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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 26, 1934)
PTGE FOUR MEDFORD TfATL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune 'EwyoM in Southern Ongoi Audi tht Mill Trlbuni" Dilly Eiwpl fUturdir Published bf MEDFORD PUINT1NQ CO. JB-JT-J9 N. ITlr 8U 80BEHT ff. BUHL, Bdllor An odtpendeat Nenpaper Eottrtd u Hcond elm matter it Htdord, Uregoo, under Act of Mud) 8, 181 d. SUBSCRIPTION BATES By Mill In AdtiDM Dill, OM 1u $5.00 Dillj, Us aontl.., J.T6 Dallj, om dodU) 00 By Carrier In Adfineo Medford. Aiblud. IkUodtIII. Central Point, Pbwoli, Talent, Oold Hill tod on blibwaja. Dill, OM ftu , J.0U Dallr, tlx nwntha 1-36 Daily, om noDtn ( All Ufma, eun In tdraoea. OfflclaJ papfr of tbt City of Medfortt Orrtcla) paper of Jarkaoo County. IIEMBE11 OF THIS ASSOCIATED PKKBB Becerrlng full Leued Wirt Strrlc Tha Anoelatet, Preaa la eielushcly anlltlad to tba uh for publteaUon of all nem dUpatehea eradltad U It or other wiie credited In tbU paper an) alio to tna local nen published herein. All rlgbU for puhlleation of ipeclal dlipaWiw oateln are alio reiened. MEMBB8 0? UNITED PBKRB MEM I) EH OP AUDIT BUHBAO OP CIRCULATIONS Adrertlilns KepretenUtlrH H. C. M0UEN8EN COMPANY Offleu In Nrt York, Chicago, Detroit, 8u FriocJsco L Angela Seattle Portland. U.f. Ye Smudge Pot ' Bjr Arthur Perry. Tba National Liars association will b organised at Burlington, Wis., loon and several around hem already claim ) they belong. Two blades of grass, throe dande- nucu ulL 40 Dalu "u uuua ma-vuuiao win uo ueiwetn iuc iivu lions, and no telling how many weeds j in the MIDDLE OF THE ROAD I now grow where formerly one blade f . . . . . of grass reared heavenward. ,T"HIS was the course adopted in settling this automobile The Republican candidates for gov- i strike, it will undoubtedly be the course adopted in settling emor. "win start in April to scare up ( t))e tttrif problem, the stock exchange problem, and other im th voters," and, well may the voters , , , , , , ' bo scared. i lt is terrible to be married to a stranger and to be marooned on a farm with only two babies for com panions. (Chlco, Calif., Enterprise.) As long as you are married to a stran ger, you might aa well make the best of It and get acquainted with him. Eminent and heavy thinkers of the land now predict that whon the time oomea for Americans to pay for the pending of the past year, the disgust rr:r .tr. r . cans will be saying about each other, what they now say about France. Anarchist Jack Horner, Loafed on the corner. Where all of his time was spent; Ha twiddled his thumb, And oalled everyone dumb, Who believed In government. A number of tired bank clerks went golfing yesterday, Instead of going to bed. ... Redding, Calif., boasta a "lawyer musician". The lawyora call him a musician, and the musicians call him a lawyer. The new brakes on the 1034 autos are wonderful. When fully applied, the car stops "In loss than three feet" the occupants In about ten feet, if they get through the windshield. The situation with respect to thai,,,. , . , f!,. governorship campaign la still some- what scrambled on the republican aide. (Baker Democrat-Herald,) Why "Wlttl respect?" j Asbury BertU of the C.Pt urea, who hu a Une named after him, and never iiaed It aa excuse to run for something, towned Snt. He la an old fashioned farmer who never learned to farm, every place but on a farm. Oregon It listed fourth among the it r tea of the union, In the amount of crime committed the pant year. The statistic are gathered by the depart ment of Justice. The favorite felony was stealing anything left loose while the owner was at church, or asleep, or otherwise out of sight. It would be interesting to know If three tractor wheels stolen In this county, at the height of the Depression, were listed among the loot. The thief had no use for them after he got them. The owner paid for finding them however. The thief knew exactly where he had hidden them. He later fled between .speeches, devoted largely to denounc-1 body. and"eedi e"peneeS"M"ng ... I HOME CHEW COMMUNISM j A dream of economio equality for all men; a lellef that the moderate, evolutionary processes of self-government have failed and that an all. ' powerful state, tinkering with the most Intimate habits of the individ ual, can make human nature virtuoua ' through the process of killing off th , dissenters; In practice, a social order geared to Ita lowest common denomi nator, which la the least Intelligent, tha least efficient, the least responsi ble man; a social order which must degrada man's flneet and most pain fully acquired moral values to fit the mob mind; a social order that sus pect Individual excellent, punishes all variations from flat uniformity, and can succeed only by regimenting and propagandlrlng I (a cltlrens with. 1 out temples; and social order that, In order to last, must destroy Its own nest members those who possess a mum of thrift and Industry, Another Great F. D. Victory TpflE settlement of the threatened automobile strike is another great victory for President Roosevelt. Tbe president did, personally, what General Johnson, as head of the NRA, negotiating with organized labor on one hand, and the manufacturers on the other, was unable to do. How did he do it f He did it essentially by using big head. And the way President Roosevelt used his head in solving this problem is undoubtedly the way he will use it in solving other intricate problems of the New Deal, as they arise. Anyone who wishes to know what the New Deal means, and the methods the administration will employ to achieve it, will find the answer by studying the details of this ORIEFLY the president achieved this victory by threatening radical action by threatening a sharp turn to the left, which he could have taken with the powers congress had, at the beginning of his administration, granted him, and then in re turn for concessions, adopting a middle course, in other words effecting a compromise, satisfactory to both sides, because neith er could accept the only alternative to it. Such action, we believe history will show, is the keynote of President Roosevelt's political strategy, and reflects the es sential quality of his character. F. D. is not a T. R. He may reach for the big stick as he undoubtedly did in this instance but he will never use it. That isn't his way. Jumping over'the breastworks, and crushing the enemy with flags flying and the big guns booming, he relegates to the story books, and to that school of political dramatics, which his famous relative and predecessor, so picturesquely ex emplified. F. D. doesn't use his fists. He does, Ave repeat, use his head. GO as long as Franklin Roosevelt is president, we need fear no radical, drastic, revolutionary action. President Roosevelt has certain definite ideas as to what should be done, and he intends to do them, as far as it is possible but not suddenly, dramatically or drastically. Not by frontal attack, not by crushing the opposition. He intends to reach his objective, not by a straight line, but a curved one, the curve being determined by the offsetting stresses of radical forces on one side, and the conservative forces on the other. x He may throaten to go sharply to the left, ho may, if political flxnnrlienp.v demands even THREATEN to en in tVio richr- hut i -1 i :j j j i poriani proDiems, on me agenda It will not be revolution, neither will it strictly speaking be evolution. It will be slower than the first and faster than the second. It will be, fundamentally, picking the way slowly but surely to a better order of things, a better and fairer set-up for the average man under shrewdly intelligent, but essentinlly conservative leadership. At least that is the true nature of the New Deal as we see it, and speaking for ourselves, we get a big bang out of seeing the wheels g o round, and this new taking shaPe, TPO return to the strike settlement. As before stated this wasn't a controversy over hours, wages or working condi tions it was in reality an attempt on the part of the American Federation of Labor to unionize the automobile industry, and the determination of tho lenders of the industry to prevent it. The settlement of this issue is all either side really cared about. The result as above stated is not a definite settlement but a compromise. The workers are to be given an opportunity to vote, for what they wish, as far as such unionization is con cerned, A permanent committee is to be appointed to rule on all issues between capital and labor, particularly on the charges of discrimination against workers who wish A. F. L. affiliation. yiUS doesn't settle the issue, but it delays the inevitable show- down. If a majority of the workers should vote for A. F. L. control, the executives will nevor accept it; if they don't, the A. F. L. will never accept THAT, but will continue to work toward ""1"' " "" .".""., ,... -m. in the steel industry. It is another irrepressible conflict, and pro- .,!., ;.,,r;.,;i.. ; ,aco u uu"v, mvii;iiti,i-ivv , out thanks to 1 resident Koosevelt, tne immediate onsis is successfully averted, a labor war that well might have plunged this country into chaos and confusion, has been avoided, and for the time being at least, the train of national recovery can go on frU steam ahead. TpiIE president undoubtedly accomplished this result by threatening to use the extraordinary powers congress grant ed him in tho Industrial Recovery Act, which would allow hiin to invoke the licensing section, and administer tho affairs of tho automobile industry HIMSELF, thus bringing both sides of the controversy to time, and ready to make concessions And then he joined together these concessions in such a way, that a working agreement could be reached, without resorting to such drastio aotion. A VERT neat piece of work, and to our mind only added evidence that this country of th m08t adroit Rnd rM0,,reeful Primal politicians (we use the term in no derogatory sense) who has ever occupied the Wni(e HouMi (Continued iiuin page one) new deal for months, but his remarks receive no national recognition. There la a distinction between au thorlaatlon and appropriation of money for the new naval building program, but not enough to make any considerable difference, to far important settlement. - :ii v- i i . l . i 01 ine new ueni. economio and social plan, gradu- :j.. ,1, :n . ,,., n, t, ,,,,., . j. 1, ,v . viiq xuktitv, an ifc lias ill biic pai. has in Washington today one congress haa only authorlred Via sums In the Vinson bill, but there will be little question about appro priations later aa aums are needed to lay keels. When the late Ambassador Her rlck waa In Paris, the state depart ment cabled excitedly aaklng what to do about a stowaway aboard th trana-Atlantlc plane. Mr. Herrlck told his secretary to eabl back; "Laugh It off." The aecretary found that th diplomatic cod book con tained no cod for "laugh." Defines "Nagging." MONTREAL. (UP) A definition of th term "nagging" was propounded by Quebec's chief Justice during tne hearing of a domestlo csm here. "Nag ging." said Chief Justice Grrenahleld. "Is a constant reiteration ot an un pleasant truth." Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number ot letters received only a few can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address br. William Brady, ws El famine Beverly Hills, CaJ. THE MEDICINE CUPBOARD I have never Men a store or ready made medicine cabinet or first aid kit that was not a handsome package and as useful as :H$m a hip pocket In a f hlVfr TVi II ft Public Health Service issued a ponderous tome which contained explicit instruc tions for prepar ing and using a first aid medi cine outfit, but hard times came on and few could afford to Invest trailers, so the federal effort proved a flop. For hi own assurance, every tour ist should equip himself with some sort of emergency kit which can be carried constantly In his car, his bag or his pocket. It is Impossible to suggest precisely what Items should be Included In such a kit the con tents vary with the character of the country and the type of emergency likely to occur. For Instance, It would be silly to carry a package of antl venln (antidote for snakebite) If ono Is not going Into a region where rattlesnakes or ot h e r venomous snakes occur. It Is not necessary to have any means of disinfecting water for drinking purposes If one is tour ing from city to city to town to town not if the water Is fit for the resi dents to drink. A monograph giving brief practical directions for equipping and using a "Pocket Emergency Kit" will be sent any reader who asks for It and in closes stamped envelope bearing his or her address. What remedies should be kept In the family or domestic medicine cup board and how should they be used In minor Illnesses or in more serious sicknesses under medical care? I suppose every doctor has his own Ideas about this. On certain items we can all agree, but on others there are differences of opinion. Oet your scissors sharpened up, friends, and be sure your aubscrlp tlon is paid so you won't miss any Issues. This Is the first of a series of articles which when complete will make a little,manual on the medicine cupboard tall you Just What to keep I in it and why, and Just what thai usea of the various medicines are. I shall Issue the entire series in one on the "Little Lessons in the Ways of Health" later, for those who want it NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, March II. Diary: It came on to pour at 6 a. m. and I drew a great chair to the window, watching. Then sleeping until 11, and up, reaains a batch of episto lary alp from Vernon McKen ale, Clllton Webb, Weatbrook P e g ler and O. Fred K e n k 1 ng. And found a native statuette Mere dith Nicholson sent from Para guay. Bo working, re arranging biogra phical volumea and with my wlte to Ina Claire'a to. do for Oladys Cooper and Keith Win ter. A large flowering and great kl doodle. So walking down the ave nue, browsing at Dutton's and Scrlb- ner's and wondering what happened to the window boxes at Helen Gould's. Dinner with Will and Jessie Hays and the Karl Kitchens there and Ru pert Hughes. And Will Rogera drop ped In from one of his quick flying trips from California, as gleeful as ever I saw him. And I told him my old school fellow "Coin" Harvey's son. Tom, was In town and he lit a shuck for his hotel. The New York literary agents there are scads of them. Laura WUk, George Bye, Dare Hampton, Verne Porter, Carl Brandt and so on are a skilled group of peppers-up of the drooping literary spirits, the buffers between Ifllnt hearts of the editorial sanctum and the sensitive scribbler. Most every established writer has one. especially those far from literary marts. The agents' offices are In mid-town, some quite elaborate with reception rooms and cute cantanas. They have ears to the rail and know the minute this or that msgaelne Is ready for tha South Sea tragedy or the Riviera romance. They are re warded by a percentage of the pay ment check. On of my occasional and Interest ing correspondents Is a Catholic sister In Minnesota, encouraging mostly but gently taking to task when a derelic tion demands. It's surprising how eagerly those leading cloistered lives look forward to aestful and whole some radio programs Edwin Hill is a high fnvorlte among them, also Alexander Woollcott and Tony Wons. Especially, too. do they enjoy the music of th symphony and Paul Wblteman when they can dial them. I breakfasted at Sherry's with a mightily depressed executive who re turned .from lolling In Plorlda sands snd yachting In southern waters many weeks to find that hla business had prospered aa never before over the same period. He felt he waa worth less and should roll up Ilk a puff ball and blow away. Ha did not ap preciate th subtlest of compliments. C. M. Schwab. 1 believe, once said; "Tli greatest axecutlv la one whose affaire flourish when he goes on a prolonged vacation." Personal nomination (or th New Brady, M.D. In booklet form. There la only this difference) X assume full responsibil ity for the accuracy of anything I say In the booklet or In any letter or monograph or other written or print ed item that goes directly from me to you, hut I cannot guarantee the accuracy of everything printed In this column. In this series on the medicine cup board I shall assume that any emer gency or accident likely to happen to a traveler may happen at home, and accordingly the family medicine cup board should supply everything that the pocket emergency kit contains for dealing with such emergencies, as well as the simple, reasonably safe, tried and true remedies for common ailments. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Color. In making solutions of dry acid colors In alcohol, ether or water the dust floats In the air and for a time afterward my spit la colored with whatever color I have used the col ore are called wool green, wool yel low, etc. Is this injurious to my health? E. M. Answer I cannot advise without specific knowledge of the chemicals used. Aa a rule such color dust Is not more harmful than ordinary dust. So There Are Capillaries? Your discovery that "there ain't no capillaries" Is truly Imposing. The writer would appreciate' references on the subject. P. 6. C. Answer If you read It In a book you'll think it may be so, eh? Any textbook of anatomy or physiology will give you the facts about "capil laries" distinguish facts from tradi tions or assumptions. Glycerin. I was advised by a beauty special ist never to use glycerin on my face as it grows hairs. Mrs. O. J. Answer If that were only true I'd try some glycerin on my dome. Only weak solution of glycerin should be used on the skin, for too much irri tates and makes the skin harsh, whereas, in many instances . a very little, a few drops to the ounce of lotion, helps to keep the skin smooth and soft. (Copyright, 1934, John P. Dille Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 265 B. Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. York newspsperman remaining least changed physically through the years Bide Dudley. e. KtflA uni nut of . the staKe world and Hollywood about long and ..,nnnfiii mnrrinees. There are many but most conspicuous, I believe, Is that of George Arllss and his wife. rm.... h, hmn hnnntlV Wfid 30 VeSTO. a culmination of a school day ro mance. He has never iroupea " made his many voyagea to England .l.kM., Uar nnlV fhttlM tlmAS In their' married state have they not dined together. All of Arllss' stage and screen contracts call for the ap pearance with him of Mrs. Arllas and If a part cans ior a wue, one uiu play It, and no marriage must be portrayed between them not con genial. They are. Incidentally, sun down walkers. Wherever they are they keep trysts with a sunset. The most sustained cheering, plus seven curtain calls, heard In the the ater this season was for "Dodsworth" and likely the most auspicious ce lebrity owning. It waa a grand wel come for two players, too long absent Walter Huston and Pay Balnter. Incidentally the producer, shy Max Gordon, attended a neighborhood movie the night of the premiere. O, yea, Walter Huston and Sinclair Lewis walk alike. Bagatelles: Ed Howe often quotes a made-up Roman philosopher he calls Sllenlus . . . John Drlnkwater Is now living at Pepya' old village of Brampton . . . Wlnchell Smith, play wright, left a eooo annuity to the Lambs . . . John Cowper Powya waits three months before reading reviews of his books . . . Will Rogers haa been air sick but once and that was while landing at Newark . . . Tulllo Carml natl has become the best dressed first nlghter ... He waa once Duse's lesd Ing man. X got to wondering during an In somnia stretch last night If the In ternational bankers counted sheep trying to sleep these day. And maybe that was what waa making me twitch. I waa certainly one of their shorn flock. And can I bleatl (Copyright, 1034, McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) BEDE RENOUNCES BUG EXE. March 2fl. Declaring his "political ambitions" would be satisfied If he retained his old posi tion as reading clerk of the house, Elbert Bede, Cottage Grove editor, to day announced he would not be a candidate for the Republican nom ination for aecretary of state. Excessive cost of a campaign was given as ono ot the reaona for Beds' decision. Saturday night, after a conference with Earl Snell, Arlington, Bede said here either Snell or himself would be a candidate, Bede'a retire ment from the picture was taken as an indication Snell would be a can didate. PORTLAND, March 28. (P) A man Identified by a CWA card s Everett Anson Swift, 69, of Portland. u found dead in a rooming house here Sunday, apparently from natural cause He registered at the place M Jot Stlner of Salem, police said. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS YOU'VE heard, of course, this tale the park rangers tell of the bears that come furtively, like the wild things they are, up to the boundary of Crater Lake park, and the moment they step over It Into the safety of Uncle Sam' protection become non chalant, assured and easy of man ner. W. W. Wilson, of Portland, tells this writer another bear tale that la at least worth repeating. MR. WILSON'S father and mother were the first white couple to be married In Klamath Falls, whlcti then was Llnkvllle, and since In that early day It was In 1871 Jackson ville waa the county seat, he had to go over to Jacksonville to get his mar riage license. ANYWAY, Mr. Wilson his name was Simpson Wilson arose brlglit and early one morning and, with a companion, set off on horseback for the county seat. 8omewhere beyond Keno, hla son doesn't know exactly where, the road forked, and by chance they took the right fork. Looking across to the other fork a little later, they beheld a war party of Modocs. So luck was with them at the start, you see. They kept on at a lively pace, and by night they reached a apot some where to the west of whst la now Lincoln. Here they made camp for the night. THEY turned their horses loose to graze, cooked a frugal aupper and in the course of time turned In for the night, removing their pants and shirts and going to bed in their under. wear whether red flannel or not, Mr. Wilson doesn't know. Having good consciences, they went Immediately to sleep, but some time along In the night Mr. Wilson awoke, and In the flickering light of the dying fire he beheld almost upon him, it seemed a bear that appeared to be about the size of Mt. Pitt. He let oft a startled whoop, and made a wild leap for th nearest tree and shinned up It expertly. His companion followed with equal skin. THEY got as far 'as the first limb, and there, they perched. By this time, they remembered their guns quite cloarly, although In that startled moment of seeing the bear they'd forgotten them entirely. But the guns were leaning up against another tree, at quite a dis tance, and there was the bear, look ing dark and Ill-humored and alto gether forbidding In the half light. So they clung to the limb and hoped fervently the bear dl.ln't remember that he had spikes In his boqta and so could climb a tree it he wished. REMEMBER, plesse, they had gone to bed In their underwear, and had left without pausing to make a toilet. And add to this the further fact that It was esrly In th spring, and th nlghta were sharp. You can Imagine, under thea cir cumstances, that It waan't altogether pleasant on that limb. But they had a notion that it would be by no means pleasant down there in tha company of th bear which aesmed a per sistent cuss, not at all Inclined to wander off Into th brush. So they stayed on the limb ana ehlvered. CAME, at last, the dawn aa they used to say In tha movie titles. And by the wan light of th early dawn, creeping over the cold auramlt of Parker mountain, they got a good look at the persistent bear that had lurked there In th shadows all the long, cold night. The bear waa a blackened stumpl WHAT a lot of 'kidding Mr. Wilson must have had to face when he got back from Jacksonville, with his marriage license, and the tale got spread around. ! DEAFened You owe It to yourself to re- celve a FREE DEMON8TRA t TION ot the TEUTONOPHONE. t Germany's Master creation, tor ! th relle.' of defective hearing. I- It la the onlv portable hearing t ievice equipped with Radio Mi ll crophone. I Dr. Orville H. Scheetz K OPTOMETRIST t 0 Eat II St.. Orants Pas r Near Post Ofllc 'f'M' Hotel Figueroa Tenth and Flfueroa Bta. :::;!; 400 euuid room in os tn owest aotels Neat door to everything Important in downtown Los Angeles. As comfortable a It la convenient Oarace In connection. Rooms with, or without, private oath. Rates 11 -SO pes day and up Attractlv permanent rates, wes month. A. B. SMITH. Lease. .;TttT m mm, Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson County History From tbe FUe of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Years Ago.) TEN YEARS AOO TODAY March 26, 1921. (It wsa Thursday) Cooking lessons for Boy Scouts to tart next week. Early spring la predicted at Crater lake. K. K. Kubll of Portland, to open his campaign for TJ. S. senator with dance at Jacksonville, where he was born. The Medford high school basket ball team en route to Chicago, will limber up at the University of Cali fornia. Eddie Demmer, memner 01 the team, shows signs of homesick ness at Dunsmulr. Attorney General Daugherty is dis charged by President Coolldge. as a result of the Teapot Dome scandal. John H. Carkln to run for the legis lature, and will have no slogan. Teggs blow safe In Rankin Estes' pool hall and steal $325. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY March 26, 1924. (It was Friday.) President Wilson's announcement of "aiding Europe" opposed by Re publican congressmen, and are told, by Secretary McAdoo, "they will be put In their place by their constitu ents at the next election." The John S. Owen Lumber company of Eau Claire, Wis., purchased 6840 acres of timber In ,the Butte Falls district. Local youth who was a member of "Kelley's Army of the Unemployed" In California returns with a "wheel barrow load of clippings" on hla adventures. The first "smudge special" in rail road history, consisting of seven cars of crude oil distillate for use in or chard heating, arrived In Medford at 1:50 o'clock this afternoon from Richmond, Cel., establishing a new record for freight runs. The order was placed by the Rogue River Valley Fruit association yesterday afternoon. The cars were loaded and moving by ft o'clock. The train waa pulled with the largest locomotives and given right of track clear through. But he must have been a mighty good sport, for according to his son, he told the story on himself, and seemed to get as big a kick out of it as anybody. It's a lot of fun to laugh at a Joke on the other fellow, but It takes a genuinely good sport to laugh at a Joke on himself. Midget Photoa 3 for 10c. Peasley Studio Opp. Holly Theatre, CHEAP LUMBER AT BIG PINES LUMBER CO. Purple Bubble BALL 9 aaaJ Oriental Gardens, Wed., March 28 DYNGE'S RED COATS Admission 40d Ladies FREE PEACE The deep solemnity and beauty of funeral services here serves as a very tangible comfort for those who are left to mourn. And it is gratifying to know that cost plays no part in the unvarying quality of our service. CONGER FUNERAL PARLOR WEST MAIN AT NEWTOWN Solicited For Membership In Order of Golden Rule and Declined COP'S CURIOSITY WASHINGTON (UP) The curios ity of a Montgomery county police man today was responsible for the re covery of 911,000 In stock certificates and notes, stolen from the home ot State Senator David Balle, of West minster. Md. Herbert Miles, an employe of the state highway department, unearthed a canvas bag while working In a ditch near Damascus. He examined the contents, which appeared to be "pret ty papers," and unconcernedly re turned the pouch to the ditch. Two weeks later, Policeman Paul Watklns, learning of the discovery, decided . he would see the "pretty papers." He Instructed Miles to re trieve the bag. One of the papers bore the name of Senator Balle as administrator of an estate. Balle told Watklna the bag had been stolen about a month ago. Drawn Curtains for Drunks. JUAREZ, Mex. (UP) When con veying an Intoxicated person in your automobile in Juarez, the curtains must be lowered, according to new regulations posted by the traffic de partment. Two-Minute Verdict. WORCESTER, Mass. (UP) A Worcester county Jury deliberated only two minutes before returning a verdict of guilty against Alexis La Plume, chained with leaving the scene of an accident. All kinds of igal blanks for sale, for rent, no hunting, no trespassing and other cards for sale at Commercial Printing Dept. of Mall Tribune. SELECT YOUR GRADUATION FROCK NOW Painted organdie, polka dots on organdie, net and mousaellne de sole. Pretty pastels and white. $795 $995 $12-95 EASTER HATS Arriving Daily 1 Adrienne's