Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1933)
PAOE STX BEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "Croyont to Southern Oroa Ruu Uii Mail rtibunt'1 Utll Kinpl teturday Publish! or MKUKOHD I'm NT I NO CO. SBlT-10 H, tht 8L PbOM 10 tfOUKKI W. KUUL, Bdltor Ad Independent Nwfp4per Entered u Mttod clua suttar tt Utdord Oragoo, aodtr act ol MireD $, 1870. guutsrmmoN bates Dally. rear .....I&.OU Dallr, ill noottu 3. To Daily, M Doato " B furrier Id Adfsnes Mtdfoi-d. Aabland, Jackwmllle, Uenual Polot, PooenU, Talwt, Uold Bill and oo Wgnwun, Dally, Qnt tv .. HOo Dally, all oontbl 8.35 Dallr. dm not) lb Ail terms, auto is adTaoea. Official papet or toe City ol aledord. GMelaJ papet of Saetaoo County. ME.MBKH Oe TUB AR80CIATEU PHB88 ttenirtitt full Leased Wire 8ml ce fbt AuocUted Prea la txclualiely eotlUed to tbt um for publleetloa of all oen dlapatebee credited t It nr oUxrwln credited to ml paper ud alao If tbe local sen publlfbed berelB, All rigftM 'or pbileitiao of ipeelal dlapateba bereta are alao reaervea. UKMItEU OF UNITED PKE88 afEMBKH OF AUDIT ft U BEAD Of CIHCULAT10NS Adrertlilng Hrpreaeouthea ftL C. MOtJENBEN COMPANt Ornrea to New York, CblcaEO. Detroit, StO rraoeUaD iw Angela BeatU Portland. Ye Smudge Pot Uy Arthui rrry Jt' getting !ong toward the day. ! when amateur Kits Krlngles get their j cotton batten whiskers too clone to. the pink candle., and narrowly escape being Krlsp Krlnglea. people who have swigged the same. wnA. that. vfhi1rjv lured In four davS takes about that long tor recovery, WHAT COUL1J IT BE? (Chlco, Calif., Enterprise) I do far more for my friends than they do for mo: I entertain more than they do, I call them on the phone twice to their once. Now what Is the trouble with me? ' JANET. Only ten (10) days lolt In ihls yea: In which, to win ari argument. in the past 'few' w'ooks there ha been one lynohing, and several near- ductcd""'n a oracrimlnne"" "nd no one legally empowered to stop samo knew anything about It until Derse,d."CnThTneMynching.'y we' averted by the sheriffs hiding the layers' of babies, old folks, or sweet- hearts, before the angered mob could , get hold of them, sociologists deduce from this, that "the suclnl fabric Is , weakening." It also Indicate, that the public la growing weary of lid-1 dllng by the courts, bamboozling by lawyers ami broMnncsa of slayers, j in committing their murder.. Lynch-1 Ings and near-lynchlngs make the ! criminals more circumspect, unlike : ha. rShrc."i was crazy when he yanked the rope, j The Don Runy'ard" kid pedalled j down town Wed. on hie velocipede, j Ho is .tin too young to ride a bicycle, , and not watch where an autolat Is going, or dare the motorist to run over him. . , Dock Robinson i. getting over his minor rheumntlco, and will soon be more suitanisn than ever. A traitor yesterday' declared that 1 the nra had no more to do with the ! K do SSTSKE o?ba'b?er.k There was not a Young Democrat wiinin ugnt or souna, at me time words for Young Democrats. -j It Is noted that the Portland dema gogues aro polishing up the time worn "mandate of the people," to be fuddle the voters on the Sales Tax. TI1KKE IS A SANTA CLAIS (Mercury) As soon aa his committee was created, Senator Nye of North Dakota hired three investigators at $500 a month each, plus ex penses: a committee secretary at BOO a month and expenses; a special assistant at 0O0 a month and expenses; four clerks at tBOO a month for the four; and then put his brother, Donald P. Nye, In charge of handling the com mittee's expenses. Farmers report that thieves are till bothering them, and stealing everything but the hired man. Another Utile matter coming before Oregon voters at no distant date, will be county unit plan for schools, Which outside of Klamath county, no Oregon county has had sense enough to adopt. It la bitterly opposed by the Portland politicians who claim they do the thinking for the farmer. IU main purpose is to abolish expen ditures, and school directors. In K ta rn th county, when the unit system was adopted the school levy waa 34.1 mills. Now It runs from 3.4 to 4 3 mllls. This Is a StO mill levy reduc tion and should hold a mighty ap pea. and be adopted without any bloodshed or political fit-throwing. But It will not. It "cripples the right of the people to govern," and the people generally make a mess of gov erning. lllckens' hn Killed. LONDON, Dec, 31. ;i Sir Hemj Dickens. 85, son of the novelist, Ch. le Dirk ens, died today from Injuries received several days ato when he -as Mt by a motorcycle on the Chelae tffibankmeat, Has Gill the Right Idea? II AS Ray Gill, master of the state grange, got the right ideat Are the members of this organization a lot of easy marks, whose votes can be delivered by their "master" in any direction he chooses, provided he passes out his time-honored hooey, about Wall Street, and the big interests f We wonder. No doubt the result of the sales tax referendum will answer that question for the present at least. If the mem bers of the state grange vote as a body against this sales tax for the benefit of the public schools, then no one can deny the master of the state grange is right. For in his first official letter to the leaders of the various granges, he plainly shows that in his opinion, all you have to do to grab the grange vote is to wave the red flag of "Wall Street," talk about the moneyed interests, arouse class fear and prejudice, and all the grangers will flock to the polls and mark their ballots on the dotted line. fX this official communication Mr. Gill declares "Big Business stormed the capital" to put over this iniquitous sales tax measure, which is only "the entering wedge and once establish ed will be added to from year tax leading to great waste ! Undoubtedly Mr. Gill is convinced the grangers will accept that statement as true, swallow it bait, hook, line and sinker, without analyzing it or asking Otherwise he would not make own signature for he knows the session in Salem KNOWS, the state capital for the sales tax lobby. There WAS a desire on all sides, to get the state out of its financial mess if possible, and above all save the public schools, from the greatest crisis they have faced since the state was founded. No one wanted a sales' tax. it became more and more obvious, that if the schools WERE to be kept open, some sort of sales tax HAD to be passed. So the members of the legislature passed the best one they could de vise. An action with less regard for what Mr. Gill calls "big busi ness" and more regard for the of this state, was never passed of the state. But this action which the legislators well knew might mean, thanks to demagogues like Gill, Journal, their political extinction, this action which they took onl fr0M the highest, sense of " "state grange" declares "disgraced the state of Oregon!" i A ND it will "only be the opening wedge for heavier sales taxes leading to great waste." Mr. Gill neglects to state the sales tax expires automatically in two years. It was- only passed to meet an emergency, all thnt the advocates of it ask, is that the people give it a TRIAL during that limited time. Even if it comes up to their expecta tions, it can't be continued AFTER that time. - Just how THIS CBn to higher sales taxes and "great waste," when every cent derived from this tax must be devoted to the schools and thereby reduce the property tax now devoted to maintaining (lem the head of the grange FAILS to state, MOT content with this Mr. Gill goes further. He categorically " states thorn urn two imnnrtanr. issues in this contest. "The .... , .. . , , . ,. , , . ., first w, shall the people rule!" The second "shall we let the governor and Wall Street fasten a vicious sales tax' upon the people of Oregon 7 TllPre you nre grflngCrg J y0u believe in the rule of the , , , . . ,? . . . pcoplo and don t believe in bending your neck to the yoke of Wa strcet th ther ; , CQUr f you to pursue, ' 1 rush pell mcll to the polls and vote down the sales tax. (But wl'y votil)8 0NB v on is "Pholding PP-" rule, and voting ANOTHER way isn't, the head of the state grange refuses to state.) , ALL Street. Good old Wall Street. What , would the V V , demagogues and the office-hungry professional politicians do without itl What would Brother Gill dot He has been ficrhtinir Wall Street and Bin Business interests ever since that ..... . .... . political bee started buzzing in 1""'8-S0 will he continue, Just get on a soap box, yell "Wall Street" loud enough, and POPlo. P"- "P. over each other trying to mark tlicir ballot for you first. At least that is the Gill doctrine. aj i. . : r ... xA .... hns no more to do with this sales, tax, than with high tide in the Bay of Fundy,it was no more the product of Big Business and the International bankers, than Greta Garbo's new wig is the product of erosion, but what difference does that make to a candidate for governor or any other office-seeking politician. 'T'llE old "Wall Street wheeze, in the bright lexicon of practical politics, is sure fire. Just tack it onto any issue, or any candidate, and watch them go down! Sprinkle your official or ders to tho state grange with it, and watch the grangers fall for it, and vote as you tell them to. It has always worked in the past. Ray GUI, master of the state grange is certain it will work again. True the sales tax has been a success in other states. True, also it will keep open the publio schools and reduce the property tax ON THE FARM by from 25 to 30 percent! But what are facts in the face of political ambition, and the time honored battle cry of "Down with Wall Street" t If Mr. Gill is right, nothing, NOTHING at all! I I tCoiHinued (rum page ono and seek Imuss or candidates. They will have plenty of both when the time comes. Any policies or ,neii they might concentrate on now will be forgotte'i or dfad before IBSfl. The new Federal Reserve Bulletin to year and soon become a heavy for the facts to support it, it, in black and white over his and everyone else who attended that Big Business never stormed tax. There was not even a sales But as the session progressed. best interests, of ALL the people by any legislature in tbeiiistory and the rabble rousing Portland public duty, the master of the r " ' , c. . his Stetson, anT as everyone u .i.. TtT-ii c.HA.i (published Thursday, December 91) may not hare been censored, but it was certainly written cautiously. The survey of business is Included after having been omitted last month The Bulletin contains no mention of the gold policy or the NRA. One thin is clear. The White House will not be displeased at t.ila month's issue. Note.. Th. present day standing of the treasury books mean nothing be cause th. real outflow of money has only started. For Instance, on De cember 18 only ,153 000 000 of the three bllUoru alloled to public works had then been disbursed. The only lgnlflcant figure In the statement Issued was the one allowing that t.tel public debt had been Increased 290.O0O.0OO since July 1. That li where they get the money (by re - Personal Health Service By William brady, M.D. . Sly; ned letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Bradj if a iiamped self -ad dressed envelope li enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be an swered. No reply can he made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady, 265 El Cam IN WINTER EVERY Moat people know little about the heat regulating mechanism of the body, and the fussbudgets who evince the greatest a anxiety about wearing suffic ient clothing to "protect" the body know the least about how we keep warm or cool. Being igno rant about this physiology people are naturally credulous In re ap e c t to the imaginary dan gers of "exposure" to trifling cold. In fact the uneducated masses are as stupid about this as they are in the matter of "regulating the bowel." As soon as winter settles In. the war between the cranks and the fuss budgets flares up again. The cranks want fresh air. The fussbudgets want to keep coddled. A compromise is the only possible end the two sides can hope for, and this they reach along toward the first of April, when each side begins to prepare for re opening hostilities next fall. You see, It takes all kinds of peo ple to make a world. . If we could give the time to tt we might persuade the people that a rigid enforcement of Oslerlsm at age sixty (with some modern succedaneum for chloroform) Is preferable to any state legalization of eugenic limitation of offspring. With all the old folks thus put out of their misery we young people could set to and have a merry time of it. In such a world there would be no wrangling over the elementary prob lems of household or office heating, ventilation, amount or kind of cloth ing required In various seasons or changes of weather, or Influence of dampness on health. Young persons with their high metabolism or rate of Internal com bustion find moderate external warmth sufficient for comfort. Older persons, ' with low metabolism or slower oxidation process, require more external warmth for comfort. So there you have the bone of conten tion, and aa long as we permit old people to live we shall have this everlasting wrangling between the two classes aa sure as winter comes. Out bowling the other day It was. well, on the cool side. Among aome fifty of ua boya and girls on the : green there was Just one lad besides myself who did not have on a sweater, Jacket or coat. This singular char-, financing "and adding It on the debtf. Apparently someone told Jesse Jones about the treasury pressroom cartoon showing himself and Mot genthau shooting dice to determine the gold price. He never mentions the gold program without some rof erence to dice and seems quite prond of his crap-shootlng vocabulary. Many of those trying to get foreign service Appointments in Russia are out of luck, as the stAte department is moving men from the border states Into Russia, figuring they know more about the current Russian problems. When young Robert Strauss, the ambassador's son, left the NRA, it was explained he was nervous from overwork. It now develops that Strauss' nervous condition t first be came apparent to General Johnson when Strauss overruled him in a dis pute which came before the policy board. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORKX, Dec. 21, Jed Harris, after total eclipse, la again preening peacock swagger along 'the Rialto Six years ago, his sudden upshoot was the most spectacular sky rocketing on the horizon. But like all auch rockets, he dropped with a dull pltnk. A vain, dapper fellow, stuffed with charming egotism, his ex plosive capers provided much newspaper copy. But hjs talent for producing could not be laughed off. He produced hit after hit of artist io merit. His mar ginal profits In Wall Street specula tions often mounted to $30,000 a day He pounded hta deek, grew amus ing beards, deflated actors and went on temperamental rampagea that left him white and ahaking. Then a cou pie of flops in a row, the market ail lapse and he sipped out like a light. There were etorle. of him slinking gaunt-eyed along side streets at night. Just as- suddenly this season he popped up with a sturdy hit. his pyrotechnics sent one outraged Brit ish actor up the gangplank In a pet the day before his opening. Harris, exerting the docility of his kind when licked, retrieved him. And Hie show went on. Whatever his fste, he gives vigor to his calling. The smartest In dog shops has open ed on a flowy reach of tipper Madi son, A facade In modern decor, tie Interior Is without cages, The dcys are on eeneroua chain, .piked to a rubberlted platform against a back ground of mirror. In the center Is a squared pit of mosaic with cush ioned divan upon which customer, sit a pets parade "before them. A sanitary system of flushing make the shop practically odorless. Th estab lishment gives a 90-day health guar antee with each dc. Wlllem VanLoon. most dtatlniuiih- ed of the writers incubated in i Vlil,e waffle ahopi. is a restless lit terateur. An day he u likely to eX3 his feathers in a I no, Beverly III Us, Cal. ONE IS HIS AGE. acter did have a deep coat of tan, however. He was all o 60 years old. How come? Oh, he Just felt com fortable enough playing around that way. That explains a good deal, my mind. The man finds the lightest clothing comfortable, not because he Is constituted differently from others, but because he has followed that sensible habit and ao bis automatic heat regulating mechanism baa func tioned more efficiently. It Is the aame old story I've been trying for yeara to pound Into your head In reference to the functioning of the bowel. Like the heat regulat ing mechanism of the body, tbe perls. taltlo and excrementory function falls only when you deliberately Interfere with It In your misguided efforts to "regulate" or "aid" It. ; QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. It Sounds Expensive. Member of our family has a disease called pemphigus vulgaris. Z would like to know the origin and nature of this disease, Its effects on the in dividual In later years. Just how It is distinguished . . . how It should be treated . . , B. 8, W. Answer In other words you want a course In medicine by return mail The doctor who was able to recognize the troilble should be competent to answer your questions and treat the patient, all right. I am not. Ouch, I am 28 years old and have been taking cold baths dally, sometimes in the morning and sometimes at night. Some say It Is harmful, espec ially when I am perspiring . . . J. c. Answer If you enjoy the bath and feel refreshed and cheerful after It, you derive only benefit from It. Child Likes Dirt. One of the children In my nursery. school has an insatiable appetite for dirt. She Is a chubby, bealthy looking child, and her parents are not very co-operative . . . w. W. Answer See that she has plenty of items such as raw carrots, raw turnip, raw potato, celery, lettuce, cabbage, whatever vegetable or cereal she likes to chew or eat raw. The "pica." as the perversion o appetite is called, usually disappears as tbe child grows older. (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dille Co.) Ed. Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady, M. !., 265 El Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. slam down the lid of typewriter a .id be off to some foreign port. In America, he sighs for his native Hoi land but, when he landa there, Amer ica seems to him the promised land. He does not remain long wherever he goes but is. usually on the wing. I recall being tremendously im pressed when the new Waldorf was being flung up to the sky that the architectural plans called for a sid ing upon which private railroad cars might be shunted from the Grand Central to the Inn's doorway. That struck me as over-the-river swank. And along came the world upset and I heard no more about It. I must run across the street some day and ask Lucius Boomer If any guest ever srrlved in such royal fashion. Natacha Rambova has become, the rumors rumor, the most popular American in Mallorca, from whence nearly all Americana save her have fled. She managed very skillfully to keep out of the Imbroglio that in volved ao many of her countrymen. many of whom were very shabbily treated. Miss Rambova went to no teaa and mingled aolely with native folk. Thingumabobs: Colt Porter's French chateau la dotted with zebra rugs . Pola Negri will not pass the under taking parlor from whence Valentino was buried . . . Ethel Berrymore Col; Is also one of the theater's chill ad dicts. . . . J. Wu la now the shortest. r.me in the telephone directory. . . . Doris Duke has never ridden in the ubway or elevated. . , . Neither had Lillian Russell. . . . Marahall Nlelan (toes to fortune tellers for advice and does the opposite. . , .Clarence Har row, averting a deserved death pen alty for Loeb and Leopold, la widely blamed editorially for the pronounced inching spirit against kidnaping. . Jimmy Savo, the comedian, la always d-essed off stage In black suit and derby. Julia Marlowe'a grlet for th. pass ing of B. H. Sothern waa Inconsol able, rof daya she sat at a hotel window overlooking Central Park In a dry-eyed dare. Until they took up permanent residence in Luxor. Egypt, they resided Intermittently several floors above In our building. His courtliness toward her In ele vatora and on way to their carriage had the tender gallantry of their stage Romeo and Juliet. In the serv ant hells It waa told how they ustd to sit at a window In softened mel ancholy watching the aun go down. holding hands. Courtney Hyley Cooper la already tiring of his Fifth avenue penthouse. He does not get any free samples. ..Copyright, 1033. McNaught Syadi cate, Inc.) Oregon Weather. Occasional rains tonight and Pit dsy; lUtle chance In temperature; southerly gales offshore. Atkins Improved M. O. Atkins of the Table Rock district, who is in tie iPscred Heart hospital for treatment of pneumonia, was reported In a slightly improved condition today. He was brought to the hospital Monday Kthelwyn B. Hoffmann's Semi-Annual Clearance Sa'.e Now In progress Dance at the Rogue Klk Saturday n'.ht, December 83. Autographed photos of Js:k Demp sey at the 5hautf. Studio, onljr 40c Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS HAVANA, four hours ahead In time of the Paclflo Coast, starts the day's news off bright and early orf Monday morning with this: "This city counted six dead and 13 wounded, today In Cuba's latest bloodshed and disorders." CUBA, one of the most "beautiful spot on earth, .has been for 400 years one of tbe moat turbulent. Odd. Isn't It? Still, there are men who wlU tell you that the most beautiful women are the hardest to get along with. THE shooting In Havana broke out on Sunday afternoon with the sacking and burning of the Spanish newspaper. El Pals, which was at tacked by a mob of negroes who re garded It as unfriendly to the gov ernment. Only one large dally newspaper now .remains In Havana El Dalrlo, which Is published under threats from both government and opposi tion forces. N OTE, however, that tola newspa- partisan of EITHER SIDE, and In consequence Is looked upon with a certain amount of fear by both sides, Is STILL PUBLISHED. , . There is a grain of hope In that. Truly Independent newspapers, al lied with no party or faction, telling the news accurately and fearlessly, are the real foundation of demo cratic government. IN CUBA, somewhere from five to ten per cent or1 the population Is enlightened, comfortable and happy. The other 90 to 05 per cent la lg- j norant, oppressed and miserable. j So, perhaps, It la no wonder civil war has been going on for some four ; centuries. Discontent is the great j breeder of civil war, and a condition 1 where one-tenth of the 'population Is happy and opulent and the other nine-tenths unhappy and poverty- stricken la a great breeder of dis content. W1 ITH Christmas only a week away, the news la running to war and preparations for war. A London dispatch aays: Great Britain, fearing that a sud den war would find her almost de fenseless, Is preparing to mobilize an air fleet of TWICE the present strength." I That hasn't much sound of peace j on earth and good will to men, has it? ! THE dispatch continues: "Only a laat minute agreement among the chief powers to dlssrm down to her level which no one seems to expect will deter this coun try (England) from embarking on the greatest air re-armament pro gram aince t,he world war." And so It goes. A THOUGHTFUL woman, watch ing a newsreel of the fighting in Cuba the other day, remarked: Will the time ever come when men will stop fighting?" Probably not. And If It ahould the men of that time would probably not be a particularly admirable lot. We do a lot of talking about the uselessness and absurdity of fight ing, and at the same time we have not much use for a man who WONT FIGHT. Co. A Notes Quarterly inspection and muster will be held at the Armory next Tues day night. As this Is the last drill of the year every member will be ex- pected to be present, and while It Is real teed that the day after Christmas ; Is a poor time to expect anyone to , drill very hard, especially after a fill of turkey and trimmings, still Uncle Sam saya "It must be done." ! One of the most pleasing parties ever held by local units of the guard waa the roller skating party last Tuesday night, when members of both companies and their ladles "took to skates" and thoroughly enjoyed the entire evening of skating. Five more recruits are needed to fill up the ranks of Company A. With drill pay, athletics, club room facili ties, and a trip to the seashore each year, all at government expense, this quota should be secured easily. Ap plicants desiring to enlist are urged to get In touch with Captain Carl Y. Tengwald Immediately. Orders have Just been received from National Guard headquarters at Salem strictly forbidding the introduction of hard liquors, light wines, beers or alcoholic beverages of any kind Into any armory or any room thereof, or any camp of Instruction. It Is stated In the orders that the training place of a National Ouard unit must Be viewed as having the same status as a campus of a university or high school, wherein the introduction of liquors would not be countenanced any more than It will be permitted In the National Guard. The following promotions In Com pany A have Just been announced through official orders received from regimental headquarters at Portland: Corporal Eugene Orr, to be sergeant; Corporal Virgil Bwanson. to be ser geant; Private Clarence H. Dunn, to be corporal: Private Roy M. Love, to be corporal: Private Jack L. Roberson. to be corporal: Private Dennie Wood, to be private 1st cU. in charge of automatic rifle instruction. Flight 'o Time (Medrord and Jackwn County History From the Files of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Year, Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY . December 21, 1923. (It was Friday.) 'Heaviest business Christmas season in history predicted, with buyers plentiful. It is requested that people with re generative radio sets be more careful In tuning, as sn .over-osclllatlon dis turbs neighbors who also wish to en Joy concerts. Gates as Lyrlsrd give $10O to Rta Cross to buy clothing for chlldden. Local merchants are vlctlma of transient forger to the tune of 5C0 Tax delinquency In Jackson county shows slight Increase. Building boom looms at Oold Kill. The Robert Llghtbody home In the Willow Springs district Is destroyed by fire. Christmas tree to be held at Wirier Orange hall. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY December 21, 1913. (It was Sunday.) Little Interest shown so far In the coming city election. Wind and rain sweep valley, but the storm ends by noon. Sam Hill predicts "an era of pros perity." If the "currency bill pass's." Fifty-seven sacks of Christmas mail arlve at the local poetofflce. Considerable difficulty in being ex perienced by Manager Walter Merrick of the Natatorlum In enforcing Ms antl-ragglng edict at the Saturday night affairs. Last Saturday night a gentleman "ragger" from Ashland waa Medford 's Largest I 1 COMING SAT. DEC. 23 FOR ONE WEEK Playing Bay and Date with the Paramount in Portland y " l,W" e",ow' ' " ' S Wondeh&Aid'm CHARLOTTE HENRYo.akc. " and RICHARD ARLEN t ROSCO ATES telSl ;' GARY COOPER LEON ERROL LOUISE FAZENDA W. C. FIELDS SKEETS GALLAGHER ' CARY GRANT B H RAYMOND HATTON HORTON f&b&tmJ f ROSCOE KARNS BABY LeROY W I MAE MARSH POLLY MORAN i-fS f, JACK OAKIE EDNA MAY OLIVER &3MV?fp I MAY ROBSON ' CHARLIE RUGGLES Sf I ALISON SKIPWORTH NED SPARKS fpj i and FORD STERLING Liri4D I Dirttttd by Norman Mctrod-A taromounl Kcturt BIG DOUBLE BILL NOW PLAYING TODAY and FRIDAY "BROKEN DREAMS" With Randolph Scott and Martha Sleeper ALSO Mary Brian in "One Year Later" MANAC.I'.R M.Rlt ASI THE ELKS LoniiF. SroSSOR Free Matinee Sat. Morning at 10 for the Kiddies HOOT GIBSON in "SPIRIT OF THE WEST" ADMISSION: rRl lT VEOET UU.ES OR ANVTHINO KATAni.E roR THE NEEDY li If You Haven't Any Eats thrown over the chain, alighting on his ear. and a couple of lady "raj gers" informed that they must at conspicuous by their absence here after. One lady thus tabooed threat ened to licit Mr. Merries. Tho storm subsided without any damage. Hyde Park HYDE PARK, Deo. 21. (Spl.) Hyde Park residents, near Talent, gathered at the Thatcher residence December 17 to serve a covered dish dinner and give a parwell party for Mr. and Mrs. Merle Baker, who leave soon for their old home In San Jose, Cal. Mrs. Baker was a teacher for a number of years there. Music and cards were enjoyed with best wUhes for success and happiness and a hope for their return to this community in the near future were extended. Mr. Wattenberg ' has his house nearly completed and It la considered a fine improvement to Hyde Park addition. With Mr. Walsh's horn, and cottages at Hyde Park, real es tate Is beginning to move In this locality. For FUEL OIL delivery. Phone 332 Relnklng Trucking Co. Pump and long hose. We give S. 4: H. stamp. Western Auto Supply Co. will re main open evenings this week. Why Get Up Nights? Drink lots of water and milk. Not much tea or coffee. Eat plenty of fruit and non-starchy vegetables. Net much meat or starches. Use a blad der laxative to drive out the impur ities and excess acids -which cauAe the Irritation that wakes you up. Take Juniper oil. buchu leaves, eti., called BU-KETS (5 gr. tablets) ftw bladder laxative. 25c at all drugg'.sto Works on bladder similar to cast'.r oil on bowels. After four days is not satisfied, go back and get your mon ey. If you are bothered, frequent fie slre, burning, getting up nights, you are bound to feel better after th,s cleansing. Heath's Drug Store and Jarmln Drug Store say BU-KETS ll a best seller. and Finest Theatre to BringCome Anyway! 11