MEDFORD MAIL. TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1932.
page foue
Medford mail Tribune
"Cvtryoni In Soulhtrn Ortflw
nidi Ihl Hail TrlbuiW
Dtlll Eiwpl Saturday
Piibll'hed try
MKDKOltD PBINTINU CO.
S3-2T.30 N. Vlf At, Www
BOB EOT ft. HUHL. SWUM
t U KNAPP, Manager
An Iixlrpeodenl Nipip
Entered M leeomj etui natter il bltdTord
Oregon, under Art of Harea g. ihtu.
SURflCIUI'TIUN RATKB
Br Mall In Advance
Dally. rear I'-OO
Dally, ni'mlh 10
By Carrie, In Alliance Medford, Aihland,
JacUomllle, Central Point, I'hoenU, Talent. Gold
Hill ind on WiUmtn.
Dally, monUi I -T&
Iially, odc year f.60
All lermi, euh to idTinee.
Of flrlal paper of the City of Medford.
Official paiwr of JirlsGD County.
HE.MHKH Uf TUB AHHIIC I ATKI i'KMIS
Itectlflng (full Leased Win Hentct
Tbe AisorlatMl Preu U eteliuhely entitled to
the uu fof puh licit Ion of all mm dltpttrhtf
credited to it or otherwtM credited In thli oaper
and alio to Uia local newt publithtd herein.
All rlghti for putillcatloo of epeclal dbpatcbw
bereln are alao resenrd.
MKMBKH 09 UN1TKD PIIKBB
MEMIIKK OK AUDIT HI' UK AO
OK ClIlClILATIUNfl
Adrerttilni Hfpreientatlm
H. C. MUtiENHEN COMPANY
Offlect la Nea York, Uiieica. Iirtrnll, 80
rraneltca. Lot Angalea, Seattle, Portland
41 MM
ZiJBi!aftAociATiow "
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Terr;
A citizen who hax been waiting
ince the Wall St. cranh, for the Lord
and Lydla Plnkham to "turn some
thing up," got mad Tuea. and turned
It up himself.
i
The rush of candidates la over. The
next rush will be to Inform the pub
lic, If they don't net enough votes,
that they were "robbed" at the polls,
Dandelion greens are finding their
way to the tables, and It' beau all, j
the accuracy with which dandelion
greens find their way to the tables. ,
Most of the dandelions are devoured
as roughage, but some are converted j
Into dandelion wine, a fearful and j
dynamic concoction, that shrivels tne j
Inner organs, and causes the Imbiber
to nmke a face at which circle-eyed
dogs bark.
Congress Intends to cook up
legislation "to stiffen the backbone
of the land." The rigidity of the
spinal column la not so vital. What
la needed Is use of a German trick
during the Great War, via: "Close the
Jaws of the offensive."
THR COMPLETE (WTIC1HM
(larden City Review)
A group of banjo twanging,
nasal moaning type of self-styled
entertainers billed as the "Lone
some Hill Billies" gave a per
formance at the local theater
recently. Those who attended
the show are of the opinion that
the hill-billies are lonesome be
cause they find after the first
two or three numbers that they
are generally the only occupants
of the house.
The political mess which has been
spewing for months In Portland, with
almost dally hell-raisings at the
council meetings, has finally given
birth to a series of grand Jury Indict
ments. In most of the true bills is
the phrase, "no criminal Intent." This
may mean they were returned for
lack of anything else to do, and may
hap, the nearness of a primary elec
tion may have had something to do
with the rumpus. The trouble seems
to have grown to a ruckus, over the
location of a market on Front street
or Fifth street. Several of those In
dicted are now running for congress,
the legislature, and way-points. Oth
ers Include political crunndnrs for the
RIGHT, who were In these parts two
years ago wiring the Intelligent voters
for free electric lights. There may be
some political fits thrown here In
their behalf ere the ahennanlgan Is
closed.
To the candidates for the legisla
ture from Jackson county: What do
you think of "tick" at the gas silos,
for the depressed proletariat
"Your correspondent would be glad
to hear of the death of any resident,
as soon as possible" (Paisley Items)
Frankness and candor, both out
poken. HOW MKK A I AUY
(Press DUpatch)
TJnfrlghtened by ner arrest and
the revelation of her plot to kill
her husband. Mrs. Alberdlna
Frank grew pale and afraid when
a mouse ran out of a waste ,
basket while she was waiting at
the prosecutor's office yesterday
afternoon.
"I can stand almost anything j
except a mouse," she said, shud- I
derlng.
It has been raining more or less 1
consistently since last October. There-
fore do not be surprised If the
weatherman reports a deficit of 14.78
Inches, seasonal norms), below mean.
I
TIIF, FINNY DEPKKsaiON I
(Pmpitrla Gazette) '
Last year your old gadding Uncle
Sttm bought more gas than any year j
In hla history last year mind yon
In a time of catastrophe and deprea- ,
ston. More than that, lost year he
electrified more homes, used more
Juice than ever before, bought more
electric washers, vacuum cleaner,
electric ranges, radios and was bus- j
ring around In 30 million Joy buggies. I
What is the answer? I
The answer la that among the j
merchant and professional class in i
the middle stratum of our American i
life, things are going on about as they
were except they are seated stiff.
When the middle classes get the scare
out of them the poor man will get
hla wagse back and the rich man will
regain his Income. Then we shall all
live happily ever after.
By way of variety, one Oregon com-,
munlty Is fighting over fixing the
road to the cemetery. Instead of how I
the schoolins am part their haU,
The Alex Sparrow Parkway
IN OUR opinion, no more fitting memorial to Alex Sparrow
could be conceived, than the proposed parkway along the
Crater Luke highway.
Such a memorial would not only commemorate li is many
yenrs of devoted service to Crater Lake park, as superintendent,
but in a peculiar sense, would symbolize his love of the outdoors,
and his life-long devotion to conserving the natural beauties
of our forests, for the generations yet to come. '
The proposed memorial would preserve for all time, th'e
glorious trees bordering this six-mile strip of Crater Lake
national forest, and protect this area from the woodsman's axe,
and the encroachments of a selfish and sordid commercialism.
Such a memorial moreover would strike that note of rugged
idealism which was such a dominant trait in Alex Sparrow's
character, and bring into sharp relief a principle or public
policy in which he so thoroughly believed.
.
npiIIS principle was briefly, to preserve the natural beauties
not only of the Crater Lake highway, but all the highways
of Southern Oregon.
The establishment of the Alex Sparrow Memorial Parkway
wotdd serve as a constant reminder of the value of such a
principle, and the necessity cf carrying it out as a permanent
and uninterrupted policy, so that the forest borders of these
highways, not only within the national forest, but without,
shall never be destroyed.
Phar Lap Flashes Out
'T'llE sudden death of Phar Lap, Australia's 'wonder horse,
crowds all other news from the front page. At the peak
of his sensational racing career, only a few weeks after winning
the Agua Calicntc derby, this pride of the Antipodes succumbs
suddenly to colic, induced it is said, by his nipping a bit of
dew soaked fox-tail.
Phar Lap to the last was true to his name, Phar Lap being
Senegalese for lightning. Death came to him like a lightning
bolt from the blucj he covered the track like a bolt of lightning,
embodied in a perfect racing machine, of taut sinews and long
muscles. Born an unpromising colt, looking like an ill-nourished
kangaroo, he suddenly flashed out into a veritable speed demon,
and earned for his owners over a third of a million dollars.
Like a lightning flash he came, quick as a lightning flash
he disappears; and not only the press wires of this country,
but the trans-Atlantic and trans-Pacific cables, arc laden with
the details of his passing.
Well
'T'WO local news items, testify to the sound judgment of two
of our important governing bodies.
The Medford School board, instead of waiting for the inevit
able popular demand, anticipates it, by cutting off a round
$50,000 from the publio school budget for next year. This
action will meet with universal public approval, for no material
reduction in taxes can be achioved, without a material cut in
the expenses of education.
The City Council selects Samuel Greeley, of the firm of
Tearse, Greeley and Hansen of Chicago to make a survey of
the Medford sewage problem, and present what he regards as
the best and most economical plan for its satisfactory solution.
'T'inS action was based upon the sound assumption that in a
matter of such importance, THE BEST ABILITY AVAIL
ABLE SHOULD BE SECURED. Mr. Greeley is recognized as
ono of the most efficient sanitary engineers in the country,
an acknowledged leader in his profession,
A man of extended experience and exceptional ability, he is
also a man of the highest integrity.
THE people of Medford can re-.t assured, that Mr. Greeley
will point out to them the way to solve this sewage prob
lem, at the least expense, consistent with the protection of the
health of this community.
The members of the City Council and the members of the
Chamber of Commerce oommittce, are to be oommended for
the good judgment shown in thus selecting the best ability
available to conduct this important preliminary survey.
OREGON PRIM JACKSON COUNTY
BALLOT CROWDED CANDIDATE PILING
BY BOTHPARTIES CREATESJECORD
(Continued irutn rage One.) (Continued irom Page One)
three on the Democratic were entered
before 6 o'clock yesterday afternoon.
Robert N. Stanftsld, former senator,
and Kenneth Harlan, Portland rate
expert, were added to the name of
Senator Frederick Stelwer, Alfred K
Clark and Robert Gordon Duncan for
Republican nomination. Elton Wel
kins of Portland filed in the final
minutes to compete against Marshall
N. Dsn and Walter d lesson.
In the race for congressional seats,
Charles H. Martin. Democrat, of the
third district, la the only one with
out competition In the primaries.
Four Republicans, Including Con
gressman W. C. Haw ley, and two Dem
ocrat are listed from the first dis
trict; Robert R. Butler has competi
tion for nomination and election In
the second district, while four seek
the Republican honors In the third.
Three Heek Treasury Post.
Among the late filings was that of
J. W. Maloney, Democrat, of Pendle
ton, who will compete In the general
election for state treasurer. Rufui
C. Hoi man and Milton Bcherplng are
In the contest for the Republican
nomination. Hsj I. Ho, secretary
of state, competes against Oeorge A
Palmiter for nomination, while Ray
H. Wlseoarver of McMlnnviUe Is alone
on the Democratic ballot for that
office.
Attorney-Oeneral I. H. VanWinkle
has a young Portland attorney. Karl
C. Bronaugh, Jr., to battle for nom
ination, which in this cose win be
election. Mnce no Democrat filed (or
that ollics.
Done!
the campaign Is apt .to rage.
A report was scattered over the
county yesterday afternoon that
Susan ne Homes Carter, county school
superintendent, had failed to secure
the proper number of names on her
petitions, and thereby was In default.
The technical error was cleared up
ere closing time. She will be opposed
by A. J. Hanby of this city and C. R.
Bowman of Phoenix In the Republi
can primaries.
Four Would He Clerk
For the county clerkship, Delilah
Stevens Meyer. Incumbent, and
Oeorge R. Carter, grace the Republi
cs n ticket, and Vic H. Beckman and
Lewis Ulrlch are the Democratic
aspirants.
For the district attorneyship Oeorge
A Codding, Democrat incumbent,
seeks re-nomlnatlon and T. J. ffn
rlght of this city and William Brlgg.
Jr., of Ashland on Republican ticket.
Campaign for the Justice of the
peaces hi p. Medford district, promises
'9 develop some heat with Glenn O.
ylor. Incumbent. William R. Cole
man. Rverett Br at ton and Fred L.
Colvig aa Republican contenders, and
W. H. Canon and James 8tesrt, after
the Democratic victory.
J. B. Coleman, assessor and A O.
Walker, treasurer, are unopposed for
t9 plsce on the Republican ticket.
Tom Pankey of Central Point, la
the Democratic offering for commis
sioner. The Republican entrants are
L. M. Sweet. 8sms Vallev. W. R
(Shorty! Morris. Table Rock. O. B.
Velin. Medford, and Ralph Billings,
Asnlsnd.
Today
By Arthur Brisbane
The Smallest Baby,
What Sort of Keynote?
Small, Surprised Terrier,
We May Learn to Think.
Copyright King Features Synd.. Inc
In A pasteboard box in Kan
sas City, with hot water bottles
around it, lies a small male
human being weighing exactly
one pound. If still alive, he
will be three days old when you
read this. Doctors think he
will live.
This smallest baby, born too
soon, somewhat undernourish
ed, has extraordinary vitality,
and absorbs liquid from an eye
dropper. All mothers will be intensely
interested in the child. All
Wall Street will say is: "It re
minds you of recent dividends
and values."
The Democratic party has
selected for keynoter Senator
Alven W. Bnrkley of Kentucky.
As temporary chairman of the
Democratic" national conven
tion he will keynote eloquently.
The next question Is what will the
"keynote" be? "I want a Job." la
not a convincing keynote but demo
crats thus far do not seem united on
any other.
It seems strange that a national
situation with so many complications
should not have developed some one
definite plan.
Do you know of any plan that
Democrats have In mind, or Republl
cans ether?
In the General Electric plant at
Schcenectady yesterday, a small, wire
haired terrier barked Into a micro
phone, and barked and barked. Every
time that he barked, he was a sur
prised terrier, for his bark, having
gone around the world, by way of
Holland, Java and Australia, came
back and barked In his ear. Of course,
he didn't know how far the bark had
gone, but to bark and have hla barks
return to him In a fraction of a
second was enough to delight any
terrier.
The radio Is a great invention. If
men only had something to say worth
sending around the world.
Little by little the people of the
United States will be compelled to
think for themselves, and even do
something for themselves.
New Yorkers, as has been suggested,
will do some thinking when the city
taxes them a penny or two on every
subway ride.
The people of Mississippi, from
whom, according to yesterday's Asso
ciated Press figures, 39.609 farms and
much city property have been seized
for taxes, will also do some thinking
Mississippi is no exception. It Is
said that In Michigan one-third of
the country real estate land has been
abandoned, because It wasn't worth
while paying taxes on It. Whether
tax gatherers seize your property, or
you give It to them, makes little dir
fere nee,
4-
However, not all news Is sad. We
shall soon be told all about the pro
cess of Isolating Vitamin C, discovered
by a young professor of chemistry at
the University of Pittsburgh. It Is
the lack of Vitamin O that causes
scurvy, and Isolating the vitamin is
Important.
And Dr. Walter Damrosch, whose
concerts, broadcast by the General
Electric company, are an Important
part of this country's education, tells
you "crooners are not born that way."
Some of them can sing, and few
would croon, except for pay.
Cardinal O'Connell's criticism of
the crooners has helped and sounds
that suggest a love-sick ohlmpsnree
mumbling to Its mate will not vex
you forever.
Yesterday Wall Street continued
shaking like an aspen lraf, or calves
foot Jelly. The worry Is about taxes
put on the brokers' business. In ef
forts of congress to 'dig up" new
taxation.
A Wall Street man calls attention
to the fact that when a customer
buys and sells one hundred shares of
American Telephone and Telegraph,
thee assorted burdens are laid upon
him. The broker gets 135 for buying
the stock, 35 for selling It. The
nation lays a tax of $37 on the
transaction, and the state of New
York collects a total tax of R1.
A committee investigating condi
tions in Hawaii reports "we found in
Hawaii no organlred crime, no Impor
tant criminal class, and no criminal
racket."
We. on "the mainland.' have or
ganlred crime developed Into a great
Industry, a criminal class that draws
an income as great as that of the
United State, and criminal racket
without end. We should, send, aiwth.
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed letters pertaining to personal neaitfc and hygiene, not to disease
diagnosis or treatment, will oe answered by Or. Brady If a siamped tell -addressed
envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in Ink
Owing to the large numoer of letters received only a few can be answered
here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions Ad
dress Or. WUilam Brady In care of The Mall Tribune.
6LPPOSE THE DOO
The diagnosis of rabies In man is
still a matter of opinion, not of sci
entific fact. The characteristic lesion.
In the opinion of
the pathologist
who believes such
a disease occurs In
man, is the so-called
"Negri bod y."
This is a collection
of round cells
around ganglion
cells In the brain
tissue, as seen un
der the microscope.
But sometimes
pathologists differ
In opinion In a given iise, one be
lieving he sees the "Negri bodies," an
other believing he does not. It seems
that these "Negri bodies" may be
closely simulated by groups of round
cells which are present In Inflamed
tissues In any case: the round cells
resemble red blood corpuscles.
So I think the occurence of rabies
In man Is unproved. I am an ag
nostic about this, as I am about the
specific disease known as gout. In
my opinion the grave or fatal lllneas
which some excellent physicians call
rabies Is a modified form of tetanus,
lockjaw.
Mate Impressive, to my mind, than
the popular legends am. the medical
traditions about "hydrophobia" or
"madness' 'In persons bitten by "mad"
dogs or other rabid animals. Is the
experience of employes of a great city
whose duties Include the capturing
of "mad" dogs. Men engaged In this
work for the city of New York have
been bitten by the rabid animals l:i
a great many cases but have never
developed rabies or anything like .t.
Moreover, according to medical au
thorities who do not believe In hu
man rabies, only 16 per cent of per
sons bitten by rabid animals become
Infected. It seems to me that such
a rate of Infection might be expected,
from lockjaw (tetanus).
Medical authorities who describe
rabies In man say the Illness has an
Incubation period of from two weeks
to three months, -that is, the first
symptoms develop that length of time
after infection. Bites or wounds about
the face or head give a shorter incu
bation period. This Is true also of
tetanus, though the usual Incubation
period of tetanus Is from four days
to three or four weeks. They say
rabies has three stages. First, a pre
monitory stage of melancholia and
depression, insomnia. Irritability, in
creased sensitivity to light, vague
fear, and severe headache. The wound
In this stage becomes Irritated, pain
ful and numb. Sort that out for
yourself. It sounds pretty much like
an anxiety neurosis to me. -
In the second stage the patient be
comes restless, excited, perhaps mani
acal. The slightest stimulus causes
violent, reflex spasms, particularly of
the mouth, throat, larynx and breath
er commission to Hawaii to get sug
gestions for use here.
Efforts by British and Dutch grow
ers of rubber, producers of nearly
all of the world's supply, have failed
to raise prices of the raw material.
Therefore, the present extremely
low cost of tires will continue, and
one of many good reasons for buying
an automobile will continue also.
parents
BOXES
My Alice Juriun Penle.
Into the average household there
come In the course of the year a hun
dred or more of boxes of every size
Mid description.
Most of them are thrown out be
cause there seems to be no use for
them. Yet wherever there are chil
dren there will be use for boxes.
The huge wooden packing caws
that come, alas) but seldom, make
wonderful play houses for the back
yard.
Wooden grocery boxes become sleds,
trains, wagons, boats, doll beds,
chairs, tables and dressers In the
course of play.
A few placed together will make
a fine doll house that can be papered
and furnished. Smaller wooden boxes
are the kind Into which the small
child likes to put his feet and go
sliding about.
A large firm cardboard hat box may
become a temporary doll house on a
rainy afternoon, with cardboard fur
niture and a family of paper dolls
created for the occasion. A whole
cardboard village may be erected
from smaller boxes, which can be
painted or colored with crayons as
the young builder desires.
The firm round cartons In which
Ice cream sometimes la sent mske
wonderful boilers ;or steam engines,
or windmills or lighthouse towers.
Shoe boxes hitched tocether make
fine trains. The sides of long shal
low boxes can be used to make fences
for a farm.
Of con rse one ea n no t p rese n t a
child with an assortment of boxes
and tell him to make this or that
out of them, but If there Is a supply
of them stored away, the moment
will surely arise when they will prove
to be just the material the child
needs to work out hla play schemes
or to fill in an otherwise dreary after
noon with absorbing activity.
Communications
Ftra Tares l.ipt1 Off
Ttt the Editor:
To meet the popular demand for
Increased speed, the Twentieih Cen
tury Limited, crack New York Cen
tral train now ipratlnc on a '0-
hour tchedule between Chic0 and '
Brady, M. D.
REALLY IS MAD
ing muscles. Any attempt to swallow
brings on painful spasms of the
throat muscles. This Is the explan
ation for the superstition, shared by
some physicians, that the patient
fears water (hydrophobia). This stage
last two or three days. In the inter
vals between spasms the patient is
quiet and the mind unimpaired. All
this suggests tetanus to my mind,
not ordinary tetanus, but tetanus
modified by passage through the ani
mal. In the third stage paralysis sets
In. Heart action weakens, and death
from syncope follows In 34 hours or
less. Victims of tetanus die like
that.
I wish a thousand long term pris
oners of the state would volunteer to
let a very mad dog bite 'em, and then
let me treat 'em with lodin and anti
tetanus serum, for the benefit of hu
manity. QUESTIONS AM) ANSWERS
We're Larger In the Morning.
What causes anyone to swell In the
morning? My ring fits tightly In the
morning, but late In the day tt Is
quite loose. Mrs. N. H,
Answer The volume of blood in
the surface vessels Is normally In
creased during sleep, from relaxation
of the arterioles. This naturally
causes some slight swelling of the
extremities.
Shots.
Daughter began study of nursing in
September. In December they gave
her two shots In the left arm (at the
same time) for smallpox and scarlet
fever. Four days later her right hand
began to pain her . . had to lance the
hand several times . . they called tt
streptococcus Infection . . . doctor
here at home talked as If the shots
. . . K. W. R.
Answer Of course there Is always
a certain slight risk of accidental n
fection with streptococcus In vaccin
ation. But It is more probable that
your daughter suffered an ordinary
Infection of her hand from some
slight scratch or puncture or abra
sion and the nature of her work.
Plla Diint Ek.
Friend of mine has "Thromboan
giitis obliterans." Please let me have
the name and address of your corre
spondent who told about giving up
smoking after he had lost a leg . . .
E. M. E.
Answer I am not at liberty to di
vulge the Identity of a correspondent
without the correspondent's consent.
The Ciilloused Sole.
Hard and very sensitive callus on
each sole under the ball of the foot.
. . . -A. F.
Answer Send stamped envelope
bearing your address and ask for In
structions for Care of Feet. Paint
the callus once daily for a week or
two with a solution of 30 grains sali
cylic acid In one-half ounce flexible
collodion.
(Copyright ohn F.' Dllle Co.)
New York, will reduce the running
time to 18 hours, effective April 24.
The train will leave Chicago at 1:30
p. m., arriving New York 8:30 a. m.
following morning; westbound, leave
New York 3 p.- m., arriving Chicago
8 a. m. next morning.
Another radical change for the
benefit of the traveler, effective the
same date, will be the removal of
extra fares from all trains operated
by the New York Central lines, with
the exception of the Century, be'
tween all points. Extra fare on the
Century between Chicago and New
York will be $10.
, Extra fares were originally Inaugu-
have continued in effect without in
terruptlon since that time. They had
been made effective originally to
cover faster train schedules and de
luxe service primarily for loung-haul
through business between Chicago
and New York.
We believe this Information will
be interesting to the traveling pub'
lie. C. J. BARRY,
District Passentter Agent.
Portland, Ore., April o.
Presbyterian rummane sale will be
held in the building formerly occu
pied by Model Bakery on West Main
Thursday and Friday, April ff and 8
Phone the committee, 831-Y or 036-J
Dr. Chaa. P. Johnson lias moved his
dental ofrice from the Phlpps Bldg
to the Jackson County Bank Bldg.
Full Flavored
direct from u
flu--.
eu.'1
the roasters
No. VW at 5tom.
W, driver Arret to yon
Trlrwnc
Tbt CASWELL COFFEE MAN
Tel. KMI-J-4. Mrdlnrit
Automatic Electric Coffee
Roasting Accompliihcd by
'"f CEO. W. CASWFLL CO. ...
(aswells
(offee
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson Count)
History from the File of The
.Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 fear
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
April 6. 1922.
(It was Thursday)
Attorney-General of land serves
notice that "Ku Klux Klan must
behave Itself the same as any other
organization, most of which they
claim to imitate." Pardon denied
three Klansmen accused of horse
whipping Alabama schoolma'am.
Police do not know what to do
with transient, arrested four days
ago for drunkenness, who Is still
drunk, and sings all night.
Hard times on Pacific Coast de
clared ended.
A&hland W. C. T. U. wages war on
cigarettes.
Taxpayers complain to county
court that $7500 Is too much to
pay for dry law enforcement, by
"Go Get 'Em" Sandefer, special
agent.
Court Hall. In letter to editor,
declares "more people would rather
see a ball game Sunday afternoon
than go fishing."
Oregon teachers denounce "Jazz
dancing."
Ten million dollars' worth of whis
key all 25 years old destroyed in
Chicago.
TWENTY YEARS AC.O TODAY
April fi. 1JH2.
(It was Saturday)
San Diego trouble with I. W. W.
agitators reaches climax.
"Stop Gossiping," Is an eaitoriai
topic.
Rural mall route No. 3 to be
established.
Local option may be local Issue
1) fall.
Rain predicted for Easter Sunday.
Famine In wake of Mississippi
floods.
Socialists control local labor coun
cil. 8 Inches Added
To Park Snows
Eight moret Inches of snow fell at
Crater Lake national park last ni&ht,
making -16 Inches that has fallen
during the present storm there, and
It was still snowing at the park to
day. Broken windows glazed by Trow
orldge Cabinet Works
sk any
-and ask
A
1 zZwm
Bias""
chillin
Dip Your Brush Into
This Rainbow!
Just brush the exquisite ROGERS BRUSHING LACQUER eolcn
Wk'l v 'nw R9ers quickly levels itself. Then it "Dries
While You Wt dnes before dust car. settle on it, dries to a hard
lustrous coatino that weais and wears.
LINULtUM. Rogers Brushino Lacquer, per pint 1.00
A Satin Sheen Wall Finisfi
heir furniture and woodwcl, l A.
16 attract,,. WLit .in., "and 7h.d.,, 'p.. , rt . . . P'-1 ,
I sk ,ninwi.ii i ini qi ai itv nnt snV'-i
Color-Varnish 6 Wood Effects
i'n't'h FLO LAcZ'lio d rJ h", "UfW you " b'in'
rlcei
Don't Miss "Keeping Up With Daughter" Every Friday
Morning Over KMED From 10:30 to 10:45.
Hubbard Bros. Inc.
Since 1884
Ye Poet's Corner
A Nation", Prater.
Horn, U a haven no more
When now to Ita very door
A wealthy criminal may creep.
Snatching an Infant from lt sleep.
A country, long for jiutlce famed.
Standi humbled. Its honor ahamed;
To a mother prostrate with grief,
Offering no promise of relief.
May God, who Is ever In control.
Mete Hla wrath on the human soul
Who would a babe and mother part,
la the prayer of a nation's heart.
Mrs. H. W. Crocker.
Oregon Weather.
Increasing cloudiness, followed by
rain Thursday and In west portion
tonight; rising temperature tonlghu
Increasing southeast winds offshore.
MILLIONS HELPED
TO HEALTH
BY ALL-BRAN
Has "Bulk" and Vitamin B
. for Constipation ; Also
Iron for Blood
In ten years, Kellogg's All-Bran
has gained an increasing number of
friends. Today, it is used by
millions with satisfactory results.
New tests show added reasons for
the success of All-Bran. Labora
tory experiments prove it has "bulk"
to exercise the intestines, and Vita
min B to help tone the intestinal
tract.
Another benefit of All-Bran is
that it has twice as much blood
building iron as an equal amount by
weight of beef liver.
The headaches, loss of appetite
and energy that so often result f rora
constipation can be overcome by
this pleasant cereal. How much bet.
ter than using habit-forming piili
and drugs.
All-Bran action is gentle. Itt
"bulk" is much like that of lettuce.
Within the body, it absorbs mois
ture and forms a soft mass. Gently
it clears the intestines of wastes.
Two tablespoonfuls daily are
sufficient to overcome most types of
constipation. If your intestinal
trouble is not relieved this way, set
your doctor.
Serve as a cereal, or use in cook
ing. Tempting recipes on the red.
and-green package. Sold by all gro
cers. Made by Kellogg in Battl
Creek.
teacher
of cooking
which one
she uses
her why
k..J "T" nV ,,olk are unn, on
10