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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1933)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "Current u Southern Oregon ftudt the Hall Mbunt" Dolt Cicapt Sttardif Publliiwd tn MEDVOBO PBINTlNO CO. a t j -it r m bl Ad lodpeodtot Newtptpw Enured a iKond elm matt tt Uedfort Ortsoo, aodtf Act of Uvea I. Mil. BUBUCBlPnON KATE! t Mall In idttnt DlUf. OM fW .16-01) Dllly, Hi swotitf ITS Dally, om moaih 40 B Carrw. IB Achillea Medfori. AlbUad, Jitiwittlilt, Ceutral Point. PbocoU, Ttltnt, Gold BUJ tin M HICDVifl, Dill?, MM leu $6 00 Daily, ill -norma 1-26 Duly, om nwnUj .00 AU terma. uid la adraoc. Official pajw of tbt Clt of Medord. Officii, paixr of Jidnoo County. UEMBtlb OF TUB ASSOCIATED PREM Uoedtlni full Leuod Wire Berrlco tbo auoeliud Crm U uelmltely enUtitti to Um um fu publication of all om aupauoco credited to it or outervuo cretvua id hup mo and alio to tM local mi DnbUhJ oerela AU rUDU for ouhllcaUoo of iptdal dlipatdMa nereis aa alio resened. UE&IBEB Off UNITED PKESS UEMBKH Of AUDI1 B0HKAD Of CIRCULATIONS Adtertlilm KeiirfMoUUTta IL C. MOOK.N8EN LOSU'ANT Omcoe lo He York, Cbietto, Dttrolt, Baa rraodao). Cm Aoctlat, Buttle, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Art Bui Perry. A number of citizens art now hot under the collar, from both the weather and the hellralslng. The esteemed Oregonlan notes In an editorial caption, "The dollar la till eluilve." Twaa ever thua. Never theless, It was the understanding that when the Democratic admlnla Iratlon got going good, the dollar would chase you, Instead of you chas ing the dollar. PIONEER PHUDI8HNE8S (Pendleton East Oregonlan) Pendleton has yet her opium dens and very seldom are there any arrests made In them, altho they are patronized by amokera very evening. It would not be a bad Idea If these dens were driven from the limits of the .city. '(30 Yr. Ago col.) A number of eminent thinkers studying crime and criminals have come to the conclusion that the causa of all the orneryness Is ths parole system, whereby a gent who commits a crime and acta caught. Is given a chance to commit another crime. They argue, that when an erring brother Is trapped and labelled as a first offender, he Is in all prob ability a 4-nd offender. It Is held that If a criminal Is hustled off to the Big House forthwith, he will not get caught so often, or do nothing that will lay him liable to imprison ment. He now feels that after steal ing the horse, the sympathy will be on tap, and the argument will be: Thla Is the first time. The heavy thinkers feel that there also has to be a first time, for going to the penl- tentlary, and no time should be wast ed In getting stsrted. ... t A piscatorial enthusiast caught a fish yesterday, and was not acclaim ed until he felt like Mussolini. There are quite a few beer psrlors. They come aa near being parlors, as their chief stock In trade comes to being beer. ... "Sadie Waylock fell out of the barn Thursday morning and badly jarred. Otherwise not Injured" (Paisley Items.) Pretty luckyl Prom all that can be gleaned from tray remarks, there li a police dog In thla town that la ripe to be shot for a coyote. ... RED-HOT PACTS FOR TODAY (Science Monthly) "You take a glass o'f wster and dash It high Into the air, the liquid will come down In the form of ringing crystals or Ice. Spittle will freeze before reach Ing the ground. All live things seek deep shelter during the win ter. Partridges dig themselves far Into the snow and stay there. There have been cases of their falling like stones while In flight, freezing to desth In the air. Marmots hide In underground holes where they hibernate, as suming the shspe or a little claylike ball. The Ice becomes so hard the ax robounda rrom It. Llvs wood becomes petrified, and when one chops It, sparks fly as If from flint." . "The Acme Motor company has re ceived a consignment of V-8 Pords, thst did not lsst a day" (Acme, Idaho, Times.) Listen to that knockl ... There Is still plenty of sin about, and no more originality than for merly or usually. ... Safecrackera pilfered the Peoria Bill Oatea aafe, extracting t.100 Sat. It aa a neat and workmanlike Job. like Peoria Bill would have done himself. ... Tha Oranu Pass boy slsyera are re ported In search of a defense, and are reported In auch desperate straits they will have to cum the power trust. It looks like the boy slayers would have plenty of time In which to live down their past, ... A gent who was hers lsst winter. raising hell along ssne lines, and was arillcted with an occasional' rational notion, has been tried in Salem for celling the Marlon county court, -individually and collectively llsra." If he hsd made a crack like that In thla county, when paranoiac hysterics were In bloom, he would have been executed for heinous mild ness. Chicken stealing, once considered a prank, has become a serious men aoe to North Carolina poultrymen ays Roy S. Deamyne, State college specialist. Can Local SEVERAL weeks ago we urged the housewives of the' valley to insist upon local fruits for summer canning. We repeat that request now. Local cherries are ripe and of unusually fine quality. Apricots and peaches are also ripe, or soon will be. The sun kissed flavor and helpful vitamines of today, can now be put in cans and not only reduce the family cost of living, but increase the family health next winter. Now is the time to can. Small fruits have never been better, here in Jackson county, and we hope, will never be cheaper. The more the women of this community buy and put up in cans now, the better for nil concerned. Buy locnl fruit and put the surplus in cans now. Please the family and benefit the local grower. Eat Medford fruit, and keep Medford money at borne. Lin dy "On the Road" 'T'HIS Lindbergh flight to Greenland is not a publicity stunt or a summer vacation, it is a business trip a la mode. Lindy'is investigating the northern air route for Pan-Amer ican Airways and taking Mrs. Lindbergh along. The southern route to Europe has been favored but Lindy may decide the northern route is better. It is interesting that on this trip, the Lindberghs came near passing the Italian fleet, en route to the Chicago World's Fair, in the air. More evidence of the rapid progress in aviation, soon "airships that pass in the night" will be a commonplace. As a result of Lindy 's business trip before the end of 1934 there will probably be regular air service between New York and Europe. Two large seaplanes are now being built to carry 50 passengers each, with dining and sleeping accommodations included. The schedulo will be one 'night and aiday to Europe. Depressions may come and depressions go but the airplane business purrs steadily on, higher and higher. Its Not an Added Tax I OOK before you leap. Study the sales tax and what it means before you vote against it. ( It isn't an added tax. If passed you will not have to pay a tax on every article you buy. Only the retailer pays the tax. Tou will buy exactly as you do now and buy where you want to buy. You will pay the market price, that's all. If the re tailer passes the tax on to you you will never know it. You will bargain exactly as you do now, for the highest quality at the lowest prevailing price. THE olection will be held a week hence. The campaign is nhnnr nvpr. Yet those who nnnnse the sales tax have OFFERED NOTHING to take the question what we are to do if The sales tax is not an extra an offset tax the proceeds used to take the burden from real and personal property and it will only be in force to meet the present emergency the tax will expire at the end of two years. Isn't it to your interest and the interest of the state to give it a trial instead of forcing another session of the legislature, and forcing the state upon a tax system that has failed I THINK it over. And look the tha wnrrl nf nnvnne else, ss You, the people, are sovereign on election day. (Assuming no more ballot burning expeditions are contemplated.). It's a question for you and you and Vote in your own self interest vote to eliminate the crush ing tax burden on this state, and the sales tax will pass, by a large majority. Good Times FOR the first time in three ' nrtf pvn.pt inr.rnr.om, nnA fall slump this year. They are as they used to anticipate in pre The farmer, they sny, is expeoted to make 1933 a good auto mobile year and a good tire year. In Indiana, for instance, farmers arc getting 47 percent more for hogs than they received last June. They are getting 22 percent more for butter, 31 percent more for lambs, 33 percent more for corn and 69 percent more for wool, Similar conditions exist in other agricultural states. And tho farmer is passing this increased buying power along in the purchase of things he needs. One sales agency tells of a dealer in a small rural town in northern Indiana who has ordered and sold 57 washing machines since May 15. Farm machinery, as well as automobiles and tires, has shown a decid ed upturn in sales. PARM buying is expected (o start in August and continue through October and possibly November. Greatly increased factory forces working 24 hours a day have been unable to keep pace with unfilled orders which have been accumulating. It is estimated that it will take three years' production at 1929 capacity to replace the worn-out cars on the road today. Every month for the past two years, 100,000 cars have gone to the junk pile and have not yet been replaced. Tires have gone with them and they, too, must be replaced. - That replace ment is now under way. Recoveries, like depressions, move from East to West. What is happening in Indiana, may soon be expected in Oregon. Communications pefrnd Governor und, Sarea Tax To the Editor: In your lwue of July 11th X rad with interest two communications on tho sale tax. on by self-styled "Parmer Harry Thorn," the other by Harold Barton, which Utter you an alysed effectively in your editorial. Many inhabitant of Jackson coun ty, particularly In the rural district, have listened to long merely to one aide of a atory and without Inveitl jtation or the facta have swallowed bunk and hooey and misrepresenta tions and voted accordingly, to Xhtlt Fruit Now its place. Have not answered the sales tax fails. tax,' nor a normal tax. It is measure over, before you take to how to vote on it. yon to'decide. Travel West years, automotive authorities do ailfnmnltil. tii. aula. cuffa, a looking for a fall peak such - depression years. own and their county's treat loss and damage. They have) been taken In by demagogue who were using th peo ple to further their own selfish and ulterior purpose. In much the a am manner the farmer are being- lined up a-gtirut the mIm tax by elf-eeklng vote hunters. Therefore It Is most refreV ln to read the snappy communica tion from Mr. Thomas, farmer who can ! through the catch phraae and m Ulead Ing at a cement of selfish aalea tax opponent. Now regarding th communication rrom Mr. Barton I hop that my daughter, who wrote the communi ration which Mr. Barton ha attempt ed to ajuwer. will "ply sad dispose Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining Co personal nealtb and hygiene, not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. in Ink. Owing to the targe number answered bere. No reply can be made structions. Address Or. William Brady, THE NUTRITION OF This Is the thirteenth in a aerlea of quarrels with our neurotlo readers. The gist of the whole subject Is given In the booklet, "Chronic Nervous I m p o a 1 1 1 o n," which, If you are Impatient, you can get at once by lending a dime and a atamped envelope bearing your ad dress and asking for No. 17 of the Little Leasons In the Ways of Health. Neurasthenic Individuals are not suffering from weak or exhausted nerves. Their nerves are no weaker and no more exhausted than their stomachs or their feet are. Most neurotica are poorly nour ished, either underweight or flabby fat, anemic, physically feeble, of poor endurance. All that may aeem what you would expect from bad nerves. But that Is no explanation to any one who knows anything of physi ology. Neurasthenics or neurotica are poorly nourished because thoy're afraid. What they're afraid of la the big secret. Some neurotics the crooks will not tell. Others, the dumb ones, don't know the origin of the fear la bidden In the subcon sciousness and It requires a skilled doctor to probe for It and bring It to the surface. Besides the crooks and the dumb nervoua Impostors, remem ber there are a good many victims of thla and that organls or functional disease who elect to fiddle-faddle slong without benefit of a dlagnosla, ascribing, their 111 health to "nerves" and Indulging In much foolishness In the futile effort to build up their nerves." ' With the fluoroscope It la possible to observe the Journey of a meal thru the alimentary canal. Normally a meal remains for an hour or two In tha stomach. In a neurotlo Indi vidual, or In a atudent worrying over an examination, the meal may re main five or six hours In the stom ach. Obviously fear, worry, anxiety, Interferes with digestion. That's why neurotic Individuals are poorly nourished. The canker of fear not only Impairs appetite, but pre vents normal digestion. Thanks to poor education many Ignorant neurotics ply themselves with various medicines or foods which purport to tone, build up or strength- exhausted" nerves. Some years ago a number of Ignorant college of his argument as deftly and declsl-j vely as they did In the previous case. They are better qualified to do so tnan am i. However, I cannot resist answering one of Barton's points and support the previous statement that Gover nor Meier, owner of the largest retail store in the state, stands to suffer financially by the sales tax, yet la so patriotlo aa to fight for thla tax for the good of the atate of Oregon. Mr. Barton Insists: "Such Is not the case they will be benefited more than .any other business or poVson in Oregon. The sales tax would be passed directly on to the purchaser of goods the con sumer would pay! Yet the prop erty tax on the place of business would be materially reduced If the salea tax were put In effect. How, then, is a large atore to suf fer from thts tax? Let us answer this with actual fig ures by O. C. Chapmsn, editor and publisher of the Oregon Voter, who hss taken the trouble to get the fncta regarding thla very case and analyze them frankly quite a different pro cedure from those who listen to propaganda and Jump at conclusions. One of the yarns circulated la to the effect that the sales tax will save Meier and Frank company S92.000 In personal property taxes. That Is an error, baaed on the mistaken notion that the sales tax bill affects the entire tax personal property. The salea tax bill abolishes only the tax on MOVABLE tangible personal prop erty. TOR THE FARMER, THAT MBANO LIVESTOCK AND IMPLE MENTS. For the aawmlll It means piled lumber and dollies, but doea not mean the planing mill machine that la attached to the real estate. For the department store It means the mer chandise tn atock and also auch of fice furniture and store flxturea as are movable and not attached to the building. In no case does It mean credits, which now are taxable under the Intangible Income tax act and the taxability or which In no way Is affected by the sslea tax bill. In the Meier and Frank store there were M4.t93 of 1933 taxes on these credits (money, notes, accounts) that are in no way affected by the aalea tax bill, but MO.OIS of taxes on merchandise and a few hundreda of dollara on movable equipment. The total amount of personal property taxea auspended by the aalea tax bill for 1934 would be only about MS.OOO, and NOT $93,900. Meier & rrank company era heavy! real estste taxpayers. They -will bene- j fit by the salea tax along with other! real estate owner. Their reduction of real estate tax will be about 7 of their real estate tax bill, which In ' !ja was 6169.550. This Tfc on 1933 taxes would have been about 613.000. j Add thla 613.000 saved on real estate tax to the 648.000 saved on personal i property tax. and the total. 660.000, ! will represent the entire probable , property tax saving to the big com-1 psny by the salea tax. Aa AGAINST 660.000 aared. there Is a sales tax to be paid. If 613.000.000 a j year la done in retail business, the re- tall sslei tax at 3 would be 6343.000 j of the sales tax to pav. A SUM FOUR ' TIMES AS ORBAT AS THE 660 OO0 j OF PROPERTY TAX TO BE SAVED. I If Meier & Frank can pass along half -x or the 3 to their customers, they will lose 60.000 bv the sales tsx. If; they find themselves unable to psssl Brady, M.D. Letters should be brief and written of letters received only a few can be to queries not conforming to In 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, CaL NERVOIS WRECKS. professors were Induced by the al mighty to algn testimonials for some such nostrum, snd for a time a large portion of the moron popu lation consumed prodigious quantl ttea of cottage cheese, which came In a beautiful package at an Impressive price. The truth is thst neither medicine nor food hss any specific Invigorat ing influence upon brain or nervous tissues. Sensible folk do not select medicines or foods for such a silly purpose. It la a mistake to think the "ner vous" lnvsltd or valetudinarian la weak because he doesnt assimilate his food. He doesnt assimilate his food normally because he la afraid of something. QUESTION'S AND ANSWERS. 3.2 Per Cent Lit. Once you published a recipe for a lotion for red nose. I used It and It worked fine. Now I notice my nose 18 beslnnlnff tn lnnlr w rari again. It can't be this 4 per cent oeer, can it? i only take an occa sional glance at It. E. W. A. Answer Potassium sulphurated One dram Zlno Sulphate One dram Rose water Four ounces Shake the bottle and apply at night, after a hot face bath. Let dry on nose and wash off next morning. Sand Pile Sanitation. Is a sand pile on the ground In the rear yard, nartlv sharfil hv trMB healthful provision for children to piay inr ti. K. Answer Yes. The sunlight and air wui keep it sanltsry. The Best Skin Food. Plesse tell me what you consider the best skin food one can um in complexion seems to lack sparkle, or u.yoe it is jusi Because I am some what aallow . . . o. R. Answer I think Ian hnvl. I. h best thing of the kind. . You should take a quart a day, and give your skin plenty of ultraviolet to help It assimilate the food. The common name ior lac oovls Is cow'a milk. Resuscitation. Please give the Instructions for the correct method or Mai,.Hf.tin- - drowned person. Mrs. C. K. c. Answer Send a dime and a atamp ed envelope bearing your address, for booklet on resuscitation. (Copyright, 1933, John I. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Ur. William Brady. M. D., ?es El Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. along any of It, they will lose 180, 000 by the sales tax. . It la doubtful If thla or other large retail stores will or can Increase their prices enough to recapture any large part of the aales tax, as small priced articles are not adapted to a fraction al cent addition to offset this little 2 tax; also the stores must keep their prices adjusted to meet the com petition of out-of-state dealera and nearby Washington which haa no aales tax. Incidentally, I might mention that the sales tax will coat Mr. Chapman himself, aa a publisher, hundreds of dollars a year, but he la an unselfish patriot, who KNOWS that there la no other way out financially for Oregon except the aales tax, and therefore works for Its passage aa all good citizens should do. D. H. FERRY. Rogue River, July 13, 1933. Mr. Mott Is Home To the Editor: K sgreeable, will you please give the following information to your readers: Congressman James w. Mott has returned from the national capital and opened his office In the post office building, Salem, Oregon, where all official mattera will be taken care of promptly. The congressman desires to coop erate with his constituents In every way possible and will be glad to have them write him concerning any fed eral problems In which they are In terested. , JAMBS W. MOTT. July 13th. SAVE BOY'S LIB YAKIMA. Wssh.. July 13.(tTP) Maggota, which have been gnawing on the diseased bone In one of Kenneth 8wank'a Ices have flnlxhrf thai- iah In a few daya the 11-year-old boy win be discharged from a local hos pital with two sound legs. , A blow from a baseball bat In a game four years ago started the trou ble. The maggots were sent In four shipments from New York. , GNAWING MAGGOTS PUBLIC MEETING on the SALES TAX FRIDAY 7:30o'cLk Court House Auditorium Rndnfr Kratlni, flfld rxcrutlte for th, Propfrty Tax RMuctlon rnmmlttr. n III adrtrr (he public on this important taut, and a 111 answer an; quntlon atlrr hi, addrns. PUBLIC INVITED NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By 0. 0. Mclntyre NEW YORK, July 13. The clump of clay feet from Morgan to Walker atlll reverberates. Never In a single fiscal year have so many New York Idols toppled off pedestals. B -cause' the me tropolis la an Isl and of Intense hero worship there are many lonely places against the sky. Tick them off! 'Thar is i p 1 a o e In the world where the magic of popu larity la so easily seized or hastily snatched. And no human figure Is aulte so pathetic aa the de-popular- lted celebrity. He flnda the people who cheered enjoy a sadistic glee In looking the other way. Napoleon at St. Helena expressed the New York spirit with: "A hero should die at the peak of his fame." At breakfast we counted 18 New York ers who rode the tide full crest a year ago, but today are eddied Into a bleak Isolation. Many head-line nsmes are now Jests. I have It reliably a man whose name created awe a few month back look ed upon his muddled career several weeks ago and murmured: "Try as i may, I cannot think -of a single per son I can honestly call friend." He rocks at a window, opening and shut ting the blade of a knife. It' heresy, I suppose, but it often struck me also Chas. M. Schwab, I hear the happiest folk are those who clutch at fame and miss. They spend the rest of their lives on the side line, prattling self-glorlflcatlon, a contlnuou vaudeville of evasion. But always happy. Early today, while shadow were oeellng away to dawn. I dressed be cause of a wakefulness and went for a walk. On a deserted corner was a man who exuded the vatted aroma -of cheap rye. He had been "playing a piano at a racket," and a proof tap ped a mualc roll under his arm. He had written many popular songs, he said, but publishers stole them. He would be richer than Irving Berlin today had he not been robbed. He fairly bubbled incriminations. Yet he was happier in martyrdom than moat men with success. My thwarted friend was also a soft shoe dancer In other days he taught George Primrose and Eddie Leonard many of their trick. Or so he voiced hi Jubilant romanaa. He was anxious to teach me one step. But the morn ing was too young for caper. The point Is: What successful person has exuberance to teach a total etranger a pas seul at 5 in the morning? Only a falluro expressea such Joyous aban don. Thingumabobs: William Rock, the dancer, began his career aa a song boy with Ward and Yokes shows . George Creel is an after-mid night writer, too . . . Jerome Kern ha ten cat at hi Bronxvllle home . , . Fra- zler Hunt's Canadian ranch, adjoin ing the Prince of Walea' acres, 1 call ed "Shandygaff" . . . Ferdinand Pe cora Is known to Intimates aa "Pic" . , . William Oaxton reads every blog raphy published ...Theodore Dreiser likes to rock In the moonlight . Babe Ruth keeps bowls of whipped cream In the Ice box for midnight forays . . . Senator Borah keeps no clippings about himself . . . Eve Le Oalllene often dine alone In out-of- way Ghetto cafes . . . Morris Geet can give a perfect imitation of an excited Chinese.. Park Row's Katzenjammer Kids of 20 years ago, Don Clarke and Joseph Jefferson O'Neill, foregathered at the Brown Derby in Hollywood recently after many year of separation. As the terrible reportorlal twin of the New York World, they were usually suspended without pay every few months. Today Don la a successful novelist and Joe ha hit a stride aa a scenario editor. Both are on the water wagon, driving hard and liking lt.l Trick bicycling la back with a bang It is in demand on all remaining vaudeville circuits. A trick rider, bill ed as "the peer of social bicyclists" crashed the newspapers by riding up the steps of Sid Solomon's fashion able Casino and Into the ballroom at a social charity. Likewise, Indian club Juggling, so highly bespoke in this column recently, was given a try at Music Hall and the performer stopped every show. He was booked for Lon don, pronto. A minstrel show, in which Al Jol- son was end man, brought the first trio of Indian club Jugglers to our town. They were billed a "The Light ning Three" two men and a Diana In tight. I fell tn love with the lady, but Delia Fox came along in "Wang," also tn tight. And in those days I was a set-up for tights. (Copyright, 1033, MoNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) - Gasoline consumption in Illinois declined only 11 per cent In 1932 from 1931. wwrw. Tells Of Rail Deals War between railroads for domi nance In tha eastern territory In tha years before tha stock market crash was described by Frank E. Taplln, Cleveland capitalist, when he test!, fled before a aenate committee In. veatlgatlng financial and stock market affairs. (Associated Press PhotoV Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the Flies of The Mali Tribune of 20 and 10 Vean Ago) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 13, 1933 (It Was Friday) Tourist who got mad and broke down a door at the Crater Lake lodge Is fined el and costs. Chan Egan gives up In the semi final of the Northwest golf tourney, Ground is broken for the new First Methodist church. Efficiency engineer from Boston in forms the C of C. Forum, that "Med ford lacks a soulful personality.' President Harry Walther, announces this defect will be remedied. Charge against Sheriff Terrlll, for threatening Clay Walker with bodily harm was dismissed In Ashland Jus tice court. The sheriff was alleged to have told the plaintiff, he "would wring hi neck, If I catch you with a star on." Revival service at Gold Hill well attended. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 13. 1913 (It Waa Suuday) Swimming class for girls at Nat prove success. Construction work start on trolley line, and steam shovel put to work on Hospital-hill. . Turkey and Rumania make ready to Invade Bulgaria, Court Hall returns from Crater Lake, making the trip in three days. He reports the road rough but In fair condition; and plenty of snow at the rim. Steel for Modoc bridge over Rogue river arrives. Special vaudeville at the Page the ater tonight: "The Human Vampire1 at the Star. BY BAD WEATHER ST. JOHN'S, Newfoundland. July 13 (AP) Unfavorable flying weather along the Newfoundland coast pre vented Colonel and Mrs. Charles A. Ltndbergh from leaving here for Cart wright, Labrador, today on their aerial mapping expedition. It waa cold,- wet and foggy when the Colonel arose, and he said he would not take off until the weather cleared. The famous flying couple had looked forward to meeting the Italian air fleet at Cartwrlght, but General Italo Balbo led his 34 seaplanes south, ward from that port today for She dlac, N. B. The Lindberghs arrived here yester day evening after a flight of 5 hours from Halifax. Out of each tax dollar spent by Kentucky, 43.9 cents goes to roads. Weathered The Storm! N INSTITUTION that hss weathered tha difficulties of the past months may take pardonable pride In Its achievement, wa cannot but feel that tha principles of business practice responsible for the success of this associa tion are sound . . . Our recent membership In tha FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK marks an Important expanilon In this Institution which mstes avail able an Investment opportunity of unquestioned SATETT strict STATE supervision and rigid FED ERAL examination positively assure this safety. Let us tell you about It. SOUTHERN Building & Loan Association Member of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Portland RADIO SQUAWKS DURING VACATION PORTLAND, Ore., July 13. (UP) v Three are people who go away on vacations and forget to notify the milkman and the paper boy. And there are people like Clarence Young. Clarence went away on nis vaca tion a week ago and forgot to turn off his rsdlo. Night and day It blared away. Police calls became more fre quent. Finally Fire Marshal Roneria sens a man out to break Into the house and turn It off. He waa too late- some Irate neighbor had already Jimmied" a window and silenced tne loud-speaker's squswk. FRESNO, Csllf., July IS. (AP) A 10 per cent Increase In the wage scale or all San Joaquin valley plants or the Csllfornla Packing corpora, tlon was announced today' by officials. The Increase Is effective In the com pany's plants In other parts of the state. The new scale for all classes of Isbor will be 3T,4 cents an hour up to 47'fc cents an hour. No change waa made In the salaries of office employes. PROOF THAT NEW FACE POWDER WON'T MAKE BLOTCHES Maoy face powden ire nude onr of oot metics which dukea when (he oil in the per ipiitrion strike them. Perspirtdoo- comes oat through the open ings of your pores tod the oil slotis with it. Every pore which is giving out oil is dark ening the powder around the opening of the pores. Thus you hive dark spots around tha pores and white spots between them, making an ugly, dobby face of blotches, especially on the owe. The new Melloglo Face Powder contains none of these inferior cosmetics which are so easily darkened by the oil in your perrpiration. Prove it for yourself. Powder one aide of your nose with another powder. Powder the other side with the new Mello-glo. In five minutes, let your mirror give you the answer. We challenge the world to produce a finet and more luxurious face powder than the new Mello-glo. The new Mello-glo formula is the formula used by the most exclusive cosmeti dans in New York and Paris. Yon don't buy face powder to make youf face look dobby and blotchy. Therefore, do not waste your money on powders that you are not sure of. Ask for Mello-glo Face Pow der by name, took for the name Mello-elo Face Powder on the gold box. Refuse the unfair offer of "something just as good," which may blotch your face. Ask for Mello-glo. by name and gfi it. 304 aad SI. Tax free. Jarmln & Woods Drug Store. DANCE Oriental Gardens Sat. July 15 A Ladies' Handkerchief FREE to Each Couple ' MEN 35c LADIES FREE t-