Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 29, 1933, Page 5, Image 5

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2.0, 1933.
PAOE FIVHJ
SOVIET ENVOY TO U. S. AND WIFE
RECEIVING HELP
Many persons making ip plications
before the old age pension commission
are already receiving aid from the
county or federal relief, the county
court announced yesterday..
In such cases the com mission ad
vise the persona to keep what aid
they are now getting In preference
to making the change, as they would
not receive as much In most cases
under the pension act aa they are now
being given.
The commission has also reported
that many blanks are coming in,
which have not been completely or
adequately filled out, so therefore
cannot be acted upon.
COMING IS BELIEF
WASHINGTON. Dec. 29. (JP)
A harmoulous congressional session
devoted almost entirely to appropria
tion and revenue bills was predicted
today by Speaker Rainey after a talk
with President Roosevelt.
The speaker told reporters there
would be no tinkering with the
Roosevelt recovery program enacted
at the last special session. He ex
pressed belief a part of the pay cut
for government workers might be restored.
TAKEN FROM DEBRIS
Alexander A. Troyanovsky, new Soviet ambassador to the United
States, and his wife, are shown above In these new pictures taken in
Moscow. Mrs. Troyanovsky may not accompany her husband to the
United States because they believe it is more necessary that the stay
in Moscow to help their 14-year-old son with his education. (Associated
Press Photos)
E
OF STOMACH ILLS
CHICAOO UP) If you have
chronic Indigestion and rumbling
pains In the stomach. It is probably
due as much to worry and a sense of
responsibility as to anything else.
This is the opinion of Dr. A. C. Ivy,
professor of physiology In the Medical
School at Northwestern University.
Such a condition Is not Incurable,
however. Professor Ivy says. To be
sure, if the spirit of responsibility
has gained a seemingly unassailable
position In your mental being, the
road to perfect ease and comfort will
be hard. ' The best way Is to forget
your worries for brief periods, but
even the most serioua and stern
minded person can learn to have the
"hasta ma nana" spirit of the native
South American, says the professor.
Here's his formula for the road to
recovery:
1. Teach yourself to forget your
worries and responsibilities for brief
periods at least.
2. Learn to relax your body mus
cles at will.
3. In time of stress or excitement,
postpone any eating until calm and
the appetite are returned.
In commenting on the first maxim
of his code. Professor Ivy points out
that, while it is important to take
yourself seriously, you should not per
mit the Idea to take complete charge.
You can learn, he says, to forget re
cponsiblllty even as you can learn
to shoulder it.
CLATSKANIE. Ore.. Dec. 29. (AP)
The body of Donald Allen, 9, who
with his father and three brothers
lost his life in an avalanche which
destroyed their home Christmas day.
was recovered from the debris yes
terday. Mllo G. Allen, the father, George,
22: Robert and Donald were killed
when the slide of mud, rocks and
trees crashed down on their home.
Mrs. Allen and a daughter escaped,
but suffered serious shock and minor
Injuries.
Rof je Rivei
ROGUE RIVER. Dec. 29. (Spl.)
Christmas was celebrated In Rogue
River by trees, dinners and the usual
Christmas parties. The school and
the three churches had programs and
trees on different nights so nearly
everyone could attend some tree.
Mr. and Mrs. Nat Hart and lone,
Mr, and Mrs. Fred Dengler were din
ner guests Christmas day of Mr. and
Mrs. A. A. Math Is In Grants Pass.
Report comes from Mra. Vern'Orr,
who had heT foot cut so badly that
she la slowly Improving but suffers
great pain yet.
Mr. and Mrs. William Elnlnger and
children, Billy and Dorothy, of San
Francisco, spent Christmas at the
Wiley Carter ranch. Mrs. Elnlnger
and Mr. Carter are brother and sister.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Sandry are en
Joying a week's visit from Mr. and
Mrs. Vern Wright and children of
Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Wright
formerly lived here and are calling
on many friends.
Edwin Brown, formerly principal of
the school here, was calling on
friends Wednesday. Mr. Brown is
principal at Flacervllle, Cal.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Reed and Mrs.
Moon of Eureka, Cal.. visited Sunday
at the Wiley Carter ranch. Mr. Reed
Is a cousin of Mr. Carter's. ,
A family Christmas tree was en
Joyed at Mr. and Mrs. Richard Scott's
Christmas eve. Present were: Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Derwfler, Mr. and Mrs.
J. M. Whipple. Mr. and Mrs. Nat Hart,
Mrs. M. -R. Bliss, lone Hart. Mr. and
Mrs. Scott and Niel and Barbara Lee.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Magnuson were
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Vic
MUlburn at Ashland Christmas day.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Elnlnger and chil
dren returned to their home in San
Francisco Wednesday. They were ac
companied as far aa McCloud by Mr.
and Mrs. James Wiley, who will visit
some time with their son and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Wiley.
On December 17th most of the new
officers of Like Oak Grange went to
Central Point and were Installed
when officers of 10 different Granges
in the county were Installed. A cov
ered dish luncheon was enjoyed at
12:30 in the dining room of the Cen
tral Point hall.
M. L. Blackburn, who for years has
run a shoe repairing shop on Broad
way, was found about 3 o'clock, by a
friend, lying on his face in his wood
shed, where he had fallen when
stricken by apoplexy. A doctor was
called but nothing could be done, and
he pawed away at 10:40 that night.
Mr. Blackburn had lived In Rogue
River many yeara. He Is survived
by three sons and three daughters,
all of whom live in Portland and
Washington. The body is at the Hall
undertaking parlors awaiting the ar
rival of his children.
Lire Oak Grange met Monday. The
recti la r business session was held.
The names of three new members
were rend. After the Orange meeting
was over the ladles tied and finished
4 quilt which was already sold. The
ladies plan on making more of these
Sflts soon. The next meeting will
6e held January 1.
A family reunion was held Christ
mas when all of the children of Mr.
and Mra. A. M. Snow were home. Two
jons from Washington and one son
from Montana and the two daugh
ters live here. This is the first time
the family has been together in 13
yea rs.
Mrs. Jane Smack entertained Dr.
and Mrs. W. S. Cary at dinner Chrtat
mw. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Scott and
children. Niel and Barbara Lee. and
OfTllle Dengler were dinner guests
Christmas at Mr. and Mra. J. W
Whipple's.
Invfntory rslanka. in tmiU or larg
q-.iant Commercial Printing Dept.!
Mail Tribune or phont 75.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
BY O.O.McIntyre
NEW YORK. Dec. 29. Thoughts
while strolling: Don Herold thinks
one thing may be said of baldness
It's neat. Bar
bara H u 1 1 o n
suggests a young
version of Queen
Marie. What be
came o f Pearl
Reg ay? Konrad
Bercovlcl's name
sounds like the
sudden burst of
a steam pipe.
One word de
scription of Alex
ander Woolcott
twirpy. Peggy
Joyce with two
South Americans and a glum look.
Judge Scabury looks as though he'd
give Ice a chill. But people say he's
lots of fun. I'd like to hear him
and Charles Evans Hughes In a get-ting-off-things
mood.
Joseph V. Connolly, a New Haven,
Vt., boy, who made good in the city,
Wellington Cross, a ha! Is getting a
sprinkle of gray hero and there, too.
Never saw the Birth Control Review
on sale anywhere save Times Square
where Its propaganda Is least need
ed. You'd never think Kenyon Nich
olson wrote that rowdy sailor play.
One of my favorite- people Pierre
V. R. Key. Texas Gutnan's white
haired parents. H. L. Mencken thinks
the fun wilt begin when thrifty peo
ple finally grasp that their savings
have vanished to make it easier for
the wasteful and debt ridden. Hope
Williams speaks all her lines alike.
What's become of the fellows who
ised to grab little boys and give
them a Dutch rub? Lindy. the cafe
man, Is a ringer for Mayor La Guar
dia. Chevalier and George Gersh
win have Identical undershot chins.
I like that Russian word "kapoot"
won't work. Broadway swank: "Hi,
Hat Ballroom 100 Hostesses."
a,
ed surpluses In diamonds. And are
they glad! The majority were forced
to hold on to their "rocks" through
the lowest dips of the depression or
sacrifice them at tremendous losses.
During the let-down, diamonds sunk
to unbelievably low prices. Pawn
shops would advance but 10 per cent
of ordinary values. But now dia
monds are soaring up, up and up.
Sm McKee, ex-newspaper man and
magistrate court clerk, to say noth
ing of a perpetual guest at hassen
pfeffer, venison and suckling pig
banquets, has been admitted to the
New York bar. McKee Is also an ex
pert on machine gun ballistics. As
chief gunner of a machine gun squad
ron with the Kentucky militia he
learned to rat-a-tat his Initials on
vagrant barns. He now experts at
machine gun gang trials.
A. Young and daughters. Maxlne and
Earlene of Med ford.
Home extension unit will hold an
all-day meeting, with a covered dish
luncheon at 12 o'clock, at the Talent
Community hall, January 3. At this
meeting the unit will have instruc
tions in sewing given by Mrs. Mabel
Mack, who will be in charge of the
meeting.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hamilton enter
tained the following guests with
Christmas dinner at their home. Pres
ent were: Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hamil
ton, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Burnett,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smith of Medford.
Mr. and Mrs. Loya Hamilton and sons
Jack and Edward of Medford, Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Saltmarsh of Applegate.
Mrs. Oeta Miller and daughter Kaye.
Mrs. Mary Higgins and daughter Eliz
abeth. Mr. and Mrs. Will Hochklis,
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hamilton and chil
dren. Mr. and Mrs. Gulliford entertained
Mr. and Mrs. Lou Baird and family
Christmas day.
Roland Parks is visiting his par
ents. Mr. and Mrs. C F. Parks, over
the holiday season.
The Ames building is being repair
ed and cleaned for the purpose of,
housing Idle men without Homes.
These men will be handled under the
forestry department.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Smith were
dinner guests Christmas day of Mr.
and Mrs. C. M. Smith of Phoenix.
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Southwlck left
Friday evening for Portland to spend
the holidays with relatives and
friends.
Wayne Mason, student at O. S. C.
Is spending his vacation with his par
ents. Mr. and Mrs. r.emy Mason.
Miss Geneva Downs left Friday for
Portland, where she will receive med
ical treatment.
1
CHICAGO, Dec. 29. Cold
weather or no cold weather. It's
strictly against government rules to
burn mall to keep warm.
The government alleged that Rob
ert Smith, a substitute mailman
during the pre-Christmaa rush, bade
a bonfire of 200 letters on December
4 to warm his hands. A United
States commissioner held him in
bonds of $1000.
Smith denied the charge.
4
10
WASHINGTON, Dec. 29. (Jp)
Forty experienced field supervisors
have left Washington to instruct dis
trict supervisors In their duties of
collecting data for the census of
American business being conducted
by the commerce department.
Cities chosen for meeting of dis
trict supervisors with the Washing
ton men Include Seattle. Portland,
San Francisco. Los Angeles, Boise,
Helena and Tucson.
North Dakota's production of corn
for 1933 has been estimated at 20,
048.000 bushels, about 6.500.000 bush
els below the 1930 crop.
Talent
TALENT, Dec. 29. (Spl.) Mr. and
Mra, p. V. Young attended a family
reunion at W. A. Young's In Medford
Christmas day. Present were the
daughters and sons of C. P. Young
and their families. Covers were laid
for C. P. Young, Mr. and Mrs. F. w.
Thomas and children, Jeanette, Mar
Jorle and Charles Young of Yrelta,
Cal., Mr. and Mrs. Floyd V. Young
and children. Doris, Luclle and Floyd.
Jr., of Talent and Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
I to heip PREVENT ll to EN Da colo
C01DS...I RECOMMEND f, 1 ... RECOMMEND
Vicks Nose Drops h J Xiruc UAonDim
i
i I
(Full details of Vlcka Colds-Control Plan in each Vicka package)
CLOTHES LINE POST
SERVES EOS
SALEM. Dec. 2y. Vpi A short note
of farewell pinned to his clothes, the
body of Louis Plett. 74, was found
hanging from a clothes line post here
today.
Coroner L. E. Barrick said there
would be no Inquest held. He said
Plett, despondent over a lingering ill
ness, apparently backed up a small
step ladder, adjusted the rope and
kicked the ladder away.
COUGHS
Don't let them get a atrangle hold.
Plth t germs quickly. Creomulslon
combines 7 major helps in one. Pow
erful but harmless. Pleasant to take.
No narcotics. Tour own druggist la
authorised to refund your money on
the spot if your cough or cold is not
relieved by Creomulslon. (Adv.)
Heath's Drug Store
Medford Bldg.
Phone 884
Now that Christmas has passed and the new year Is fast
approaching we take this occasion to wish our friends
and customers a happy and prosperous New Year.
We are having a Consolation Sale on some of our
Christmas items. If you did not get the present that
you expected, come in and buy it now at a greatly
reduced price.
Ladies' $15.00 Toilet Sets
Ladies' $20.00 Toilet Sets
Jergens' California Castile Soap
Jergens' Bath Soap, (6 big bars)
C. & C. Ginger Ale (quarts)
Phillips' Milk of Magnesia
100 Wyeths' Aspirin
Guaranteed Pocket Knives .
....$4.95
....$6.45
29o
29o
23c
39c
29c
. 39c
DRUG STORE
I
Roy McCardell's literary dugout in
West 47th street Is a rendezvous - for
a polyglot assortment from head- i
liners to what-nots. Otto Kahn may
pop In, filch a cigarette from Roy's j
typist and be off again. Or Police
Inspector Kerr call it 'Care" or
fight may hop off a life saving
Emergency Division motor truck for
a gabfest. Al Woods, Joe Humph
reys, Philadelphia Jack O'Brien and
now and then Ellis Parker Butler
are there. McCardell, used to grind
ing out oceans of copy in the clack-
ety furore of a city room, is un
mindful of the chirruping. He func
tlons best In an uproar.
Be Sure to Ask for S and H Green Saving Stamps Added Savings for You!
Christopher Morley has noticed the ;
fruit vendors who seem to be on
the fringe of every crowd listening
to a hot gospeler discuss atheism.
And observes: "Theology and argu- '
ment always lead to the apple, with
which they began." !
Arthur McKeogh. a member of the
T-ncr, nnttntlon and decorated for
' bravery, wandered out of a theater
between acts recently for a cigarette
and strolled back into a theater :
three doors away. Confused by the
strange lobby he looked about be
wildered. The manager, recognizing ;
htm. Inquired: "What Is this a
.habit!"
Damon Runyan, who has given
more of Broawway's real flavor to
his stories, films, etc.. than any oth
er writer of his generation, is an
after midnlgtht prowler for the shift
ing lights and shadows so Ingrained
In his work. I hear he's an occa
sional dropper In at all-night lunch
wagons, those beacons, net-wise at
the foot of many streets, where wan
derers, fly-by-nights, panderers and
coke sniffers gather.
Ladies of the evening, as well as
others who lived lightly, usually salt-
Fred Keating, magician who has
become the stage sophisticate, win
nows his biggest laugh in a brittle
thin comedy of American manners
in the Latin Quarter with this: The
sceno Is a Montparnasse bistro. An
Armenian rug peddler decorated with
his wares drifts In. Keating spins
him about and heads him wlti a
push toward the boulevards from
whence he came with: "Listen I
liked 'The Green Hat all right but
your last book was terrible 1"
(Copyright 1933 McNaught Syndicate.
Inc.)
Double Specials
For the New Year Holiday we will feature two items
which it will pay you to investigate.
Date Drops
An Old Favorite
19c doz.
Betty Crocker
Angel Foods
39c each
The Large Size Three Varieties
We will also have on sale a good supply of dinner
rolls of various kinds including our famous Butteries,
Fruit Cake, German Holiday Cookies.
m
MihiHrvMiiiiff.
rers
Bargain Basement
SHOE
SALE
FINAL CLEAN-UP
One lot of Women's Pumps or Oxfords
in broken sizes, values in this lot up to
$2.98 many exceptional buys at the
low price, pair
$1.98
WOMEN'S PUMPS and
OXFORDS
One lot of broken sizes and splendid
values at the regular prices up to $3.45,
the pair
$2.45
MISSES' & CHILDREN'S
OXFORDS
Black or brown, in values up to $1.95,
but the sizes are broken and due to this
fact, you may buy them while they last,
the pair
$1.00
MEN'S OXFORDS
In this lot of broken sizea, there are
Men's Oxfords in values to $3.95. You
will find them exceptional in value at
the pair
$1.98
i
Every
Womans'
DRESS
In Our Entire
Stock
Reduced
Save from $3 to $10.00
on each dress I You will
be surprised at the
smartness the quality
and the amazing value
in these dresses at these
sale prices
Women's Winter
COATS
On Sale Tomorrow at
Smashing
Reductions
You will ipilrkly find exoclly the coot yon
hove been wanting In tlili upeclal lot of
cools nil slzrn from 14 to 48 mid every one
n exrrpllonnl bargain at tile prices we r
quoting for flnnl clrnn-up.
$8.75 $13.75
$16.75 $28.50
$5.95
$8.95
$10.95
$19.95
BUY SILKS NOW
FI-AT HII.K CRKPR In full line of plain colon. Our
regular 9Sc quality and a very drtlrnnle fabric filing
uprclal for Anturday, the yard
79
RAYON FLAT CREPE
RAYON FLAT CREPE-Plain or printed pat
terns, ihe kind you pay rogularly 69o the yard, J
on sale Saturday, the yard
FLOOR SHOE BARGAINS!
MAN
One Lot of
Oxfords and Pumps
fimnrt iiird mforrt and
pumpq whirl, rrciiliirly
mH rr fM.1 Mifelrtlly
priced for utter ClirUt
tnan nrlllnc.
S3.45
One Lot of
Oxfords and Pumps
Mirde nr kid In smart
ntylp. regit Inrly sold for
9.1.!ft and offf red to
thrifty nhopper tomor
row at. pnlr
S2.98
One Lot of
Oxfords and Pumps
In suede or kid which
formerly unld for $3.45
ftperlnlly grouped for cell
ing Saturday at this o pe
dal prlcft
S2.45
Ml &! riUi) rJMi
EPARTMENTM
C. A. MEEKER, Manager
Women's Sport
Oxfords and Brogues
Here you will find some exceptional values for
Saturday new styles, too, and every pair a real
bargain at these prices
$2.95 Values Going at
$3.05 Values Going at
$4.05 Values Going at
?2.-15
- .152.95
$3.95
All Men's Oxfords
REDUCED!
Have $1.00 on every pair of shoes In
our present stock Utiy now and
take advantage of these special
reductions)
One lot Oxfords on Sale at
$1.98
One lot Oxfords on Sale at
$2.98
$5.45 Oxfords on Sale at
$4.45
MEN'S BOOTS
Ifl-lnch, tan boot of heavy oiled
veal leather double soles and
service built right Into every pair.
$0.45 values On "ale at
$5.45