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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1934)
P3TGE ETGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRPBUXE, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1934. Medford Mail tribune "Emyont In SouUwn Ortgoo Rd thi Mill Trlbuni" Dally eiwpt Btturdif PubllihH by MEDFOBD PBLVTINQ CO. SS-Sf-lB N. Fir 8L ROBERT IT. BUHL, Editor Ao lodtpetxkot Nmpiper Cntcrtd u iMond eliu Bitter tt Utdord. ncao, under Act of Uuth 8, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION BATES rt Man In AditDM Daily, one rear ,,,,,.$8.00 Dally, ill tontbj J.T6 Dally, oim monUi 80 By carrier id Aaunw Mwroro, Aiuaoa. JaebODTlUe. Central Point, Pboeali, Taint, Gold B1U and oo Highway. Daily, on year...,, .$8.01 Daflr. ill month! 8.31 Dally, oo moatb .60 AU Ur mi, eub In adrioce. Otridtl paprr of to City of MaMord. Official paptr of Jackaoo Couoty. . MEMBEB Or TUB ASSOCIATED PBE88 Beeelrtoa Full Luted Wlr Bertie Tb Aiiodatcb Preia la utltislTdy antltled to tfa uh for publication of all cent dlipatcott crtdlUd to It or othertrls credited lo thli paptr and alto to the local newi puhiiibed herein. All rlfbti for publication of apodal dispatcbH Mrein art also reierrea. MEHHEB OF UNITED PBES8 MEMBEH OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIBCULATJ0N8 Adrertlilns ItepresentatlrM H. C. MOCENBEN k COMPANY Office In N York, Chlcafo, Detroit, Sen BTandtco Lot Angeles Seattle Portland. ' M V M el V MIMSae Give Us the News! Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. ' " The state champion Aatorta high school basket team ran three miles very day before breakfast, Instead of darning 80 miles every night they thought the coach was sot looking. Almost any day now we expect the service boy at the filling station to lean in and pick our teeth. (Typo-Oraphlc). And, the service ' station boy reports, there Is a de creese In the number of sutolsts, who try to drive away without pay- tog, ! . ' Jack Thompson has a receipt tor si he gave towards the erection "of a monument on the State Capitol grounds at Salem, Oregon, by the Sons and Daughters of the Union Veterans of the Civil War of Ore gon." And the bull U getting ready to run again In this the Bull Run sector of Oregon. m . Voters are not mad enough yet, for candidates to quote the Bible, tnd further Infuriate them. The Mesdames Rumor are still abroad, and broadcasting that all of ficials, and all their favorite hates are -In Jail, while they are still at Urge, through the charity of the law. The Mesdamea Rumor should not be confused with - Dame Rumor, who killed Nick Klme of Orlffen Creek last summer, but he etui don't know It. The success of the rumoring Is largely due, to a portion of the pop ulation believing anything, aa long as It dont sound too much like the truth. THEEE is unmistakable evidence in the offing that a political campaign is about to begin. The underground grapevine is starting to work overtime, with rumors and canards; charges and counter-charges, filling the circumabient ether, every hour of the day and night. , For example: This official is under bond. Another is to be brought before the next grand jury. A third, has skipped the county with all the dog licenses. And a fourth is having his campaign financed by Samuel Insul ! Through them all, runs another charge-'a survival of the great ballot-burning up-rising of a year ago, i. t,: that the Mail Tribune refuses to print the news, and suppresses any thing that may reflect in any way upon its candidates or its policies. 1TELL, at present the Mail Tribune HAS no candidates. We don't even lrnnw who all ihn.nartAiAatam ir. - Nor have we decided whether or not we will enter the pri maries. We haven't, in the past. We don't intend io this year unless the pubho interest appears to demand it. Under normal conditions the important thing is not the candidates the parties choose, but the candidates the people choose at the final elec uon. 11 remains to De seen wnetner local conditions tnis year, unlike last, WILL be normal. AS FOB refusal to print the news, that is a bird of another faafhAl anrl a liitfttiie tiA inftp..flvinr Tf iin a1 to fly when th political; pot starts to boil, and proceeds to roost in obscurity and silence when it is over. . (Ho-huml It's a funny world, isn't it? particularly when the political witch dance starts in. Heaven help those who have no sense or humor, or having one, proceed to lose it.) Well, all we have to say to those who are silly enough to take this charge seriously is this : . . . GIVE UP. A TRIAL, GIVE US YOUR NEWS ! We will not only print it, but if it is HALF as sensational as the county snoopers and scandal mongers claim- we will plaster it on the front page under an 8-column streamer. OT PR INT. THE NEWS! Why that's our business. We pay out quite a tidy sum each week to give our readers a true picture of what is going on, not only in this community but throughout the world. As for local news that is more desired than any other it's the life blood of this paper, as it is of every newspaper. OUT, obviously it must be NEWS. It CAN'T be rumor. It " CAN'T be hearsay. It CAN'T be village gossip, idle or malicious. If It involves a criminal charge, it must first be a matter of grand jury, police; or court record No paper would last a week if it tried to take over the funotions of the district attor ney, the jury system, the police, or courts. Some papers for the sake of building up a declining circulation have attempted to do so. A few have even attempted to try civil and criminal cases in their columns. They haven't lasted long. It is good for the community and the profession, that they haven't. So give us your news if you have any. We will not only print it, but if it's local news of genuine importance and nor mal prosperity ever returns we will pay for it. That 's fair enough, isn't it f - Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.U. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered Dt Or. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a tew can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address or. William Brady, tvi El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cat. MORE GOOD NEWS FOR GRAMPY Charlatan are atrong for crediting Nature (they always spell it with a capital N) with preventing and cur. ing things. My own Idee, is that nature . Ls cruel and treacherous and should never be trusted. Ks ture does hideous things to inno cent victim un less the vicious harridan ls strained and guided and con trolled by the in telligence and skill of a good doctor. Nature ls particularly wicked in her treatment of tht mothers of the race. What ls the reward nature offers to so many women who have borne and raised large families of children? Death from cancer of the womb. Even the one-child or two-child mother who survives to the ripe old age of 45 years in many cases Is doomed to suffer for several years with hot flushes that ls, unless her doctor is up to snuff and gives her the benefit of a course of treatment with corpus luteum or the prepara tion called amn tone tin which ls ad ministered by intramuscular injec tion. These modern endocrine reme dies are not specifics or sure cures but will bring grateful relief in large share of cases where women suffer much from hot flashes and associated disturbances of the menopause. We gave some space here last year to the Improved method of treating prostatic obstruction in elderly men; that ls, the method of removing the obstructing portion of the enlarged gland by diathermy (electro-surgery) through the natural channel. Tills Is called trans-urethal prostatectomy. It is not suitable In all cases but it offers & most welcome alternative for the formidable external or perineal prostate removal in a large share of cases of prostatic obstruction in eld erly men. This method ls nearly if not quite bloodless and does not keep the patient in bed more than a few days. Why so many men beyond 50 suf fer from hypertrophy or enlargement of the prostate we don't know. An Iowa City urologist, Dr. N. G. Aloock. reported his experience with more than 600 transurethral prostatic resections, as compared with his ex perience with 400 consecutive stand ard external prostatectomies. Of the 400 operations (It is usually done in two stages at Intervals of some days or weeks) 87 patients failed to re cover. 15 of them succumbing to can cer. Of the last 275 transurethral resections only two of the patients failed to recover. A Cleveland urol ogist, Dr. W. J. Engel, say his ex perience with the new method indi cates that from 70 to 80 per cent of cases of prostatic obstruction are suit able for transurethral resection. A Chicago urologist, Dr. H. L. Krefc achmer, reports that since March, 1932 he has done no external prostatec tomies but has treated all cases by the transurethral method. Like ell new departures In medicine and surgery, this method has been frowned upon and scouted by the old established docs, who have gained their reputation by the old methods, But I'm telling you, grampa. Of course this la a free country. -h QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Dope. Whether a cough medicine contain ing 0.33 grains of morphine per fluid ounce ls safe for a weak person to take to subdue the pain of pleurisy? T. H. . Answer No, the patient should take morphine only under the care of his doctor. Oleo. I use oleo In place of butter on dry bread or toast, but not for cook ing. I use it not because I like It but because of the cost. Is it harm ful because of the glycerine and ben zoate of soda? J. N. J. Answer I'd prefer to get along without butter or to use only ha'.f as much butter, rather than to take as food stuff that requires such em balming to prevent It from spoiling. At any price. I doubt If it ls economy to use such substitute for butter. Butter contains Vitamin A and Vita min D and perhaps other vitamins, which are not present In oleo. If ycu can have a fair amount of fresh milk dally, this would not matter so much. Oleo In the feeding of child Is permissible when the child receives a liberal daily allowance of. fresh milk. Here Is Some Truth. If, as you assert, the pharmacist of today can dispense a cheese sand wich more skilfully than he can prescription, hLs plight has been brought about by the Illiterate and Incompetent manner in which the modern physician stumbles through his hieroglyphics in his feeble at tempt to write what he would like to call a prescription. H. R. H. Answer And that Isn't the half of it. (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dllle Co.) Comment on the Day's News MR. BALONEY MAHONEY By FRANK JENKINS . RAINING after all these weeks. Everybody pretending to like It, pointing out what a lot of good It la doing, how It wlU start up the grass and In a measure make up for the ehortage of snowfaU, And- everybody secretly griped about It, greatly preferring the sun shine. T BEATS the dickens, doesnt It, how people dislike the things that are good for them, such as castor oil and sulphur and molasses In the spring, and yearn for the things that AREN'T good for them?- ' IP WE did always only the things that are good for us. and never the things that aren't good for us, we might live a lot longer than we do. And also hare a lot less fun. ' Ed 'Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Ur. William Brady, M. D., 265 E. Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Col. WHY RIBS SPLIT (Congressional Record) Mr. Hastings: Is It true that the senator appeala to congress when the farmers do not produce enough, and appeala -to congress again when they grow to much? Mr. Smith: If both conditions are disastrous, why should we not? Will the senator answer that? If both of them are dis astrous, and this Is the only place to get relief, why should we not appeal? ' Mr. Hastings: I suppose con ' fress might hope that the same dlssster would not happen twice In the same year. Mr. Smith: I hope ao, too: but under the Republican regime It happened two or three times a yesr. (Laughter), ... T. Farlow of Lake Crk towned and traded yesterday. He la another one of the Model T farmers, who can't make any headway with a plow on a street corner, . Sheep at being killed by a dog. witn oniy one headlight and a Call fornla license. Drlnkera are getting used to the state gln-mlll, and no charcoal In their chain lightning. It don't look much like the state would go as crar.y over nudism, as they did over miniature golf courses, but Portland la threatened with a walkathon. . McSWEN. Mar, 3. Water frose In the water buckets In some kitchens for the first time this winter last Friday night. (Baker Democrat Herald). The best sl(in of winter In these parts. Is when the tea-kettles of the Trail district freese up, All the Republican candidates for governor, now claim a monopoly on virtue and righteousness, and, owing to their alleged greatness and good neae, should be wrapped In cello phone without cost to the people. Counties Pay Ta. SALEM. March 30. p) Four more counties have paid first qtisjter state prcpsrty tajes in full today. Includ ing one which paid for the first hslf Lincoln county which remitted 113,910 for the two quarters. The others were Josephine, aa.sss.; Bsker, au.eas, and Wasco, su.lM, Many Are "Called" but IT WOULD be very refreshing if some candidate for Governor would be absolutely honest with the people. So few of them are. Taken by and large none of them really want the job. They are neither attracted by the honor of the position, nor the power, nor the glory. As to the very comfortable salary in volved, they never think of a sordid thing like that. No INDEED 1 Invariably they are reluctant about running. They delay, they hesitate, they think they will- then they think they won't. When they finally hurl that battered campaign hat into the ring, there is only one compelling reason. They have heard a "CALL!" Tea Sirce, ALWAYS a call. That call never comes from Big Business, never from this spec ial interest or that, never from some special olique or faction, never from the local pride of . the candidates home town, nor from that gnawing political yearning, within the candidates own breast, it always comes from the PEOPLE. ' . The candidate doesn't WISH to run. But a strong sense of duty COMPELS him to. He is not a self starter, nor just a fluent, personable gentle man, out of a job, he is a patriot, offering himself as a sacri fice to the common weal. . "When duty says thou must, the candidate replies I can." 1TTE HAVE an idea if one of these days, a candidate for Governor would be honest aud quite frank about the matter, the people would be so surprised and delighted they would elect him by acclamation, from a sheer sense of gratitude and the compelling force of novelty. An announcement like this for example: - "I am no world beater. If I am elected I don't expect the mil lenlum and If I am. defeated I don't expect the state of Oregon to disappear. I don't claim to be the only honest candidate, nor necessarily the only capable one. But I think I atack tip pretty well with the others, and frankly, hoys and girls, I would like the Job." Hot Dickety I Wouldn't you vote for a man like that I . e MO, you probably WOULDN'T. Tou would rather vote for a man like Rufus Holmnn, who is a "beeg strong fella" and takes himself very seriously, who is always fighting the battles of the down-trodden and the oppressed, against the Tower Trust and the subsidized press; and who after many months of soul communion in solitude on the mountain tops, has finally heard that long awaited summons. Rnfus throws his broad-brimmed chapeau into the pit, at this eleventh hour, for one reason only, the "call," that OVER POWERING SENSE OF TUBLIC DUTV, "a duty to the pro gressives, and to the members of the Republican party, and to all those who labor for their daily bread, "which we don't believe anyone will deny includes about ALL the people of voting age in this great statel ' And here's a prediction. UNLESS some other self saorificing patriot also answers the "call" to enter the Republican pri- i maries, Rufus will win hands down. It will be a walk awav. JZiZ .1 woT mug Soy. Wh-' Wf" ,h because-Ore-est Main and central. gon hat no Will Rogers t,o oppose him, " NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre pi NEW YORK, March 30. Thoughts while strolling: First entire winter I've spent In New York In nine years end quite pleas antly too. Qaddlng ls the bunk. The sole tun ls anticipa tion. The rest nightmare of bum hotels. catching ships or trains and gen eral Insolence. How puny the clientele of those physical culture restaurants. The roarlngest name I know Tex o ttourke. How secluded Al Smith lately! What became of those two Teddies or the Zlcgfeld platoons Teddy Olrsrd and Teddy Hudson? Aa Oene Buck used to chirp: "Swell gals!" Grand name for a Scottle Ramsey. The lure of window displays! An avenue haberdasher tells me a new cravat pattern will sell aoo ties first day. One word description of Edward C. Hill debonslr. One of the few reporters, too, to carry a cane. More than any five producers, Msx Gordon puffed life Into the dying theater. I like to Idle among the catacomb of pert little shops In Rsdlo Center. And It's a slx-rlng circus with the running-fire comments of Irvin Cobb. Two never-fslllng visitors to the Lsmbs Pred Stone end David War field. Long time since Bill Hart has been to town. One of my favorite people Gilbert Gabriel. Nobody has the trick of hsndllng sn Impssse In speech like Will Rogers. When he gets stumped. Rives nis race an Imaglnsrv hand wash and turns to another sublect Just throws the whole thing awav. Others hang on and flounder foolishly. Yet to my mind no meaty tavern of those days reaches the excellence of Jock's. The Irish bacon with eggs, and French fried potatoes a single order filled an enormous blue platter was only for the rugged. It was a gastronomic Joy to see Diamond Jim Brady, napkin In his collar, tearing into one or these around 3 a. m. Addison Mlzner was a runner-up for brady in stowing away food and I once chanced on them paired at the same table at Jack's. Although hungry myself, my efforts by com parison seemed the languid pecklngs of an -Invalid canary: SPEAKING of living long, an old doctor, still active at the age of 101, was asked recently how he had kept himself in such remarkable health. ' He answered: "I did everything I wanted to do all my life but did It In MODER ATION." - - THERE'S quite a sermon In that 1 statement. A lot of the things we have been taught to look upon aa wicked In the extreme are wicked In reality "only when carried to excess. Eating, for example, la about as blameless aa anything can be, for we have to cat to live; yet eating to ex cess la one of the leading causes of 111 health and premature death. ONE of the leading causes, please note. The leading cause of death. In this day and age, ls orgsnlc heart disease. which ls Increasing, Instead of dim. Inlshlng, going up six per cent In 1933 over the previous high. If you want to live a long time In this modern age, you must watch your heart. To an unnamed bard should go some sort of a Pulltser prise for the moat penetrating political editorial of the year, likewise one of the most entertaining. Published In the Klsm ath Pslla Hersld, it Is as follows (Come on fellows, everybody In on the lsst line!): "Who ls the working man's best friend? Whose promises, laid end to end. Would reach from Klamath Pslla to Bend? Mahoney Baloney. "Who swore to us a year ago That Copco'a wires snd poles must go? Mahoney. Now Klsmsth's streets sre fslr and clean, Not one obstruction mars the scene Bsloney. "Who promised light snd water free: At least they'd next to nothing be Mahoney. Now Klsmsth's rates have sunk so low A few cents keeps your house aglow . Baloney. "Who wrapped himself In our proud flog. Whose noble speeches never log? Mahoney. He ls our leading pioneer; . His dsd snd grsndod settled here Baloney. "Who dsred the Knox low to come In, Who saved fair Klamath from all sin? Mshoney. His beer Inspector alwoys sees That bsrs close up and pay- their fees Baloney. "Who snstched fair Klamath from the brink. And put her clesrly in the pink? Mahoney. No CWA can pave her streets: With cssh her honest debts she meets Baloney. "Whose voice upon the radio Can sway the masses to and fro? Mahoney. Those speeches carved In ageless stone. With no high priest them to Intone, Would be BALONEY!" Portlsnd Spectator. There Is an emberlng glow, too. In watching freight handlers along West street docks line up at one of those stool-counter Joints after a ahlp sail ing. Most of the places hove parrots, pawned by seamen, jabbering the Jargon of the fo'casle. The strong scents of onions and garlic almost plait your eyebrows and the soup stained coats of the countermen are exhibits for the Bosrd of Health but nowhere In town ls there such eating. Or rather stuffing. I stopped Into a book bindery laat evening to have a set of my own trifling volumes especially bound for a mend. I don't know whether the man who waited on me was a kindly and blundering simpleton or shrpwd appraiser of hla kind. Anyway he suggested a binding of antique yap! (Copyright, 1034. McNought Syndi cate, Inc.) There was a doughy diction of a Park Row newspaperman, who In his cups, used to leave an uncompleted sentence dangling In mld-alr and go into a semi-stupor. After awhile he would come to with a Jerk mumbling: "He certainly could!" The phrase eventually got Into a revue and be came a hit of slang of the Brosdwsy speaks. One of the he-toon places Is Billy the Ovsterman. Billy has hlmselt been trsnslsted to another sphere, but his heavy-tlmbered dining room with red checkered table cloths, off the beaten path. Is usually crowded. Out aide of oysters, the spoesl Is In hesvy slobs of beef, double chops and other red-blooded ollspodrlda for robim appetites. It was a favorite haunt of Clare Brtggs and Harrison Fisher. Jack Dempaey used to head for there after hla fights in the east. Charlie Chaplin is a dropper-ln when he comes to town, ond meny womn ce lebrities give dinners there. Amelia Barhart, for Instance. I Nifes I (Continued nun page one) If you want to bet any money, bet It thla way: 1. The revolution It not coming 3. Despite reform In 10.16. or some, where sround there, we will still be fundamentally whst we were In 1029. F YOU want to ward off heart dis ease, so as to live a long time. here are seven rules, laid down by the American Heart association: I. Go to your doctor each year for an examination, and FOLLOW HIS ADVICE. Have him examine your heart after every serious Illness. 3. Look after Infected teeth or tonsils. That la to say, pus relessed Into the blood stream weakens the heart. 3. Keep your weight near the aver age for a person of your sge and height. That ls, DON'T OVEREAT, : i. Follow a well balanced diet. S. Don't take headache medicine without consulting your doctor. Some headache remedies contain drueo hormful to the heart. e. consult your doctor about the use of tobacco and stimulants. 7. Live a well-rounded life, with regular exercise atopped before you get overtired. THAT brings up this more or, less Interesting question: How long do you want to live? This writer, speaking merely ss one Individual among millions, wonts to live only aa long as he csn remain active and USEFUL. Communications A Good Idea; To the Editor: You have said that the Diamond Jubilee will bring 50,000 visitors to Medford. Why not make Medford even more beautiful for the Jubilee than it nor mally Is? This can be done with flowers and more flowers, not only around the homes, but also In the vacant lots that otherwise will be come eyesores before June. The way to accomplish this Is for the com mittee to stir up competition between streets, or even between blocks, as is done with the lighting of homes and business houses at Christmas time. Such things have been done else where upon similar occasions and can be done In Medford, but the start should be made in plowing and seed, lng right now. - MRS. ALBERT BURCH. Medford, March 30. Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the Files of The MsU Trlbuoe of to and 10 Tears Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY March 30, 19U (It was Tuesday) Medford high loses to Florence, Miss., 37 to 36, In lsst hslf minute of play In national tournament at Chicago. Ellsworth Kelly of Josephine coun ty, one of the escapee from the state penitentiary, ls captured. Craters Issue "April Fool" edition of Mall Tribune. East Is swept by April showers. Labor ehortage continues on cosst, snd In California tourlits are "draft ed" from ftlghways. More Democrats- than Republicans now Involved In Teapot Dome scan dal. TWENTY TEARS AGO TODAY March 30, 1014 (It was Wednesday) Wong Yet, a Yreka Chinaman and hog buyer, spent the day In the city and visited with his old friend, Bill Coleman. A number of out-of-town people attended the Page last night to see Henrietta Crossman In "Tongues of Men." The April fool pranks consisted mostly of giving explosive clgara to friends. Supt. Will G. Steel of the Crater national park proposes electric lights for the park, In hla report for 1013. . Commercial club offers S31 In prizes for the best results In the "swat the fly" campaign, and great Interest exists among the boya and girls. 3 FOR SHERIFF POST (luntlnued from psge one) turmoil, appeared aa a character wit ness for Bsnks In his trlsl for mur. der at Eugene and was one of the bondsmen for Earl H. Fehl. when In dicted for vote-atesllng. Both Banka ann Fenl are serving sentences for conviction of their crimes. The Democratic csndidotes for sheriff, up to noon todsy, were: Sid Brown of this city. Ions time real. dent snrl Democrat of the old school; Eugene O. Norregan of this city, war veteran; Theodore Sims of the Jack sonville district and Robert A. Bell. courthouse Janitor. The Republican fllincs. bealde Obenchaln, ore: Sheriff Walter J. Olnwheld. Clstouo McCredle, chief of police of this city, and Amos slker. one of the minor figures In The best story of the dsy Is the 'he Fehl regime, one sbout the representative of the 1 It la reported that two other Re Tass agency (Russian) who wss ssd- publicans sre contemplating filing, died with professor Wirt last sum-i ere next Tuesday, the flnat day. mer and told to give him a good ; Tom L. Taylor, farmer and horse time. The story la to the effect that man. once owner of "King Seal." a the doctor wanted to hear about rev- j trotter that brought racing renown olutlon and nothing short of that, I to southern Oregon 30 vesrs ago ves so the Tsss fellow filled htm full of ' terday filed for countv'commlsaio'ner. tt. It Is now denied, but It Is a good on ,h Republican ticket, story anyway. Nick Brophy. well known farmer The Anthony advocatea sre start-!""1 Plpm"r int. la reported ss lng the story thst only the bulwinkles "mpl'lng "ling tor the pott on is ASHLAND, March 30. (Spl.) J. L. Bornthouse, well known local butcher, waa severely burned and narrowly escaped death Wednesday afternoon when he slipped while standing beside a vat of scalding water at hla slaugh ter house in Vslley View, and fell Into the vat. The speedy action of his son. V. G. Barnthouse, who was standing beside him, and Immediately grabbed him ssved him from a complete scalding. However, much .of his left side above his knee and his left arm were burned. The seriousness of the burn could not be determined Immediately. PENDLETON, Ore.. March 30 M, Foster Towle, reclamation engineer', said today thst bids for nearly ioo. 000 of construction work for the re habllltation of the Stanfield Irrlga tlon project In western Umatilla county, have been called for by the reclamation bureau at Stanfield. Dow Cafe (In the Fluhrer Bldgf.) Sat.,March31 Vegetable Soup 10c 25c Lunch Turkey Ala King, Homemade Noodle Baked Short Ribs Beef Roast Tork. Brown Gravy Buttered Peas, Mashed Potatoes 35c Lunch Toasted Turkey Sandwich, Potato Salad Tuna Fish Sandwich, Vegetable salad Hot Pork Dinner Sandwich Ice Cream, Cake, Jello, Shipped Cream Lunches served from 11 a. m. t 4:ou p. m. ti. to Dinners, 11 a, 50c and R5c. 8:30 p. mt Sixth Annual Easter Monday BALL Auspices American Legion Auxiliary Oriental Gardens MONDAY, APRIL 2 Music by Reg. Pifer's Orchestra can pull the wool over their eyes, the Republican ticket. or do they mean eheepwinkles? A "'ln,!r known. Brophy stock market critic says: "What I like Precinct committeemen filing on about Vie Wall Street bovs to that ,n lmocratle today were: James E they've got rhythm. That's what we Stewart. South Medford precinct, snd ought to have." , Otto Jeldness. Ookdale. John Anderson, dairyman-farmer of Johnston's raster Candy in fn.-y the willow Sprlnjs dutrlct. tiled for boxes. 3Sc to 3. st Woods Drug Co J precinct committees jn on Wie Re-: East Main and Central. ' publican ticket. PEOPLE'S MARKET 105 W. Main Free Delivery Phone 1068 We are here to please our cui tomers. When better meat is sold in Medford, we will sell It. EASTER Specials 45c Young and fat. Each HENS 1934 SPRING LAMB (Very Choice)- PRIME STEER BEEF OREGON TURKEYS RHODE ISLAND RED ROASTERS HENS AND FRYERS YOUNG RABBITS '--V