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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 12, 1934)
PMIK SIX MKDFOKD MAIL T1UBUNK, MKDFOKD. OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune "Cwyom in Sou t hit n Oregon Atid Ui Mail TrlburV' Dallj Bieepi Saturday Puhllihed ttf MfcUKUHD PRINT1NU CO. 16-37-39 N. Hr 8L HUBERT w. kt-HL, Editor Ab Indtpeodtm Nanpaper Entered at aeeood elm natter it Medford, Oregon, under Act of March 8. 1870. BUBHCH11T1QN HATES Bj Mill Id Adtanee lUllj, odi rear ,..6.0U Dally, lis o-ontba 3.75 Daily, on nootb 0 By Carrier to Adianee Medford. Aibland. JitUomllii, Central point, PhoeoU, Talent. Uold Hill and on Ulghvaja. Dallj. orw fear IS OU Dallr. ill montha ... i-3ft Dally, oca anontb 60 . All mm eub In enhance. Official paper of it City ol Medford. Official paper of JackiOD County, MK.MHKII OK THE ASSOCIATED PHK8B Itecelvlns trull Leatsd Wire Service Je AuncUtet, Vrta la eicluflltely entitled u Uie me for publication of all net dlipatche credited to It or other 1m credited In ihla pal and alM to toe local new puhllined Herein. All rlgbU 'or publication of ipeelil dlipatcba aerelD are alto reserved. MEMKEK OF UNITED PKK88 MEMDKk 09 Alllin BdKEAO Oir CIKCUI.ATIONB Adrertlitng Hepreaentathea M. C MOd'ENSRN COM PA NT Office In N York, Chicago, Detroit, Sao FrancUeo Lot Angelea Seallle Portend. Ye Smudge Pot Uf Arthur Perrj. The Liquor Problem Again TPHE liquor problem, like the tax problem, is always with us. As far as one can look into the future now, it always will be, Until the natural laws of fermentation and distillation are repealed intoxicating liquors will be available, legally or illegally, and the inherent demand for a stimulant will insist upon being satisfied. . . The recent meeting of the dry forces in this state, and the condemnation of the present liquor situation, therefore, should cause no surprise, nor resentment. It is perfectly natural. Nothing will satisfy the radical Drys, but absolute prohibition: and as recent developments have shown, absolute prohibition will eventually satisfy no one else, So just as the liquor problem can't be solved, the conflict over it can't be stopped. It promises to go on, like the brook, forever. DUT whilo no solution satisfactory TO ALL is possible, a ma- mrtftr ftf rhn tinmiln nf i hiu stain rt amr ntliAt olimilrl kn ..... jbur.v v u. .-..' v wn.v.. a.ivsu.u ui. able to get together on the common ground of temperance, and work together toward the best available system to promote tem. pcrance. Past experience has demonstrated that temperance can't be produced by statute that morals can't be inculcated by legis. lative fiat, but progress toward a better moral condition (is far as liquor is concerned, can be reached through improved methods of sale, more careful regulation, and above all through example and education, "piIIS paper believes that, all things considered the present Knox liquor plan in this state, is as good as any system available, and should be given a thorough' trial, before it is radically modified, or serious thought given to its repeal. It hns eliminated the corner saloon, it has eliminated compe tition in the sale of intoxicating, liquors, it has outlawed, if it hasn't eliminated, the speakeasy and the bootlegger, and it lias supplied some needed funds for local unemployment relief. Arrests for drunkenness have undoubtedly increased. No other result could have been expected. But the reign of disso lute debauchery and wild-eyed intoxication, that was predicted by the foes of prohibition repeal when the gates were let down, has NOT materialized. All in all, we believe, the people of this state have handled the problem rather well, and wo predict con ditions relating to liquor will, as time goes on, get better, in stead of worse. Tomorrow 1 Friday the 13th. An ominous day, and a law black cats ... nn. n mat,. mitJ-H t-rt lnmm ! munity. that suffered two years of i IF they DON'T then as Ave have often predicted in this column hysterical hellraising. and paranctcal 1 not,illg can prevcnt this. state returning to absolute' prohi- ( bition, again, and the forces chiefly responsible for prohibition John DUlineer, the supcr-bandlt. Uiropea) wiu have only THEMSELVES to blame. reported headed this way again. Any ' ' . . ,. one seeing Mr. Dllllngor, Is requested or these forces can t just let things .SLIDE. They must to detain him and notify the proper WORK HARD in every way, not only to furnish an example of authorities. , , , sobriety, but to insist upon drastic punishment for those in their The Denver. Colo., judge who sen-! own mnks who can't or refuse to. It's a matter of example todoMcastor'oilf'is iwking for ! a"d education. These forces have been given what they asked a cure for drunken driving, when he for, the repeal of prohibition; now it is up to them to show already has it. j t)at (rom tle standpoint of better moral and ccouoinic condi- ThBt car coat .only a0ooo," Kiel tions in this state, they know how to handle it, know how to ;i;n,""i-'"iriPMVt the 'buMa, .which they declared would NOT, and their Sunday suit, and wipe, oft the hoodl opponents declared WOULD, follow such action. I . . If elected I will conduct the bual- j ness of the county as I don't conduct i my own, la a good unused political alogan. j Personal Health Sendee By William lirmjy, M.U. Signed letter pertaining to pertonu! health and hygiene out to dis ease dlugnuhlt or treatment will be aniuered by Ur. Brady it a stamped J f -addressed envelope If eiifiosed. Letter, hould he brlel and written in Ink. Owing to th large number or letters received only a ten can be an saered. No reply can be made to querlea not conforming to instruction Address Ur. William Brady, e. El Camlno, Beverly llllia. Cat. IF IT IS CRI IT IS COMMUNICABLE. As I say, I wish we could Ignore the small proportion of cases (from five to ten ncr cent! of coryza that fim?Sea " NOT infec- t nous ana hui c o m m u nlcable. But they do hap pen and there Is no denying the fact. It Is unfor tunate for two reasons. First, the circumstance that non-lnfec-tlous coryza can happen gives aid and comfort to the dolts and scoundrels who peddle the crl. They can always claim that theirs Is the harmless type of coryza, say from sensitivity to a certain food or from exposure to tho dander or hair of an animal or bird, frequently develops shortly after the victim has felt a draft or changed his underwear or wet his feet or noticed some change oj weather, and such chcumstantlai evidence outweighs all 'scientific Knowledge and wisdom In the mind or a wiseacre. Non-infectious coryza Is character istically abrupt In onset and abrupt in clearing up. it Is annoying or Irri tating and a tiresome nuisance while the attack Is on, but It docs not make me victim in. It does not cause neadache, malaise, feverlshness titner disturbance of health Nor Is It accompanied by sore throat as In rectlous coryza or the crl often Is mere is no Incubation stage. The nose suddenly stuffs up, rerhans the eyes redden too, and soon a piofuse. perhaps Irritating watery runUng at the nose begins With this there Is .iKely to be considerable sneezlnz with many exclamations ot .lamttall. All this lasti ususRlly an hour or so, seldom as long as half a day. In- rectlous coryza. oi) the other hand Is usually many hours comlnn on. and lasts seldom less than a day or two. ine non-infectious coryza usually ceases abrupt! as It began. And as soon as the old probosclsls stops running, everything Is all hunky until the next seizure. Unfortunately, victims subject to such atopic corvza. hyperesthetlc rhinitis, chemical coryza or what have you, too readily forget nu aooui it wncn the annoying mani festation censes so suddenly. Or worse, they ascribe the quick "cure" to whatever "cold cure" they have happened to try. Or worse still they cite the relief they experience as suf ficient proof that one can "ward off" an on-coming "cold" by getting away from the draft or changing to dry clothes or warming the feet or what ever measure they happen to resort to when they think they've "taken cold." Believe It or not, I have a lot of patience and even feel some . faint compassion or sympathy for the com plaints of dumb laymen. But more than once X have solemnly considered whether It would not be Justifiable homicide to dispatch a few of theae maddening wiseacres who Just know THEY take "cold" Immediately If they get their feet wot unless they take care to dry their feet again as soon as they get back home. I yearn to send 'em to a place where they'U never get their feet wet or be ex posed to cold In any way, shape or manner. Now If you will pardon the pre sumption I'd like to tell about the crl. First, the word Is of my own coinage and It has no specific signifi cance. I took the Initial letters of the rather cumbersome phrase "Com mon Respiratory Infections" and Joined them neatly If unphllologl cally to make the new word which Is pronounced kree. It- Isn't the word Itself, which has no specific meaning. but the tdear-behlnd It. Let's see what the Idea Is. Comment on the Day's News ' By FRANK JENKINS. THAT Kansas City robin that we read about so much last year has atarted fighting again with his re flection in the window pane. He has been at it now for over a week, the eager reporters tell us. T-OOU8H? Oh, sure. But a lot of people do things equally foolish. Especially politicians. They're exceedingly fond of setting up bogeys no more tangible than a reflection in a window pane and fighting them year in and year out, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Acidosis and Alkalosis. :You say acidosis is not due to wrong diet but that It Is an effect or manifestation of some disease or Illness. How about alkalosis. I have alkalosis. Mrs. L. C. Answer The same answer applies. Shoe Pye Poison Apaln. Several readers have sent In a clip ping in which a doctor tells of a case of shoe dye poisoning, nitrobenzene or anllln. They think the case proves that something can be absorbed thru the skin. AH the doctor says Is this: "If the shoes are worn too soon after the dye is applied, that Is, before It hafl dried, the feet may become heated and volatilize the dye, which Is then absorbed Into the blood stream." These readers ask me to comment on the explanation." Answer Volatilize means to evapo rate, to cause to pass off In vapor. In that state the substance is likely to be Inhaled. There would be no point In causing It to pass off from the feat or shoes in vapor if it were to be absorbed thru the Bkln, would there, slow wits? , (Copyright, 1034. John P. Dille Co.) AND NATIONS, when you come right down to It, aren't much better, especially the nations oi Europe. The war scares they're all twittered up over most of the time are really Just as silly as this Kansas city robin's fight with his reflection. B1 Ed Note: Readers wishing to enmmunlrate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Ur. Wllllnm Brady. M. l.. 2(15 E. Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Col. Quo Vadis? The Prospect ball team, Dewey Hill, top hired man of the county, man ager and 1st sacker, la anxious for a team to come up and beat them, and eat mushrooms. . 8, Morris, the Q-HIll, T-Rock, and 8-Valley ' tiller, who fears the Bales Tax will pass, and help him, towned Tuea. Wall St. Is still chasing him. Many hope Wall St. will do some thing constructive and chase Mr. Morris Into Siskiyou county, Calif,, where, while getting his wind he can obtain testimony that the Sales Tax la a Godsend, Instead of a grindstone around the necks of the Portland Professional Friends of the Farmer. ... PROdltliSS I'imKS UP (llrppner News) And still improvements con tinue. Now Ed Clark la having the front of his place of business on Main street pslnted a sort of dove gray. It begins to look like the people would elect a deneral as Governor, and trip over a sword every time they visit the state house at Salem. The sun has started to beam warmly, and the Capitalists Class controls Bl per cent of the shade. The time has arrived, I believe, when It la the part of wisdom not to Jeopardize a really aatoundlng achievement by compli cating President Roosevelt's task any more at this time. If the whole position la surveyed, these general conclusions seem to be clear: First, there have been released and greatly stimulated poworful forces whloh are producing recovery. Second, there has been a very considerable elevation of the general standards of business, In part through new laws, In part through the educational effect of the president's leaderahlp, and a vast Increase throughout the nation of the general sense of social responsibility. There has, In short, been substantial recovery and substantial reform. Third, there are distinct slgna that the mass ot the reforms la so large that it la becoming too compli cated to be administered effectively and too Intricate to be understood and supported by public opinion. There would, there fore, appear to be need of a period In which to digest the re forms already achieved, to strengthen them by curing their defects and to consolidate them by the good feeling which Increased prosperity will bring. For theae reasons, the wise course would seem to be to take on no new burdens during this session of congress, and to con contrate attention and effort on making the existing reforms workable and, above all, upon stimulating the forcea of recovery. Walter Llppman, In N. Y, Herald-Tribune. That sounds pretty sensible, doesn't it t And we herewith predict that with President Roosevelt's return to Washington this is the course he will pursue. Ho has gono to the left as far as he believes wise, he will now turn to tho right for a while, so as to regain the middle of tho road. Tho left wine will howl as raucously, as the conservatives The new autoa are mechanically t ,., . ,,. Kt i . ,:. .. . ni. and artistically perfect, but the mak- u,u " """" m. Uv, and tilo ot. tno Amoncan peopio win wave tncir nags nnci cneer. Ayo verily, a MASTER politician 1 NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre tra forgot to install a horn that brays, and harmonizes with some ot the driving. POPULAR COUPLE (RpiI Bliifr, Cat.; News) , A marrlssc declaration was filed here today by James Popoff, 20, of Bherldan, placer county and Alice Popin, 30. of Dixon. Mlns Mclba Lark, waa hostess to a large gathering of the Feathered So ciety on the Alice Hun Icy fence, Wed nesday morning. Lord Wyandotte (Napoleon) Rooster furnished unex pected entertainment with some im promptu strutting, during which he terrified his spouses. He then ascend ed an eminence near a hole in the barn, and pretended to look down on Mt. Pitt. Grandma Thrush said she had never seen such egotism not even In Man. FACTS A HOt T KIIIHEHS. (hlrn (Cal.) Entrrprlkr) There are all sorts of liars, but they have one thing In com mon hnblt. Some people He be cause they haven't the courage to tell the truth. Someone has called a He the refuge of the coward. Some people lie because they lack principle, but have cnctiRh pride left to make them wh to conceal from others the r?t Mt thev have no principle. ,:me people He because they get p big kick In putting It over on t'.e other fellow. Some people 11? becaiue their moral perception la so deadened that they don't knoi" nhere truth ends and faiia- Mm.. Photo 2 ror 10c. Warren Patterson, secretary-treasurer of the Central Point national (arm loan association of Central Point. Oregon, recently received word from the governor of the Farm Crd:t Administration. Wm, I. Myers, telling him of the ready reception which farmers and their creditors are giving to the bonds of the Federal Farm Mortgage corporation, which are now being tendered by the Federal Land bank of Spokane. Washington, In place of cash In settlement of farm ers' rtebU. "Theae bonds have been selling In the large market at a little above par, Indicating a ready market for them. Just a week after the banks began using bonds Instead of cash, the first bonds to be sold on the New York market were purchased at 100 We anticipated these bonda, which bear 3i) per cent interest per an num. would aell at par or above at the tim we aet the interest rate, for government bonds maturing in 1941. bearing the same rate were selling above par." Mr. Myers polntei out that thts. bonds were not only exempt ficm to- the exception of surtaxes, Inheritances and gift taxes, but that they are a readlly salable as government secur ities. He said they are being quoted in the metropolitan papers, but If such quotations are not available readily to farmers that they will be given the quotation la they will write to the Federal Land bank of thMr district. - Blaze Destroys Ornate Mansion LARCHMONT, N ,Y., April 13. (AP) The ornate home of A. C. EUl menthal, wealthy New York theatri cal producer and real estate operator, j waa aesiroyea oy tire eany today at a loss estimated to be somewhere be tween $300,000 and 9500.000. The aa-room mansion, noted for its luxurious appointment including a gold-leafed bathroom Installed at t coat of nearly 130,000, waa one of the show places of Westchester county. NEW YORK. April 12. There are no people so docile aa the hardened New Yorkers. Years of roaming about in the clutch of the herd instinct give them tho amiability, minus the bleat of sheep, i have seen a lone cop with waves of his club keep a pith clear In congested Times Square. Man hattaneae have learned that protesting takes too much out of them so they Wfly meekly at any wand of autnority. A pucklt'i psychographcr, to teat his theory, stood In the old Waldorf corridor an hour one day saying: "On your tip -toes, please." Everybody obeyed. No one asked why. If a tAxl blocks a street crossing, pedestrians walk around it without even an annoyed slance at the driver. The Manhattan humility is well ex pressed at fake auction sales where passersby aro fairly pulled In and made to buy by browbeating tactics that would incite a Do nny brook fair at the crossroads. The rush hours of the subway of for another exhibit of meekness. Hired plug-uglies in flying tackle formation sweep passengers off the platforms and Into trains. Every day, year after year, clothes are torn and bodies bruised and rarely Is there the faint est murmur. chiffons into a crumble of marigold. Washington Irving was stirred by the changing colors of the shrubbery clinging to the bold sheer of cllfis that are the Jersey palisades. At twilight they shimmer into a haze of heliotrope, breathless in friendly cow er. And then. as though the world were taking a deep breath there comes the plunge of night and a heaven asterisked in stars. No man can behold it all without a secret avowal to be a better boy. Billy Rose doesn't have to be known longer by the designation "Fannie Brice's husband." This beaming lit tle man caught the Broadway rebound from repeal with the biggest amuse ment money maker in town in ah ape of an Americanized version of a con tinental music hall. Now he will try to crack the hoodoo so long1 hovering over the Hammersteln theater by con verting It Into a similar endeavor at cheaper prices. The Hammerstein, one of the costliest of the later crop of playhouses, has been mostly dark. Shrewd experimenters had their fling at the life pumps, but It always laps ed Into another sinking spell. New York's Juvenile jargon, ton, differs from that of the outland. A sllng-shot is a beaner. And the game out yonder known as leapfrog Is here "parr." Boya parT over fire hydrant. The game known elsewnere as hup- skotch is potsy and the local cops shield la still called a potsy, after the fUt wad of tin which ktds flatten out to play the game. Tragedy Enters Banquet Scene ft ED ALIA. Mo., April 13. (AP) -A banquet became a scene of tragedy when scalding water burst from a food steam labia at the Missouri Pa cific railway shop, here last night, fatally burning Mlns Mary Kanra. Mr. J. T. Abney and Mra. A. Q, Hau aama and scalding 29 other women, three ct Ideally. Douglas Fairbanks seems pining for familiars from home In his London exile. It was at his Importuning that hla eon. Doug, Jr., left the Holly wood scene to embark on a new ca reer in the British capital. Recently Karl K. Kitchen was called over to spend several weeks as a house guest. And Tom Geraghty. long the Fair banks' Friday, mas summoned a month after the screen star left America, and has been with him since. Thingumbobs: Wilt Rogers Is Percy Hammond's favorite radio entertain er .. . Aldotis Huxley was with D. H. Lawrence when he passed away, his staunchest friend ... In sixteen years. Jack London wrote 40 volumes . . . Amy.Iowell liked to read in bed un der a big black umbrella, smoking a cigar . . Sir Arthur Wing Pinero always wore a gray bowler hat with a black band ... At IS, Channing Pol lock was a dramatic editor In Wash ington . . . Burton Rascoe left the University of Chicago because it was "interfering with his education" . . . And Edmund Rostand gave up law on the day he was admitted to the bar. From a Key West, Fla.. editorial: "Up until 1916 O. O. Mclntyres writ ings, although he had written for years, did not cause the slightest rip ple." Yeah? Wei. they were followed by America's entrance into the Wor'd war, the overthrow or the Spanish government, the Manchurlan upset and the banana riots In Trinidad. MEX ICO, D. F, April Ts. (AP) A party of 87 prominent California newspapermen and their wives ar rived today on a special train. They were met by a welcoming committee of government officials, representa tives of the United States embassy and consulate, and a police band. IG AMERICAN FLEET, we read, heads for Atlantic coast. Why? Two reasons are advanced. One is that Japan objects to the constant presence In Pacific waters of so large a war force Indicating, she is said to think, suspicion of Japanese mo tives toward America. Another, much more reasonable, is that the politically powerful East wants some of the money spent by the fleet. ANOTHER headlTne this one no about wars or fleets or fights: "Woman Becomes Federal Judge.' The woman Is Florence D. Allen, of Cleveland, and her job is the Judge ship of the U. S. circuit court of ap peals. She is the first of her sex ever to ascend the bench of a major federal court. The news editor rightly put the story on the front page T IS admittedly unusual for a - woman to be named judge of a high court. Still, why should It be? From time immemorial, women have been listening to the testimony of their children, In the manifold small troubles that children get Into, and handing down Judgments in ac cordance with their conception of the facts and their opinions as to what ought to be done about It under the circumstances. Isn't that the best possible train ing for Judges? ' ' THE MEN, you know, have a habit of running out on thes fobn and laying them off onto the women. Yet the men have the Idea that they are the only proper JUDGE ma terial, and that the women aren't fitted for the job at all. Men are funny creatures, aren't they? Consistent abort some things, and exceedingly inco.uu-tent about others, fOUR men are Incus tody at Sacra- r mento, along with $1000 In bogus $1, $5 and $10 bills they are alleged to have made. They were nabbed be fore they had time to put out much of their bad money. If all criminals were caught as quickly and punished as promptly as counterfeiters, crime wouldn't be nearly as prevalent as It is. THIS question occurs: If counterfeiters can be caught so promptly, why can't other criminals? Communications The Mushroom Scare To the Editor: . It seems that the past few days that the Tribune and the Oregonlan ,'iave been spending quite a bit of space to the epidemic of the doctors' so-called mushroom poisoning, which has afflicted quite a number of peo ple In this part of the county. I, being in a position where first hand Information is easily obtained, would like to say that It seems funny that about three -fifths of the people who have been sick with practically identical symptoms have not been near a mushroom. Still, according to the reports sent Into the papers, they have mushroom poisoning. Of course, a lot of people from t,hts country do eat mushrooms, and, therefore, if there was a sickness of any kind going around. It would be j bound to hit some of the mushroom eaters. It is my honest opinion that It would be more to the point for the doctors to use some of-their scientific knowledge toward determining the real cause of the trouble Instead of grasping for a possible something on w.hlch they might lay the trouble. C. C. CLARKE. Butte Falls, Ore., April 10. Magician Slated Fpr Performance Eagle Pi. Grange Bernard, 'the man of mystery," will present a two hour program of magic and sleight of hand at the Eagle Point grange hall April 14 at eight o'clock. The program will Include mysteries gathered from many lands, mind reading and an astonishing escape, those in charge of the enter tainment say. There will also be a talented mu sician, Ivan Bailey, who will play tho musical saw between acts. Following the show, cake and coffee will be served those present. The program Is being sponsored by the grange ways and means committee of Eagle Point, and Is open to the public. Flight q Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the Files of The Mail Tribune of io and III fear, TEN YEARS AGO TODAY' April 12, m. (It was Saturday.) "Kind-hearted citizens" give funds snd cheer to a stranded family from Oklahoma, who have been sorely but feted by fate." Medford basketball team on way home from Chicago tournament, see the sights of Los Angeles. Eddie Dem mer Is homesick, says a letter from Jimmy Allen. F. Wilson Walt takes up homestesd ner Butte Palls. "The whiskey press of Jackson county" Is blamed for Speclsl Prohi bition Agent Sam Sandefer getting ijla salary cut by the county court. Labor Is plentiful, and "there la not an Idle hand In the county." J. C. Berrand and wife, who are traveling from Connecticut by ox team, are due here Sunday. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April 12,-1914. (It was Sunday.) Churches of the city crowded for Easter services. Youth who admits passing forged checks, declares, "I was Inspired to commit crime by the movies." Mrs. Charles B. Oay la recovering rapidly from an operation at Sacred Heart hospital. Harry K. Thaw, millionaire slayer, lr ordered freed by the federal court. Showers fall over the valley. Drive starts for good roads In Jack son county. "Confiscation of larms" feared If successful. For asrden prowing Tel. 912-J. '- , f 8 Midget Phovo. 10c Peasley Studio. No More Piles Doctor's Prescription Guaranteed Thousands of Pile sufferers do. not know that the cause of Plies is In ternalbad circulation of blood In the lower bowel. This Is the scientific truth about Plles the real reason why salves and suppositories do not give lasting re lief, why cutting does not remove tha cause. Your itching, bleeding or protruding Piles will only go when you actually remove the cause. External treat ments can't do this an Internal mediclna should be used. HEM-ROID, the prescription of Dr. J. S. Leon hardt, sold by good druggists every where, succeeds because It stimulates the circulation, drives out congested blood, heals and restores the affected parts. So why waste time on external remedies or worry about an opera tion when Jarmln, Woods,- also Mc Nalr Bros, of Ashland Invites every Pile sufferer to try HEM-ROID with guarantee of money-back if not Joy fully satisfied with the help one bot tle gives. Inspiration Point Is Riverside Drive's sweep to its highest peak a short walk from the single span of the Washington bridge. Friendly benches overlook the ripple of the Hudson and they are usually filled at twilight when the vanishing tun Good News for Kidney Sufferers) ta r.iitf that m n.hi Oh... .i ...i. - . . Peasle, studio Opp. HoUj Theatre, cal. aut and tttti taxation. wlUl raXuaa. aa Saaluri Aaivio, "i'ji ...I.H.J ki ii .. in imuHii mi pom, .Uii,m i,ura,nl ,,,.!, rhlr rmr.l .!l,l,l,,TI Wl-w. . ' .. ,1,7. Mcltw, .Nlr.1,. All HnuuiH In rob. ISIW? WHISPERED Great Completion LT Secret ! W mOtr friend the ctm fiwsi.hewTiTtohf. flawlrsfirlfar white skin. Long hro tOx lf.vnr th.it no con mr tic wou't hMit? Motrhm, ntmpln ot Mlkwir?. She I euro the scrf t ol rtal mm ptrtion benuly In NR TsblftsOiaruTT'iRem- cleared the elimtrut.ve tract corrected aluc IPh bowel action drove out the pwnou' wastes. She felt better, too, fun of pen. tmlmf nh vitality. Trv th mild, afe. dependahl.-all-vegetable corrective tonight, See your com nletxMa Improve. roe headaches muineaa vannn. ,tali -only 2:. ... a sac" Uuvi rvh- c a.d iiM-tr-TUM5 1, hearthwn. iitv . 7 me wing on which you cannot lose- a good Electric Refrigerator An Electric Refrigerator is one investment in which you cannot lose. Every day the whole year around it pays dividends in good health, food saving and convenience. It actually costs Less money in the long run to own an Electric Refrigerator than to "get along" without one. Electric Refrigerators are cheaper today than they have ever been or are ever likely to be again. Prices are going up, why not purchase yours on easy terms at today's bar gain prices. See your dealer now. ih m aa " I. IUCTOIC jl ynraicaTD7 5 THE CALIFORNIA OREGON POWER COMPANY a