MEDFORD ItXTL TRTBTTSE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1932. PAGE SIS ' Medford Mail Tribune "CmyoM In Swlhirn Ortgos nadi iht Mll Tflbuiw" Dillj Bieepl Uiwiaj Publlirwt bt UEUFOKD PU1NTI.NO CO. IB.ir-ll N. fir 81 fboe. Tl fiOBEUT W. ItUUU Wit L U KNAPP, MiatM Ab lDdCttDdMt Ntwiptpsr EnUr4 u teeood dm utter at Untfortt Oregoo, tmd Act ot Uutb s. 1819. 8UBSCK1PT10N BATES 09 Mn Id Adtuc ctiiy, nu tr.oo Dtllj, msotb 15 B Cirri ef. to Adranct Medford. AiUiAd, iteksoofllJa, Ceotril Point, PbosoU, TaltoL Gold UiU mo oo uixtiwaja. Dillf, aootb I .To DUj, SM TMT f.50 AU term, cub Is adTioe. OfMelal paptv of too City ef MedTord. Oflclai papor of tut no Court. UEMHEH Or Till A880C1ATEU PUEdt BMCinttf ruU Luiid Win Herri ea tb Anoelated ftm l aiclutlielf aotltlad to tin oh for puhUeatloo of all oewi dlspatettw eradiud to It or oiberwlaa credited to thU tupw tod also to Uw local new puhllRhed berela AU rights for putilleatloo Of apeela) dhpatcfaaa hereto ara alio rasaned. HEMUKW OF UNITED PHKS8 fclEMBRH OK AUDIT HUKEaO Qg ClHCUUTIONfl Adwtlilnt KepreaaoiatlTea H. & MUUKNBKN COMPANY Omcoi Id Hem York, tolcafo, Detroit, Safi fraoctom, Loa Angaiaa, Bealtla, Portland. 0 Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry There Is positively no opium amok. ing In this vicinity, even It It does sound Ilka it moat of the time. American males spent $760,000,000 with barbers yearly. Either the American male la beyond bope of besutiftcstlon or the barbers are ,hell lshly Incompetent. Watermelons Till soon be ripe for Talley hoodlums to steal, and tran sients to get the blame lor It. Gregory Campbell, a tender Scotch, man of six-teeth, was downtown Tues. on bis. His Paw Is a Copco slave, Boot boy swings a mean rattle, and cracked Thomas Bradley on the left temple, Inflicting a painful 'jut not necessarily fatal wound. The young fellow can make a cute noise like telling a horse to get going. Another promising young man has accidentally shot himself with Dan iel oupld's bow and arrow, which he ' did not think was loaded. In defense of the fllrtatlouaneas ot her bull-baas husband, alleged to have deceived a thrlce-marrled and divorced nurse, Almee Bemple Mc pherson says: "Even Abe Lincoln had an affair of the heart before he settled down." The comparison Is odious, and besides Abe Lincoln was never accused of kissing a lady on the knee. FAIR WARNING (Pendleton East Oregonlan) , Jimmy Perklna Is building a cozy little csge Just opposite the , Episcopal church on Alta atreet. Rumor says well Jimmy may batch there but we hardly think he will. Look out, girls. ' . . The annual hope that nobody will get shot for a deer has started to surge among womenfolks with men folks, who think they are careful hunters. . Somebody hss stoten our typewrit er. The thief will bring It back as soon aa he tries to write with It, If he don't feel lmpslled to go out and steal an axe aud smash It to bits. There will be ao prosecution U he does, e i A couple of citizens have started to complain about everything, but as yet have not showed up driving new automobiles. .1 e . Another state highway commis sioner has quit. It is not known whether he got a dose of his own economy or just tuckered out. T.he retention of a state highwayman Is getting to be quite a problem. The governor may Invoke a 8-way plan, via: one coming, one going and one on the Job. e TRY KEEPINO T1I.L (Chlro Enterprise) Dear Miss Ohatfleld: I have a daughter of IT that la hard to oontrol, impatient and defiant. If I tell her to wear a certain dreas It Is a signal for a fight. If I suggest that she should go to see a certain friend she goes In the opposite direction. She Is very thin and consequent ly I am forever trying to make her eat fattening foods which makes her a sulky companion. What shall I do about her? MRS. H. e s The construction of a railroad to the Coast Is still under way, with lungs and lead pencils, and is rapidly approaching the hand waving stage. Just what this railroad would do to the fish In Rogue River, and the fish out of Rogue River, the taxes and the fanner, la not known. However, It would be something. It would pro Tide material for civic battling until well Into the next century. Take the depot. Should It be built adjacent to the tracks, or on the Paclflo high way, where tourists could see It? It would also provide another Industry for the legislature to put out ot bus iness with fool laws. The third day after the railroad began a regular schedule. It would be discovered that the freight rates were too low, One advantage, the new line would re the elimination of expenditures for send and sand homes. Sand Is used by locomotives to stsrt on frosty morn ings. With ons terminus on an ocean beach, sand to supply 'the world is available. Then Is also plenty of sand at the other end ot the line. By all means build the rallrosd at governmen expenese. Build two ot them, If Santa Claue Is la charge of the U, B. Mint, 1 1 OBT O lGAi Hi I ASSOCIATION We Are TTHIS country is really at war. Only instead of fighting a foreign foe, it is fighting Old Man Depression. The quality of spirit, exhibited in 1918 is the quality of spirit needed now, but we regret to say there is little evidence of it. Instead of the "will to win," we have a pronounced defeatist complex; instead of accepting self sacrifice, as a necessary element, in successfully surmounting a serious crisis, we are at least too many of us looking around to save our skins in the nearest hide-out. rURING the war slackers dare show their heads, and bitter againBt them. But now. The woods are full of nothing is said against them. During the war when people of means didn't do their share in Liberty Loan drives, they were quickly smoked out and held up to public scorn. people of means who refuse to buy things they need and can afford, and who join in the widespread buyers strike. Nor is anything done about those who hoard their cash, refuse to let it work for themselves or anyone else who just dig in with food and water, waiting until YET THESE PEOPLE IN REALITY, ARE GIVING AID TO A COMMON ENEMY, AND REFUSING TO DO THEIR BIT, IN TIME OP DANGER, JUST AS CLEARLY AS WERE THE SLACKERS AND EVADERS, 14 YEARS AGO. e e e e e TpiIIS is no time for a buyer's strike. It is no time for hoard . ing. Those who are guilty of either, invite the very thing they aie trying to avoid namely, a prolongation of the De pression, and an increase in There are thousands of people of course, who can not buy, for they have nothing to buy with. But there are also thousands, in this state, and everywhere money and the legitimate needs This refusal is based upon two chief motives both unworthy at any time but particularly so in such a critical time as this, namely: Abject fear, and unmitigated selfishness. They are afraid of the future, they have lost their nerve and their faith in themselves and in their country. They are not thinking about what is best for their com munity, or their country; they are only thinking about saving their precious financial skins the same sort of spirit that turns theatre fires into holacausts; that transforms men into wild beasts in a disaster at sea, when they fight and claw to get to the life boats first. we need in this economic war is what every country needs in any war the real WAR SPIRIT the determ ination to fight through to victory if it takes all summer; the determination on the part of every individual to do his bit, and whenever necessary sacrifice his personal desires, on the altar of the common weal, and the publio interest. We can pass remedial legislation until the jiows come home, we can inflate credit and deflate prices to our hearts content, but until we FACE FACTS AS THEY ARE, march to the firing line, as 8 people, and present a united front to the common foe, only a deadlock is possible there can be no real victory the war ean only end himself out. TITHAT we need in 1932 is the aroused publio opinion of " 1918. We also need a few "Minute Men" willing to take time from their private affairs to arouse the people to the dangers confronting them, and the spirit needed to sur mount them. How low our morale has sunk, how blind we have become to the practical needs of the situation was vividly demon strated to the present writer by the remark of a friend a few days ago. He said he needed a new but decided not to do so because for spending money in such a way when so many people were starving. linn" ARE SO MANY PEOPLE STARVING? Because they W are out of work. WHY are they out of work t BECAUSE people who can buy are not buying, because mtney that should be in circulation that should be working, is idle. Because so many people are doing what this man decided to do. WHYf Because he FEARED criticism! Fear, fear, fear I Who gave cause is there for fear today I PVERY man that buys a new ear or ANYTHING, ELSE is doing his bit to end this depression. Every man that is able to buy and refuses to do so who has money but refuses to use it or lot anyone else use it is giving aid and encourage ment to the oommon enemy. We moked out the slackerg smoka out a fow of them today. The more "smoking" we do in this direction, the bettor for this community and for every other I 10 WASHINGTON, July 91 (f) The open aesson for hunting wild ducks and geese has been extsnded from one to two months lur the coming fall by President Hoover, at the recom mendation of Secretary Hyde. The lengthened aesson, It was said at the department of agriculture. Is made possible by Improvement In the situation which become serious for waterfowl following drought on their breeding grounds In 1931. The eerlleat open season In any state will be October 1, and the lat est opening date November IS, with the exception ot Florida, where the season will open November 90, In Alaska September 1 will be the open ing date. The new open season for ducks, geese, brant and coot Include: ' October 1 to December to New at War! were few, and those few didn't for public opinion was militant we have no such public opinion Depression slackers, but little or But today, nothing is done about the war is over. its destructive affects. else, who could buy who have but who refuse to do so. when Old Man Depression tires car, had the money to buy one, he feared h would be critized way to fear in 1918. What and evaders in 1918, why not Mexico, Arlaona, Idaho, Oregon and Washington. October 1 to November SO Nevada. November 1 to December 51 Cali fornia, ANIMALS GET BREAK BY KVANSTON, in, July 91 (API Cats, as well as dogs, horses and other domestle animals will hsve at least an equal chance with pedes trians under Kvanston's new traffic code. The regulations prescribe thst mo torists must warn animals In ths street and halt If they appear be wildered and unlikely to leap to safety. In rase an automobile strikes an animal, the driver la under Instruc tions to stop and give his name and a'ldreas. Real Estate or lnsursnee Leave It to Jones. Phone 796. Broken windows glased by Trow bridge. Cabinet works. Today By Arthnr Brisbane Unchanging Mountains, Turmoil and Upheaval, Dictator In Prussia, Bolivia Wants War. ' Copyright King Pesturee flynd., Ino. BELLE AIR MOUNTAIN, Catskills, N. Y. We know theoretically that everything in the universe is changing and must some day disappear like the fabric of a dream. The presidents of today of 100 years ago and one thousand years hence will be forgotten. The "great battles of the world" will be as unimportant as so many fights among wolves. Jeans tells you that our sun throws its substance out into space at the rate of two hun dred and fifty million tons a minute. Four minutes hence, when you reach the bottom of this column, the sun will weigh one thousand million tons less than it did when you began to read. He proves it, and proves, also, fortunately, th.at the sun has done this for hun dreds of millions of1 years, ean keep it up for more hundreds of millions of years, supplying heat and light in which we may struggle on toward civilization. But ultimately all must pass away. The sun and the planets, Including this little earth, will be dark and cold, waiting for cosmlo processes to reconstruct them, usefully, elsewhere In space. THEORETICALLY nothing lasts, and nothing seems worth while. But theory loses Importance when you re turn to the mountains, after a year's absence. You observe no change, no crumbling of the universe, among the stone bills, with their veneer of green trees and their roof of blue sky. Each mountain stands where It did, each tree nearby, and the Indistinct rows of trees outlined against the clouds, along mountain slopes, far away, keep their positions. The sun goes down, leaving Its last light on the same peak. The star that fol lows the sun appears In the same place at the appointed hour, and the Big Dipper points, as usual, to the North Pole, fixed and unchanging. You know that many stara In turn become the North Star, as our North Pole swings around the circle In less than twenty thousand years. But It all seems permanent In the mountains. No change, exoept that slowly growing trees cut off each year a little of the horizon. From the world beyond the peace ful mountains comes news of turmoil, the most Important news from Ber lin. The solemn German, who thought all the exciting newa must be "out" by this time, found his city, at 11:30 yesterday morning, decorated with placards announcing the appoint ment ot a dictator to rule In Prussia with absolute authority, threatening punishment for refusing to obey the dictator, or tampering with placsrds. Von Hlndenburg, president of the German republic, had appointed as dictator Von Papen, atrong in the confidence of the German people. The Prusslsn cabinet, denying Von Hlndenburg's power in the mstter, is sent about Its business. - e For a while one men's will la to replace the effort of the Germane to govern themselves by republlcsn methods. The Hctheneollem mon- srchy led to disaster and failure, the republlo after long success, under difficulties never before known, con fesses failure, temporarily. The rea son given for this .change Is ths In ability of Prussia's cabinet to maln ttaln order and Us too great aympathy with communistic elements. The dlctstorshlp does not extend beyond the Prussian borders, but It covers two-thirds of Oermsny's ter ritory. The real dictator, MuseoHnl, keeps hit machinery la order. Yesterday he dismissed lfl members of his debt net, taking two mora Important of- ftcea on .his own shoulders. Respon sibility, does not worry HIM. Wherever you look on this rolling earth, trouble meets your eye. Japan is rushing another army to fight the Chinese In Jehol, and financial rutn threatens much of Japan. Troops from Paraguay hare beaten troops of Bolivia In a two-day battle, and Bolivia' people Insist on a regu lar, genuine war with Paraguay. If they consulted a few European na tions they might not be so eager for war. 4 We have our own isusl worries. A radical leader In Washington's bonus army la arretted, He promoted Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, wUl 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 ot 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 cars of The Mall Tribune. SHOE DYE, DO.N'T I noted In your column a. question snd answer about shoe dye poison ing (nltro-benzol), and you stated that this cannot be absorbed thru the skin, but haa to be Inhaled. Shortly after wsrd I came across th- in closed -Item by another physic ian, who states. you will see, that the heat ot the foot volatilizes the dye and it la absorbed Into the blood through the skin of the foot. All this In terests me because my brother suf fered from shoe dye poisoning. Sev eral years ago ha had a pair of shoes dyed on his feet. Three or four hours lster he became sick snd in less than 13 hours be had turned almost blue-black. This wss diagnosed aa poisoning from the shoe dye, nltro-benzol. One of our city's' most reputable doctors took care of the case, and It was our understanding that the poison had been absorbed through the feet. A blood transfusion was necessary to clear up the ailment, but my brother finally made a complete re covery. If what you say Is true, that It has to be Inhaled, It would seem that my brother was not In as close contact with the dye or the shoes as was the boy who dyed the shoes. The boy suffered no 111 effects, and he dyed shoes like that many times day. How did he escape Inhal ing any of the fumes? O. S. In the clipping the correspondent Incloses a physician arbitrarily as serts that the shoe dye is absorbed through the skin of the feet after it has been volatilized by the heat of the feet sounds like a Rube Goldberg explanation to me. Then this same physician tells the world that fortunately such shoe dye poi soning never hss any serious conse quences and every one can afford to Joke about It afterwards. Our correspondent's brother probably had the blood transfusion Just aa a bit of a Joke. The shoeshlne boy probably In hales some of the dye every time he applies It. but not for long and not In any great concentration, for usually shoeblack stands are freely ventilated. But the victim to whose Today's Guest Editorial The Mall Tribune, thanki to the courtesy of the American Legion, Is printing a lerles of go est editorials written on Important questions of the day by prominent citizens In various walks of life. The Mall Tribune offers these editorials as an Interesting feature but does not necessarily endorse the sentiments expressed. Kpmher 21 By JOHN J. PERSHING The program lor military training takes on a national Importance from the sole viewpoint of citizenship, and calls for the most earnest consider ation of every thinking man and woman. The principles underlying the undertaking are sound and its success wilt be productive of perma nent and beneficial results. Its ap proval, comes from loyal citizens who recognize Its necessity. Its support comes from those who stood helpless and unready, but valiant, In the face of a world calamity men from all walks of life, practical men who apply common sense to their every day problems. demonstration toward the White House. Wheat and cotton both declined yesterday, wheat hunting for new low prices. That news Is as bad for the Republican party as It la for farmers. There Is one little bright spot In Wall Street's gloomy canyon. Street car stocks, surface, subway and In the air, are stronger. The public Is expected to take over the New York city companies, to the tune of hun dreds of millions, and that comforts high finance, wlV. stock prices where they are today. To check the building of the St. Lawrence waterway, connecting the Oreat Lakes with the ocean, making every lake city a seaport, would be a calamity. But It Is said that Sena tor Norrls may ask "Who is to own and get profits from two million horse power electricity that the canal will produce?" It seems Inconceivable that power produced by spending the people's money should not belong to the peo ple. But everyone remembers (he amusing Muscle Skoals story, and everybody knows that In our coun try the dear public la supposed not to own or operate anything UNLESS OPERATINON PAILS TO PAY, IN WHICH CASK THS PUBLIO SHOULD TAKE IT OVER AND PAY THE DEFICIT. - Senator Borah also will have some thing to say about the new water way, which must be approved by the senate. Let us hope a way will be found to avoid robbing the people TOO thoroughly, and to avoid break ing the hearts of too many "power people." The waterway is needed, and no matter what happens now, te people will always have power to do w.t seems wis and Just. la the power i Brady, M. D. BOTHER ME. shoes the dye Is applied remains for many hours In an atmosphere containing a small quantity ot the volatilized nltro-benzol and Is bound to lnhsle considerable, especlslly If he hsppens to sit somewhere In doors, with the freshly dyed shoes still on his feet. Whenever or wherever anyone of standing who Is on the other side of this controversy Is ready to test this thing out, I am ready to serve as the subject of any properly con trolled experiment. Meanwhile, we must remind our opponents that to date no scientific evidence hss been forthcoming to show that anything can be absorbed through unbroken skin. On the contrary there is con siderable scientific evidence (expert- mental evidence) that the skin is Impervious to the entrance of any food, poison or substance Into the body. Little boys will please not ask me why, then, use liniments ot plasters or salves or poultices, lor that has nothjng to do with the subject. QUESTION'S AND ANSWERS. Hiccoughs. I am subject to attacks of hic coughs and sometimes It Is hours before I csn stop It . . . Miss M. R. R. Answer Hold an ordinary paper bag closely over mouth and nose and breathe Into it for a few min utes. This produces an accumula tion of carbon dioxide In the bag, which stops hiccoughs. Quite a Hazard. I sm employed In a milk con densary and am allowed to drink all the milk I wish. I have been drink ing a quart a day. This milk comes from 300 different farms where production standards are Just so-so. Is there any danger of get ting any disease from drinking this milk Just as It comes to the plant? B. B. Answer I'd prefer to pasteurize the milk If I were In your place. If pasteurization Is not practicable. then boll It five minutes. This de stroys any harmful germs there msy be In any of the milk. It also destroys Vitamin C, but you can get that by taking any fresh fruit or vegetable every day. It also de stroys the taste of the milk, for many, and if It does so for you, then I suggest that you drink certi fied milk exclusively. That Is pure, raw and absolutely the finest grade of milk to be had. (Copyright John F. Dllle Co.) In the restlessness and the Insta bility of youth lies the greatest dan ger to any government. Unless guid ed and directed along rational and patriotic paths, future national se curity la endangered. Work and as sociation under the self-imposed dis ciplines of the military training courses should Inevitably Msult In a new sense of patriotic obligation and the development of .higher moral standards. , . I regard the system of military training in all Its phases as a won derful school for the development of the Ideal virtues required for good citizenship. Tomorrow: Charles Burton Robblns, formerly Assistant Secretary of War. of "eminent domain'. and the power to tax, there are remedies for many evils, If the people choose to .use them. - . Jenkins' Comment (Continued (torn Page One ) outstandingly the gold -producing countries of the state, Jackson coun ty producing gold to the value of $95,087 and Josephine to the value of 73,348. The next nearest county to these was Grant, with a total production of $66,669. Engaged Evelyn Knspp and Donald Cook, youthful film players. Informally jnnouncsd their enosoemcnt In Hoi 1y.ood, (.Associated frei Eht,l) i';:ys-'. m- Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson Count) History from ths Files ot The Mall Tribune of M ai d 10 Veen Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 21, 1922, (It was Friday.) "One Glorious Day," with LUa Lee, at Rlalto theater. Miss Lee Is ably supported by Will Rogers, In a com' edy role. Radio broadcasting set is lnstslled at Central Point by W. J. Virgin, and will use Msll Tribune news reports and market reports. Wildcat Welty and Gordon McKee, coast middleweight champion, put on tame bout under auspices ot K. O. Brown. WUdcst Welty was not very wild. H. O. Frobach mxes lively speech at Rogue River on the county fair, and makes hit with audience. Recall literature circulated setting forth that Sheriff Terrlll smokes cig arettes and "threatened to break a citizen's neck, It you don't quit play. Ing horse around the county Jail nights." Oregon Klansmen balk at assess. ment of (IS for defense ot Texas brother. Thti mercury reaches 100 mark again. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 21, 1912. (It was Sunday.) Circuit court orders work on Nled ermeyer buUdlng at Fir and Eighth streets to halt, as cars on the Jack- sonvlUe railroad scrape the brick. Marie Bradshaw, three years old. found after being lost for 24 hours. Two to one odds laid In Wall street that Wilson is next President. Rainfall In July above normal. Jack Morrill drives from Crater lake to Nash hotel In five hours and 40 minutes, "unbelievable as It may seem." "Pearl and Cassldy" present a laughing song at the Isls, and are the talk of the town. GARNER OLD-TIME HORSEBACK DAYS WASHINGTON. (AP) It Will be something new to this generation to see "Cactus Jack" Garner mount the political atump. 1 Down In Texas, where a district that lacks Just four square miles of being as large as the whole state of Maine has sent him to congress for IS consecutive terms, the old-timers may remember him as a hard-riding, straight-talking, horsebsck campaign er. But, to the younger crowd, he Is known as a man whose constituents .have thought so highly of their rep resentative that he nas found It nec essary to make only a few campaign speeches lnyeaxs. It will bS to his behavior on the house floor, then, that observers will have to look for a clue as to what sort of a campaigner t,he Democratic vice-presidential candidate will be. On the basis of this, his public may expect colorful and fearless speeches, a dominant thread of bluntness relieved with touches of wit and humor, and NO references to manuscript or notes. He always speaks extemporaneously. His appeal largely will be to the plain people, whom he 'la of snd for. He speaks with his whole body, waving his srms and driving home points with his fists, but his talk Is of the stralght-from-the-shoulder va riety with no flights Into oratory. His voice Is high-pitched but his delivery Is vigorous and he Is noted for bis ability to strip away the husks of a subject and drive at the facts and figures. Nervous before msklng a speech, he gains assurance once he is on his feet snd words are clipped out with machine-gun suddenness aa he warms to his subject. If his psst record In Texss bears any evidence, he will be ready for whatever rigors the campaign may have In store because he hss tackled many a man-sized campslgnlng Job In hit early days In congress. His district then contsined 33 counties snd he had to address ral lies In every one of them. Transpor tstlon was not of the best and he turned to the ssddle aa his means of covering grounw. ICHf (By the Associated Press.) MONTREAL. Pete Sanstol, Nor way, and Emlle Pladner, Prince, drew (10). NEW YORK. Prtmo Camera, Italy, technically knocked out Jack Gross. Philadelphia (7): Jack Redman. South Bend. Ind, technically knocked out Eddie Benson. New York (7): Bob OUn. New York, outpointed Muggs Kerr, Oklahoma City 181. SEATTLE. Predd le Steele, Ta. coma welterweight, technically knocked out Ralph Chong, New Or leans Chinese 16). Rev. McDougall to Be Guest Preacher Rev. Oeorge T. McDougall will speak at the Presbyterian church here Sunday morning and a large congregation Is desired by the church board. Reverend McDougall comes to this city highly recommended as a' forceful and sincere Interpreter of the Bible and aa entertaining speakei. F fulfil T S LAST Communications A Word to Jim and B1U. To the Editor: 1 see by your paper that Bill Gor and Jim Owen are going back to Washington to get six million or ao Iron men. I wish Bill would fix up the rural telephone line before he goes. They -tell me Bill Is president of the com pany, aiid If he could get Jim, who can't be very busy, to sell him some poles cheap and peel them, then Bill could get someone out of work to help him put the poles up and string a little cheap wire. We might get, say, service three days a week. Liv ing in the country is no fun without a phone eort cf furnishes the house and ycu miss all the news on tho party line when It's out, which If always. I feel sure If Bill would fix up things so we could get service say on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, noy body would kick. The way It Is now, you can't plan a thing. Say, for In stance, you planned to have a baby on Monday and you couldn't get the doctor till Saturday, It's hard on tho baby and spoils the' whole week. I think Bill ought to do something about this before he goes away. If Bill and Jim get $6,000,000 it's no cinch they will ever come back, and living out here without any phone 1st h 1! MARY ELLEN RYAN, R. P. D. No. 1. P. S. Don't get fresh; I am not planning anything. Crystalglow Kodak gloss supremo. The Peaaleys opp. Holly theater. - 'We Know Chevrolets You Know Us9 OUR HAT IS OFF to the flag that waves over the greatest nation that the sun shines on; likewise our hat Is off to a certain farmer not far fro here who wanted to hire a piano tuner to tighten his barbed wire fence. You'll feel like taking your hat vit mj our morougnnesa ana s&m In repairing your Chevrolet. There's Increased satisfaction also In knowing that work well dono , Is dependable work. Your motor- r Ing sense will appreciate the quality of our work the moment you sit behind the wheel after your car leaves this shop. Pierce-Allen Motor Co. South Riverside Phone ISO Oh Boy! What Joy LIFT CORNS RIGHTOUT The English Way Right from England comes the new, better, joyful way to take out corns roots and all. ' , Callouses go also and you can rub f oft that hard skin on heels and toes with your hand the magic treat ment. Ask Brown's Pharmacy or any lead ing druggist for a packace of Radox put a tablespoonful In a gallon of hot water do this for 8 or 4 nights m succession cnen mt out tne corns. This Joyful exhilarating fobt bath Is simply great you'll enlov vr minute of It and your burning, sore, tiira, Bcning ieei win reel better than they have for years ask for Radox and foot comfort will be yours. Man Lost 26 Pounds Looks 100 Better Feels Stronger Than Ever. .t.l tn rm. n .... - or woman thst Kruschen Salts Is the onra way 10 recuc( let us take the 7,icr wi r. j. nuz 01 Cincinnati, Ohio, recently received. He write.: "I've tried extreme diet ing, settlne-up exercises with very little results hut the results from KrilSChen nr nlmnat litflrf(i.i. 3 months I reduced from 205 to 179 pounds and feel tronrfr than ever no more whrcVlng or gasping for f ter." Bear In mlnrf vrvi - there Is dsnger In too much fat try thA AJLfA WAV n mHium V. . . . ' spoonful of Kruschen Salts In a gls.se of hot water every morning cut down on fatty meats and sweets one bottle that lasts 4 weeks costs uuv miie get it st Jarmin Woods. Hesth's Drui Store. Brown's Pharmaev. or an. 4- - . world. ' " Painful Piles Oo Qnlrk No Cutting No Salves. Itchlnr. hlMln, m mm...,-- Diles ta oulrkiv mH 4nn r- i'-t. If you really remove the esuae. Bsd blood circulation In the lower bowel and hemorrhoidal veins causes pile bv msklnff the affects n. ... flsbby. slmrwt desd. Salves snd sup- f"-,,u" 'wrsiiw oniv sn Inter nal medicine that stimulates the cir culation inH rirlM. .- , . v.,, lnipure blood and actually correct the cause of plies. Dr. J. s. tjeonhard discov ered s real Internal Pile remedv. After prescribing It for 1.000 patients with success In over 900 casea, he named It HEM-ROID. Jarmin Woods and druiilsts everywhere sell HEM-ROID tablets with gusrsntee they will end your Pte misery or money back.