Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 24, 1933, Page 8, Image 8

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    PAGE ETOHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1933.
Medford Mail Tribune
"EMtrom u Southern Ortt
Rnu thi Hill tflbuiw''
Otll CiMpt Otturd)
Putttlirml bf
m murium phintinu CO.
lft lT SB ft fU 8L t6
BOB KM W. BUHL, Editor
Afi Indepeodut Ntwiptpw
KtiUrtd u weooa eiu aitttw it Medford
Orefoa, uodsr 4el Of Usrcs . lsT.
4U8STK1PT10N RATES
Dally. im mr J'
Dill;, fit BODthl !
null dm month
n ParHar in Artttnee MedfOfd. Aibltnd
JlikjonrtlJi, Central Polot, Pboeals, Talwt, UoW
BUI tod od Ulgbvtfi-
Dally, ont itu I0.
n.ll. at annnfht l.SiD
nii AM tDOOU) 80
AD Urmt. cub Id idfaoe.
Orfidai wm of Uw City al Mtdford.
Officii paper of Juxud County.
MEM BO Of TlUfi ASSOCIATED PHMi
UvtiriM full Uut Wirt Berrtn
Tbt Aisoclted Prm to ssclurinli cllUtd U
Ux im for pubue-tion Of tu oewi aupw
credited to tt or ottwrvlM credited ID Uitt paper
nri aim tn tha inrai news oublWied beraln.
AU rlfbu 'or publlcitlOD of peeUl dUpitebaa
Mrclo tn two retenra.
Of UNITED PHES8
UEMBKH OP AUDIT BUBEAO
OP CIRCULATIONS
AdiertUlnf Kepreianutlfoi
' IL 0. MOIIKNSBN A COMPANY
OfflOM in Ne York, Cbtesgo, Datrolt. B
rruetoto lot AACdet Buttle Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Annul Perry
The Governor delivered a menage
to the legislature yesterday, which
aounded uplclouly like the open
ing gun. of a campaign for re-election.
He beate the free power tom-
toma anew, and Intimates .nai m.
"Joseph policies" will be for naught,
unless the state goea Into the elec
trio liit business. The hooey, that
o completely befuddled tho
sent, vwr " - i
T . ,n io:u. Therein, i
caiijr
the Governor was smart. He oeat
u. ,a nntjintiai s:ubernatorlal
aspirants to it. There was also They point to the resignations of Woodwin, . Achcson and
&nrrJSumb.ra.Trtha;;Sprague the anti-inflation article in the last Saturday Evening
.Oregon should be its own power Post by Barney Baruch, as evidence that the President is being
ft,r.0nfurTJtra,nwen 'Select'" deserted by the sound money men of his own party, and if he
light. If coming events are still persists in hia present course his party is due for a terrific dis
csatlng shadows, It means that the I
polltlrians, are getting ready to ron-
found and gosh durni the public Qn the Republican side, it is reported ex-Secretary of the
.SorEyS Mi,l8.i8 unIimberi"8 his heavy guns, also against
the last industry in the state that inflation, and with strong Wall Street backing is preparing to
Is functioning, and are quite annoy-, ,;.um i,,.
Ing with their permanent payrolls,
and prompt psyment of taxes.
"DRIBBLES" IS RIGHT
(Portland Journal)
"America's richest girl," who
(ell heir to a 10,000,000. share
of her fortune Wednesday on
her Slat birthday. Other drib
bles will come along from time
to time until she geta all of her
thirty millions when she la 90.
The alx best dressea movie actresses
have been selected, and publlo opin
ion returns a verdict, directing that
they act, as well aa they dress.
'
The state Intends to grab the pro
fits of liquor aalee, for emergency
relief, and more power to them. Then
with aate-control of football game
receipta, and payment or aeunquem
taxes, via a alot-machlne In the
sheriff's office, there would be no
use for red Ink.
.
Dear Miss Chatlieid:
There are five ooys trying to marry
Be and I am In love with one who
la poor and. uneducated and works
with his hands. (Chlco, Calif., En
terprise!. What seems to be needed
la a reverse English Utah,
leniug, i
of the i
la the order ot the day. In the cities
of the state. If thla keeps up a fire
engine will be able to get by an auto
bus unloading passengers.
An Irate Engllsnman cslled the
King a "parasite," while the King
wss msklng a speech, and nothing
happened to him. People who know
their Englishmen, express ths belief,
that In due course of time, the irate
one will eat his word.
...
Though the mornings are nippy,
and the evening the same, there la
a marked decline in the number of
fashionable males, loose without their
hats. However, the bare - headed
vogue la Just as popular, aa it ever
was, but the devotoee, are too poor,
to buy a new hat. to leave home,
when attending social doings. On
the other hand, there are fathers,
in high-topped boots and macklnaw.
escorting their ahlverlng bare-legged
going. There is very little consider
ation shown for Juvenile legs, la the
winter time.
A census of the 1dm crop of boys,
ahows that their Paws plan making
halfbacks out of everyone, or know
the reason why, with but one excep
tion. This is the Dub Wauon kid,
who will be whittled Into a spectacu
lar end. All, It la hoped, wtlt be out
standing athletes. Though this Is a
red-hot bowling town, and there are
had hu athieuc rr mapped TL Ei"" conprfss convene. I He will have a most formidable army
"ranking bowler." of shock troops, taken from BOTH parties, and supported by
The n. m. Hogn boy u now ai i n aroused public opinion, ready to fight at the drop of the
wX'hu n.m.,U MilnlS,Si,',, fr U mmt'' aBBi"8t Vx Mling with
more like it, and Jibe well with
Hogan. His dad's folks made a mis-
Sta siul ra1 latH hdn klalvln This
error has now teen corrected. Like
ail the football crop, tht young man
la Rolnt; to be a halfback. It is about
time some second string tackles were
bowing up.
. 4
This Must
WHATEVER the final liquor control plan adopted in this
state this much is certain: the people of the state
should get back of that plan 100 per cent and support it.
Another fact should be clearly borne in mind. No matter
WHAT that final plan may be, it will not in itself, ENTIRELY
eliminate the bootlegger, and the moonshiner. In other words
it will not eliminate the chiseler, or the crook.
For, whatever the market price of legal liquor may be,
whether it is sold in state stores, drug stores or saloons, that
price will include a heavy tax, and will therefore be materially
higher than illegal liquor, which evades the tax.
Here is where the "New Deal" bootlegger will come in. He
will have his ground-squirrel whiskey and his bath tub gin, at
prices which will knock the thirsty consumers eye out. It will
of course, be "just as good," as the legal liquor, at one-half or
one-third the price. Why pny $3 when you can get the same
thing for $1 f.
WHY INDEED f Why OBSERVE the law when you can
make money by BREAKING itt Why buy legal liquor
which is pure and wholesome, when you can buy illegal liquor
which is neither, for half, or one
The answer of course, is that buying legal liquor will be
right, and buying illegal liquor wrong; buying the first will be
supporting the LAW, and assisting the finances of the state;
buying the .second, will be breaking the law, and assisting the
bootleggers to regain their foothold in politics, finance and the
underworld.
I AWS are only ag strong as
- Oregon is to have a new
Whatever that new deal is, unless it is supported by public
opinion, it will fail. Unless the right thinking people not only
get behind it but take the trouble to publicly condemn those
who don't it can't succeed.
But if the people will DO, what, under this new dispensa
tion is so clearly their DUTY,
that their friends and neighbors
courts and law officers in running out those who DON'T
Then, WHATEVER THE NEW SYSTEM happens to be, it
will be a success. For it will have the law and public opinion
behind it. And this success will be a glorious triumph for
GOOD CITIZENSHIP 1
Why the President Smiles
IE have an idea President
war
political game, than most
The aforesaid critics are calling Roosevelt an inflationist.
j""' .,uv.. ""-"'""i
snooting of Ins own.
Under such circumstances, the President's smiling indiffer
ence, as he continues to enjoy his vacation at Warm Springs,
Georgia, is (to these critics) hard to understand. The man
should be scared to death by this formidable uprising against
bis present monetary policy, from BOTH major parties. Can't
he see the handwriting on the wallt Unless he turns a com
plete samersault on his monetary measures very soon, he 'i
DOOMED, etc., etc.
M
EBBE so. But we have another idea. In the first place
things, including the broadside
I the anti-inflation blast from Barney Baruch, BEFORE they
happened. There is no reason
informed regarding the preparations of his old oollcge chum,
Ogdcn Mills, to start the anti-Roosevelt ball a rolling.
Then why should he be so complacentt Why has he done
nothing but smile f Why didn't he start a back fire some time
agot
TpiIE answer, as we see it, is this: Things are developing not.
only as President Roosevelt expected, but as he WISHES
them to develop.
For what is he gettingt He is getting, several months be
fore congress meets, a tremendous national, BI-PARTISAN
movement against inflation and in favor of sound money. Ho
is getting not only the leaders of his own party, but the leaders
of the Republican party committed against what former Presi
dent Hoover termed "confetti currency."
Well, PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT IS AGAINST CONFETTI
CURRENCY HIMSELF 1 He is against inflation, at least any
direct inflation, such as putting the currency printing presses
to work. His gold purchase plan isn't inflatinn. No one knows
just what it is, but at the worst it is nothing more than a trial
balloon in the direction of a commodity dollar If it works
toward raising commodity prices, 0. K. If it doesn't, it can
be stopped by the stroke of a pen, and no harm will have been
done. First, last and all the time, President Roosevelt is him-
qmivn VfWPV
yilEKEFORE isn't the President getting just what he wantsf
He isn't afraid of the "Baruehs" of his own party or
the "Mills" of the opposing party. What he IS afraid of, is
the next congress and particularly the wild-eyed inflationists
and easy money fanatics, from the South, the Middle and the
Far West, who will all be there.
But if things go on as at present what will Franklin D.
have with which to meet these
"'C currency.
Ergo and also Q. E, D.l That is precisely what the Tresi-
l-Mlt wants
llfMY alioiiMn't Franklin I), enjoy himself and his vacation
" iu the aumiy south. Things are breaking awell."
Be Done!
- third the price!
public opinion supporting them.
deal in this liquor business.
get behind the new law, see
do likewise, and support the
Roosevelt is playing a deeper
of his critics suspect.
. nI..i,i.g
from Professor Spraguc and
to doubt that he was equally
"monetary Bolsheviks" when
Aye, verily brcthern, the politician who wishes to outwit
Franklin D. will have to get up very early in the morning. He
is about three jumps ahead of the best of them-
Personal Health Service
By WUIiam.Bradj, M.D.
8l(oeo lettcri pcrtAining to puraonaj aeaitai tad ajtlens not to dls
mm dlaguutU or treatment, wUi o answered Oj Or. dtad 0 a la raped
MlfBddreued antelope w enclosed, belters tnuuld oe ortef uo srrltten in
ink. Owing to the targe o umbel ot letters received only a ie can Oe ans
wered her No reply can fir made to queries out conforming to Uutroctlons
address Dr. WUI Jam Brady. 26fl El us ml no. rieverley UiU, Cai.
THIS BASAL METABOLISM THING.
I've been exercising admirable re
straint over that Impulse for a year
or more and I can t be a gentleman
any longer,
It Is
high time to
have a quiet chat
with those
among our read-
KS.TflK,r- &a era who shall be
V! ' H or are now be-
tests. Those who
have had the ex
perience should
charge It off as
education or di
version. If the
medical brethren elect tu listen In
on thla confabulation It Is all right
with us, provided they preserve de
corum. One woman writes: "X very
sick all last winter. Doctor thought
It was my heart, but I was too weak
to be taken to hospital for t basal
test . . . fine physician was giving
me heart medicine . . . heart was
too rapid. 126 or more to the min
ute . . ." This correspondent goes
on to say that she has made remark
able gains since she began taking
the Iron and ammonium citrate I
suggested here for a simple anemln.
Probably the medicine did her no
harm, but It Is much more reason
able to assume that the medicine,
rest and other things her physician
prescribed actually produced the re
sults she credits to the Iron. I know
human nature. But the point I wish
you to notice Is that the woman had
a rapid heart action and the doctor
was uncertain whether there was
some organic heart disease or whether
the rapid heart (tachycardia Is the
medical term for It) was merely a
feature of hyperthyroidism or mask
ed exophthalmic goitre (Grave's or
Basedow's disease, or. as some machine-made
specialists call It, "toxic"
goitre).
Here Is another woman who com
plains: "I am 37 years old and have
been under physician's care for
two years . . . have had metabol
ism tests and found to be hyper
thyroid. Also I have paroxysm
taxis cardla (she means the heart
action Is rapid by spells) . , .
headaches , . . teeth X-rays O.
K. but head X-rays showed slight
sinus which is now cleared up
. . . but headaches continue . , .
Finally doctor ordered all medi
cine stopped and nurse to give
high colon Irrigations . .
Here. too. the heart action was
rapid and the doctor wanted to de
termine whether organic heart dis
ease or some general condition cause
NLW YORK
DAY BY DAY
3y O. O. Mclnryre
NEW YORK, Nov. 24. Thoughts
white strolling: They say Mencken
and Nathan will tie up In a new
magazine v e n
ture. Who re
members when It
was an oyster
plant? Lily Pons
has a skip In her
walk like her
name 111 y
ponsl What's be
come of Vincent
Lopez? Holly
w o o d studios
clamor for Da
mon Runyon.
One of my fa-
Fred Drake. The Furplno leader.
Manuel Queson, suggests a shrunk
Sam Shlpman. Dick Hyland's stu
dios expression. And Tnllulah Bnnk-
hcad suggests a statue in chalk these
days. What a queenly looking lady
Mary Roberta Rhine hart is. Also
Mrs. Dana Gibson.
Somehow I'd like to ae Owen
Young leap-frog over a fire plug.
It would do him good. The Rltz
ntarters never change. Colin Cllve,
the actor, la a startling ringer for
Jimmy Walker. What will become
of peep-holes In speakeasies? .Those
Rlalto doctors at every opening
Wagner and Michel.
Fred C. Kelley, a Xenla, O.. boy.
who made good In the city. Odd
how minestrone is always sermed In
a battered tureen, Efldle Duchln la
the town's best blusher. That tin-
roused detachment of Brock Pember-
ton. There's a giddyap to those
Jockey rap hata the ladles wear, all
right, all right!
One word description of Fred Al
lenraspy. No person looks so un
like his photogrsphs as Albert Wig
gin. Louts CftViern and beautiful
bride. Mary Pick ford still excites the
populace more than any other movie
star. Forlorn old-timers around the
Palace comer. What was It about
variety that made us love it so?
Hoofing ha recruited some of the i
best box office stars In the movies, j
Valentino, of course, was the most '
notable garniture. But there are also i
such feather-footed figures as Bar- j
bara Stanwyck, Oeorg Raft, Ginger !
Rogers, Ruby Keeler, James Cngney
and Joan Crawford who began as
fast steppers mostly in Broadway
night clubs. I
The original Algonquin crowd was
not the moderns who glorified the1
Round Table. The flrat of the lit. i
erary minded to make ths West 44th '
street inn their luncheon place wm
headed by the youthful and Irre
pressible Booth Tarklngton. In the
wry select circle, too, were Oorge
Ade, -Bluffy' Davis. Ort Wells. Har
ry Leon Wilson and ths actor Roy
Atwell. I
There was a memorable nUht when
Tarklni too. Booming out ot tb in-
mm
the tachycardia. Hence the basal
metabolism tests.
This test Is too complicated to de
scribe here. Suffice to say it gives
a fair Index or guage of the rate of
combustion of fuel and tissue going
on metabolism, the vital chemical
process. In fever, for Instances, the
metabolism is speeded up. In other
conditions It may be slowed down
below the normal rate of health.
The knowledge, skill and judgment
of a well trained physician, In my.
opinion, is better than any basal
metabolism measurement the most
expert technician can make, In the
diagnosis and treatment of sickness.
At least, I'd prefer a good doctor'
Judgment to the findings of such
machine measurements.
I say this only after a prolonged
effort to learn how and. why this
Imposing machinery was wished on
the medical profession. I think the
use of such gadgets increases In In
verse ratio with the decline of medi
cal training and skill. I may be
dumb. If so, I Invite any physician
who knows better to tell me and our
readers about It.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Breath Holding
Daughter aged 3 has spells of hold
ing breath when she cries, and she
becomes' rigid and rolls back her eyes
and turns blue . . . (Mrs. D. H.)
Answer X-ray picture of neck and
upper chest might show enlarged thy
mus gland, and X-ray treatments
would do good. Meantime see that
child has dally ration of plain cod
liver oil and plenty of exposure of
naked skin to sunlight, or If no sun
light available, the light of an ultra
violet lamp.
Well Water
Like to know what to do to a well
that has not been used for the last
12 years . . . (M. H.)
Answer Boll all the water you
drink, at least until you have the
assurance of the local health depart
ment, that the water Is pure.
Now Who Is Tight?
Kindly send booklet "The Art of
Easy Breathing." Am Inclosing stamp
ed addressed envelope as I under
stand you are too tight and lazy to
use your own. (P. P.)
Answer Tighter and lazier than all
get out, friend. I had to use your
stamped addressed envelope to carry
a special message to you. Informing
you that the booklet will set you
back (a) one dime and (b) a stamp
ed envelope bearing your address.
Kd Note: Readers tvlshlne to
communicate with Or. Brbdy
should send letters direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. U.. 206 El Ca
mino. Bevrrl Hills. CaOl
dlana corn belt, was given a cele
bration lasting from 4 one afternoon
until the same .hour the next. Then
his cronies escorted him to the Al
gonquin and, to be certain he re
mained there, sequestered the clothes
he wore. But two hours later "Tark"
appeared at the Lambs, merry and
bright, in fur coat, high hat and
bedroom slippers. When the room
became a little too stuffy he doffed
.his great coat and revealed himself
In an old-fashioned night gown.
During the Roman Holiday Roy
Atwell complained to Tarklngton he
had been unable to see "Havana," a
hit at the Casino. Aa they moved
in a devious but enchanting Itinerary
from this cafe to that he kept grum
bling: "I want to go to 'Havana.' "
It became so tiresome that one morn
ing after a night of wassail and con
tinued complaining Atwell awakened
on a rolling boat actually bound
for the city of Havana. Without a
soul
Only one stage box In New York
was ever denied the public. Thla
waa an upper tier at Vie New Am
sterdam for A. L. Erlanger and
friends. Erlanger finally abandoned
the Idea. But in the Euclid opera
house in Cleveland stage box A re-
Ye Olde and
Turkey Trotte
IN VE HILARIOUS
VILLAGE OF YE
JAYVILLE
YE TOWN OP YE
WARMISH SOLES
AND YE
REVELRY
TILL 2
Ya Local Chamber of Commerce Hath Ordained That Ye
Cloaket and Bonnets Do Be Chekked for Nothinge ... So
Come All Ye I
PRETTYE TUNES TO BE PLAYED
maJned Inviolate from time the the
ater was built until torn down. It
was for the political leader Marie
Hanna and at death pawed to his
son.
Memory of the stern rebukes my
doughnut dunking received In form
ative days has left an Ineradicable
scar. To this day when I duck Into
wrtat Wilson Mlzner called a sinker
salon I have an uneasy feeling of
being followed. And at the first
dunk, expect somebody to scream,
"Don't do that!"
(Sopyrlght, 1033, McNapght Bundl
cate. Inc.)
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS.
TWO AMERICANS, Lieutenant Com
mander Settle and Major Chester,
rise In a balloon to a height of 11
miles above the earth's surface, and
then descend safely, landing in a
cranberry bog in New Jersey.
It U dark when they come down,
so they climb out of the special
gondola, wrap up in the fabric of
the balloon and sleep peacefully
through the night, while all over the
world wires hum and radios crackle
with surmises as to whether or not
they are lost.
COMING BACK, successful, from a
feat that arouses the Interest of
the world, their first need is for sleep.
Their next Imperative need is
FOOD.
Human brings, you see, are Just
human beings, no matter how big or
spectacular they may be.
YOU have read In the papers that
Lieutenant Commander Settle and
Major Chester soared up 11 miles
into the STRATOSPHERE.
The stratosphere is the" layer ol
thinner air that lies above the heavier
ATMOSPHERE we breathe.
It is too thin to breathe, which is
why balloons that go up Into It have
to be equipped with special gondolas,
in which oftygen can be released.
You have seen pt'i.r?" of them
In the newsreels.
THIS thinner afrj by 'the way, of
fers very much less resistance to
moving bodies than our heavier air,
which leads to the idea that in time
to come we may navigate it with
streamlined aircraft that will encoun
ter VERY LITTLE resistance and so
will be able to reach terrific speeds
500, 600 miles an hour, or perhaps
much more.
Passengers traveling in such air
craft could leave San Francisco In
the early morning, have lunch in
New York, spend the afternoon seeing
the sights, go to a show In the even
ing and be back on the Pacific Coast
In time for work the next day. I
SETTLE and Chester, wo read, went i
up Into the stratosphere to study
the cosmic ray. i
Radio rays, so far as we know, stick
to the earth; following Its surface
and so finally coming back to their
starting place. The cosmic ray. it
Is suspected, may travel out through
space. Intersecting other worlds in
its path.
The time may come, you see, when
we will be TALKING with other
worlds.
Fantastic, of course, but 10tt years
ago the radio would have seemed
fantastic.
AIRCRAFT can get up out of the
heavier atmosphere and Into the
thinner stratosphere, where resist
ance Is less.
Automobiles CAN'T. They have to
stick to the surface of the earth, talc
ing on whatever resistance the air
offers which Is plenty.
It Is air resistance that holds down
Time-Honored
Tleae lenore Te Lonf
Fare nn Ye Arl Prnpne. ..
I!e' Merely Ylrtunmlv
Patient Wsitlnr. for Ye
taturriave NUhl!
speed and INCREASES fuel consump
tion. IP AUTOMOBILES are to Increase
their speed and at the same time
DECREASE their consumption of fuel
they must be made so as to slip
through the air with less resistance.
Streamlining la believed to be the
answer to that. Engineers estimate
that a properly streamlined automo
bile could be driven by a 25 horse
power engine at a speed In excess of
100 miles an hour, on far leas fuel
than Is now required for much lower
speeds.
That Is why streamlining Is the big
thing In automobile design at the
present moment.
It Isn't Just a fad, for the purpose
of making new cars LOOK different.
Flight 'o Time
iftii-afora ana Jackson count)
History from Che rtlee ol 1'he
ttan Tribune ot it ana 10 yean
o.)
TBS YEARS AGO TODAY
November 24, 1923.
(It was Saturday.)
City to vote again on Issuance of
bonds for new high school.
Yale beats Harvard 13 to 0, causing
great glee and despair around th?
University club.
Bill OUara Is fined 25 for killing
two quail.
Pourteen Thanksgiving day dances
are advertised.
The Medford Armory will be for
mally opened for public inspection
next Tuesday.
Lloyd Williamson writes a letter to
the editor on the "broken chain"
football game which Salem won. Mr.
SATURDAY ONLY
Continuous Show 1:40 to It
I MB ONLY TUXIM PICTURE ENTIKU HUE M Aflta
sfV .W -
Roaring, Shrieking And Rebellious
Jungle . . . Man's Conquest, Beast's
Defiance. Don't Miss It.
AMONG MIGHTIEST
MAMMALS AND THE
TINIEST HUMANS WITH
Mr. & Mrs.
MARTIN JOHNSON
a FOX picture
Ends Tonite
Ms dame Racketeer
lias a New Racket
Alison Skipworth
tn
"A LADY'S
PROFESSION"
TODAY
mm
and Sat.
a
WIERD! GHASTLY! UNCANNY!
CREEPY! CHILLING! STRANGE!
What'SCARFACE meant
to gang pictures
WHITE
means to thrillers!
with
BELAWfMIJGOSI
Would you know a ZOMBIE if you saw one?
Also CHARLIE CHASE in "His Silent Racket"
MICKEY MOUSE CARTOON Patho News
Bitify Moore's
LITTLE GIANTS
Playing at the
Fairgrounds
SATURDAY
NIGHT
MEN
35c
Williamson declares "the fact the
chain broke when It counted most
will give all sportsmen grounds to
pause."
A wandering boy loola the police,
the sheriff and the prohibition agents,
and escapes In a stolen automobile.
TWENTY YKARS AGO TODAY
November 24, 1M3.
(It was Monday.)
City payroll for year amount, to
$33,100.
Bud Anderson, "pride of Medford."
passes through, and Court Hall falls
to get to the depot In time to see
him. Bud plans to fight In Van
couver, B. C, soon.
Col. P. L. TouVelle says that he
ate a pumpkin pie made by Issle Mc
Cully of Jacksonville, from Bagley
Cannery canned pumpkin, and "It Is
fit for king to eat, and give praise."
Anna Held, the famous actress, will
be here December 4, at the Page.
Ashland defeats Medford high. 37
to 0. High disgust prevails among
the local athletes.
BIG DANCE
Every Saturday
Night
Dreamland
Medford 's Most
Popular Dance Pavilion
7-P1ECE DANCE
BAND
Modern and Old-Time Tunes
Men 35c I.ndlts A Dime
ALSO
C'hnpter 9
"Whispering Shadow
Torch? Comedy
silly Symphony
Cartoon
Attend
Sat. Matinee
Avoid the
Rush
BHU
hi
LADIES
10c