PAGE six MEDFORD MATT i TRTBTJNTS, MEDFORD, OREGON", TUESDAT, SEPTEMBER 19, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "Ewyons Is Ssuthini Orttea udi th. Mill TrlbuM" Dili J ictpt iiUxtMJ PuMKbed t IIZDrORD MlNTUiO CO. 16-lt-JS N. fir It BOBEBT . SOUL, Editor is lAdeptodMit NmHM bund u Hand tins utur U Madford. Oncos. unto Set at Hsreb t, 11T. SUBSCRIPTION BATES alall In .itian. DIUr, out m IJ-J2 Dtllr. lis month. 1.JJ Dlllr. DM DOOlb 80 am r.rrlar In Art'aM. UedfOfd. AlDllOfl, jiekMDiUlt, Central Point, Pboanli, IiUst, Gold mil Mil nn WirharmnL diuj, m i 2-22 Dull, tU awothi Dally. ODJ SMDUI ihi .SO All UrmJ, CAih la sdftoea. Official papit Of ttal CltT Of MKUOCd. Official piper Of jKaMfJ C0Q0t. UEMBEB 01 TUB ASSOCIATED PRCS! lbs AuodiUO Proa l aelurft.l- tntlUod U UM OH for pubUeitloo of til om dupiUba. eradltfd to It or otherwlu credited Is tbU pepw ud tlw to the loul uewi published herein. All rlchte for publication of specie) dlspetcbei nereis ire iuo rcaciici.. MEMBER OP UNITED PRESS UEMBEB Of AUDIT BDBEAO or CIRCULATIONS Adrertulng Brpresenutlm IL C. MOGENSEN COMPANY Oftlue to Nn Tut, Cblexo, Detroit, Sts rriOClSeO U AOgeini OWU. tana Ye Smudge Pot Br Arm nt Perry. Willamette valley points hate started building municipal power plants with government money, and the wind of candidates for governor. A politically managed power plant, and the ourrent delinquent tax Hits, would make a stemwlndlng combina tion.. Forsooth, the confounded pow er trust Is about the only agency left that pays Its taxes, without giving the sheriff an arduous pursuit. In 1930, Jackson, Klamath and Douglas counties traded off at least $9,000,000 worth of construction work for "elec tricity without cost to the taxpayer." in tne llgnc ox event, so wo m wj .1 bum swap. nhm liinlnr etlftment naked off to ' school yesterday am. In new bib and i tucker, witn tneir races saimni hh a 4d headlight, on a dark and stormy night. 00 10 yr. ago this week Dock J. Madi son Keene was kicked by a horse, IS yrs. ago a horse ran away and broke his arm; when a boy, a horse topped on his foot, and Monday, after recalling the Incidents the vic tim declared, "the country would be better off If the horse was still taking It places." After all that has hap pened, admiration for the horse la till strong. 0 LEARNED ABOUT PIONEER OALS (Pendleton East Oregonlan) We saw a man going along th treet yesterday, accompanied by his wife, who was carrying a sat chel, handbox and umbrella, while he, the lazy brute, was packing his hands empty. Our friend Albert took a ride Wednesday and as his fair com panion's hat blew off, he politely descended from the vehicle to re cover It but wa very much angered when he saw another fellow get In the buggy and drive off. Albert says, "So help me, Moses, I will keep the hat." (50 Yrs. Ago col.) o Sunday was a day of rest. A the result of unheralded and unexpected cautious driving by autolste, and all the drunks Juvenile and adult staying In the house, It la not a day of rest from now on, for anybody. 00 Th Puyallup, Wash., lady who hid $6000 under her house, where some boys found It, and spent alt they could of It, now reports that $37,000 la missing. This Information will bring forth silent but sympathetic O, yeah'sl from Me. to Cel. She had a system all her own, with secret wires, for the protection of her money, but It was not near as effec tive as the steel door In the back end of a bank. Some around here still retain their great faith In the dirt floor of a henhouse. "The fool deer season opens next Wednesday" (8ge Gleanings.) Tou mean the fool and deer season opens next Wednesday. 0 The Old Timers baseball game has been called oft, because somebody told the Humane Boclety, Leaves of the young maple trees are now the sickly yellowish blonde color of Fletch Fish's devilish do-dad mustache. The former will brighten, fall, and succumb to the wind and the frost, but no such luck for the latter. O 0 o Fall hats for the OalshevtkU are now plentiful, and It Is wonderful the number of tilts and angles a hat can be twisted Into, and atlll be worn. They are worn every place on the head but on top of the head. Some of the modes hide the eye, ear, or nose. If the mode Is worn over th right eye, the knot of the hair la moored on the left ear, or vice versa. This produce! "a contrast" and howl Between the hat and the hair, th girl la chic, smart, piquant, 10331an, and several other things It would not be wise to mention at this time. Those with ostrich feathers sticking out In unexpected places, are the most stylishly flabbergasting. Believe It or not, they are supposed to five the fair wearer "Jauntlnees And all th hat "art created In th spirit of th 'New Deal'." There mould be another shuffle, followed VV Many Thanks! HP HE Mail Tribune wishes to take this opportunity to thank the people of Medford and Southern Oregon for their gener ous response to the annual Bargain Day just closed. We know how discouraging conditions are, how scarce money is we realize how a $5 bill today, represents more than a $20 bill did five or six years ago. We also know that handing over five dollars at this particular time, genuine sacrifice. Yet the bargain day just closed was a signal success, and considering the prevailing conditions, the generous response, was nothing short of phenomenal. The Mail Tribune is deeply appreciative, and assures its increased list of subscribers, that during the coming year, it will do everything in its power to continue the improvement of its product,, and merit the loyal support and confidence, which this bargain' day response, has so strongly evidenced. It Had to GROUP of fruit executives ing night and day, without out of chaos in the pear industry. They have sacrificed their private affairs for the good of the industry as a whole, and for this they deserve the gratitude of the entire community. The plan adopted provides the elimination of all but the fruit that under market conditions which prevail this year, can be sold at a profit. Naturally such a plan calls for sacrifices on the part of the individual grower, particularly the grower, whose fruit, or a large part of it, can't meet the new requirements. But such sacrifices mnst be made for the good of the Indus try as a whole. After all it is better to sell a small crop At a PROFIT, than a large crop at a LOSS better throw pears on the dump heap than pay freight on them and merely ADD TO RED INK. This procedure had to be adopted this year. It's tough, but it is one of those things that had to be done. ' INSTEAD of being criticized for this action, the local fruit executives should be highly praised. They are getting noth ing out of it for themselves, nothing but grief and a lot of hard work. They are doing the only thing that can be done, to prevent a repetition of the 1932 disaster in 1933. And with any luck at all they will succeed. Not in making 1933 what could be called a prosperous year for the fruit indus try as a whole such an outcome simply isn't in the cards, but in assuring a decent profit for- fruit of the highest grade, and reducing the gross losses to a minimum. A Must THE present fruit season has again demonstrated the neces- sity of maintaining the highest standards of the pear pack. Through a period of years, only the highest quality pays. To secure high quality, pests must be controlled ; blight can't be allowed to spread. Toward this end, every fruit grower owes a responsibility to the industry as a whole, for one orchard improperly cared for, may ruin properties adjoining, in spite of all, owners of the latter may do. There is a state law to prevent such a situation. If an owner neglects to take care of his property, and thus endangers other properties, the infected place can be cleaned up by the proper authorities and the costs assessed to the property responsible. TIBS law should be STRICTLY ENFORCED, particularly rilirintT rhA nominee veer Th eViiit indiio.fi.ir ! tint oil vtrtk have, but it is the most important thing we have. If it should fail, the community in which we live would fail. Orchards which are sources of infection, breeding places' for destructive pests, must be owner then by the county. The time to start on this clean-up is now. For if it is not started now, the local fruit industry next year, will suffer a blow from which it will take years to recovor. An ounce of prevention is not only worth a pound of cure. A campaign of prevention, is absolutely imperative to save the fruit industry 1 By -Products Again YESTERDAY we called attention in this column to the need , of a fruit by-product plant in the valley, a practical method of utilising the large pear tonnage, which, under present conditions is going to waste. We are glad to learn that Oregon State college has been con ducting extensive research along these lines. College experts, believe that pear sugar, of great value to diabetica, pear brandy, and pear alcohol, can be manufactured commercially, and profit ably, with an initial investment of approximately $50,000. This would certainly be a small sum to pay, for perpetual insuranoe against monetary loss in the pear industry. The Mail Tribune has requested details from Corvallis, and hopes to have them ready for publication before the end of this week. If further developments prove the feasibility of such a project, we can think of no single venture that would better repay the careful study and financial support, of everyone in this community. OLASOOW, Scotland, Sept. 10 (T Ernest Harper of the Haltamshlre Harriers today ran 90 miles, 1604 yards and i feet In two hour to claim world record for the time. Oflclala ssld th best previous msrk for two hours was 20 miles. 1190 yards, made by Romonen at Toronto in July. Th listed world record for a two hour run Is 30 miles. M2 ysrda, by H Clreen of Oreat Britain, at London. represented in some instances a Be Done here are, and have been, work compensation, to bring order for radical reduction in tonnage, finest quality of fruit, the only Be Done ' cleaned up, if not by the MS FIRS! Mi Pittsburgh, Sept. is. jp Robert D. rorden, lS-year-old sand lot football player, la th first grid iron fatality of th season in the Pittsburgh district. Th coroner's office reported the youth died In a hosplul from shock that developed from a fractured ver tebra. He was injured In a ecrlm make plleup. Real estate oi insurance leave " Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to ponunaj uraiia and nygicne not to dls oaM d lag i lot li or treatment, wlli oe aniwered 07 Or. Brady u t tamped wif-addreued euvelupe id encloted. Lettera louuld De arte ana written in ink. Owing to Ctie targe number of letters recelfed onij a tew can H ana wered nere. No reply can De made to queries oot conforming to Instruction. Address Or. William Brady. 265 El Camlno, tfeverlejr Hills, Cai. ' .THE CUBE OF TYPHOID CARRIERS. Since the days when Typhoid Mary hrew her weight about the front page the treatment of typhoid carriers has been notoriously unsatisfactory to all concerned the carrier, the physio lsns or health authorities and the general public. Perhaps the best bet thus far Is surgical re moval of the car rier's gall - blad der. In a series of twelve cases re ported by Dra. Oeorge H. Blgelow and Oaylord W. Anderson this operation has apparently cured tne carrier con dition. At least regular monthly ex aminations made for a year after the operation have revealed no typnold bacilli. Such a test seems a fair one. A typhoid carrier could scarcely get by twelve such bacteriological exami nations If he wore eliminating ty phoid bacilli. The cost of the operation, these physicians maintain. Is a Justifiable public health expenditure, and why not, since It la far cheaper than the attempt to keep a typhoid carrier under the surveillance of the health department through an Indefinite term of years. , . In all twelve cases galhtones weie found present, and In the few cases where the patients had any symptoms from the gallstones the symptoms disappeared after the operation. In every case, of course, the patient had had typhoid fevor from a few months to thirty years prior to the operation. One woman dented that she had ever had typhoid fever. But the typhoid bacilli were being elimi nated from her ga3tro-lntestlnal tract nevertheless. Probably her attack of typhoid had been dubbed "gastric fe ver" or "Intestinal nu" or "malaria" or "a bad cold." We do not know, but we begin to believe that In every Instance of the typhoid "carrier" condition the fo- ous of Infection from which the ty phoid germs come Is in the gall bladder. Everybody knows that an Individual who Is a typhoid carrier (whether he or she knows it or not) may be the source of Infection In one outbreak after another of mysterious typhoid in the course of years, especially If the carrier handles or serves food to persons who have not been Im munized against typhoid. - These carriers (especially the In nocent or undetected carriers) are quite likely to travel to summer re NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre SPRINGFIELD, Mass., Sept. 19. j Likely many poetized those white-! washed lawn stones that curlicue New Bag land green swards. Best kept front yards in the world are here. And housekeep ing as an art at tains lt zenith. Every window la a n immaculate flutter of lace, curtains. Every porch a dell. I was interest ed in Wlnsted. from whence I received a a a mid-west t e 1 e- graph editor, fabulous versions or cows that gave cider and bullfrogs that croaked high tenor. It Is maln- streety, with plenty of accomplished j whlttlera and rockers. A line hive for ridiculous yarns. I never thought of tobacco fields In Connecticut, but acres of them gray the valleys with their protec tive covering of cheesecloth. Also huga warehouses, precisely latticed and racked with tobacco. No scrub by hillside patches here, featuring a lean-to, sick cow and sour well. Mother earth la generous. Indeed- farms auegeet scenes from picture books, rolling, plump with orchards and capacious red barns. I often wonder if others like the cloying aroma of a barnyard. The mean squalor of cities is nowhere seen. Lany rivers, gurgling brooks and wind run clean. Most cities on the brink of be coming a metropolis suppest the be wildered novice suddenly thrust In stellar role. Springfield Is exception a bustling manufacturing center. One alpaca plant was blazing after midnight. No one seemed loafing and I warmed to the xnlnd-your- ewn-businesa air. We stopped at the Kimball, remin iscent of the old Burnett In Cincin nati. Uttle push-buttons and flunk led flapdoodle, but mellow hospital ity. The dogs were admitted with no eyebrow lift. For years I've want ed to pv especial tribute to the most intelligent response of all In hotels here and abroad room serv ice. I hsve never in years of hotel living known them to make a mis take in meal orders. Yet these are employee the patrons never see. Or tip. Amid the sun's sinking splendor we motored to Amherst Dwlght Mor row's college. On a beautiful up land. It's far more alluring than Vale. The campus trees, so old and gnarled, bespoke simplicity of an older mode. To go out Into life feeling deeply rooted to Amherst must be comfort ing through the years. Holyoke Is another suburb aahtne with cheery almp'.lcity. We dined in a venerable, (oadside tavern, whose Jj Brady, M.D. sorts to take places as cooks, waiters, etc., for a season and woe betide the patron who sojourns at such resort without having bothered to be Im munized by his physician. Gallstones in a considerable share of cases are caused by typhoid fever the stones forming upon a nidus or clump of typhoid bacilli In the gall-bladder or the bile ducts. A farmer who had had typhoid fever 30 years ago and was a typhoid carrier had been selling home-made butter In a city for years. Numerous cases of typhoid had occurred in the city, but none could be traced to blm. Only one case was definitely traced to him. When he was ope rated on, there were no more cases of typhoid In the community where he sold his butter. Don't let the menace of the typhoid carrier worry you. Just have your physician Immunize you, and no such misfortune can befall you. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Call a Physician. Kindly give me the materials and amounts of each to use for treatment of round worms in children and In adults. M. F. F. Answer A lot of wire, rubber, fibre, etc. fashion into a telephone and call a doctor. Removal of Hair. I have heard that destroying the hair on the legs and body would allow the pores to close up and prevent them from breathing, thus causing Ul health. Is there any truth In this? D. A. T. Answer There are no pores In the skin to breathe through, bo there Is no truth In the notion. The only openings In the skin through which anything passes are the orifices of the sweat and sebaceous ducts, and these serve only for excretion of water and salt and sebum (skin oU), The worst that can happen from closing up these openings over a limited area of skin would be local Irritation of the skin from accumulations in the sweat or oil ducts. Lightweight versus Heavyweight. A friend who promotes boxing In sists that lightweight boxers mature earlier than heavyweights, arriving at their best sround 33 years of age, whereas the big fellows reach their top at 27 to 30. Is there physiologi cal reason for this? M. H. J. Answer I know of none. (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D 266 El Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. floorboards creak with the dignity of 148 years. The dinner, with enor mous list of savory New England dishes, was 59 cents. The waitress, buxom, middle-aged, crossed the floor gingerly on tip-toe. Framed on the wall, Oeorge Washington's call for troops, ending In the forlorn bra vura: "God Save the United States!" An enticingly clear night and sky powdered with stars. After dinner a drive up the winding roads of Mt. Tom. In one clearing we permitted city bred dogs to Indulge a freedom they seldom enjoy running at large unleashed. In Kasper Hauserlsh fash ion, they displayed no Interest In woodland things, merely hanging about our heels. But frisked and barked happily returning to the car. Across the hotel court at a win dow rocker sat a white-haired lady. I smiled and bowed and she waved a blue-veined hand, remindful of many grandmothers whose last days' vision narrows to small horizons. My wife sent a bouquet she gathered along the roadside. When we depart ed she displayed It in a vase on the sill. It is difficult to interpolate into such apparent trivia the significance it deserves. I was especially interested in South bridge, Mass., a sprightly city along the way. From here my syndicated wares are sent In proof sheets to newspapers. The prlntery is part of the South bridge News, a lively dally owned and edited by my ayndlcate chief, V. V. McNltt. Few newspaper structures offer simpler dignity. Of red brick, perched back on a peace ful knoll, its facade Is graced by snow-wHtte colonial pillars. There was an attractive maid typewriting at a window, at whom I shouted: "I'm one of your hands!" But I did not check in. Anything that even suggests my Job has of a sudden become abhorrent. I've be come a food and sleep man. (Copyright, 1033 MoNaught Syndicate, Inc.) OLD HENRY JONES PORTLAND, Sep, ffV-Talrtng two falls out of three. Bulldog Jack son of Klamath Falls won the main event of lest night's wrestling pro gram here from Henry Jones of Provo. Utah. Jackson weighed 168 and Jones 151. The Klamath rll grappler won the first fall in IS minutes with a ham mertoe. Jones took the second In It minutes with a series of wrist locks, only to lose the match In Hi minutes when Jackson successfully applied a body slam. Otla Cllniman. 10. Oklahoma City, won two falls out of three from Jack Straolottl. 183. New Tork. to win the semt-wlndup. Dorry Detton, 157. won the prelim inary from Hugh Adams, 159, Port land, taking one fall. Heating costs csn be reduced. For complete heat.ng service call Art .ScttmldU 1963. BALLOONISTS RESCUED FROM WILDS r :- 7- Still wearing the beards they grew while tramping their way out of Canadian wilds, Ward T. Van Orman (lower right) and his aide, Frank Trotter (upper right) are ahown after their rescue near Sudbury. Ontario, where they were lost several days after the landing of their balloon In the James Gordon Bennett cup race. Van Orman ia ahaklng hands with James Barrett, power company line walker who found the pair. Trotter Is being congratulated by W. E. Mason, manager of a hydro-electric plant near Sudbury. (Associated Press Photos from Toronto Star) Western States Replacing Quail With Big Partridge Altovc are sieclitHMiH ot the hciivv, but spotMlv, l.hukor partridge, which game officials in western states predict will supplant the quail in the affections of American hunt-ers. It thrives at any altitude. and weighs about three times more than the average quail. YOUNTVTLE, Cal. ((AV-A game bird possessed of the qualities that may eventually make the .eastern sportsman forget his Bob White and wean away the Callfornlan'a affec tions for the Valley quail la now be ing bred extensively in four or five western states. It Is the Chukor partridge, a native of India. One of Its chief sponsors in Amer ica la August Bade, chief of the Cali fornia bureau of game protection. Bade la cautious In predicting the displacement of either the Bob White or the Valley strains of quail, for sentiment Is strong among the scarlet Jacketed fraternity and af fection for both these species has been a heritage of many generations of huntsmen. Faster Than QnalL Still, Bade declares, there la no renson other than sentiment why the Chukor partridge shouldn't eventu ally win first place In the sports man's esteem throughout the nation. First of all, he says, the partridge Is faster on both ground and wing than any strain of quail. Ite meat is of equal quality and, most import ant of all. It will dress from 23 to 24 ounces, whereas quail seldom exceed six or seven ounces. The Chukor partridge does well at any altitude from ea level to 16,000 feet, although Its most natural range la from 4,000 to 6.000. It la weU marked for protection. Is a good rus tler, as easy as quail to hatch and rear and meets virtually all of the requisites of a good game bird. It is, he says, not a great deal slower than Vhe Peeves pheasant, which has a rating of 80 miles an hour on the wing. Popular In England. English sportsmen are better ac quainted with the Chukor partridge than are American, he says, and It has made more friends there, but the number of states which have added it to their list, following Call fornla'a lead, appear to presage a steady growth of favor for It in this country. With more than 700 rearing pens and an incubator capacity of 16.000 eggs, the Yountvil'.e game farm, one of two operated by the state, is equipped to propagate almost every kind of game that can be raised In American, from OoMen Pheasants to African Sand arouse. I A single Incubator holds 8.000 pheasant or 12.000 quail eega, and the farm owns game hens that produce 60.000 eggs a year. It pioneered elec trical tncubatlou and brooding. APOLLO PIANO STUDIO Claw lessons for beginners 25c. Right toun- 50,000 Portland Young In School PORTLAND, Sept. 19. (AP) About 50,000 Portland children re ported In 'class rooms yesterday for the opening of the new school year. The elmenetary schools started full day sessions. Assignments were made in bhe high schools and the pupils returned today for the first full day. The school period in Portland will he of nine monthss duration. 4 Production of creamery butter last year was the largest on record, to taling 1,894,132,000 pounds. Ohio's flag was first displayed In 1901 at the Pan-American exposition at Buffalo. no. is:u Treasury Department Office of Comptroller of the Currency Washington. D. C, ' September 11, 1933. Whereas, by satisfactory evidence presented to the underalgned. it has been made to appear that "Medford National Bank," in the City of Med ford, in the County of Jackson and State of Oregon, has compiled with all the provisions of the Statutes of the United States, required to be complied with before an association shall be authorized to commence the business of Banking: Now, therefore. I, J. P. T. O'Connor, Comptroller of the Currency, do here by certify that "Medford National Bank," in the City of Medford, in the County of Jackson and State of Ore gon, is authorized to commence the business of Banking as provided in Section Fifty-one Hundred and Sixty nine of the Revised Statutes of the United Btates. In testimony whereof, witness my hand and seal of office this eleventh day of September, 1933. (Seal of the Comptroller of (Signed) the Currency.) Treasury Department.) J. F. T. O'CONNOR, Comptroller of the Currency. Canning Peaches Get them now. Supply exhausted by 20th! 415 So. Newtown Phone 1122 R Flight 'o Time (Meoiord and Jackson County History from the files of 1'be Mall tribune ol iv and 10 Vears Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY geptmeber 18, 1923. (It was Wednesday.) Prink O. Calllson, coach of the high school, Is expected to srrlve this week to start the, football drill for the year. Five mill levy Is asked for the water board. Chief of police announces arrest will be made of citizens who leave their autoe parked In the street all night. Mann's will hold a formal opening t of their ready-to-wear department on the second floor of their store. Congressman Hawley to apeak at Pioneer reunion at Ashland. Auto dealers to hold an auto show at the fairgrounds. Three stranded tourist families given aid by the Red Cross. Community resident for school teachers held at Phoenix. Three indicted for possession of gallon of liquor. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY September 19, 1013. (It was Friday.) Supporters of C. B, Dates to call mass meeting to urge his appoint ment as mayor. Motorcycle speeding on Main street ia condemned y the chief of police. The editor of the Mall Tribunes "Condemnation is fol-de-rol. Stop it." City given high praise by tourist In home paper, after visit to valley. Six hundred sixty-five autos visit Crater Lake past summer. County leases granite quarry at Gold Hill. Vancouver Barracks troops ordered to Mexican border. "Sleepy Seventh" of this city may get similar orders. W. C. T. TJ. adopts resolution de nouncing "ragging" on the streets. Communications A "Leader" Speaks Up. To the Editor: In answer to your call for a 'leader," as printed In the Oregon Statesman or September 16, 1S33. 1 wish to maXe the statement I Intend to run for governor this coming election, on the Democratic ticket. There are many who aspire to fill the governor's chair "politicians," I am told. I am of the people. It remains to be seen, do the people wish a governor for them, or for money-grabbers? I am of the people, for the people, and must be elected by the people. I am not running for the honor of the office. I am connected In no way jWlth any political group. If I am elected to the office I will go with no obligation nor promise to fulfill. But I do promise the people a safe, ssne and sensible administration. Forty-eight hours after taking the office, the cost of operating the state of Oregon will be reduced SO per cent or more. Every man in the stste who wants work will be given an oppor tunity at a living wage. It will Da my aim to have our now many va cant farms relnhablted. In running for office, I will spend no money, nor In any way will I buy my way in. Neither will I fill the state offices with the "Old Guards." Let us try. Just once, a government for the people, by the people. O. w. OADT. Salem, Ore., Sept. 18. Nearly 1,200 rco farms in this corn try have been growing approximately 840.000,000 bushels of wheat a year says the department of agriculture. Many schools in eastern Kansas have laid plans to burn wood thla winter, buying stove wood cut up by the unemployed. Notice. In the County Court of the State of Oregon for Jackson County. In the Matter of the Estate of Susan E. Whltten. slso known as Susan Elizabeth Whltten, also known ae S. E. Whltten. deceased. Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned has filed his Pinal Ac count and Report In the above en titled matter, and the above entitled Court has fixed October 20th. 1933, at 10 o'clock a. m in the County Court Room In the Court House In Medford, Jackson County, Oregon, as the time end place for hearing ob jections to said Final Account, and for the eettlemene thereof. HARRY O. 6KTRMAN. Administrator. Swedish Massage Hours 2 to 5 Corrective Exercises By Appt. Oscar S. Nissen, P.T. Physical Therapeutics Formerly Director and Instructor Massage Dept., Boston City Hnsp. SIS E. Main St. Medford, Ore. WANTED Wool&Mohair Shipping another car, Wool and Mohair, to Bos ton market. Special prices paid. We also could pay yon a food price for lambs' wool MEDFORD BARGAIN HOUSE Phone loss, jj. Orape