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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 22, 1932)
PXGE TEST" Medford Mail Tribune "gmyoiw In Southern Ortgoa rtadt Iht Mail Mfcum" Dtltj Eieepl Saturdif Publlihetl bt urnrnRn printinu CO. JB-JMI N. kit 8L fiOBEtfl W. HUUL, Edlt L L KSAPP, fcUnwr Ao Indeperxlcni Nipl Bourtd ti Meoad clu mitwr it Uwlford Ortfoo, rata Act o Uvt . 119. B U BBC Bim UN BATES DiJly, rear ..IT.00 Diiif, B'jdUj Tft Bl Cifritf. la Aitn Mcdford, JUblind, ImLsodtUJi, Ontr) Point, i'ftotnlx, TlUDL Gold Bill lad eo UUHviJt. DiJlt. nonUi .IB Call;, om itu 1.60 ill Urmt, cub Is aduoet. Offldal paper of ttot Cltf of Medford. OffUlal papar ol Jtcuoo Counlj. UEMBEH OV TUB ASSOCIATED PKE88 RKtlTtai ruil UaMd Win SerrtM 11m AiiodalM Preaa U tteluttidy ntltiad tbf uh ft publication1 ol ail oewt dbptictei cradltad U It oUierwlM credited to thu piper ind alio to tbt local newt oubllibed Herein. All rlffhta for publlcatioa of peell dlapautw barito ie alio reeeneo. UEMBEB 09 UNITED PKKS8 HEM H EH or AUDIT BUUISAU OF C1BCUMT10N8 Adwtlflnf Ktpreienutlree Id. C. HOliKNSEN A COM PANT Orricaa to Na York. tniio, Detroit, Ban rraodMo, boa Angeiee, Baadla, Portlatid, Ye Smudge Pot Bj Annul Perry An excitable upstate Journal la In a fine frenzy, over the threat "of Wall ! Street gold flooding the nation." As and properly engraved, or a good enough counterfeit to escape detec tlon, the layman Is In favor of the flood, and will not view It as the 7-year Itch, or a plague of grau - hoppers. An orchardtst strolled out into hi backyard Thurs. am. about 3:30 a'mImW !(. kl. nln. hill hla DhW was not watchful, so a general smudging waa not launched. fob sale Dandy little 'as chev- rolet roadster, In good condition, i Ahull. Alan vniit.' hluji urnnl atitt I (Bend Bulletin.) a dandy five-room runS','.own?k11ot 50xS0, ""JT"! In 1938 for this very car. The boy that toured the country, and viewed it from a clothes basket in the rear, aaat u & Din dov now. I President Hoover'i Reconstruction program Is fizzle, according to the statesmen leaning up against the Bill Oore bank, and looking sad when the wnmftnfnlkB num.. Thu rvonitnirt.inn program needs uttie time. The twnenu ox tne spring rains do not how up until late In August. It would be news if a prisoner at the bar, getting IS years for stealing ham, and a lecture to which he can make no reply, .would up and give the court a lecture. In 1818, the people were "kept out of war," and saved. In 1023, the taxes were whacked In two, righteousness Injected bv aalnt In their shlrttalls, and both both their pocketbooks. and their souls saved. In 138, fancy engineering came to the rescue, the bootleggers alt voted, and the masses were saved, sclentlfl- 1 eally, - j In 1030, the people were wired for tree electric lights, and saved along with the "water for thtlr children's children." This year the populace la bring aved as never before, the exact meth ods being still In doubt. From all this salvation, nothing has been saved but tho surface, and the childlike faith of the farmers, that they can be aaved by campaign speeches and piffle. The Initial strawberry shortcake of the year, has made Its appearance. As In the past extreme care la exer cised to see that the strawberries are Bot wasted. Monday Mrs. had an attack of pantomime poising. (Theresa, N. T., News.) In other words, spring ds.no ing. ... "Moat people who are aald to be acting the fool aren't acting" ( Thomas ton. Oft.. Tlmea.) The mean eat dig of many a moon. ... AT IS OR 61: DITTO (Roeeburg Newi-ReTlew.) Dear Nancy Lee: I have been a reader of your column for the past ten yeara. 1 want your advice on my prob lem,. I ab 61 yeara of age and In love with a man of the eame age. He ha, proposed to me twice. ... The grape and hop acreage of the Talley ahows an Increaae. The grape will be uaed for marmalade and Jelly, and the hope for poultice, to reduce swollen ankles and cure the ear-ache. The landscape will also be dotted with cornfields, the harvest of which will be ground Into corn-meal. . The Toungrat Set are rolling hoops and roller skstlng In the street. The main object U to akale through the hoop, and miss a d . . . M!ss MelJI Kamsnsal got a washboard and Iron ing set on her birthday. Just one of lire's little ironies . . . alias Mary Josephine piymale has recovered from a bum eye. She tried to cut her brother's hair. Any woman knows the Is a better barber than the ton aorlal artist . . . The I. Coleman girl got a-, eyeful of the Bill Heath boy, the 1st of the wk. She Issued no statement, but does not seem to think much of the Istest WM. , , . Donald Caaebolt, the home-run hitter of the Jackson school, la estranged again from his girl . . . ahe only likes end runs, hs reports , . . Bam Richardson of the East side, la study ing the "economic crisis,' and can discuss same aa Intelligently as his Idem. Dance at Rogue Elk Sat. night, mission: alen 60c; women tree. Ad. 1 . - M Of! ffofflWtsT lT J A 7$e Perfect Lover ""PHE refusal of Governor Rolph to pardon Tom Mooney was no surprise to those familiar with either the psychology of "Sunny Jim," or the psychology of California regarding this notorious case. Sunny Jim abhors political and personal controversy, as Nature abhors a vauum. He is no quitter He will fight when cornered. But no man in public life will run faster and farther, from a squabble, in which circumstances do not force him to participate. His passion for a choker collar, a clean-shaven jowl and a buttoniere is only exceeded by his passion to baBk in the un of popular approval. He loves his wife and family, but Oh, HOW HE LOVES HIS APPLAUSE 1 In that official plane he flies as unerringly to the nearest cheering crowd, as the busy bee to the nearest honey-laden flower. When publio acclaim is involved he is indeed Tom Moore's "perfect lover" i "No, th heart that haa truly lov'd never forget. But as truly loves on to the close; As the sunflower turns on her god when be set. The same look which she turn'd when be rose." Sunny Jim is the perfect sunflower. He gravitates as natur ally and inevitably toward the smiling skies of popular appro bation, as a comet toward the earth. . To have expected Governor Rolph to have pardoned Tom Mooney therefore would have been to expect him to go against his nature. Under the circumstances no doubt many people will be surprised and disappointed at his decision. But only those who don't know their Jim Rolph and their California. Ej'OR in California the Mooney case has long since passed the realm where facts und figures or even abstraot justice are of any importance. The state is divided between the pro Mooney and anti-Mooney factions, with the clevage not a factual but an emotional one. In spite of the years that have passed since the trial, public feeling still runs strong. To have pardoned Mooney, Governor Rolph would not only have gone against his nature, he would have gone against his j crowd, his set, he would have committed the unpardonable . sjn 0 j,j8 "sunshine creed," stirred up a mess, refused to ,,, . P'ay Ball. 1 i 'T'RUE such action would have brought hira vociferous ac- i claim, not only from the radicals of California, but from . tne radicals and reds of the I reaction, in its volume and intensity would have been nothing compared with the outburst Market and south-of -Market street crowd. And while this opportunity wide figure no doubt tempted Popular acclaim do he no doubt easily resisted it, for beneath 11 , his well tailored exterior, Jim Rolph is, always has been, and ALWAYS WILL BE, essentially a "south of Market street ' " ooy . So Jim Rolph refused to pardon Tom Mooney. Freshly shaven, discreetly debonnaite, with the inevitable "fleur de jour" in his buttonhole, Sunny Jim handed down bis decision, then fled from the after-clap, as him, to the Governors' "rodeo" at Richmond, Virginia. .. "False to the principles of true justice" proclaimed Mooncy's attorneys. Mebbe so. But true to himself, and true to the spirit of California Why Mooney Isn 't Free ON the basis of abstract justice, and on the basis that nothing is settled until it is settled RIGHT, the fight to gain the release of Tom Mooney will undoubtedly go on. And in the opinion of this newspaper it should. We don't see and have NEVER seen, how any fair-mind ed person, free from the California complex, could study the faots in this ease, and oppose either giving Mooney his freedom, or a new trial. f Our entire system of jurisprudence is based upon the as' sumption that a person should Mi 1 TitlTfAV'n a gum is provea liaiunu auu itrjAtujiVAUijf'i uuuoi. A review of the esse should, wa believe, convince anyone that Mooney 's guilt has never been proved BEYOND A A REASONABLE DOUBT. His guilt is fairly saturated with doubt, and only by accepting evidence that was FALSE, and perjury that wag ADMITTED, can an impartial person arrive at any other conclusion- This was the view of the Wickersham committee. It has been the view of innumerable outstanding leaders of the Amer ican bar, it has been the view of every informal and impartial tribunal that has passed upon the case. VfET Governor Rolph is the third California Governor to deny a pardon, similar action has been taken by the California Supreme Court and the pardon board. What does this meant That the Governors of California have been corrupt, that the entire system of jurisprudence in that state is rotten I We think not. The explanation, we beliove, lies in the state ment above that tho case has long since ceased to be a factual, and has for many years been an emotional one aa far as Cali fornia is concerned. The plain truth is, that from the standpoint of abstract jus tice, from the standpoint of what is legally right and legally wrong, Tom Mooney did not get and as long as public opinion in California remains what it is CAN NOT GET a square deal, a e e a 11TERE Mooney a different type there might be more hope " for hira. But he is an exceptionally strong character, and from tho standpoint of sunny California, a very disagreeable and dangerous one. He represents as completely tho antithesis of tho real California spirit, as Sunny Jim Rolph EMBODIES it. The following may appear as a far fetched statement, yet we regard it as essentially true THE FUNDAMENTAL REASON WHY TOM MOONEY REMAINS IN SAN QUENT1N, IS DENIED EITHER A PAR DON OR A NEW TRIAL, IS BECAUSE HE PERSONIFIES IMPLACABLE HOSTILITY TO THE SPIRIT AND THE PERSONALITIES, WHO HAVE BUILT UP CALIFORNIA AND MADE IT WHAT IT IS TODAY. In other words, those who demand freedom for Mooney, demand from the standpoint of California, incorporated, placing abstract justice above state loyalty Hiid pride- And those who realize what it means to ask any true Cali fornian to do flint, can easily realize why Tom Mooney occupies the same cell today, that he entered 13 jears ago, MEDFORD 1QHL entire world. But this favorable that would have come from the to become a national and world hira, as all opportunities for fast as the Limited could take be (uljudged innocent, unless his i - aTl, a At i nr rrtrm TRTBTOE, UEDFORD, Today By Arthur Brisbane Spring In Chicago. Sam Mule Is Bumped Next? To Discourage Air Men. Sad Desert, No Dates. Copyright King Feature, eynd, Ino- CHICAGO, 111., April 21. Fine spring weather here, and no weather is finer than good weather in Chicago. Men twenty stories in the air hang outside of windows, cleaning them, calmly mak in a living, and indignant, most of them, because they are forced to use safety devices. The 1933 exposition, planned to eelebrate "one hundred years of science," from 1833 to 1933, is progressing well. It has a fine back ground, with big Lake Michigan on one side stretching toward the east, huge Chicago and its skyscrap ers to the west, and around it, monuments to Chicago's energy and good citizenship. The great Marshall Field Museum is one of the finest buildings in Amer ica and one of the world's great museums. . Beyond It stands the aquarium, given by John O. Shedd, and at the water', edge the planet arium, given by Max Adler, In which all the movementa, alzea and dis tance, of earth, moon,' sun, neighbor planets, stars, comet, and nebulae, are made plain. There la. In America, no more important educational in stitution than that planetarium, ex cept the public school. Such men as Marshall Field and Max Adler should .have monumeuta In Chicago, bigger and better than any other,, except the Lincoln monu. ment. It would be profitable, ai well aa Just, to honor good citizen ship, and thus encourage It. Today supplies Its usual story of a Ufa snuffed out, such aa you read dally hare and In New York. Today's victim, Sam Mule, alias Morley, would be hurt If he coulj know what small headlines, how few words, are devoted to his killing He was an ex-convlot and a boot legger "muscling in" on territory pre-empted by Ills betters In the great Industry. A blonde lady and two men rented a room opposite Mule's headquarters. The lady sat at the window In rocking chair "scattering cigarette atubs about, to pass the time while che watched." Once Mule came by, but bla new wife, Lillian, 32-year-old Minnesota girl, waa wltli him. Slugs from sawed off shotguns scatter, so they let her pass. She had done nothing to make her death dealrable. Next day Mule came, alone, on his last earthly Jour ney. Slugs blew off the top of bla head. This little Incident will Interest the future trlossart, chronicling our doings, chiefly because It now at tract, so little attention. W have one of our biggest Indus trie,, bootlegging, orgenlted on a murder bssl, and take It for granted. Senator Capper 'of Kansas tella the house that our nation muet "pro vide controlled Inflation of the cur rency," and If It fall, to do so. con gress will print two and a hair billion dollars' worth of currency, pay the soldiers' bonus In full and distribute the money all over the country. That, Senator Capper say,, would help ev erybody. Kansas would get thirty five million of the new dollars. A bill Introduced In the bouse of representative, to reduoe drastically Vie pay of officer, that fly In both branches of our air service reflect, Uttl, credit on the Judgment of pa trtotlam ol the man Introducing the bill. A congressman, sitting at his ease in the safety of a comfortable chair, enjoying hla 110.000-a-year aalary. cuts a poor figure when he seeks to reduce the pay of flight officers, called upon every day to risk life In th, moat Important branch of the national defense. Army and navy flight officers, and mechanic that accompany them In their flights, risk their Uvea for pay that t, now far too small, alnc, their famlltee may at any moment be left dependent. They are called upon to experi ment with new planea, to carry out, aa a matter of routine, dangerous, close-formation flying at terrific speed. The economical congressman should, Just once, try the well-named "hell diving." th, plane plunging perpendicularly downward, 300 miles an hour, practicing th dlschsrg, of bombs at enemy craft. ' - Our airplane defense la weak enough as It la, without any mean. 'OREGON, FREDXT, XPRIL 22, 1932. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal neaitb and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady u a stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Ad dress Dr. William Brady In can of The Mall Tribune. ALL THAT WHEEZES IS NOT ASTHMA Asthma Is well, frankly nobody ter than you think. There la little knows Just what It la or why, but we can d0 ior victim of anthracosls anyway the condition Is a periodic ,or mP'- There la a good deal we one, like migraine or epilepsy. While a spell, seizure or attack la on, there la little difficulty In seeing whst alia the patient. But between spells nothing whatever alia the patient, 10 far as ordinary sbservatlon, or a medical examina tion, or t&e pa tient's own sensations can ahow. That la the characteristic feature which distinguishes asthma, bronchial or spasmodlo asthma, as physicians call It, from other diseases In which wheezing or difficult breathing hap pens to be a prominent symptom. A lot of people sasume they have ashtma when In fsct they bsve no such thing. Many of these take what purports to be good treatment for asthma when the treatment can't possibly help them even If it Is good for asthma. But then, we might say vlrtuslly the same thing of numerous other ailments Indeed that la why the most successful nostrums pur port to be good for so many differ ent complaints: the manufacturers, kind-hearted scoundrels, want to give customers plenty of liberty In the matter of their ailments, as long as they all ask for the aame medicine. Thus the nostrum makers keep cus tomers' senses benumbed without all the fuss and bother of using a lot of different dopes for the different com plaints. One reader writes that he has had asthma for 20 years. He waa a miner for many yeara. He stlU can work outdoors, though he breathes hard and only wheezea when he has to walk any distance, and he cougha and cougha and raises much phlegm and has a rattling noise in his throat. Obviously the man hasn't asthma at all, but rather anthracosls or chronic bronchitis or chronic lung Inflammation from the coal dust de posited In his lungs In the years he waa employed aa a miner. I do not know what the record duration for an attack of asthma Is, but we may safely say It is not more than a few weeks at the longest. Any body who purports to suffer con stantly, over a period of months and years, with asthma, Is In error, that's all. The usual duration of an attack of asthma Is .hours or days. When the attack Is over the patient Is perfectly well, at least there la no wheezing or other difficulty In breathing. If this seems quibbling about a technical question, my motive Is bet- stingy, narrow-minded and con temptible, economy to discourage air men on whom the country rellea for the development of our air force now, aa It would rely on them for its safety In time of war. . Joseph H. Appel of New York, wan dering over the desert In Africa with bla wife, sends word from Biskra that business depression baa reached those distant places. A blight on the date palm has wiped out the native's chief food supply, and a cash blight, nearer borne, haa nearly wiped out the tourist crop. Without tourists or dates. North Africa feels like one of the apeculatora that went In at the top and cam, out at the bottom. The natives In and around Biskra and the many oases, over which hu man beings have fought for one hun dred centuries, have one hope left. They are now praying for a plague of locusts. The Insects would strip the palm and make the oasea look bare, but locusts are good to eat, an acceptable sort of manna. Biskra and other oases In North Africa are now under the best man agement they have ever known. France own, them, owns also the fine hotel, built for tourists and Is building more of them. Everything modern, cooking, of course, excellent. Th, government of France 1, not afraid to try anything, from hotels to railroads. And If government railroad worker, strike, France haa a remedy. The strikers are called to the color, and ordered to operate the road aa soldiers. To refuse would be a court martial offense, with conviction sure, so the railroad men changed suddenly to soldiers, go to work. Our railroad presidents would csll thst "govern ment ownership with a kick In It." Everybody agrees that this cation's railroad must be preserved, and If they are to survive the government must do something for them. How about buying tnem. at a fair price to stockholders, and letting people own and run them? Three yeara ago that would have sounded like paternalism, bolshe vlsm, aoclallsm an d confiscation rolled Into one. But with New York Central down to 20 from nearly 300. and other roads shrunken In propor tion, a suggestion to buy might not be so unwelcome. Perhaps governmeln ownership, re taining of course, and paying well the ablest railroad managera, could suc ceed In competition with automo biles, truck, canal and airplanes. Picuue frsmes made to order Peaalera, ojjp, aoUf theater. Tat we are sure .his troublels bronchlsl or spasmodic asthma, aa doctors caU It. and not some other wheeze. Difficulty In breathing occurs in many cases of heart disease, lung. pleural and bronchial affectlone, anemia, and sometimes from kidney disease, it is unfortunate for the welfare of the patient to confuse such difficulty in breathing with asthma. One may have any of these other diseases and still be subject to genu. Ine asthma, of course. - A characteristic of the difficult breathing of true asthma is that the difficulty Is only with expiration or breathing out. Indeed the aufferer Is obviously too full of air and embar rassed to exhale It. To the best of our knowledge asthma Is a neurosis akin to ml. grains, epilepsy and hives. I don't dow the cure for It, but In many cases a course of calcum lactate, ten grains three times a day for a period of eight or ten weeks, seems benefi cial. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Sherman Said It from Liddell Hart's "Sherman," n 378. Sherman on his march to the sea wrote his wife: "It Is a general truth that men exposed to the ele ments don't 'catch cold' and I have not heard a man cough or aneeze for three months, but were the same men to go Into the houses, in a month the doctor would have half of them." Thla was written In February. 1865. "Numbers of the men had been marching barefoot. Thousands had split boots and tattered clothing. (Mrs. D. L. L.) Answer. Thank you. All actual evidence la aealnst tliA thnrv ra an. I perstltlon that exposure to cold or wet causes or predisposes to certain dlaeasea Our men in the trenches in France and Belgum observed the same truth. ; The Diaphragm and High Blood Pressure Received your Instructions on Belly creaming rour months ago. My blood pressure was so high the doctor told me. ... I take six breaths lying on my rigai aide, and six lying on my left side. It Is wonderful how much relief I have obtained. ... I am 63 yeara old and feel 80 per cent young, er. . . . (W. E. R.) Ans. The regular dally practice of tho Belly Breathing exercise helps to prevent or reduce nigh blood ores. sure. Send stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for the Belly Dieaumig instructions. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) Ye Poet's Cornei Our Beautiful Pythian Home. ine aged and crippled Brother Knights. They have a place to go a Home witn nest of care for their delight, Need not go hungry or to roam. It's a life Insurance for old age They need not die to receive their ehare Of benefit the Pythian heritage But spend their last days with out care. Cur Knightly Home with Sisters dear The brother Knlghta with kind ness act Are all united to give cheer Makes this a real home in fact. D. T. OERDES. Pythian Home. Vancouver, Wash April 20. 1032. IMiS TOJ Parents THE MIDDLE CHILD. By Alice Judson Peale. Blake was born when hla older brother waa not yet two. When he himself was hsrdly out of dresses. baby ststcr lay in his mother's arms. He never got much atten tion. The first child had been hoped for and welcomed. To hla mother he was a dally delight, to his father a source of pride. Had he not dupli cated himself In his sont But a second son was no such significant event. Chleny he waa an additional expense, an added care. further tax on his mother's ener gies. The arrival of the baby girl was something else again. To each par ent she hrought a new experience. This time It was mother who could see herself In her child end father who could experience the pe culiar tendernesa that a parent feels toward a child of the opposite sex. Blake, coming between brother and sister, must have sensed that he did not count for much. Is It any wonder that he developed a fir less attractive personality than they? I Is It surprising that he waa Irri table, with streaks of mesnneas and Ill-concealed Jealousy, and that he once burst forth with "I hate father. He thinks I'm stupid Just because I can't talk to him the way brother doe. I can't talk to people who are cranky." Th child In the middle often has such a difficult time. He etanda especially In need of love and ap preciation. Of coure. every position In the family picture has Its special ad vantage and disadvantages, but the position of the middle child Is pe culiarly likely to give rise to feel ings cf Jenlcuy. Inferiority and that ant.vrcmm which mskee It so dlf flrult for him to accept bis psrenis as aa Ideal, i Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson Count) History from the FUes of The MsU Tribune of to and 10 Yean Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY April 22, 1922. (It waa Saturday) Oregon auto law la held valid Juries Calkin. In test suit filed Tom Merrlmsn, the blacksmith. Frost danger lessens, with rain In prospect. Tsx meeting scheduled here, post poned untu after primaries. Emily Fraaer Brown wins dental essay contest In local achooia. Chanrea of graft hurled against the "gang," and recall -petition against Sheriff Terrlll threatenea. First baseball with Ashland. gam, of season President Harding denlea claim "Imperial Wizard." that be Is friend of the Ku Hux Klan. TWENTY YEAB8 AGO TODAY AprU 22, 1912. (It waa Monday) Titanic disaster laid to lack of spy glassea by lookout. Also charged the crew was drunk. City In need of a good piano tuner, a con are available this side of Eugene. Mrs. B. H. Porter returns this week from an extended visit In east. A driving club is formed to ope rate the county fair horse races. Medford-Central Point macadamiz ing to be completed thla aprlng. Labor shortage In the valley. O. E. Gatee sells 14 Overland, In a month. Among the buyer, are Qua Newbury and E. E. Kelly. Primarily for use In forest fire pro. tectlon and control the U. S. forest service haa bunt 7167 mtlea of tele phone line In the 14 national forests of Oregon. Dance at Rogue Elk Sat. night. Ad mission: Men 60c; women free. Real Estat or Insurance Leave it to Jonea Phone 70S. . Swem's Gift Shop Offers Hundreds of Card Prizes at 50c-$l.00 Recent price reductions have made available many attractive things that were formerly priced beyond the customary amount spent for card prizes. The things listed are' just a few examples and there are many more! Peasant Pottery Pitchers Were 75e to $1.29. Now 50c Glass Cookie or Cracker Jars Hand painted decoratlo Were tl.50. Now .... ..$1.00 Decorated Waste Baskets All colors. Were $1.00. Now 50c Intaglio Plaque Etchings World famous scenes. Were $3.75. Now $1.00 Guest Towels Hand made In fine linen. Were 75c and $1.00. Now 50c Pottery Vases, Bowls, Jugs Shapes, sires and colors galore. Most of the pieces have been priced from $1.23 to $2.J(1. Some even higher. Now .$1.00 Chinese Brass, Hand Carved Rulh bowls, vases, trays, candle sticks, etc. Dozens of Items that were $1.00 and more. Now 50c Swem's Gift Shop On Main Street a.l-m in Tank Meet. BALEM. April 22. (AP) Junior and senior swimming team, of the Salem Y. M. C. A. will leave tonight for Tacoma to enter the northwest meet there tomorrow. CrystaJglow Kodsk gloea supreme, rhe Peasleys. opp Holly thati EVERY WOMAN faces this question "How do I look to other people?! If you have a lovely skin, attractivaj eyes, and plenty of enthusiasm, you ' need not worry. So many women, though, risk their beauty by neglect of constipa. tion. It often causes loss of pep. sallow skins, dull eyes, pimples. Yet constipation can be overcome by eating Kellogg's All-Bran. Thlt cereal provides "bulk" to exercist the intestines, and Vitamin B -.vhich tones the intestinal tract. All-Bban also supplies iron for the blood. The "bulk" In All-Bban is mud like that of lettuce. Special cookina processes make it finer, more pal atable. It is not habit-forming. Surely this is safer than abusinj the system with pills and drugs so often habit-forming. Two tablespoonfuls daily wll correct most types of constipation it your intestinal trouble is not re lieved this way, set your doctor. At all grocers. It the rcd-and-greet package. Made b3 Kellogg in Battli Creek. HELPS KEEP YOU FIT NO Mi LOVES A GRAY HAIRED I HE SAYS Love And Gray Hairs Are As Far Apart As The Poles ONLY THE FAMILY IGNORES GRAY HAIR j ALL-BRAN "I worship, adore araj Idolize my mother, no matter how old, gray or wrinkled, and Dad is the same way about the mother of his boys, but love real, true love such as one , feels for the opposite sex which thrills, enraptures and inspires a fiacsionate desire to possess and ove you shrinks unconsciously from gray hairs, crows-feet, deaf ness and other signs of old age," declares C. J. Mains, the nationally-known expert on gray hairs. "Stop and think a mlnuts and yoo'lt agree with me. Lova Is a mltoaed word upreulve of ths feeling of delisht, rsp. tart, Jealousy or pssiloa toward ths op posite sex not kin to too. A man retains his mother on her lofty pedestal. " She Is ' enshrined there. No man divorces his mother, but he leaves a girt hs loved ov mlshi lovs if she falls, has halitosis, bad habits or Is untldr snd old for him. No mother needs to keep her Azure, youth or winning ways to please her children, hut wine or girl friend, who a msn nsvsr wor ships but only loves, must avoid gray hslr. ' fat snd wrinkles or love flies out the win dow. "Women happy with family and do. mestie life can afford gray hairs be cause it brings respect, adds dignity but her days for love, a new job ov socially mingling- with the younger set sre over the sair.e as with a man who if happy at horns, well fixed and head of hiafl business. i "Young married folks shun the com pany of gray-haired men and women th same as children Instinctively shun gray hairs except in their parents. Love and all it means avoids the company of gray hairs. They like you, admire you, repeat you. but , "Bosses give Jobs now snd then to gray haira out of compassion, but they rightly feel they are hiring a liability Instead of an asset, whereas win youth they delight In giving 'Pep' first chance. Men and women complacently living in the part on their past performancea, aerenely confident they are Intrenched in their wife or hus ,, Jov' ,heir Job o ""-'si strata, would be amazed to find how easily younger person could supplant them. May be In small towna your competition Isn't bothersome, but try getting along wiui gray balra along Broadway. New York, and see how soon you lose out. "Some stay gray because tba family ,rV ,.""s' (,',"'t But how about you7 Why not look your youngest and b tpfe-and-apan from head to foot? Some times even a sweetheart says he or eh doesnt mind gray hairs, but they'd pro pose or accept much sooner l( the gray, haired old-age barrier wasn't there. Women Initlnctively hide their real age, yet some times foolishly brag about gray hair. I can show men and women in twa minutes how to get rid of their gray hairs and never have another. Without obli gation I will gladly tell you how to look yeara youneer make your hair youthful and beautiful. The Nationally known Lea, Tonle Co.. Brentwood, Md., backs not every word and assure you Lea's Hair Tome will delight, amnio and satisfy yen kl.S0!!!'. . kno """'ions. A dollar bottle erf Lee-, Hjlr Tonic sUrta yon and not even your barber or closest friend need ever know. If out of town, writs ms at MrentwooH. VrT n . j . Jf:'" '"r bottle and directions, postara Ionic." Rheumatic Cripples Xew Medicine Guaranteed to Fre lour Musilea and Joints In Lee Than a W eek or Money-itack. No matt- w .-inni. - -. . ., v. i-)jivu ana iieii less von -- .iti, -i .. - ...... iiiciijiiausai, you can now euo that pun in s day and ...vuiiiaiuima tcn-lDl grip on your system In les athsn a week. J ' I"! of Ru-MA la guaran- jtmr muscies and Joints rrorn all crippling stiffness, swelling mun,Urln P":n " 50Uf a No long wsit for that swful agony ?. for RU-MA ease, p.thi fl.st day. Magically your muscle, ai d Joints llmocr up. .welling van Wies. aches an J away go crushes snd "cane. coi1" n" Wt,ori' h"' much eiery rheumatic in town tr, t ana guarantee money-back It it doe