodyear Theatre R&tf
Thursday Night
Starting 9 mi ?
better
t a ste
Matchless flavor by the
bowlful! That' what
Kellogg's PEP Bran Flakea
give you.
These crisp, crunch? flake
tempt you tease you to
taste their goodness.
And the more of them you
eat the more you'll agree
that Kellogg' PEP Bran
Flakes are better brtn Btkes.
Made by Kellogg In Battle
Creek.
0
BRAN FLAKES
1 FREE S
$39
II II 11
I MMM ;
HOW
For All ' Auto Owners
JOE E. BROWN
IN ;: :
and Selected Short Subjects
. : ; ..I .
Added Attraction!
A 2-reel picture of modern business
- featuring the making and Belling of '.
GOODYEAR TIRES
wSSni. t.. Medford Service Stkiift