PXGE YOUR
"$rETiTOK& TRIBUNE, MEDFOTID, OREGON, TTTESD5T, JUNE 6, 1933.
Medford Mail Tribune
"EvtryoM tn Southtrn OrtflOl
fiudJ Uw Hall TrlbUM"
DtUf Exnpt sttordlf
Published by
uinmun printing CO.
BOBERT W. (tUUL, Editor
Ail independent Newspaper
Enured m weood elm mitter at Mt4ford.
Ortsca. under Art of Mireb 8, 1870.
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
It MatLIn AdtaM
Dallf, or Jtu 11.00
Oallr, ill noDthf t.lo
. DiUr. OM Booth 00
Ra rtrrtrv In AAianeM Mtdfofd. Alb and,
JaclooorlUe, Central Point. Phoenix. Talent, Uold
mil am on tuinwin.
Dally, mm rear 0-OO
Pally, ill month S-25
. Duly, ooa Booth CO
All tartna, euo u aanaca.
Official paper of tha Cltr of Medford.
Official paper f Jaekaon Couatj.
HEM BE B Of TUB ARflOCIATED PHESi
BcmiHim full Leued Wire Berrle
The Aisoclated Pren to eiclutltelj entitled to
ttie um for publication ill oen dUpatchee
credited to It or otbcnrlae credited In thu paper
ind ilia to the local new oubllshed Herein.
All ricbti for publication of epecia) difpatcbai
feeralB ire alao menea.
IfEMBEB Or UNITED PBK8S
MEIIBEK Or AUDIT BUBEAU
OK C1KCULAT10NB
AdiMlslnt Kepreteouthee
K. C MOGENBEN a COM PA NT
Offleee Id Nea York, Chicago, Detroit, Sao ,
rieodjco, Loe Ancelee, Seattle, Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
133 wet candidates have shown up
to date, as prospective delegates to
the Oregon state convention for tha
repeal of the prohibition laws. Ten
or 13 years ago, when a wet candi
date was needed, they were all run
ning for office with the slogan: "I
stand for the strict enforcement of
the Volstead Act."
All the high school graduates sal
lied forth yesterday am. looking for
e grindstone upon which to place
their noses, while bottling for pan
cakes. Ferdinand' Pecora, the New York
lawyer asking J. Plerpont Morgan
questions before a group of senators,
to the great annoyance of Plerp., 1
doing a very good Job, and In a man
ner that indicates J. O. Barnes of
this city must be coaching him.
'
It Is quite a mystery why the guilty ,
Insist on fleeing from anything so
low as Justice. j
' The season of warm evenings has !
arrived. Who will be the first bright I
young athlete to dive 1A feet head
first Into a foot of water, and cause
a great commotion around the old
awlmmlng hole.
PIONEER AWAKENING
(Pendleton East Oregonlon)
On last Friday the water rose
In the river and threatened the
breakwater. A party went out in
a boat to remove some obstruc
tion In the channel when the
boat upset. O. W. Foley and an
other received a watery bath and
came near faring more seriously
but were rescued. The boat
washed a mile or two down the
stream and was badly wrecked. '
A series of religious meetings
have been held this week at the
. Baptist church.
Arguments on tha proposed Sales
Tax, are the order of the day. Many
en both sides are not handicapped by
any knowledge of the subject, and
therefore argue brilliantly. Some
contend it will hurt the farmer, and
some say it will help the fanner, and
oma say It will neither wound nor
aid the farmer. In any event the
Bales Tax ends the long drouth of
nothing to cuss or discuss.
A couple of the major stars are
changing their positions In the heav
ens. A decrepit 4d collided with a
house Sat., that was being moved
down the road. The planets will
manage to ease by each other,
astronomers say.
The Dubb Watson boy Is heading a
coterie of ktds with a club tn a hay
mow, and they sneak off to Bear
ereek for a swim, when their Maws
are not looking.
The Portland papers report that
the demand for gooseberries Is not
"strong." Tha gooseberry Is a pro
duct that even an English sparrow
will not eat, and It Is readily under
stood by the layman why tha de
mand for gooseberries is not "strong."
Donald Casebnlt, our enterprising,
courteous, wtde-awake, handsome,
energetic young secretary and Janitor
reports the loss of his girl, so his face
Is as long as his arm.
Tom Waterman, the Vermont refu
gee, and Vic Beckman looked at each
other 43 mlns. Mon., without blink
ing, while seemingly playing chees
and thinking.
.'
"The reported case of torullltU in
this vicinity proved to be a flivver"
(Salmon Bar Items.) What's another
Insult to Mr. Ford?
.
One of the Older Girls Is slowly
recovering from a new pair of shoes.
360 people gathered at tha ball
park Sunday. It was the largest as
semblage of folks In two years with
out a speech setting forth the aso
different ways in which the county
Is being robbed, by everybody but
tha speaker.
f
Good Work, Governor!
GOVERNOR MEIEB is to be commended for ordering an
investigation of charges of perjury in the recent trial of
L. A. Banks, held in Lane county.
It is essentially a state matter. The immediate trial was of
chief concern to Jackson county, where the crime was commit
ted; but whether trials are, or are not, properly and honestly
conducted, is a matter of vital concern to the entire state.
X17HAT we call civilization is after all only a veneer. The
only thing that prevents civilization from collapsing into
barbarism, is our laws and our courts, enforcement of the
former, respect for the latter.
The main purpose of our courts is to determine the truth,
for only on the basis of truth can true justice ever be obtained.
That is why the law provides that every witness in a case,
must testify under oath must solemnly swear, before taking
the stand to "tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but
the truth."
If that oath by common consent is to be disregarded, if
laws against perjury are to be treated as mere scraps of paper,
if deliberately violating that oath, and deliberately telling lies
on the witness stand ,'are to be winked at and condoned, then
we might as well burn up our law books, close our courts and
return to the tooth and claw of the jungle.
'T'HIS-is, we repeat, a state concern. It is vital to every right
thinking and law abiding citizen of this state, that the
courts be cleaned of perjury, that the laws against perjury be
enforced as rigidly and fairly as all other laws are enforced ;
that violators of the law be punished, and respect for the law
and the courts be maintained.
In taking this action Governor Meier has announced to the
people of this state, that under his administration, every effort
will be made to put meaning and vitality into the oath of a
witness in the courts of this state, that where there is any
valid reason to believe perjury has been committed no stone
will be left unturned to bring the guilty to justice.
His prompt and courageous action should have far reaching
results. It may well result in legal and juridicial reforms in
this Btate, which will spread over the entire country.
year in Oregon, and of course, SOMEONE must pay that
$3,000,000.
But in our judgment, the sales tax as framed, represents the
best way of solving our tax problem that has been proposed to
date and as matters stand the ONLY WAY.
For if the sales tax is defeated, the only way out will be to
call a special session of the legislature at considerable expense
to the taxpayers thresh over the entire tax situation again
and as far as we can see, with slight prospect of any better
solution, in fact with Blight prospect of any solution AS
G00D1
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D.
out of the roadside bushes a be
whiskered veteran, flapping hU arm,
and .creaming: "Catch a... I'm rat
tlesnake bit!"
Ogden Reld, ne-scaper pubhsher.
la the last surviving collarlst at least
vlalble on the sartorial horizon tn
wear the 1000 moael, 8 Inch -turn
over with rounded point. No figure
In the New York ourrah so suggests
a Prime Minister Cor a Conservative
Party, a tight-sitter who maintains
the statua quo, as Mr. Reid.
Signed letter, pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease
diagnosis' or treatment, wlU be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self-
addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink
Owing to the large nomber of letters received only a few can be answereo
Here. No reply can be made to qaertes not conforming to Instructions
Address Dr. William Brady In care of The Mall Tribune.
t
DON'T OIVB ANVBOD YOUR EARS. KEEP' EM.
Jenkins' Comment
(Continued from Page One)
BUT everybody buys postage
stamps, and every time he buya
three-cent; stamp he thinks a Uttle
Indignantly of the good old days
when he used to pay only two.
It Isn't good politics to have too
many people thinking Indignantly of
the good old days, '.
The Sales Tax Again
A COMMUNICATION printed today in another column from
W. B. Crause, who opposes the proposed sales tax, shows
how desirable it is for people to know what the Oregon tax is
before they oritioize it.
It is plain to see, for example, that Mr. Crause assumes that
the sales tax will mean the levying of a small SEPARATE tax
on every bar of soap, loaf of bread, or pair of shoes which the
individual buys, particularly the working man.
Such is NOT the case. The sales tax is solely on the retail
merchant's QROSS sales. It becomes then, one of his costs of
doing business and is not a tax on the consumer, except in so
far as the dealer'i prices may be inoreased to cover this tax.
If the dealer, in an effort to increase sales, in competition
with other dealers, absorbs this tax, the consumer escapes
entirely. If he passes the tax on, which our correspondent
assumes will be done but on which point many experts are not
so certain, then at the most the consumer must pay 2 cents
more on every dollar purchase, less than the price of a postage
stamp. It is hardly reasonable to assume, as Mr. Crause does,
that such a small amount will compel any person to deprive
himself and family of the "necessities of life," if without the
tax he would have had the money to pay for them.
ANOTHER point our correspondent appears to overlook is
t.hn fflnt frnf thia anlnn tnv in In rtn AovnraA tft wa1i,a4i'm
of the property tax. Until the property tax is reduced, rents
can't come down, and property owners can't escape from the
tax burden that is literally crushing them.
Mr. Crause stresses the plight of the working man who must
pay the tax but can't, like the dealer, pass it on to anyone else.
True. But if the "working man" owns his own home he will
get his relief in the reduction of his property tax. If he doesn't
if he is a renter, then he will or should get his relief in
reduced renti.
The point is the tax on real property must be reduced, and
the only way it can be reduced in Oregon, under PRESENT
CONDITIONS, is through the passage of this sales tax.
OJTOR does our correspondent understand the sales tax as it
applies to the fruit industry. To quote:
"The fruit grower sella hie fruit at the buyer'a option over
the auction block. Kaa he any chance of collecting his tax from
the consumer! No."
But the individual fruit grower is EXEMPT from this sales
tax just as is the farmer who sells to the wholesaler. He should
have no chance to oollect from the consumer, for HE HAS NO
SALES TAX TO PAY. In fact this Oregon sales tax is "made"
for the man who earns his living from the soil from first to
last he is favored and benefitted.
00 we might go on, for there are several other errors in the
communication, but space prevents dealing with all of
thorn.
We are glad to have received Mr. Crause 's letter, for this
is a very important issue, and the more people taking an active
interest in it, the better. Nor do we doubt our correspondent
is perfectly honest and sincere in his opposition to a sales tax
many will agree with him. There is a strong, deep seated, and
to us rather mysterious PREJUDICE against such a tax
ANY sales tax.
But we are also sure that if Mr. Crause will study over the
provisions of this Oregon sales tax carefully, many of his ob
jections will disappear; that if he reviews the entire tax set-up
in this state, and the necessity of tapping new revenue sources,
more of them will disappear. We believe many people opposed
to a sales tax on principle, will decide to vote for this one (it
will only be in force for three years) as the best way out of a
bad financial mess, the best hope of successfully surviving the
immediate emergency.
AS has been frequently pointed out in this column, in the
matter of taxes, Oregon faces a condition, not a theory.
It is an extremely serious condition. The sales tax is not a
perfcot tax. No tax is. It is calculated to raise .OOOjOOO a
Infections of the nasal sinuses in
childhood are primary causes of mas
toiditis and of acute abscesses In the
middle ear (the
portion of ear
within the ear
drum). Loss of
hearing is a com
mon consequence
of such attacks.
Even In a'dults
acute sinusitis
(too commonly
regarded as Just
a bad "cold") Is
likely to impair
tha hearing. But
children and
youths particularly should have the
benefit of medical advice In every
acute head trouble and never be sub
jected to experimental home treat
ment or piled with nostrums. When
I say medical advice, of course I mean
the advice of an honest physician,
and not an old fossil or quack who
conceals his Ignorance ond incompe
tence by telling the gullible customer
It Is "Just a cold.
Postponement of proper treatment
of chronically Infected tonsils in
childhood is a factor of Impaired
hearing In later life. In former, times,
when radical surgical removal of the
tonsils was the only effective treat
ment, perhaps people were not en
tirely unjustified In putting off the
ordeal, for surgical tonsillectomy was
and still is a formidable major ope
ration and has a mortality of Its own.
Today, however, there are good phy
sicians In every community who are
skilled In the diathermy or electro
surgical method of treating Infected
tonsils. This method has proved quite
as efficient as the more dangerous
surgical tonsillectomy and It may be
successfully employed even for chil
dren as young as four or five years
of age. There seems little excuse for
putting off proper treatment of In
fected tonsils now that this bloodless
method Is available and no hospitali
zation or disability Is Involved. 1
warn all parents or adults who seek
treatment for Infected tonsils to be
ware of the old fossils, the back num
ber throat specialists, the quacks In
the guise of reputable physicians,
who hove the temerity to assert that
the diathermy method Is not prefer
able to the old Spanish custom. Could
I make auch an uncompromising
statement as this if it were not truo,
or If any physician In the country
could successfully controvert it?
No one with ear trouble should ever
wear cotton or other plugs In the ear
canal.
When bathing or swimming try to
keep water out of the ear canal, and
especially If there Is a perforation in
the drum. Before going In swimming
Insert some lamb's wool, raw wool,
or oiled cotton In each ear canal, or
wear soft rubber plugs while In the
water, or soft wax plugs.
It is my honest opinion that any
one with chronic ear trouble
chronic deafness will receive better
treatment and better general advice
from a good family physician than
from an ear specialist. A good family
physician will send or take the pa
tlent to a specialist whenever there
Is a reasonable chance of any particu
lar benefit from the specialist's coun
sel. In any case, the wise patient.
having found & good physician,
lies on the physician to suggest such
counsel when or If It offers any
chance of betterment for the patient.
These wiseacres who go straight to
some self-contained specialist of their
own choosing and scorn to take treat
ment or advice from the general prac
titioner, pay a fancy price for com
paratively unsatisfactory results. They
forgot that, after all, the ear Is part
of the general system.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Bad Habit.
Kindly send the name of the prepa
ration you recommend for curing con
stipation. F. H. A.
Answer I know of no such prepa
ration. I have no cure for constipa
tion. If you have the habit I may be
able to tell you how to correct the
bad habit. Send a dime, a stamped
envelope bearing your address, and
ask for booklet "The Constipation
Habit."
No Leakage,
Please send Information on leak
age of the heart. Mrs. O. H. H.
Answer No, this Is only a health
column. If you tell me you have leak
age of the heart I may be able to
send you some helpful advice.
Calcium Carbonate.
1. Are calcium carbonate tablets
taken continuously harmful? 3. Are
magnesia tablets taken continuously
for the stomach harmful? 3. Are cal
cium carbonate tablets flavored with
cinnamon as good as plain calcium
carbonate tablets? A. O.
Answer Calcium carbonate, plain
or flavored with cinnamon, Is a good
antl-acld, preferable to soda, mag
nesia and other alkalis, when a rem
edy for acidity, heartburn, waterbrash,
etc., is required.
(Copyright, 1933, John F. Dllle Co.) ,
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY-
By O. O. Mclntyre
NEfW YORK, June fl No man at
two different! periods of life so aa-
quired two directly antithetical repu
tation as Bob
Davis. ' As Rob
ert fl. Davis he
was for years
magazine editor
rarely grooving
out of his rou
tine a worn
path from his
editorial desk to
his aoartment.
An editor,
discoverer of
writers, ha rarely
bossed stationery for fiction storing
Today they are the two biggest d
posltors In the sum Institution. Lots
of fun, that kind of a Jokel
And a head copy boy In an edi
torial room, glancing at a rather
fuzzy -wuzzy new reporter on the
staff, observed: "He looks to me like
a Shubert road show of Heywood
Broun i"
(Copyright. 1033, McNaught
Syndicate. Ino.)
Communications
Opposes Truck Tax.
To the Editor:
If you sea fit, plesse publish the
following communication:
X have noticed of lata two articles
in regard to the new auto license
and truck transportation act, which
law. In my estimation. Is the most
unfair and vicious legislation yet en
acted. To practically exempt pleasure ve
hicles from taxation and at the same
time double It up on the work ve
hicles la decidedly unfair and un
American. No class needs relief from
excessive auto tax so badly as the
small farmer does; yet If he hap
pens to be thrifty enough to own a
small truck to be used occasionally
for his own hauling, he pays four
to five times as much as the pleas
ure vehicle.
If ha Is forced by economy and
thrift to choose a passenger car chas
sis with a pick-up body on it, he Is
forced to pay practically four times
as much license as If he had chosen
a sedan and cluttered up the high
way with a trailer.
This Is unfair class legislation and
should be opposed by everyone be
lieving in fair play and honor,
whether the. gainer or loser.
E. E. FOSS.
Talent, June 6.
Opposed to Sales Tax.
To the Editor:
We are opposed to the sales tax for
the following reasons, and would be
glad If you would publish this:
Such a tax produces revenue with
out destroying values, except the
wages of the working man who can
not add the tax, but must pay It.
It will bring relief to farmers and
small home owners, but the amount
of relief will react on them in the
Increased taxation for which they
get no recompence.
It will bring relief to the business
man by greatly reducing his personal
property tax, who pays his taxes at
the present time, and the public will
have an added burden placed upon
It to further help him out. Why
not let him bear his share?
It will restore values to real and
personal property, at the expense of
the people, who must lose as the
other side prospers.
It will not confiscate property. It
depends what kind of property you
mean. It certainly confiscates the
money of the people who pay the
tax, and who have no means of re
couping themselves like the business
man who . can add the tax to his
goods.
It cannot sell a farm or confiscate
a home. This probably would he so,
provided the home or farm was not
taxed at all, but sales tax takes
money that Is needed to pay the other
taxes, and the home owner and
farmer cannot collect tha tax.
It has no delinquencies and no
sheriff sales; It Is arbitrary; the tax
payer has no option; In order to avoid
paying the tax he must deny himself
and bis family the necessaries of
life.
The tax payer can save the tax
either wholly or In part. Only at the
personal sacrll.ee of himself or his
family.
It Is a reliable tax and has a large
volume. No doubt of it. The tax
payer la burdened with this same
kind of tax at the present time. Does
he want any more reliable taxes?
It rests upon ability to spend, but
not upon ability to earn and the tax
payer must, like the business man,
collect his taxes from those who hire
his services the same as all other
business men, but will the sales tax
do this?
It will encourage and reward econ
omy and thrift. Very true, for the
benefit of the other Interests, not
the tax payer.
It will discourage extravagance and
waste. Maybe so. but how?
Tha time and amount of payment
are largely at the option of tha tax
payer. True, but only at nia per
sonal sacrifice.
It Is i direct tax directly levied
and collected. True, pay in advance.
It taxes the transient population,
Also true. The tourist that Is already
taxed In his own state for all he Is
worth. If he comes here ha will have
more taxes to pay. It won't Induce
the tourist to come.
It taxes the spending Instead of the
saving ability, therefore It will cur
tal expenditure for legitimate goods
and react upon manufacturers and
dealers who will lose by reason of
loss of trade for goods sold for the
benefits of receipts of taxes, and out
side competition from, states who
have no sales tax.
It eliminates the cost of assessing
and minimizes the cost of collecting.
Maybe so, but we fail to sea where,
unless It Is proposed to do away with
the assessor's office.
With the sales tax or a consumers'
tax the citizen Is never In debt to
the state; he pays as he goes. This
Is absoluately true. But again we
ask who is going to pay the working
man back? Tha business man can
collect from his customer, but the
working man cannot. The business
man who employs him pays him what
he Ukes. I wonder what he would
say if his employes added on the
sales tax to his weekly wages.
And In conclusion, how about the
fruit industry. Tha fruit grower sells
his fruit at the buyer's option over
NOTICE
We will take City or County
Warrants, Stocks and Bonds as
part payment on new and used
cars.
See Page 7
for list of cars.
Armstrong
Motors Inc.
Headquarters for Chrysler,
Plymoifth, Hudson, and Terra
plane, Cadillac.
is
i wrote
line.
About nine years
ago ha became
O. O. Mclntyre Bob Davis, globe
trotter, and tn that time has written
nine books and h indreos of news
paper columns. At the moment he is
off for a long caprice in far away Ice
land.
Born in a Nebraska whistle stoD,
tha son of a mlnlrer, his early life
was spent In Carsnn City. It was
there he piloted Bob fttulmmons
and gave him tha nlck-nsme "Ruby
Robert." As as amateur photographer,
hts collection of snapshots of ceie
trttles will some day go to the Met
ropolitan. At 04, be Is a twitch of enthus
iasms, a raconteur par excellence with
the Impish expression of hankering
for a tryst with the gang behind the
barn. The other evening I asked
where was the mo interesting plsvr
ha had aver been. "The most Inter
esting place Is whwe I am," ha said.
Bob Davis was telllni of a wiry
Celt sidling up to Jim Corbett, in the
first flush of his championship, la
one of tha New York bars. He wanted
to know whatever became of this per
son and that out In San Francisco.
His queries became so persistent that
when hla back w turned someon
dumped an entire pottle of fiery to
kssco In his beer. He downed !t.
While evsrybody looking on, beadtru
In perspiration, expected him to burt
into flame, he wtpod hts hand across
his mouth and Inquired: "Jim, what
ever became of Nonpareil Jack Demp-sey?"
Sax Rohmer and P. O. Wodehouse
were fellow clerks, at two pounds a
week, in a Londo courting house
After their gradu.tMnn from college.
Thry were dismissed the stune dv
for uwlng up tha bank s xpena5va etu-
Wlll Rogers attended an uppUy
luncheon at which the piece de re
1 stance was Eggs forentlne. Rogers
gazed contemplatively and final1?
forking up Its rich crust of spinach
snd creamy yellow goo that suggest
ed a gorgeous It all in sunset, nudged
Amon Carter and Whispered: "Don't
ssy anything It's iv."
The late Francis Patrick Murphy
was one of New York's most engaging
after dinner speakers. With narrow
ed eye and lifted finger he cou.d
sweep an -tudlence Into tears or laugn
ter at will. Altiiough the world
thought his efforts extemporaneous
he confessed to Intimates ha rehears
ed every speech with gestures repeat
edly before a fuU length mirror In
lieu of delivering it in public.
Shortly before bis passing, Mr.
Murphy received a scrawled post card
from an old nestor In the Maine wootls
he had known many years. It read:
"I'm coming down o New York short
ly for a capital opeatlon I'm going
to have about five pounds of drld
maple syrup cut out of my whiskers."
There's a fool yarn Squire Earl
Mauck used to tell that starts off
along a lonely road In the West Vir
ginia hills. Suddenly there darted
SEE US FOR
ARSEMAT
off LEAP
and other Orchard Supplies
We Carry a Complete Stock
F. E.
Phone 833.
229 N. Riverside
DELICIOUS
with fruits or berries
forf00!
pYPaOlU
m
CHRIS WOLFF.
PYROIL Protects Where
Oil Alone Fails!
Because it will withstand heat to the
point of melting and vaporizing of the
metal itself.
MEDFORD OIL DEPO
207 So. Riverside Front Sanderson Motor Co.
Phone 1335. FRANK HULL
Hotd Wtcayiand
and BUNGALOWS
Pasadena, California
A truly charming atmosphere In which t
rest for a day, a week or to live and dream a
way tha winter months.
Pasadena and the beautiful HOTEL MAHY-
LAND are s bit farther away from tha ocean,
where the dry, crisp air and health restoring
sunshine are so invigorating- yst only a few
mlnotes drive along paved boulevards te the
heart of busy Los Angeles.
For Booklet; and Tlem ota States'
WriU to H. M. NICKERSON, MANAGER
the auction block. Has he iny chanc
of collecting hla tax Irom the con
sumer. No. I have bad personal ex
perience with this tax and have seen
its destructive effect and I sincerely
hope that It will not pass.
W. B. CRAUSE.
Medford, June 6.
MORE
PEOPLE
BUY BUICKS
THAN ALL
OTHER
EIGHTS
IN ITS
PRICE RANGE
COMBINED!
BECAUSE
BUICK GIVES MORE
AND BETTER MILES
Pmoplm look Ml tb 13 &igbis
in Buiek't prlem ringm,
no bay more Baieka thmo
alt of thm re if combined.
Thtrmtro 600,000 man peo
ple driving Buickm than the
oexi moat popular ear in
Boick'e price range.
Every state in the Union
parchaaea mora BoJcka thaa
mnj other automobile priced
ahove $1,000
Prww fJoMi .. auiiy pmoplm
boy Boiokm mm may athmr emr
primed mbovm 91,000 mtxmm,
mtohtm, tmlnm or mlxtemnm.
Bvmry cltr wHb . population
of 135,000 or oyrnr boym
mora Boiekm tbmn may olbmr
emr priomd mbovo tl,000,
'PitametmkeneromPoTk'elfmtionmt
New Cat Smlem Serviom
Buick wishes to trmnlr the
men and women whose
demand for Buick cars has
made possible this great
sales leadership. Such
popularity can mean only
one thing: People are
convinced that Buick
gives more and better
miles. You and your fam
ily will also find Buick the
ideal car. A single drive
will prove that it gives
better miles and the
records show that many
Baicks serve dependably
for '360, 000 miles and
more. That's reliability
and economy, too. Re
member there are twen
ty Bnick models all
moderately priced and all
available on liberal G. M.
A. C terms. A General
Motors Value.
SKINNER'S
GARAGE
Its So. Riverside
Medford, Oregon
When Better Xutomebllea Ar,
Bollt, Bolek will Build Them