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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1933)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune Emvwit to Swithirr 0't.o. tut im mil I'ltuM' Oklly sen tetvds PabUjJMr 01 fcuuiroun printing Co. ts-tr-is N r lit im Tt HOHKM UUHL, tilta t U KNACP UusM an todepatNMll ll.mp.pw bind u I Omoo. iukIs Act at Mar t :Uat nll l sbdfpro SUBSt'BlfTK KATBi a Matlln Ariniw. Dtflr. rur W.00 Dili. aootl 0 R. ferrtar In idTUM UdfOrd. AM iKtsoorUla, Cmral Point. PtoenU. UlatA. Uotf gill tnd M tilctinja. Dtil?.' oot rur All itrmt. nib la vrnottL orflclal ompa sf tl at) ol Uxllord. OfflrUl pipe ft tttunr oiantj. UCMXHU OF m Ataucu-nu msM HMiniM IftiU LAUOd Wlr. 8n100 ' p Ptom I tseJuPltoLi toUtM tt ao oh (or pubUeiuoD or oil o dlrpoutior redlud to K or otMwlM eradllod to UU All rtsbl for nuMleiUoe or tpcdil dUootenor borrln oro tmo mmtmo MEMBKH 0 UNITED PHHM UEMBEU OF AUUI1 HUUKAO OF CIHrni.ATION AdirrtUInt Keprwunillta L 0. M0IIBN8EN A COMPAN! ofrl 10 Ne York. Cblawo. Dolrolt. sto rtiwlMO. U Anlo mttu Portloml. fe Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. A youth who has been having bis fling. Is now flinging himself upon Jul! oot. "Mil. Lane has decided to leave off ' her canvassing until after the close of school." (Sucker creea- itonn.r Its still trifle chilly. . o 1 The collegian who cot 4 A's and the collegian who got 4 baskets, are back from the campus, snaring we plaudits of the town folks this week fumuol Sdaitow. middle-sued for his kind, reported to the police this mornlnir. that a bird he knew only as Oracle, yanked loose one of bis tsll-feathers during a friendly doui, nd is using the same as a wainscot ing in her new nestalow. The crime v occurred when Samuel turned his back to fly, and he aided In the ex traction. The court was held In simi lar cases, that mother love Is strong, nd victims of bad company -must zpect reverses. . A miner on the Applegate has found s skull two Inches thick. It will be sent to Balem for examination-with out the formality of an election. . ., . IN DATS OF OLD. (Pendleton East Oregonlan) Drunk and disorderly A lady In drink and In latl two children nueallns on the streets. A novel ' sight for Pendleton. Horse thieves are aroubd and In' dlans and white alike are losing horses off the reservation and all over the country. They may be caught yet. We are Informed the vigilantes are organized and we W' peot to hear of a rope over a limb nd a man at one end and horse t the other, trying to see which can outpull. (10 jts. ago col.) i n The Bible, formerly used extensively in these parts as masks for euseed nees, provide perfect and complete descriptions, (Psalms 65 v. 20-31) of the "forces of evil belching malice and Sate" I "Re has put forth his hands against uch as were at peace with him; "His mouth was as smooth as but ter. "But his heart was at war: "His words were softer than oil, "Yet they were drawn swords. ' "And. beneath his lips was adder poison." After months of calling "damnable bluffs, and names, the hog-calllng Bat. will be sweet change, and should not be considered as any re flection upon the hog. Farmers have started planting beardless barley and whiskered oats. Spring due yesterday arrived, and immediately ahowed signs of her com ing. The bluejays were roosting on phone poles, and swooping across the canyons In the Prospect area with shrill hollering. In the Applegste wild daisies have bloomed along the roads, and the air Is heavy with the smell of burning hair, caused by cows having hot Irons slapped against their southern extremity. The sun Is shining. Most everybody has ceased taking themselves or anybody else serious. The Union will survive and the fish are biting. High school 4de re packing 7 boys to a girls. Peo ple have stopped fretting and fussing , about world problems. They have reached the verdict that Inflamma tory speeches will never make them happy. It Can V Be Done "There's none so blind as they that wont see." Jonathan Bwlt. IN SPITE of the fact that the Good Government Congress is bo discredited that it can't be resurrected, some of the members refuse to see it. Incredible as it may appear, these members are now trying to organize their scattered forces and blow life into the corpse. Such an effort is doomed to dismal failure. These blind leaders of the blind, as well as their few misguided followers, can no more bring this lawless and seditious organization back to life, than they can bring George Prescott, slain in cold blood by their leader, back to life. It is simply one of those things that CAN'T BE DONE. TpiIIS minority is composed of 'two distinctelements first the downright lawless and criminal, those who have been swept so far from their moral bearings by this inflammatory agitation, that they actually justify the crime, becond, the honest and well meaning members, whose minds have been so poisoned, and whose emotions have been so un settled, that even the shock of a cold blooded and cowardly murder, has failed to open their eyes to the true situation, or allowed them to sense their true responsibility, as good citizens, at the present time. Fortunately the latter category PAR OUTNUMBERS the former. Among them we place Mrs. Ariel Burton Pomeroy, who has taken a very active part in this organization from the out set, and now assumes the position of official spokesman, and offers that organization s "explanation." WE ALLOW space to Mrs. Pomeroy for two reasons: TTil'Sr tlAAQIICia if Vtaa alniatu U .w At-. IT " a iimujn uccu tue- jjuticjr oi ims news paper to give a hearing to the "other side" in any local contro versy, under certain restrictions, which she observes. Second, because we feel the people of this community should know the exact nature of the problem they now face, and the obstacles the problem presents. THE outright outlaws and oriminals can be handled. That is A nnllffA npnlilavM Ttiian 1a ! ll. 1. 1 ru-uv ftvuiutu. uw wuv oig uoitiiot, wuu are Dinuereiy for right against wrong, BUT are suffering from a temporary i psychosis, which makes it impossible for them to clearly dis tinguish between these two moral extremes, are not so easy to handle. They present what might be called a political or patho logical problem. The former problem can be solved quickly; the solution of the latter problem takes time. .- The Congress Explains JIRS. POMEROY rests her case upon several claims, of whloh the following is No. 1. The Oood Government Congress has not expressed Itself more definitely because Its officers are held In custody and Its rights of free epeech and assembly have been denied, therefor It cannot function or express Itself as whole. The definite expression referred to, according to Mrs. Pome roy, was the demand of the Mail Tribune for some definite eiT pression of the organization condemning the pillaging 'of the court house and the destruction of the ballots. But when this definite expression was requested, none of the leaders or officers was in custody, the president had not horsewhipped her editor, the provisional president had not killed his man, none of the indictments for robbery or oriminal syndi calism had been returned. During this period, the congress had a daily paper at its command, held several meetings, public and private, all the members were at liberty, and yet this blow deliv ered at the very heart of all good government was not only not condemned but not even mentioned. The only comment in the congressional "record" by any member or official of this or ganization was that of its president, at the last meeting that her only regret was that the ballots had not been destroyed before I and clean government are keenly alive in the minds and hearts of the membership! X"HE present spokesman of the congress is "aghast at the number of its members in jail on charges of robbery, syn dicalism and murder. But is that the fault of the opponents of this congress or the fault of the members THEMSELVES! She is ev.en more "aghast" at the tragio passing of George Prescott, whose death was caused by the act of our "honorary president, Llewellyn A. Banks but "We feel. I believe Justifiably, that this wu an set commit ted by man temporarily unbalanced by long and deliberate persecution." , Was L. A. Banks unbalanced by long and deliberate persecu tion! That statement would be laughable were it not so serious. It not only illustrates the Inability of this minority in the congress, to distinguish between what is true and what is false, but their tendency to regard as true, what is the precise REVERSE of the truth. - NO ONE in the history of Medford ever so deliberately perse mifofl villiffol nnA fnrAaA k! foilin nlfivdna " AlA T. A. Banks. Scarcely a public official, scarcely a prominent citi zen in the community that he did not, at one time or another, castigate, slander and abuse. He did not even spare their wives, the virulence of his venom, the unscrupulousness of his methods knew no bounds. He bluffed and he bullied, and for years he made his bluff good. The one serious criticism to which this community is now subjected, by other communities in this state, is that people as a whole so long submitted to this sort of thing, for so long did not try to combat it, laid down and took it refused to fight back. And now we are told L. A. Banks was deliberately perse cuted a martyr to a holy cause! Not until this man's seditious and destructive activities brought this section of Oregon to the verge of actual civil war, was there any concerted effort on the part of the right thinking self respecting citizens to protect themselves, and then that is all they tried to do PROTECT THEMSELVES! PERsecutiont There wasn't even PROSECUTION, until this man made good on his repeated threats of sedition to openly declare a revolution j and on his repeated threats to shed blood, actually DID shed blood. A "MIND temporarily unbalanced?" That is SOMETHING vmi. Tm nnnRTs to nwr'TnTi' m;n is.... ti,t decision to the courts. But this much is CERTAIN. If L. A. Banks was unbalanced when he carried out his threat to kill, if he was unbalanced when he prepared for that murder, and when he made his state ment justifying that murder, declaring that under similar circumstances be would kill again then we believe even our correspondent will agree he was unbalanced from the time he arrived in Medford and tried through his newspaper to become an absolute dictator, and the leader of a revolution. Whatever his condition of mind was it was NOT temporary. It was the same condition that always had existed, from the first overture to the final curtain fixed in its purpose and shrewdly logical in its processes, either to rule or ruin in this community, and regardless of consequences, escape the penalties which his indiscretions amid the worst depression in the world 's history imposed. ' .. , . . Misdirected Devotion, Wasted Loyalty TTE DONT question Mrs. Pomeroy's sincerity or honesty in this public statement she makes we don't doubt she Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to duesse. diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped, selt aildressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the luije number of letters received only a few csn be answered here. No reply ran be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady In care of The Mall Tribune. FREEDOM COSTS TEN CENTS A BATTLE Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the Files of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Yean Ago.) Having sent for your booklet "The Constipation Hsblt," I studied It for several days and finally decided to join "The Break' era." I made up my mind to It to a finish or find myself fin ished, as I half apprehended. That Is the first chapter In the actual story of one of our read' era, friends. Be fore we listen to the second chap ter Old Doctor brady must put In a word. 1 Just want to say that our correspondent made a bum start. If he felt apprehensive about the outcome he never should have Joined The Breakers" at all. The cards were all against the success of the undertaking for him The first step In this portentous blrslness of break' Ing the physlck habit Is the righting of attitude. It Is a question of your knjw!edge of the fundamental physi ology of the digestive system. Un less and until you get that clear In your noodle. I warn you that we don't want you In "The Breakers. Tell your fears or your troubles to the cop. Apprehensions make us tired Now let the correspondent con tinue his narrative: Nothing alarming happened, how ever, and after the third day a nor mal action took place. Odd. but that suggests the moun tain that labored and brought forth mouse. It Is quite an antt-ollmax, after the promise In the. first chapter. Prom there on the correspondent Just fills up a few pages, mucn as our million mystery story writers do when they've caught the guilty one and allowed him 01 her to gobble down a bit of qulok poison to save the state a nasty Job. I thank you from the bottom of my heart ... for S5 years I -have taken cathartics snd consulted many doctors, yet no one ever called It a 'habit" until you convinced me . . . have gone now for seven months without resorting to anything of the kind and I consider myself entirely cured ... Cured? He that compiles against his will Is of bis own opinion still (no use trying to correct the quota tion, literary sharps, for I'm copying It verbatim this time), -mere is cure concerned. It Is purely snd sim ple vne breaking of a bad habit. The booklet. "The Constipation Habt " sets you back . dime and stamped envelope bearing your ad' dress. If It shows you the way to break the habit absolutely and for life It Is worth your dime and your while. But I regard the experiment In pnysohology as a total failure. If you make a few feints or false passes at it and then resume your old pin. enema or whatnot. . No use bothering with the expert men If you are noc first prepared to believe that I speak the scientific truth when I say that no matter how much physlck you have been aocus- tumed, not unto war j exrect win oc cur ii you abruptly cease using any such artificial aid: nothing more than trifling discomfort for a few days in any case. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Hare Mp. You say that hare Up Is not In herited. But Is It l.ot possible that thera Is some condition responsible for it. that Is Inherited, and which Is the same In every case? C. B. B. Aitswer Anything Is possible oept a mouse's nest In the cat's ear. No one knows the cause of hare Up or any other congenital defect of de velopment. There Is no reason -o Imagine suoh congenltsl detect are heritable or likely to occur again In the same family. Hare Up or club foot or congenital hip disease' or any of several other suoh defects may happen In any family. Going Mad. A woman saw the accidental death of her child, went Into hysterics and finally became Insane; not violent but has to be kept in an Institution. Wouid this affect the offspring. If any, of her children? Mrs. S. L. J. Anr.wer The woman was probably Insane or was to de7elop the mental d tsetse regardless of the tragedy. I am unable to hanard an opinion about the question of Inheritance without knowing the nature of the case. (Copyright, John P. DUle Co.) The sharp rat-a-tat of broom- handle popping against carpet la beard In the residential areas. There Is no great excitement here because Joan Crawford, the film queen, la having spat with her hue band, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Before ' the lady became pop-eyed from try ing to ape CI rets Garbo. the sad Scan dinavian sister, she was fair act ress, but no great shakes at it. and the same goes for her man. Joan has the slinkiest pslr of bulging hips In the movies, on her side of the sex fence. Junior flsunts what appears to be an oily C. Chaplin mustache. - Several are flirting with new 1033 autos that will pay for themselves the salesman says. The Older Girls have started bat tling fat and freckles. Mn Clarence .Wheeler has assumed active management of the Wheeler Apartments. 349 60. Riverside. ' The meetings of the congress have always been orderly, dur ing the last meeting held at the court house assembly hall a . resolution was adopted prohibiting the use of either secreoy or . force a method to gain the furtherance of Justice. Everyone knows suoh a resolution was passed. But every one also Knows it was never adhered to. Mrs. Pomeroy negleots to state, that soores of witnesses testify to ories of ropes and nooses having been made at the meetings of this congress. Also that a few hours after this resolution was adopted, the court house wag broken into and the ballot boxes destroyed, and at the very next meeting the leader and provisional president of the congress, THREAT ENED OPENLY TO DECLARE A REVOLUTION AGAINST THE STATE OF OREGON AND HIMSELF TAKE THE FIELD. S THAT "prohibiting" force or sanctioning force f The fine , sounding sentiments on the cards of membership, nledeinff support to the constitution of this state and the country, the pnoiaing or trie fundamental principles of our democratic government, were also adopted by this organiiation but at every opportunity were outraged by its leadership and defiled by its shock troops. "By their works ye shall know them." 'The only dally publication 'upon which we could depend for an accurate statement of our resolutions or utterances hss boon suppressed." This refers to the Daily News under the direotion of the organization's provisional president. Let the files of that paper be produced in evidence as to whether or not this congress op posed force or sanctioned it. The News of course was not sup pressed. It passed from the hands of L. A. Banks because he never completed payments for it, to th hands of its former owners, under court decree and the due processes of legal action. "The objects of Justice and elean government for which we organised are keenly alive In the minds and hearts of thousands of our citizens." Amen to that. But if the officers or members of this organi iation have publicly DEMANDED JUSTICE for the brutal murder of Officer Prescott we have failed to notice it. If they have condemned the most outrageous attack upon "clean government" in the history of this community the pillaging of the county court house and the burning of the ballots, we have failed to notioe THAT. I Or if any officer or member has ever demanded justice for the persons directly or indirectly involved in this outrase. we 'epirtt is noticed. Accumulating griev. also have failed to notice that. But still the objects of justice TJ ."Sf, believes she has been engaged in a righteous political crusade or that Bhe joined this Good Government Congress with the highest motives and the best intentions. We believe her regret at the tragedy resulting is perfectly genuine and we honor her for it. But this is also true she and those who believe as she does have been terribly and tragically duped, from the first meet ing of this organization to the last they have been used, ex ploited and finally betrayed. What they took to be true was false ; the situation they were told existed in this county, never DID exist; the ideals and principles they were TOLD the leaders of this organization held, WERE never held. What they took to be a holy crusade, was merely the effort of one desperate man, to climb to a position of personal profit and power, over the backs of his misguided and deluded followers. That's all. And it ended as it was certain to end, in dis illusion and tragedy. WE realize nothing we can say, will convince Mrs. Pomeroy or her personal following of the truth of this statement, at the present time. But what we can't do, what the pillaging of the court house did not do, what even the shot that snuffed out the life of Offi cer Prescott failed to do, we are confident the revealing hand of Time will do. Truth crushed to earth will rise again. The eternal years of Qod are Hers, But error wounded writhes In pain ' And dies among his worshippers I Editorial Comment "TUB (UNO. Whlla the teat of the state wonders t the state of near-anarchy which developed In Jackson county, culmi nating In the murder of a constable. the student of social psychology can pretty well reconstruct the conditions which made the movement possible. Qtven a few individuals ambit lou for power and given a great many other people with thwarted ambitions and you have the materials for such an eruption. In every community there Is a great mass of folk who are outside the fringe of success. It Is true In a lodge, a church, a school district. A few "run the organisation, the others are mere members silent In meeting and pased over when elections come round. This mass soon get the feel ing that their attendance and mem bership are useless, because the same old crowd will control. In the larger sphere of city or j county or even state politics, the same the term "the ring" frequently ap plied by the "outs" against those in office In a city hall or court house. Thwarted ambition In politics. In business or In social circles breeds the bitterness sgainst those who have either been more successful or more lucky. It may not be "thwarted" am bition either; It may be plain, ordi nary ambition using discontent for a bowstring. Banks and hl at Medford made constant reference to "the gang. It was an Indiscriminate term. One or two were named by name, the circuit Judge, the district attorney. But the term was purposely vague tn order to Include every one who vu the ob ject of personal grievance. This brought becJc of Banks and Pebl therefore all the discontented ele ments), all the Individuals whose hopes had been frustrated, and others who saw opportunity for using a movement to personal advantage. The "Oood Oovernment Congress" was mass organisation of Individual griev ance. (Salem Statesman.) THI BAND BOX ANNIV7RAARY sal continues until Saturday night. Oret money saving targslns In Hats. Dresses, Coat and Shoes. THEY RENOUNCE G. G. C. Through Wth O. O. C. To the Editor: 1 signed a card In the Oood Oov ernment Congress through a misun derstanding, being told that . It was to aid the unemployed. Have never at tended one of their meetings and did not take Banks' paper. I do not wish to be affiliated in any way with such an organization. I hereby withdraw from the organization. W. R. SIPES. Medford, Oregon. Never Attended. To the Editor: - Let It be known publicly that I, the undersigned, have never attended one of the Oood Government Cong ress meetings and hereby withdraw from such organization. S. H. HAWK. H. P. DEMMER. Desirable houses always in first class condition for rent, lease or sale Can 10S. Communications They Stand Aghast! To the Editor: Criticism has been made that, as an organization, the Oood Oovern ment congress ,has not expressed It self more definitely. I believe that all fair-minded citizens, if they will pause to deliberate, will agree that no organization can function or ex press Itself as a whole, whose offi cers are held In custody and to whom as an organization the right of free and orderly assemblage has been de nied by officials of the county court. This right has been denied us even though our meetings have always been orderly. During our last meet ing held at the court assembly .hall, we re-Iterated a resolution that had been unanimously passed at the pre vlous meeting. This resolution prohibited the use of either secrecy or force as a meth od by which to gain our objectives In the furtherance of Justice In this community. Our congress Is composed largely of landowners and taxpayers, ranchers and farmers, two-thirds of whom were either born In Vila state or have lived here twenty years or more a citizenry rooted In the soil of this county and substantial In every sense of the word. The only dally publication upon which we could depend for an accu rate statement of our resolutions or utterances, has been suppressed. These facts should make It quite clear that at present It Is Impossible for us to function as a congress, In order to bring about a better understanding of our position at this time there seems to be a real need for expression, so, as an Individual member and as chairman of the by laws committee, I will stats my per sonal attitude, believing that It will represent the majority of our mem bership. I nave come In close contact with a great many of our members during these last days, and realize that even though we cannot temporarily func tion as a body, that the objects of Justice and clean government for which we organized are keenly alive In the minds and heart of thousands of our citizens throughout the length and breadth of this county. Everywhere members are aghast at the extent of the Imprisonments that have taken place among Its offi cers and membership, and at the un usually high bond that Is required In many cases. Even more do we stand aghast at the tragic passing of Constable Geo. Prescott, whose death was caused by tne act ox our honorary president. Llewelyn A. Banks. We feel, I believe Justifiably, that this was an act committed by a man temporarily unbalanced by long and deliberate persecution. I believe that all alike deeply de plore the passing of Constable Pres cott, who. In courageoie obedience faced a desperate situation which was pressed to a tragic end. We all extend heartfelt sympathy to hie family and his many friends In their bereavement. ARIEL BURTON POMEROY. Medford, March 21st. Insult to Prescott 'i Friends. To the Editor: Enclosed you will find a check for $1.00 In favor of Mr. Frescott's mem orial fund, which we trust you will place in the proper hands; We wish to take this means of thanking you for calling Earl Fehl In yesterday's editorial. His public statement, deploring Geo.. Prescott's murder, was an insult to every friend of Mr. Prescott. If he didn't know this murder was coming up why was he hid out? Does he think he can put that old Chicago gangster stuff over on us? And we surely hope the law won't be too slow In taking Its course, for some of us can't hold In much longer. JOHN L. NEALON. Central Point, March 21st. TEN YEARS KOO TODAY March 22, it23. (It was Thursday.) Three state start war on "Home Reds" Eapee passenger train beats the ft engine to the Main street crossing. Home-grown rhubarb on the market. City hall to be remodeled. Healing meetings at Gold Hill rouie interest. Gopher poisoning starts In Ta-bl? Rock areas. Rain is badly needed. Tourist travel starte on Pacific highway, with majority of cars hall lng from Oklahoma. ' The Trlgonia oil well ceases drill ing when wood supply exhausted. TIVENTV YEARS AGO TODAY March 22, 1913. Bisle Point dlntritt sist telng bilked by took agents, and ijrj im vuiifliacraDie excitement. The Wednefldnv Htiiriv with Mrs. Porter J. Neff and discussed Ibsen. PoKst rangers assemble here and outline summer's work. Cook 1 rur exoert tired let that trlcity will be the rule rather than the excen t Ion for n tntv in a, in mm than ten years. Mrs. A. B. Cunningham ntrfoin. a number of friends at & Wiurtiintr- ton luncheon. "The Rusty Hinjte" auartt w a regular featur it-, fti ttba m.. ' Star announces that hereafter "we win txnowonly licensed films.' Ye Poet's Cornei God Give TJS Wom.n. Tim The poet savs "God fflve tm m.n We say God give us women too women sucn as our mothers were. Women with brave-hearts and vision clear To see the right and ferret out the wrong God give us women fit to h. Mothers of strong and righteous men. aiuuicrs or women Drave and true, Who' see the right and scorn the wronsr to do- Women who do not spend their time in senseless strife To gsln the plaudits of a weak and misguiaea lew. Alice Applegate Sargent. Jacksonville, March 20. 1933. LACK OF CASH HALTS LANE COUNTY RELIEF EUGENE, Ore., March 33. fAPI Because banks of thn oltv hou cllned to cash Lane county warrants, na woric ,nas oeen stop ped by the Lane county court.. Re lief work on p.. n n r.nrt. n. oontlnue, at least for a time. It was pointed out that warrants are not eligible for discount and for that rea son banks cannot carry an unlimited number of them 210 Men Return To Sawmill Job PORTLAND. Mar. 23. (Pi Con cluding a four-months' shutdown, the West Oregon Lumber company here resumed operation today on an elght hO'jr shift and employing about 310 men E. D. Klngsley, president, said more men will be added as business warrants. Seasonal Improvement of tne umber business has made re opening possible. Klngsley said. Peach for Yarhtsman. TACOMA, Wash., Mar. 3 (API- Edward A. Rich, prominent surgeon and yachtsman, died early today from ourns received Sunday when his 135, 000 yacht, the Argmy, blew up and sank at Its berth at the Tacoma Yacht club. Spongy, Bleeding Gums "Are Often Signs of PYORRHEA So go after such a condition at once with the treatment used and prescribed by 22.600 dentists. Here It ts: MASsaze your eums three times a day with KOJENE. the most power- rui antiseptic sare for vou to use. (Us equal parts of -KOJENE and water.) Then soak a small roll of cotton m KOJENE and put It be tween the gums and cheeks to keep the healing sntlseptlc In constant contact with sick tissues. Dont think vou can aav mon. by getting a clieaper antiseptic for this purpose It mijriit cost you your teeth I Try KOJENE first and risk nothing. If KOJENE doesn't Oar up vhe trouble In a week, get your money back and see a dentist. Heams Dnuj store and all oth.r flrst-clau dnuelst. sell KOraw Q 1 for the next t deilQ$l. months of THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY Make the most of your reading hours. Enjoy the wit, the wis dom, the companionship, the charm that have made the ATLANTIC, for seventy-five years, America's most quoted and most cherished magazine. Send $1. (mentioning this ad to The Atlantic Monthly, Arlington St., Boston a .DflNMOORG U.''a L IT-- I XI r I III lis should be vour Choice of Hotels Because: The Vr Low rat mttt ht DANMOORE the most econ omieftl food hotel. $1. f 1.50 S3 2-M. Special fmi!y rU Nwrfy ervrr room hu a prt. bath. Womtn trvlim untKrooip&ae tnd rccrt trtry eourKsjy. , Downtown lection tom t the tUxm, bat not nouy. pa J. Moors, formerly of tin Moor Hotel in Sewide. owm sod operate the DANMOORE personally, A. A. A, Office Opposits Botl Opcotite Terminl Sales Building TWELFTH AND MORRISON PORTLAND