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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1934)
I PAGE FOTTR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune "Ewryont In Southtrn Origon Rtidt tot Hail Tribunt1' Dally Except Saturday Pubtlfhed by HEPFOKt) PBINTINU CO. IS-If-SB N. Kir Bt. ROBERT W. BUHL, Editor As ludepndot Ntwiwpsr Enter) aa teeood tiu matter at Medford, Oregon, uodcr Aet of Blurb 8, 18TB. BUIISCKH'TION RATES BT Mall In Ad-wet Daily, one yaar 15.00 Dally, ill tontbi.... 9.T& Pally, one awntb 60 By Cvrler In Adunee Medford, Aibland, Jartsootllle, Central Point, Photoii, Talcot, Gold Bill and on lUthaiji. Pally, om jr 90.00 Pally, tti awnthi 8.25 Pail, oa month 80 All terra, etuh In idraoca. Editorial Correspondence Official paptr Official paper It Cltr of Mettford. Jackion County. MEMBER or THE ASSOCIATED PUKHU ItcccirlDg Full Leaud Wirt Benlc. Th. AaMdatct. Prm If ucluslicly tntltlnl' to tlx um for publication of all om dlspalehw ertdltrd to It or othcrl credited In thta papar and alto to the local new punllihed herein. All rlfhU for publication of ipeclal dlipaleha nerelD art alio referred. LOS ANGELES, Keb. 13. The president'! order revoking all air mail contracts, exploded like a bomb shell in this aviation center. But the afterclap has been even more sensational, President Roosevelt in one corner, Colonel Lindbergh in the other I Lind.v condemning in no uncertain terms the executive edict, Franklin D. coming back, through his secretary, to accuse the colonel of all people 1 of releasing his communication for political and mihlinitv nnrnoaen What . tahloniiT there, mv I A """! omthln P'lnted har. ' " 1 1 " - ' Plainly ninted that basal mnbo lam countrymen 1 All the morning papers are bannering the inci-1 test, are hokum of tn machine age dent, and well might theyl It's a natural. The most popular president in a generation, challenged by the greatest hero of recent times. Who said anything about, an immovable body meeting an irresistible force t Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. MEMBER OF UNITED I'HBHD MEMBER OF AUDIT BUIIEAO OF CIRCULATIONS Adrerttilnf KepresentatlTtt U. C M0UEN8EN COMPANY Offices In New Tork, Chlcaio. Detroit, Ban Franelico Los Angelea Beadle Cortland. El, jp V7 Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Terry. "IVia Young Communlsta" will be organized In thla aectlon, ao now la the time to oak the PWA tor funds to build a woodshedakl, yesterday vaa a fine spring day, and brought out all the olltzena fin ancially able to be In California for the winter. e The Knox law, governing the aale of liquor In thla atate, haa been de clared conatlutlonal by the supreme court. Two problema arlne: (a) What about the bootlegger; (b) what about the high prrce of liquor? The bootlegger ahould be no sacrod ox. If caught, he should be pickled away ln the penitentiary and hie fate not made an excuse to vote against the Incumbent aherlff, or the basis of a civil war. The price of liquor will always be too .high and not worth the coat. People voted repeal for tho revenue; not because aomebody was thirsty or had a cold. Those who can't or won't pay the price ahould i not use the bootlegger as the me dium of. a cheap drunk. If the boot legger la found guilty, he should be detained In the hoosegow, not pa roled to plant more corn to make more moonshine. If the state can't prevent competition from lawless ele ments, It needs a dictator. Will this mark the end of the president's honeymoon, or the end of Lindyf Probably neither, for when all the facts are known it MAT be clear that both were right. With the air mail situation plainly in a mess, inexcusable greed if not actual graft, involved, the president undoubtedly decided that there had to be a new deal all around, and the only way to get one was to sweep the boards clean, start out all over again. It was drastic action, but he saw no other way. Lindy, a paid executive of one of the largest air mail com panies involved was undoubtedly ordered by his employers to step into the breach and give the companies' side of the question. This he did. And what he said was true. The order was unjust to those companies who had played fair, it did violate the basic principle, that innocence is assumed until guilt has been proved. But in times of crisis, it is often impossible to avoid injus ticeto prevent the innocent suffering with the guilty, the supreme consideration being the public welfare. President Roosevelt did what he did as president of the country, Colonel Lindbergh did what HE did, as a private citizen, devoted to the best interests of aviation, and the good standing of the company employing him. Their views were in conflict, but it is not unlikely that had their roles been exchanged, each would have taken the stand, the' other did. Motored over to Hollywood to see Garbo and Gilbert in Queen Christina at Grauman's Egyptian. The theatre was packed as usual and also as usual the prologue this time prin cipally singing, juggling and dancing was alone worth the price of admission. The film is distinguished principally by two things most beautiful photography and the change in John Gilbert's voice. The last time wo saw John in the tnlkies his voice was terrible, siieeky, tight, strangely colorless. In this picture it is as resonant and vibrating as Lawrence Tibbct's. Only goes to show the movies can do ANYTHING. They can lift faces, remodel noses, change voices, put inches on or take them off. In short they can find a workable substitute for everything but brains. Meanwhile Garbo is gallivanting somewhere with her direc tor of the unpronounceable name which all the newspaper boys declare is merely a press agent stunt to arouse public interest in tho film. Judging by the crowd at yesterday's matinee it is working. And such a jaunt is rather in character with the film. One gains the distinct impression that during the queen's reign the 7th commandment was not regarded as nearly as important as the first. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis- J ease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped i -eir-addre&aed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be onei and written to ink. Owing to the large number ol lettera received only a few can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instruetlona tddress Dr. William Brady, 263 fcl Canilno, Beverly Hills, Cal. BASAL MKTABOLISM TEST IN PLASTIC StrKiEBY the keloids under our observation and ln certain hypertrophic scars has been almost a specific." Keloid la the name doctors give to excessive formation of scar (hyper trophic means overgrown). Often the heaped up scar has flnger-llke pro jections Into the surrounding normal skin, resembling a claw the term ke loid la derived from a Greek word meaning claw. Patient sometimes complain of a clawing sensation. Cer tain individuals seem particularly dis posed to develop excessive scar from trifling Injury. Even from a pimple, or from electrolysis of heir follicle, or from Insect bite. In a few Instances keloids spontaneously disappear after a year. As a rule they remain per manently. However, x-ray or radium treatment will usually convert them permanently Into flat flexible white scars. Skilled plastic surgery la the ideal treatment where thla la feasible. rSa'Si'v of what wu once Indeed ttia art of medicine. A hot-cha spec ialist or hla at tractive office girl or near-nurse trundling a ba sal metabolism outfit hither and yon to measure the patient. metabolism some how reminds me of the gadgets they furnish In the notions departments of accessory stores you know, the attachments which save 25 per cent of your gas and oil yet give you 25 per cent more speed, pickup and time for healing. But I want to give this basal me tabolism thing a fair break. Many of my too well equipped colleagues may not believe It, but for a year I have been combing current medical litera ture and querying physicians and specialists everywhere In quest of a good reason, If any, for measuring metabolism with machine. And finally I have found something. In the course of a paper on "Re constructive Surgery and Old Paclal Burns" road, curiously enough, before the Section on General and Abdom inal Surgery of tho American Medical association ln Milwaukee last June, Dr. Howard L. Updegraff, distinguish ed sculptural surgeon of Hollywood, and Fellow of the American college of Surgeons, pointed out that ln order to achieve the desired smoothness of healing it is necessary to carry out considerable routine pre - operative work, such as urlnanalysls, red and white blood counts, differential, bleeding and clotting time and a Waaserman test. Then he made this Interesting observation: "Prom the point of view of purely reconstructive plastic sur gery, our greatest laboratory In terest ts In the basal metabolism reading. Without exception ln a large series of burned patients with keloid scars we have found a markedly low metabolic rate. I believe that the Increased con centration of the blood over a long period, following large burns, produces a partial asphyxiation of the tissues, which permanently damages the mechanism control ling the metabolic rate. The ad ministration of thyroid substance by mouth has markedly improved Comment on the Day's News Gave Queen A Lift By FRANK JENKINS. QOLDIERS Patrol Paris," So reads wr a oig neaaime. Mounted republican guards charge and disperse a crowd of 1000 war vete rans demonstrating against the gov ernment ln front of the Elysce palace in the French capital. QUESTION! AND ANSWERS Slippery Elm. For anyone who has swallowed any foreign body. Get two ounces of pul verized slippery elm bark at the drug store. Mix half a teaspoonful with cold water to a thick paste. Sweeten It If desired. Eat It with a spoon. This will form a smooth coating around the object so it will pass through the natural channels. Repeat two or three times a day till object passes. 'Mrs. B. L. E. 1 Answer Thank you. It la an ex cellent suggestion. Also let the per son who has swallowed a foreign body have NO catheratlc, lots of banana to eat, and a large bowl of chopped green and fodder vegetables raw v cooked every day. If a child will eat handful of absorbent cotton or cos- ton batting mixed with spinach or other food, that iff a valuable aid, the cotton fibers collecting In a bill around the object, especially a sharp object, so that It will pass through the stomach and Intestine without; causing Injury. I Don't Go Stale. I THAT'S a long way off. Not much of a. thrill. But there'd be a lot of thrills ln It If It were happening ln Washington. It would concern US then, and news that concerns US Is a lot more Im portant than news that concerns the other fellow. M SPEAKING of French news, you may have read this dispatch the other day: -"Royalists riot In Paris against the RADICAL SOCIALIST government, whoso members' are accused of being mixed up too much with the Stavisky bank failure." t , 'I It' - I Vis r vi ' :l'l n , 'it " go- i f tf'fei., , if . v, j-t,' ! THAT is to say. the extreme con servative OUTS accuse the radi cal socialist INS of doing the very things the radical outs have been ac cusing the conservative Ins of doing all these many years. Human nature lit human nature, isn't it? BUT enough of this long distance, world politics news. You're prob ably fed up with it. This writer cer tainly Is. Let's get closer home. THE pet peeve of a certain Southern Oregon building owner is the fel low who goes around scratching matches on the walls of good-looking buildings. It's an odd freak of vandalism that Do you advise a special diet for leads people mostly men to scratch middle aged persons who are going stale? R. O. Answer The corrective protective diet may help to stave off some of the cold gradations. Send a dime and & stamped addressed envelope for the booklet. "The Regeneration Regimen." (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dllle Co.) tid. Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should tend letters direct to Dr William Brady. M. D.. 2(15 El Ca nilno. Beverly Hills. Cal. Speaking of commandments ami "sich", we sometimes won der if American comedy is going the way of tho French to deal frankly and broadly with the sex relationship and not much else. It would appear so from a thoroughly rowdy and ribald production, known as "Sailor Beware", being put on here at the present time. The plot is concerned solely with the robust efforts of "a certain gob called "Dynamite", to break down the resistance and destroy the inhibitions of a young lndv who had never been known ns "Lou'. We can't say we were shock ed no one is shocked nowadays but we were bored for tho simple reason that these things have to be done skillfully, light Iy and gracefully, or they are not entertaining. They are not even funny. We can understand how a first class Now York company could make a success of the play on Broadway for that matter we can understand how a third rate company can pack them in los Angeles but that is the difference between A board flew up and bit E. Ulrlch, the Prospect stockman, square be tween the horns, while ln the hay mow last Sabbath morn. City dwell er when smacked with a skillet, al ways report a stick of wood flew up and maltreated them. t Man seem sthe only growWi that dwindle here. (Oliver Qoldsmlth). You said something, Mr. Goldsmith; but man Is the only animal that can stand hts own eussedness. Men's trousers "this spring will break away from tight offects," tail ors advertise. , Quit a number of cltluru art threatening to hit their backyards 1 NCW York and Los Angeles I with same. n. oieemen win exhibit their 1 . 5"'1-s"m,n wcatlier-ovoreonts arc out flnd white flannels hirt bosoms, and warble ln k. Fails I w. The tourists are rejoicing of course, and we hope they are fiSXt Tues. I tiflvor tA wlmt wa nnrA tA l, n rl A t.AB,,ln.,4 V. - " vi -. txa a v HUVHI lUWIl J. CO, this is perfect earthquake weather 1" NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, Feb. 14. The swlrly Peggy Fears has.no equal, save per haps the similarly named Peggy Joyce, in acniev lng the page one headlines. As vol canic in tempera-, ment as the over- I the-dam swoop of her touseled coif fure, she takes life ln a tornado trot. Her marriage to the flyweight millionaire, A. C. Blumenthal, the cockatoo streak of white in her hair, her matrl- ! years. Outside of Caruso, he was Mefa most interesting foreign Im portation, the first in town to wear I canary colored gloves. They were discussing unusuel acci dents. My choice was one that befell Billy Seaman on a private train to the Louisville Derby. In swiping back hla hair with a brush on awakening, his scalp suddenly parted down the middle with a gush of blood that re quired ten stitches to close. A safety razor blade had caught ln the bristles of the brush. matches on handsome walls, isn't It? But men aren't the only offenders. Beside the mirrors ln the women's rest rooms at the Pelican theater, over at Klamath Falls, one of the most attractive theater buildings on the Pacific coast, appear red streaks where women, after, applying their lipstick war paint, have wiped the surplus from their fingers on the wall. (N The more natural middle hair parts that show up so generously when we leaf through the family album were inspired back in the 00's by John Drew at the Empire. Experts of the coiffure parlors say the middle hair part went out because most toupees were so parted. The single toupee that defies de tection is worn by a sterling actor whose full-blown English accent Is puncture proof, although I am told he is American born. Nor la there any actor who so successfully looks at monlal difficulties, tneu private car;ieaat 20 years under his age. I refer Next to curtains on a Ford, with Initials ln gold on the door, a port folio for a bowling ball takes the oake. Several of the outstanding bowlers are thus equipped, nnd make pretty picture. Republicans of Jackson county more being at larne than estimated endorse Senator MrNary for the GOP nomination In 1036. There is noth ing like being anead of yourself. Statistics show that every tourist coming to Oregon last year spent 4.17. No count was made of those who left Vie state overloaded with Jackson county beans. Austria Is the latest land to be come rambunctln.ia and stage a rev olution. Nobody, least of all the Austrian, seem to know hat the fighting la about. All ths recent re volts, In foreign nations, are rather Indefinite on this point. The Aus trian are seemingly mad at the premier. This la because he happened to be handy. There Is no dwp -rated Ill-will over the way he combs hi hair. Congress won't do anything about birth control. Conversely, It's too late for birth control to do anything about congress. (San Diego Union). Sound logical. The Walla Walla prison riot proves again that It is Just aa hard to tiet out of such places as It la to get In Auto manufacturers are reported as "seeking a truly easy payment plan. If they are alnrrr, they will adopt the Oregon tax collection ays-tern. Campaign Atiilnst Air HI flea. ALLIANCE, O. (AP) Alliance po lice are on the warpath a a Hut youths shooting air rifles Inside the city limits, a practice which has re sulted In several broken store window. K. W. U. BY CCC AT CAMP RAND With a well-prepared lecture, i eompanled by three rolls of film, H. Petri of the personnel department, CCC district headquarters, Monday evening presented an Interesting pro gram on the making of paper to the COO men at Camp Rand Ranger sta tion. A number of person residing nearby wtre also In attendance. In addition to the picture on the screen, Mr. Petri had a comprehensive display, showing the wood In the vari ous forms through which It passed, ln order to appear In a piece of paper. A complete description of the "barking" of a tree, to remove all ,he bark, the washing of the log, and their passage through steel discs with sharp knives, to cut the logs Into chips. Mr. Petri explained In his talk and later illustrated with movie., how the chips are conveyed to a tall build ing, where they are placed in bins, known aa digesters, which are from 90 to SO feet high and 48 feet In diameter. Cooking of the chips, in order o separate the fibers Is another process which was explained to th men. The mass of fibers are then blown Into pit, then placed on various screens. Th product, Mr. Petri told the group. Is bleached by chlorine gas. He told what a small amount ot color ts needed to chance the shades of the mixture In large vats. The photographs, taken at a laiyr paptx nuu in Maine, showed tut trees being cut down, sent down stream to the mill, and the various processes tnrough which the material goes be fore It is a finished product. A chart waa displayed by Mr. Petri which showed the various types of cellophane materials, all made from wood. The man ahowed much Interest In the lecture and movies. The presen tation is being given In all of ths camps in the district. T TO ECW CHIEFTAIN trips with their Intimate, Jimmy Wnl kor. and her play-producing procliv ities, have alt been sources of ilpny cony. This season the girl from Dallas. Texas, produced her own play In which she was the bright particular star. No memorable effort, ln fact It died almost aborning, but her first nlht brought out u complete an assortment of Broadway types as ever grouped In one theater. And won her. a Job In the movies. Despite outward bluster, the ob vious gesture to be seen. Miss Pcrs In a close-up Is shrinking and halt ingly shy In speech, poised In a sort of tremuloua wonder. She seems hyo- nouted by the New York hurrah, ?lungea Into It and stands shlverln; like on leaping Into Icy waters. to A E. Mathews, whose careful and effective characterizations not only mark him aa a real artist but Is on my secret list of six of the very best actors of the legitimate stage. Monte Brlce tells of the suddenly discovered young star in Hollywood who has Just as auddenly become magnificently grand. Indeed ao much so she now uses only gold moth balls. (Copyright, 1034, McNaught Syndi cate. Inc.) Delirium tremens note: Earl Car roll took his first drink, a glass of beer, at Dlnty Moore'a In 1930. and had to be taken home In a taxi. Whoop-ee-eel Emerson Knight, Inspector of state park emergency conservation work, left Tuesday on the Shasta for Msrsh fleld and Salem, after conferring here with City Superintendent Fred Sohef fel, concerning the establishing of a CCC camp at the Roxy Ann alte. Mr. Knight stated that the recom mendations were being sent to Law rence Merrlam. district Officers ot I throatv clutch sreliur anvone an vourur atate park emergency conservation . doing anything alone because nla work, and a favorable report on tho babvlsliness was so accentuated bv site will be given by Mr. Knight to pretense at maturity. In first tiny Oroucho Marx Is a confirmed pool player. Hla spare time la devoted to the game. When he finds a stage play uninteresting he sneaka to a neighboring poolroom to knock the balls about, returning to hla seat by time llahts come on. Twice he has missed Santa Fe's to Hollywood over staying hla time between trains In Chicago pool parlor.. Early today I walked behind a shaver on way to achool, his book strap Jauntily over hla ehoulder. 1 regarded him perhaps In the manner of the gods of comedy and tragedy above, milting for htm to trip. How unconscious of llfe'a alarming road aa he stopped before shop wlndowa. petted a kittle and waved airly to a crossing cop I Cm. experience, a Mr. Merrlam. upon his return to San scratching, on the hard surface ot life, his arrogance was delightful, amvanre all of ua lose with world's swift aocka. Francisco, In Salem, Mr. Knight will conler with Sam H. Boardman, atate park engineer, who la procurement acn: for th. park sites. After five month, total b'.lndnesi , following a motor crack-up that dt' Notice: Petition for Brooking I tached the retina. Andrea de Seiur Harbor at th. following: Tryon'sj ola, beloved and famous Metropolitan Mercantile. Talent: Mrtfford Chamber singer, now sees again and la work ot Commerce, Medford: Barklet'i J ing in Hollywood picture. Today his Place. Phoenix: Coleman's Store. Jack-; monocle, with the accustomed fixity 'onrine sign quickly and return tojof a porthole In a ship, la back In W. J. Ward, Brookinja. by Feb. 30. place altei lis llial vacation to S Persist : i 'OTE: This Is hearsay. This writer, who smokes a pipe and wears trousers,- Isn't in the habit ol frequenting women's rest rooms in theaters.) AND somebody, whether man or woman not known, deliberately took a knife or razor blade several months ago and cut the leather tops from several seats In this same theater. It certainly takes all kinds of peo ple to make a world. .TID you see." a friend said to this LJ writer last ntght, "where some woman back east brought a lot of walnuts to the bank on the last day of grace for turning In gold? Inside each walnut was a 95 gold piece." She certntnly had a smart hiding place figured out. Not many burg lars would think of looking In walnut shells for hoarded gold. 4'4'rPHERE was Another one," he con st tinued, "who brought to the bank on the last day of grace a lot of gold pieces that were strangely discolored. "Asked as to the cause of the dis coloration, she answered that she had kept them hanging for years ln a tin can suspended by a string In the well, below the surface of the water." POOR deluded hings both of them. . Gold hidden away, either In walnut shell or in tin cans suspended in wells, does the world at large no good. Money, If the country Is to proaper. must be KEPT at WOKK not hid den away In all sorts of qurer places. Not many persons can boast of the honor that came to Percy Tit mouse. A brewer's agent of Cam bridge, England, he gave Queen Mary a lift when her royal motor car broke down between Sandrlng ham and Cambridge. He Is shown beside his car. (Associated Press Photo) Sams Valley FERSIST. Feb. 14. (Spl.) Mr. and Mrs. Roy Proctor entertained at tur key dinner January 30. Present were Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Hutchison and children, George 8c her mer horn. Ray Svhermerhorn. Cirl Chlldreth arid Mildred Young and son. Donald. An evening of cardi was enjoyed by the s talking of the war In Europe that grown-ups. i , txptfti to break as soon a the SAMS VALLEY, Feb. 14. (Spl.) The high school students are rehears ing "Cyclone Sally," under the direc tion, of Miss Vesta Hall. The date for the giving of the play is to ,be set later. The following students make up the cast: Misses Jean Upton, Marie Seegmiller, Ruth Galloway, Dor othy Straus and Betty Wilson; and Melvin Smith, Homer Ryan, Lewis Dusenberry and Billie Crawford. Fire destroyed the separating room for O. T. Wilson Thursday night, tak ing his winter's supply of bacon and a cream separator. The fire was dis covered ln time to prevent the dwell ing house from catching. Warm dnf's have renewed the farmers' energy to get their farm lands prepared for seeding. The hum of tractors can be heard on all sides. day and night. Some enthusiastic flower seekers have reported finding lamb tongue buds, but no blossoms have been re ported from this district yet. Mr. and Mrs. R. e. Nealon and Miss Hal Caldy of Table Rock were Sunday evening visitors in Snms Valley. Walter Straus of Merrill Is visiting tnis week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Straus. Snms Valley basketball high boys met their first defeat in a scheduled game for this season, when Prospect met them on their home floor Frl day night. The score was 13 to 14. The girls met their first defeat at Central Point when that girls' team won over the locals by 8 points. Ladles' club will meet Thursday arternoon at the home of Mrs. Aleta BIgham. where the ladles will enjoy n Valentine party. Miss Erma May, primary Instructor at Agate, wits an over-night guest or Miss Frances Wilson Thursday night. Fritz Snider and friends gave a dance at the Caton hall Saturday night. Miss Naomi Mngruder, instructor In the Meadows school, spent last week end visiting her mother, Miss" George Mcurmough. Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the File of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Years Abo.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY February 14, 1034. (It was Thursday.) Seven dances four in the city and three ln the country greet St. Val entine day. A. 8. Bllton. on a trip to Gold Hill via the Old Stage road, found violets blooming on the hillside. C. of C. perturbed to think there 1 no "free auto camp for tourists," and claim "the valley's reputation for hos pitality will suffer." Three DeAutremont brothers, want ed for Siskiyou tunnel murder, re ported seen in Central America. Rogue River to build auto camp and swimming pool. Twelve tons of mall order catalogs distributed la Ashland. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY February 14, 1914. (It was Saturday.) Children of the Roosevelt school hold an election and Myrl Merrlman Is elected mayor and Edward Kelly is defeated for councilman by Bruce Putnam. Ted Leonard was elected councilman from the second ward. Bright sunshine with a whiff of spring in the air brings a large crowd of farmers to town. William R. Coleman accepts a posi tion as salesman for the Bulck auto. City unable to find anybody who will accept position of police Judge. Judge F. L. TouVelle leaves on trip to Chicago. Butte Falls district sells 6.000 cords of wood in city during winter, P. & E. officials estimate. Brownsboro L BE HELD Information has been received here that persons wishing to take examin ations to enter the medical corps as first lieutenant, may do so from March 19 to 33, and for service ln the veterinary corps as second lieu tenant, from April 16 to 31. Examin ations for those, wlshlnc to enter the medical administrative corps as second lieutenants will be given from March 13 to 17. Persons interested in taking the ex aminations are requested to get In touch with the adjutant general in Washington, D. C. 4 Suits cleaned end pressed. Sic Dresses 75c up. Tel. 835-J. Economy Cleaner, 1738 No. Riverside. BROWNSBORO. Feb. 14. (Spl.) Mr. and Mrs. Earl Woodley visited at Roseburg and Grants Pass with rela tives, over the week-end. Mrs. George Brown returned home Tuesday after an extended visit with her daughter, Mrs. Dallaire, at Eu gene. Mr. and Mrs. Dallaire are the parents of a baby girl. Mrs. Ed Tucker was token seriously 111 Thursday and was rushed, to the Sacred Heart hospital, where she un derwent an operation for appendicitis. At this time she Is getting along as well as can be expected. Miss Irma Glass of Trail Is a guest at the Glass home during the absence of Mrs. Glass, who Is spending a few days In Medford, the guest of her sister, Mrs. Peart. Donna Brown and Donald Young spent Sunday at Crater Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Terrlll and Geo. Brown were business visitor in Medford Saturday. - Rev. Johnston of Faith Home. Ceres, Cal., who Is spending a few weeks in southern Oregon, was a welcome vis itor at Sunday school. At the close of the lesson he preached an Inter esting sermon. AUDITOR SUPERVISOR TENDERS RESIGNATION SALEM, Feb. 14. (&) Otto Ku- bin, supervisor of auditors in the sec retary of state's office, today -ten dered his resignation to Secretary P. J. Stadelman, effective about March 15. Kubin then will Immediately take up new duties as one of the auditors of the federal farm land banks Jn the twelfth district. Be correctly corseted In an Artist Model by ' Ethel wyn B Hoffmann. In keeping with tne times Drug and Toiletries at Cut Prices at JAR MI N'S DRUG STORE. DOM FISHER, just back from the east, says everybody back there Lumber Co. made a business trip to "w " WMV ox . ground in me town February 0. spring, so that armies, with their Work on the Mathews cabin is i heavy modern artltlsry can be ma progreaslng beautifully. The work- j n.,,.vr-H era intend completing the Job In two more weeks. rw,rle back tnre- h1 "'. waliy Raymond Schtmierhurn and Ervin believe war Is certain on the other Hutchison sent a truck load of pota- aide, tee to town February 13. . Carl Chlldreth called on frlenda and: let It come. If thev're so relatives In Medford Thursday, last. W fooUf, vnr aud A.ts u to Mr. and Mrs. Roy Proctor ,. .., . . week-end visitors of the Krvin 1 " "OT T vc Hutchisons this past week. evn begun to recover from the last We are enjoying beautiful weather -war, let them go at It. again, aner tne recent rains. George Sohermerhorn made a trip to town Monday. i PEPCO UNABLE PAY DEBENTURE INTEREST PORTLAND. Ore.. Feb. 14. f P) Unable to pay Interest due March 1 on H.000.000 worth of outstand ing debentures In Vie hands of 6. 500 holders, the Portland Electric Power Co. through Franklin T. Grif fith, president, haa mailed to all debenture holders a plan for ex changing a new issue of Income But, If we're as mart as we ought to be. arter all that haa happened to u in the last two decades, we'll STAY OUT and let the rest of them fight to their hearts' content selling them whst they want FOR CAHH and ! extending no credit netting our flngvrt burned once ought to be enough. 25 Years OF DEPENDABLE BUILDING ADVICE Big Pines Lbr.Co. Tel. 1 VALENTINE DANCE AT DREAMLAND HALL TO Peb Stone's Melody Boys WED. NITE Men 25c. Ladies 10c There Is o premium on cold We Buy Old Gold Do not sell rntir old gold to st ran errs. We hold a U. S. Gov't llcenne to hur. JEWELERS MEDFORD. OR t Monnment to l.ee'a Secretary. SYLVA, N. C ( AP A monument will be erected In historic Cullowhee cemetery to the memory of Roland ! bonds, bearing 6 per cent interest. Tor rlnt'r- Prtv,t xtnr of Oenral ; the debenture certificate. , Robert E I durlnc the civil war The confidant of the confederate Phone 543 W will haul anty fgu) - lender died at his home here about , refuse, city Sanitary Seme. I year ago at the g of 04.