Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 22, 1933, Page 4, Image 4

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MEDFORD M5IL TEIBUXE, JIEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1933.
Medford Mail Tribune
"Enmn I Switbim OrtfM
Rum Uii Mill IrltuM'1
FunuiMd w
' MTOIMUD flUNTINO CO.
g-ir-i n. ru bl
BOBtKl W. BUHL, Editor
All DdelMaleot Nmwv
EntefMl u Meond elao oitur St Medforfl,
Oratoo, under Act el Uveb 8, 1ST,.
8UB8(H1PI10N BATES
Utll-U Ad.lMS
dii, om rr
D.1I, 111 mooUll t.T0
Dallj, on moot 80
Bj CvrUr U Adm Medford, Attlud,
JtetsonrtUt, Csntril Poiot. Pbouls, Tslsot, Oold
Bill UJ UU (KlUHUt,
.7T7 I8.0U
' iwilt' tit moDtbd
Dilif, OfM oootli t0
All una, etab Id adTioec
Official piper or tb City of Mtdford.
Official mp of JaeiaoD County-
HE MB KB Off THE ASSOCIATED PHK88
RiMiiini ffult Laaud Wirt Btfrtet
Sit jMeltd Pren to nelwlnly ntlUed to
tb om for pubuestioo or ui otwa auvtwm
errdltMl to tt or otbtnrlH eredlted lo toll otpor
uui aiM t tha local oen DublUhed boralo.
AU rlftiU for publlutloo of petlal dltpiUbM
6ml n art tuo rewneo.
HEMREB OV UNITED PBE88
HE MB Kb OP AUDIT HI! READ
CIRCULATIONS
Adnrttflm BepraaeoUtlTet
H. C MOUENSEN COMl'A.IT
OfncM 10 Hf fork, ChltdfO. Detroit, Bta
rraoelioo ot Aiwalw Beattlo Portland.
dge Pot
By Arthui Perry
Max Baar, heavyweight oontender
tot the world'e ohamplonshlp, kissed
Jack Dempsey, former heavyweight
ohemplon, at A San Franclseo light
. . . ...u. Tnhn I.
Ronert pitaimmona. and
James j. corbett, turning over in
their grave., notaing happened.
H the vacant lot auppiy holds out ;
b two service stationa for every au-
I.
tomoblle.
BUYING HELPS BUSINESS. (Hd
line Portland Journal) Juat like
eating dlspela hunger, no doubt.
The assumption by optlmlte that
th. rank end file, and the clAsset
and the messes,
"win not Abuse
returns." 1a fAr.
fetched AS a matter Of laOC, not
fetched tar enough. More taan one
wouia over .u... v-
drunk as quick aa possible, and staj
that way as long as possible. The
above Assumption also entertalni ths
quAlnt notion, "The Inebriate will
seek seclusion." Most everybody
knows that an Inebriate will eeek
seclusion where his condition will
ttraot the most attention and com
ment. The upstate Journalist who have
been twitting Medford fans for their
eoln eupport of the University ol
Oregon football team, should twll
out of the other side ot their feces.
The Medford offer to bet was de
clined by California citizenry. Med
ford money out-talked them.
Plans have been completed for a
wedding that will require A 4tlei
sake, clawhammer coats for the men
folks, and a bridal veil that will
cover the better part ot a block.
The publlo speaking class, whlcb
waa formed last fall to turn out
better grade ot orators, Is coming
along tine And will be on the market
within a month. They at now be
ing drilled In the preeentAtlon ot
Ideas, and to Atop talking w,hen
they are through speaking.
The oouple were married at the
bom of ths bride's parents, where
they will remain until the bride
groom gete a Job. (Centralla (Mo.)
Times.) Two can . starve dad to
death better than one.
T. Oarleton of Prospect towned
Mon. trading. The lack of winter
this winter Annoyed him not.
"A poverty Supper was held at the
echool house Frldsy evening. Venl
Aon ham, turkey, eteelheM sslmon,
c'ams, roAst beef, all the filings,
and five kind of cske were the main
Items." (Salmon Dar Jottings.) It
looks like all the diners nude out,
somehow,
The messAge of the governor to
the special staslon of ths legislature
waa "sane, sensible end construc
tive." If this don't beat him for re
election, nothing will.
Fathers of 2-year-olda report the
Infanta get up before farmers boast
they do, and make more noise then
an SO-year-old Orandpaw building
a, fire.
Delay In meting punishment to
the San Jose, Calif., kidnaping fiends
will be occasioned by the state tak
ing time to prove to the Jury end the
court what the kidnaper have Ad
mitted, And whAt the Jury And ev
ryone else slrrady knows.
Dork Howsrd completed 30 yeerA In
vAlley Sunday, end Is still aa enthu
slajtic aa An enthusiastic fishermen.
Thsnkaglvlng Is Just Around the
comer. In compiling the list of
things to be thankful for, dont for
get to mention the decline in local
llArs snd pArAnolacs.
flnlrt EvrhAnga Reserve Up
STOCKHOLM. (UP) The Swed
ish gold and foreign eschsnge n
Aerve has Increased 300,000.000 kro
ner, or about S7S.000.000, this year,
says the Bank of Sweden. It Is now
730,000,000 kroner, as comparM withj
188,000,000 In gold and only as.ooo,-
OO0 In exrhAnge, two yeATA Ago wheni
the country went off the gold stand-1
ard,
gy-' m
r in
ie :
How Can It
fS there no bottom to Uncle Sam's pocketbookf Every day
for month after month, millions of dollars have been handed
out from 'Waoliington, for this, that and the other thing. A
few millions here, a few millions there, a few millions somewhere
else.
Where is it all coming fromt How is it going to be paid
backf We know we are on our way, but where are we going
financially!
The inquiry is a natural one. And the bewilderment is
natural, as long as one envisages Uncle Sam, as a long, lanky
hayseed with chin whiskers, packing a wallet along with his
plug tobacco, in a hip pocket
But such a picture of Uncle Sam is for funny papers only.
The REAL Uncle Sam carries no wallet. It would be more ac
curate to say that he carries an Alladin's lamp. And AS LONG
AS HE MAINTAINS HIS CREDIT, that lamp works, all the
old gentleman has to do is rub it, and ask for what money he
wishes. With aforesaid credit unimpaired, sooner or later the
people will pay it back.
But how will the people pay it backf Most of them are,
or claim to be stony broke; cash is about as scarce, as trout
streams in the Sahara desert.
Well none other than Professor Eexford Q. Tugwell, Roose
velt brain truster, and presumably author of the present finan
cial policy of the government, answers this question in the cur
rent American magazine.
The approximate cost of the national relief is placed at
$10,000,000,000 about what the allies borrowed from this torn
try to finance the World war.
A $10,000,000,000 recovery
years, he says, IF the program
With a 50 percent revival in business, Prof. Tugwell figures
that the federal income should reach 5 billions a year.
"Assume," he says, "that
recovery were 4 billions, in the
third year 8 billions. Assume
tinue at about 2J4 billions. In the first year, then, we should
pay off Vi billions, in the second year Z'i billions, and in the
third year billions. The recovery debt would be paid in
three years, with half a billion
JE goes into further details as to what results he expects
from the National Recovery Act.
"The national income for 1928 was 82 billions, and the in-
come tax yielded 2.2 billions.
8tate 0f progress, that the recovery measures will bring us back
Q percent toward the prosperity of 1928 and do this within a
year ye national income, then, should increase from 40 bil-
lions to 60 billions for 1934, and
from 746 millions to 1.1 billions.
was 60 billions, in 1931, the income tax yielded 1.9 billions. We
ought to be able to count on this much, and it is a substantial
answer to those who profess so many fears at present.
"In addition, immense revenue is expected from liquors,
wjtn the repeal of the 18th Amendment, and from increased
. , . , J ' Ti t
uwiuub uuucd an lubciuniiuuni tiuun lomco. xu wumu aiuu ua
extravagant to expect that, with a 50 percent revival, our total
.. ;at i. t i.:ni
"PIQURES like these are conjectural. No one can predict
the percentage of recovery to be expected during any
given period. But, assuming that the program produces sub
stantial results, such an outcome is not' at all fantastic. Our
national income fell from 82 to 60 billions in two years, and to
40 billions in three years. The fact that it was once as high as
82 billions means that we have the resources, the factories, and
the man power to produce that much. We have capacities we
are not using. These are not lost. All we need is the courage
and the intelligence to put them to work. And if we fell off
40 billions in three years perhaps we can get back in the same
time. To quote further:
"The recovery plan Is one way to get back to prosperity. If It
costs 10 billions over three yeArs to set us on a basis of SO Instead
of 40 billions of Income a yeer. our effort will here cost compsra
tlvely little. We shall have spent an average of S.S billions a -year
to gain 40. If you think about the country instead of any
Individual sacrifice which may be Involved, this Is worth working
for heart and aoul.
"It Is a national effort. Government cannot do It alone. No
few Industrialists can help enough. The whole country haa to
go along. If It does, we shall get back to the 80-bllllon days In
short order. And we shall pay the coats without particular pain
to anyone."
.There you are. 'Simple, isn't itt
- The Saloon Again
ALREADY division appoars
nf t.llA finln nf hnnzA
Here is a suggestion to those
into the sale of hard liquor.
selling may be under another name. But in the end, the same
power that private profit in booze wielded in the past, it will
wield again. '
By some hotels, for example, the sale would be honestly and
decently administered. But what about others t
Booze is irresistible. It inevitably has its way if private
profits allowed to enter the traffio in it. Permit private profit,
and it means snloons. Bring back the saloon, in whatever guise,
and you will cruoify the movement for scicntifie and civilized
booze control. Portland Journal.
SEA HIDES FATE
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. , Nov. 33
Restless waters of the broad Atlantle
today apparently formed a grave tor
Mrs. Louise Turrk Stanton, who bor
rowed plane and flew seaward to
meet death wherever the craft fuel
ran out. The 80-year-old Junior
leaguer had recently lost her hus
band In an automobile accident.
In note left behind ahe asked
that It not be called aulclde for "I
particularly dislike the word sui
cide" nd explslned she Just want
ed to go "out Into spec and find
out whAt It'A All About, And It there
Un't anything thAt'A O. K. too."
Bd Fuel Oil Delivery has long
hose tod pump. Call lit.
Be Done?
debt can easily be repaid in three
works.
our revenues in the first year of
second year 6 billions, and in the
also that ordinary expenses con
dollars to spare."
Let us assume, on the present
the income tax yield should rise
Actually, when our income
v.
in the legislature over oontrol
who want private profit to enter
That plan means saloons. The
LINDBERGHS LEAVE
HORTA, Aaorea, Nov. 33. (AP)
Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh,
who flew her yesterday from Lis
bon, plan to take off tomorrow for
a return flight to the continent by
way or the Island or Saint Michael.
The plans for the flight, It was
said, depend on the weather, the ex
act destination was not announced.
Although there had been previous
Indications that the flying American
couple, who are conducting a survey
of air routes across the Atlantic, In
tended to make several side tripe
around the Arorea, the new project:
was regarded as altering this pro- j
gram.
Personal Health Service
By William
tflgneo lettert pertaining Co personal arait And ayfleOA not Co dls
nh cliuxnusl. or treatment, nuj oe Answered oj or. drad u a tumped
ieir-AddrtsM!d envelupe w enclosed. Letters mould oe arlet aho written in
ink. Owing to tne large ounihei ot tetters received only A le can De Ans
wered tier. No reply can be tnsde to queries out conforming to Instructions
Address Dr. William Brady, 865 El camlno. rieverle; iJiua. Cai.
WHO NEEDS SKIN OIL, FACE GREASE. OR COMPLEXION CREAM?
Sebum la peculiar oily substsnro
secreted by the sebaceous glands of
the skin. It la natures own com
plexion cream.
It Is the only oil
or grease that U
necessary to keep
the akin AOft,
clear And beau
tiful.
In normal
young persons
there la Ukely to
be an Increased
functional activ
ity of the seba
ceous glands In
the 'teens. This
produces the ex
cessive olllnesA or shrny sppearance
of the skin and the excessive olllness
of the scalp and hair so commonly
seen In healthy young persons. The
condition 1a given various lugubrious
nsmes, which don't mean anything
except that we doctors have to live,
you know; seborrhea, pityriasis, stea
torrhea, hyperldrosts oleosa that's
our five-dollar line; of course If you
oare to go higher . . .
The skin oil serves to keep the
skin soft, flexible, smooth, warm and
clean. It Is watertight, and It forms
a thin, clear protective fUm over the
surface, which catches dust and grime
and makes It easy to oleanse the
skin when these foreign substances
accumulate on it.
The sebaceous glands are scattered
over the entire surface of the skin
and scalp but sre larger and more
numerous In certain areas, such as
the scalp end the surface of the pro
boscis. They pour out their sebum
or oily substance upon the surface
through the same duct that conveys
the sweat to the surface from the
sweat glands, and thla common sweat
and sebaceous duct empties Into the
well of a hair follicle. The mouth
of the common oil and sweat duct is
popularly called a "pore," though of
course that la not the correct name
for It, alnce nothing la or can be
absorbed or taken Into the system
through these excretory channels.
Don't let any bunk merchant or his
subsidized "medical authority" fool
you about that, Dora.
Now If jou are not tossing your
b. but d. head in anger there may
be room in It for a few plain physio
logical facta which are also health
hlnta, beauty secrete and economy
aids.
Your skins are normally richly
supplied with skin oil. and therefore
need no cream or other "beauty"
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK, Nov. 22. I had HO
Idea wrMtlIng had become the brutal
affair It U until watching a recent
bout. In other
days the tugging
and straining
were fierce
enough but there
waa alwaya a aus
plclon or fakery.
There can be no
deception about
the newer meth
od. It's a killing
business.
They take run
ning jumps, held
and feet first, in
to each other's
fcA'o-OJ midriffs. Heads
are crashed with all the force of
thrown bodies against the floor. They
are hurled Into audience laps. I saw
one wrestler reel, his arms drop while
his nightmare mind tried to grapp'.e
with a flicker of reality.
As he stood in an egg-peeled-wh.te
daze, his ounonent raced the length
of the rlivgnd sailed head-first Into
the pit of his stomach. He sagged
with an agonized oof while both lay
prostrate and possibly wandering
through some field rich with posies.
Finally they crawled toward each
other like dying gladiators.
They slug, they foul, they even
bite. There appears to be not a
single rule of decent sportsmanship.
The victor staggered to his feet with
effort at a swollen smile while grop
ing Into the obscurity of a yelUng
crowd. The vanquished was carried
out on a stretcher. And many of us
sicken at bullfights.
One of the ataunchest of the edi
torial shop loyalties was expressed
by the late newspaper artist. Morris
Aleshlre. Befof his banking days,
Oeorge Buckley and Aleshlr were
"tenting under the same rag" a Chi
cago paper. While Buckley was mak
ing his remarkable recovery from a
22-montha strnppM-to-a-board ill
ness, Aleshlre profusely 11 hist rated a
slx-pse letter to him dally, mailed
It to his hospital and doubled the
ante on Sunday. Doctors agreed this
diurnal done of cheerfulness had mvKh
to do with the astounding comeback.
Charles M. Schwab has long been
one of the earliest risers along River
tide Drive, a custom he acquired In
puddler days and which he never for
sook, A few wayfarers who pass his
mansion at 0 30 a. m. are likely to
see Mm strolling about his lawn or
wandering to the liver edge to toss
chip therein for his big police dog
to retrieve.
Mrs, Schwab, love-ly, silver-haired
snd enduring with fortitude an af
fliction that arena her mostly In Mr
chair, was proudest amon all the
golden wedding gifts received of the
duplicate of her wedding ring Mr.
Scbwab gave her. The original ilng
was a. plain gold band modestly fleck
ed with frarnrt and two m dia
monds. It epltomtred large slices of j f
neir-sAcrlflctng thrift In his atrug
gllng-up daya.
Prosperity note: Lexlneton avenue
now has a "Personal Nectie Comm!
nlonatre "
aV J : .. ,. 1
When Kuuer lis, the writer, re-
Brady, M.D.
dope. Old skins are likely to run
short on sebum and therefore require
regular application of some suitable
oil.
So far as hygiene and esthetics are
concerned, anyone can keep the face
perfectly clean with oil or cold cream
and never use any aoap at all. Young
persons with shiny or oil skin msy
use plsln soap and water to scrub tne
face thoroughly every day or two 1n
order to remove the excess sebum;
but they should not negative this
care by applying grease or cream of
any kind. Older persona had better
omit the soap and depend on oil or
grease alone for cleaslng the face.
. A lotion which tends to correct ex
cessive olllness, seborrhead, may be
applied once or twice a day: Dissolve
10 grains of resorcln in one ounce of
any toilet water or one ounce of pure
grain alcohol. Where the oUIness,
shlnlness or redness la confined to
the nose end cheeks, shske up end
spply with the fingers the following
lotion At night. Allowing It to dry
on And washing It off next morning:
Zinc eulphate, one dram: potassium
sulphurated, one dram, and stronger
rose water, four ouncea.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Rolls Make This Man Dizzy.
I am 61 and can turn a very neat
somersault, only when I roll a few
It seems to make me feel dizzy, sick or
weak. Is thla because of my age or
because I am unaccustomed? G., W.
McC.
Answer Because you are unac
customed to laying aside your dignity.
With moderate but firm perseverance
you 'will presently find you can roll
em forward or backward and keep
your head. It la excellent training
for the circulation.
Well, Well, a Real Baby!
We have been married Just three
vears and have two babies already.
We hope to have five or six, snd not
too long spart. Please send any aug-
gestlons you have for the care and
training of babies. Mrs. o. E. B.
Answer Had to read your letter
over twice to make sure you were
talking about babies, not automo
biles. Send a dime (not stamps) and
a stamped envelope bearl: your ad
dress, and ask for "The Brady Baby
Book."
(Copyright, 1933, John P. DUIe Co.)
Ed Note: Readers wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letters direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. i 265 El Ca
mlno. Beverly . Hills. CaJf
turned from his Rhodes scholarship
at Oxford, he set out in quest of s
literary Job. In those days as In
these he found the path of the no
vitiate rocky. In despair one morning
he turned to the want ads and saw
a distinguished gentleman wanted a
tutor for his son a tutor who was a
"Harvard man, a high ohurchman,
and an athlete." Davis happened to
be not one of these, but he got the
Job.
Simile; "As Informal as Jim Tully'a
haircut." And I like the sign on a
42nd street auction room: "Step In
Here Out of the Depression.
Among the odd flora of the pro
fessional literati ta the Euridlte Ernest
Boyd. He Is a sort of swaggering Jo
Davidson with a blackthorn stick,
wide hat and shlnlly magnificent red
beard, a Dublin-born scholar whose
dandelion career has been devoted
largely to French translations and
considerations of Ouy de Maupassant.
A quondam theater companion of
Oeorge Jean Nathan comprises his
excursions uptown, but around Wash
ing Square he la a tremendous to
do, an extra biological offspring of
all ths great literature. Such is the
power of a wide hat and bright beard
In the waffle shops and coffee houses 1
From a radio magazine: "No one
knows why Mclntyre has never suc-H
cum bed to enormous radio offers.
Unless because of his writing quality.
There are times when he is extra
ordinarily coherent, as darting and
dazzling as Jean Cocteau. Then at
times he seems tired or it all and
his jumble becomes a thin mutter."
Don't be rldlc. Sometimes a man's
best friend is his mutter 1
(Copyright, 1933, McNaught Syndi
cate, Inc.)
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
HEAVY NEWS In the papers the
past few days recognition of
Russia, resignation of the secretary
of the treasury, spending of the pub
lic works money, etc.
Perhaps you grow weary or heavy
news, Just as you tire uf too much
heavy food.
ir so, there l plenty of lighter
newt to turn to.
M
ARY McCORMlC, operatic star,!
for example, li sued by Grace
Call 6 For
FUEL OIL
Any Kind Any Amount
Quick, Dependable Servlre
VALLEY FUEL CO.
Williams, writer, for a million and
one dollars.
The dollar Is for a slap in the face
delivered by Miss McCormic. The
million Is for "humiliation and in
Jured feelings."
The brawl In which the slapping
occurred took place In Hollywood last
week.
THE DIVISION of damages Is prob
ably fair enough.
The pain resulting from a alapped
face subsides rather quickly. But the
pain resulting from humiliation and
Injured feelings endures for a long
time.
So, If one Is going to value pain
in terms of dollars and cents, hu
miliation and Injured feelings are
doubtless worth a million times as
much as a slap In the face.
nyiRS. HONORE BOWLBY-GLED-
Ivl HILL, English noblewoman, gets
crocked or swacked, or oiled, or tight,
whichever term you prefer goes out
In front of the Dead Fish cafe, up
on Telegraph hill, In San Francisco,
and cuts loose with a 22-callbre pop
gun at the Colt memorial tower.
She la arrested and charged with
violation of the California gun law,
shooting within the city limits and
possibly as an afterthought being
drunk in a public place.
What -she - thinks of these bally
Americans after all that is probably
plenty.
t
UT mark this:
u She was released on ball. Her
title came in handy there. If she
had been an ordinary, common
brawler, without name or prestige,
she would have been permitted to
cool off in Jail.
ft ARY Mc COR MIC, operatic Star,
11 gets mad all the way through
and slaps Grace Williams, writer, in
the face.
Mrs. Honore Bowlby-Gledhlll, Eng
lish noblewoman, gets pickled to the
eyebrows and starts shooting at the
surrounding scenery.
When something elemental, like
getting mad or getting drunk, breaks
the veneer of so-called "culture," the
Colonel's lady and Julia O'Grady are
pretty much alike under the skin.
aren't they?
Human beings are Juat human
beings.
THIS Grace Williams, though, may
be an exception.
Mary McCormic slaps her In the
face, causing physical pain and great
humiliation. If the veneer had come
off, leaving her entirely human, she
would have pulled Mary's hair and
scratched her eyes.
Instead ehe goes to a lawyer and
sues for a million and one dollars.
That's doing It In the dignified way.
AND here's another touch of hu
man nature for you:
About nine people In ten will pub
licly commend Grace for keeping her
temper and salving her wounded
feelings by the dignified process of
a lawsuit and PRIVATELY will feel
a sneaking sympathy for Mary for
LOSING her temper and going na
tive. Human beings are funny.
ANOTHER little touch of human
nature In the news:
The King of England publicly criti
cises President Roosevelt's new gold
policy which, speaking broadly and
leaving room for the necessary ex
ceptions, is the same policy followed
by England since she went off the
gold standard.
ITS all right, you see, for England
to "sell down" the pound when it
serves her purposes to do eo, but It's
ALL WRONG when a competitor does
the same thing and the king of Eng
land, In spite of his crown and his
ermine and the white light that beats
about hit throne, gets burned up and
criticises his competitor for doing the
same things he haa been doing, Just
like the rest of us.
Human nature Is human nature, no
matter where you find it.
BIG NEWS and little news world
shaking events, and the little,
trifling, sometimes commendable and
sometimes contemptible, things that
human beings do under the stress ot
this or that emotion.
That's the daily newtpaper ror you
a mirror or the dally life of every ,
ATTENTION
TURKEY GROWERS!
Bear Fruit & Produce Co.
1IS-U7 Wahlnlo Street, San Franclwo, Cal.
day human beings In high and low
places, showing up their good points
and their bad points alike.
That's why the dally newtpaper
holds such a big place In our Uvea.
Flight 'oTime
(Mnarora And eactsoa coont)
History mm the me ol roe
at all Tribune of e an 10 fean
Alto.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
November S3, 1918.
(It waa Wedneaday)
Three De Autremont brother are
Indicted by grand Jury for Siskiyou
tunnel murder and train robbery-
W. A. Dates is foreman. Indictment
la also returned against a Swede,
charged with being drunk on the
fairground last September.
District attorney I advised to re-
sign by two faction. .On declares
he la too rigid In hi enforcement
and the other that be 1 too lax-
Ford auto left standing In front
of the Hotel Medford suddenly bursts
Into flames, and la saved by prompt
action of a Japancae with a bucket
ot water.
The coach of the Salem high school,
which defeated MedfM, 13 to 7, last
Saturday, declarea Medford fans are
"loud-mouthed Jayhawkers," and Is
answered by B. O. (Jerry) Jerome.
Thla was the famous "broken chain
game,' wherein the chain was found
broken after Medford acored a touch
down. Carload of fat turkeys shipped out
by the Talent growers.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
November 33, 1918.
(It was Saturday)
Two currency bill one to Increase,
and one to decrease the vslue of the
dollar, to be presented at nest aesalon
of congress.
Snow fall In the foothills, and
many local hunter ble way after
cougar.
Children ot the city to be guests
of Ed O. Brown at special movie at
the Isls. No child is barred, and will
"be admitted without an argument
aa to how old they are."
Wig Ashpole leaves sgaln for Port
land with a carload of cattle, the
third this month.
P. & E. now on its winter schedule
and will run three trains a week to
Butte Fall.
Ralph Norrla, tsckle on the high
school football team, breaks his
shoulder on the eve of the crucial
Ashland game.
Jackson county democrat writes
letter to President Wilson, demand
ing free speech, free press, and fed
eral lawa for control of commercial
fishing In Rogue River."
Modern Fuel Oil' delivery. No spill
ing. Eads Transfer. Phone 315.
Reading Fun In
Store for Boys
World adventure thrills are In store
for readers of THE AMKRICAN BOY
YOUTH'S COMPANION, according
to word lust received from the editor
of youth' favorite magazine. From
the Arctic to the Jungles of Haiti,
and from the plateau of Asia to the
lion country of Africa, the editors
have charted a course of excitement
and fun in the 12 Issues ot 1834.
Several yeara ago, the AMERICAri
BOY Introduced to It readers the
popular black-haired Jlmmle Rhodes.
Army aviator. Those who followeo
his adventure through Brooks ana
Kelly Field, and with the 94th Pur
suit on cross-country hops, target
practice, and formation flying, wlh
be delighted to leam that Jlmmle
Rhodes hsa returned to the maga
zine. The new series takea him to
Haiti where a revolution 1 Impend
ing. THE AMERICAN BOY YOUTH'S
COMPANION, filled with the adven
ture every boy craves, with the In
formation he needs, and the advice
on hobble and (porta he 1 always
seeking. Is the Ideal present for that
son, cousin, nephew, and chum. If
the kind of present that renews itseu
every month when the mailman lays
a copy on the doorstep. Approved
by teacher and educators, and en
dorsed by high school America, the
magazine can solve your Chrlstmsa
shopping difficulties.
The subscription price is a.oo ioi
one year. Until January l, you may
take out a three-year subscription
for $3.00, a saving of $3.00 over the
one-year rate for three yeara. Aftei
January 1, thl three-year rat wll.
be withdrawn. Mail your order di
rect to THE AMEHRICAN BOY-
YOUTH'S COMPANION, 7430 Second
Blvd.. Detroit, Mich. Service on your
aubscrlptlon will start with the Issue
you specify. Adv.
Receiving Turkeys
Nov. 24-25-26 at
Davis Transfer
Co.
South Grape St., Medford.
References Bank of Amer
ica, Cal. & Montgomery
St., San Francisco, Cal.
PHONE NO. 25S
ONE WEEK
STARTS
SATURDAY
NOV. 25 .
I., mnttett
Notning " ; ,.
Here's .
WIST
in -
9mNo I
Angel
with CARY GRANT
A Paromounf PM"
Nov. 25 to Dec. 1
Starting
TODAY
For 3 Days
SHOULD
SUCH
WIVES
BE
BRAN
She promised to
be falthful-but
two vears was
jfoi V so long to v
lit
L I
nara g
with
Madge Evans
Conway Tearle
Una Merkel
Stuart Erwin
Mat. 25c. Eve.' 35c.
Kiddies 10c
rilONE NO. 855
( A
S
UsV w I
w una
h0OF