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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 12, 1934)
P'AGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGOX, TUESDAY, JTJXE 12, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune "EnryoM to Southirti Ortgos Riaai Ihi Mill rribunt'' Oilly Eietpt (Uturdaj Published Oj mimmu hunhm. co. 21-30 N. Vil 8L ItOBKIlT W. HUHL, Editor An Independent Newspaper Entered i trcond clau Bitter at Medwd Oregon, under Act of Mareb 8, 18T9. AUUbTRII'TION BATE8 Bf Mall in Adiacee daily, one year f 5-00 Daily, ill month Pally, one month., 80 R Curltr In Adtance Medford. Alblind, Jickiontllla. Central Point, Pnocnli, Talent. Gold Hill irui an Itldmiri. billy, one ftu ... t6.au Dally, ell nwiithi 3.26 Daily one month. . -j 0 All termi. cu In adrffte. Official paper of the City of Medford. Official paper of Jaetioo County. MEMRKH OF THE ASSOCIATED HUKSB ItKehlne Kull Leased Wire Sen Ice The AiKdated Presa It Kctuiltel entitled to the use for publication of all newt dUpatthet credited to It or oibfr Iw credited In thin paper and also to the Inral neva publlihed herein. All rljht for publication of ipeela) diinatebet herein are alto retmed. MEMBER OF UNITED PltBSfl HEMFtEH OF AUDIT BUREAU OK CIRCULATIONS AdrertUIng Kepreientathu H. CMOUENBEN COMPANY Offlcea In Net York. Chicago, Detroit, Ban Franelneo Lot Angetet Seal! It Portland. Editorial Correspondence CLEVELAND, Ohio, June 9. They are even complaining of draught here. Too bad they couldn't travel about 1000 miles west, and be grateful for their blessings. It hasn't rained here since May 28th only about ten days ago. In Wyoming they hadn't had a real rain since Ndw Tear's day. After travelling across the country, northern Indiana and Ohio look like the Promised land. Such fields of red clover; alfalfa, thick and dark green; rich pastures full of fat stock. There are vineyards, too, leafing out in grand style. And to make the picture complete, the skies are overcast today and rain is predicted. This portion of the country is fortunate indeed. The big news of the day is President Hooscvelt's new inter pretation of the New Deal. Coming directly after the G. O. P. pronouncement from Chicago it is generally taken as an answer to the Republican challenge although it was undoubtedly writ ten several days before the meeting in Chicago. While probably not so intended it unquestionably is an answer to the somewhat lame effort of the 0. 0. P. national committee. Where the latter was general and non-specific, the former is definite and explicit: calling for security of the home, security of livelihood and security of social insurance. As usual the president is several jumps ahead of his opposi tion. Where one citizen will object to such a program, ten will favor it. Being specific, Roosevelt places the Republican party at once on the defensive. Their bid for liberal support, becomes punctured balloon. The G. 0. P. in spite of William Allen White, must be merely an opposition and ultra conservative party during the fall campaigns. In one brief but epoch making announcement President Roosevelt has spiked their guns. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M R Ulcnrd letters pertalnlnc to personal health and hygiene oat to dis ease diagnosis or 'treatment will be answered by Dr. Brad; It .tamped .tif-addreued envelope Is eu'-lwed. Utters should be brlel and wrNten In ink. OBlnt to the large number ol letters received only few can be lo wered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to iiutructitins .ddress Or. William Brady, its El Camlno. Beverly Hills. CaL . A SURGEON APPRAISES AMBULANT METHOD. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur I'erry. The 18-lc. Jubilee deficit la due en tirely to nobody being bright enough to auggest i committee on Pioneer Beer Gardens. ' From all that can be read In the upstate press, the . Portland po"M force la Juet aa foeblo In a crisis as the Portland ball team, In the ninth Inning. The metropolitan copa cant sea any hotter, press dlapatchea Indi cate, than some people could hear at a courthouse hellralalng. 1 All the leading cltiwna have re covered from bouncing around In saddle on the hurricane deck of the noble horse. The laat to mount a charger was Pop Dates, the 4d agt. He cavortod down the Main Stem (Bhtverce Alloy) at the head of the laat parade. The Jolly townsman left the Impression he could fall off more graceful than the prince or warns, but didn't. ' HOI HUM) ITEM. , (Cong. Bccord) And atlll the American people ! are Indlfferont. Becoming bolder j and more brazen, the gangstera, , the hoodluma, the crooks, the racketeers, tho whlto alavera, the ' spawn of the gutter, and Jails and i the brothels, are throwing the ; dirty rag of defiance Into the ' facea of the Amorlcan people, of ; whom you are one: and, Incon ; celvable aa It may aeem, the great : body of the American people, of i whom you are one, who, If they i so wished, could end this trlght ' ful, disgraceful situation, are en- tlrely indifferent about the mat ' ter, , : Prohibition la Just around the cor ner, and more so, than Prosperity ever dared to be. Even now cltluna are running around with their votea cocked, anxious to make It necessary to motor to a northern California burg every Sunday for the week's sup ply of hootch. At the present tone of the week-end capers, the blow will (all in about 36 more week-ends. There Is opposition to the Knox Liquor Control law, principally be cause It works. Private Interests gate with envious eyes upon the revenue that Is now reverting to the state cash registers. Then there la the In ability of bartenders to tell the age of Juvenllea with thirsts. Besides the two aforementioned Items, the In creased unsteadiness of auto driving on the hlghwaya and byways. Is pro ducing Carrie Nations In large num bera. People have an aversion to get ting their 81500 motor bunged up by a 111 "bug" In the hands of lads who failed to drink the brewery dry. Jt all adds up at the polls, and the liberal element better start doing something about It, besldea looking aad, when the trend Is mentioned. Home ownership, unemployment insurance, and old age pen sions are the Roosevelt promises to tho American people. What liberties, asked the president, are curtailed by such a program ? Well the liberty of free and open competition, non-interfer-J ence or control by the government, a return to the old capitalis tic and individualistic dogma of each for himself "and the devil take the hindmost." - , That is ths only issue upon which the Republicans can tnke a stand, and on that issue the stand will be taken. : And such opposition is perfectly legitimate. With every citizen insured against unemployment, with his material security in old age guaranteed, one of tho greatest incentives to individ ual endeavor will be removed. How many men have worked day and night, developed every resource, strained every nerve, to create sufficient savings, to make idleness' or incapacity to work, in later years, NOT an individual and family tragedy.' With that danger removed, how many individuals will let down early in life, cease to worry and strain, and say to them selves, "well, no matter what happens, if I can't get a job I will get government insurance, when I am too old to work, I can live on a government pension." That is the other side of the New Deal picture and it is an unavoidable side. i There will be plenty of people who will oppose such a pro gram who will say that it only creates an indolent, dependent class, and eliminates the ambition and robust determination, of the rank and file, which has mado this country great. Thus the New Deal will inevitably be opposed by those who still beliove in tho Old Deal by those who believe that a major operation is not needed but all Uncle Sam requires to return to his old time vigor, is to bo left alone, allowed a rest cure, and pick up things where he loft them a decado ago. Those who believed Roosevelt only adopted the New Deal from the standpoint of political expediency, something to act as a rallying point for votes, and that with the natural return of bettor times, he would drop the radical, program like a hot cake, must admit that they were mistnkvn. In this pronouncement, Roosevelt not only retains tho New Deal, but elaborates it, and takes a definito and epoch making turn to the left. No doubt remains as to just where he stands. The die is cast. That old wheeze we aro on our way but don't know whero we are going, no longer stands. The president shows clearly where he wants this country to go. And as a sporting proposition we should say it's about a ten to one shot, that the American people as a whole, will follow him.' -. ' R. W. R. Gardeners roport conditions have Improved ao much that It la possible for them to got a mesa of beana out of their own gardens, before they are devastated by auto tramps. t ' The BUI Heath boy spent a few houra downtown yesterday, and be came sodden with Ice-cresm cones. A farmer was kicked by a horse yesterday. This Is more old-fashioned thsn the sprained wrist from crank ing a vehicle or being gored by a bull (political or Hereford). ; YE PAINFUL TRUTH. ; Behold the politician. So long as he Is what he la and what he must be under the democracy aa It la and average man keen to please an average electorate, government will be hat It la. 1 We find too often titer the ballots are counted we have picked a dub. Tet aa an escape from the menacing plutocracy, down the right-hand fork or the road, we Americana are seri ously considering handing over either for draatlo regulation, stringent con trol, or actual ownership the vast complicated, delicately Intricate ma chinery of finance and commerce to whomt Well to our American poll- tlctana, who In their better momenta are statesmen, but In times of crista too often tiyn demagogues. (Prom William A. Wbite eddreae). NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.Mclntyre NEW YORK, June U.-tanhattan Is losing Its sharp consciousness of celebrity. Even the auvograph dwindle. No particular reacn. Juat one of those things. Ru dy Vallee Is no longer followed Neither Is Mary Plckford. Lionel Barry more re. cently walked Broadway with only a few head turns. Jerltaa and Lily Pons shop on the avenue without a awlrl of gawkera. The persistent crowd that await' HI ed the arrival of the aoth Century .or movie start turn to aomething else. Mayor La Quardta goet to the opera or play with no buu-furi. And thy actually Ignored Lupe Velea at re cent first night. Only two celebrities remain with distinct power to start the pack In full ery again. These are Lindbergh and CUrbo who have whetted curola tty to the drooling point by constant refusal to be seen. Near York loves to be snubbed. Some think national Idle ness la abating and lessens the cele brity furor. j Others say It Is no longer possible to pick up small change selling auto graphs. The exchange on West 46 th street hss closed and there is no mar ket whatever. Jimmy Walker's clg na ture that once brought 13 is now pro curable for a dime. Babe Ruth's 1 brings only a nlckle. aim Silverman's son. Aid, Is the most seU-eHsocg figure m toe ftrosd- way world. Since his famous dad's pa&lng he has, with Abel Oreen and Jack Pulaski, capably piloted Variety, dividing time between New York and Hollywood. He Is the husband of trie attractive Marie Saxon, former dancer, and when not at his office Is horn-. To him, Broadway is a news center, not a playground. The other day X referred to the check-up of 406 cases In which a physician-surgeon who teaches In a uni versity clinic found recurrence :n less than 4 per cent, of the cuei where he had giv en the ambulant s r e a tm e n t for :ernla. A week after 1 had received this report X heard Irom a disting uished surgem and teacher of surgery In one of ine i.nc&c medical schools. This sur geon has been observing the ambu lant treatment for several years. Ho aaopted the method In his own prac tice and used it with satisfaction In suitable cases. I quoted briefly from his present view: "I feel that the method Is ap plicable In selected cases, namely, those with a narrow mouthed sac. In an occasional case the results are brilliant In that the sac is apparently sealed off with only two or three Injections. ... As a result of my observation of Injected cases and surgically operated cases, I am perfectly sure that If one of my family or I had a hernia, I would have It operated upon rather than Injected, so that. I cannot conscientiously advise the Injection treatmet on the basis of my experience . . Neither operation nor injection can pos- -slbly fix hernia In people whose hernia regions are poorly de signed, so that recurrence will take place In a relatively high percentage of coses when these regions are subjected to strains that are too heavy for them . . . ' This Is the most studied and de ptndable criticism of the Injection treatment of hernia that I have heard from the surgeons or by a surgeon. Understand that this surgeon flrnt Investigated the method carefully, ob served it as a student sitting at the feet of a master, then tried It out In his own practice. His conclusion is that the injection treatment Is ap plicable in selected cases. Perhaps the pendulum will even tually come to rest not far from the position this surgeon (I'll gladly give any physic! an -surgeon his name but not a layman) has reached. While I am somewhat disappointed In this final conclusion from a col league whose Judgment commands my respect, still I am gratified to know that he recognizes that the Injection method la the method of choice In certain cases of hernia. . My surgical mentor refers to an other pet method of mine: "The great question of diather my removal of tonsils will soon be settled because, largely through your writing, everybody is pre pared to remove tonsils with dia thermy. Several of my Intimate friends, who, I think, are soundly trained men and who expressed to me well thought out objections to the diahermy removal of ton sils, have succumbed and now give patients their choice This is amazing because a patient con sulting a specialist would reason ably expect to be advised and not allowed to choose. In the end the public will decide . . ." But the well though out objections expressed by the specialists who pres ently succumbed were theoretical ob jections and hearsay views. Here In my playroom I have the data to show the source or origin of these theoreti cal objections which the brass special ists raised against the modern method when enlightened patients began to ask questions about It. I said brass specialists. From the context of my surgeon friend's remarks It Is clear he Is referring to that type of spe cialist. A brass specialist Is one the patient consults; a real specialist Is one the patient's, physician consults. The brass ones will have no answer to this; the real specialists need none. If I had a hernia I'd prefer a cou.'se of Injections by a physician-surgeon of good repute, and I'd submit to tha radical operation only after a thoro trial of the ambulant method had failed. ... QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Keep Your Hair On and Dandruff Out I am on the sunny side of 30, yet my hair is coming out fast. Does early baldness run In families? My father went bald quite early and . , . hope you can suggest something to keep my hair in. (W. C.) Answer I refrain from suggesting an old shoe box. Some are born bald, some Inherit it and some have bald ness thrust upon them, you know, cares and responsibilities and lids and all that. Send a stamped envelope bearing your address, for monograph on Care of the. Hair and Treatment of Dandruff. Flowers In Sickroom Is It harmful to keep green plants In a sleeping room? (H. P.) Answer No. Growing plants tend to Improve the air In a room. Nor is It harmful to have cut flowers In the sickroom or bedroom If you like flowers. (Copyright 1934. John F. Dllle Co.) Comment on the Day's News : Ed Note: Readers wishing to should send letters direct to Dr. communlrate with Dr. Brady William Brady, M. l 2 (SO E. Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Cal, Mayors, he adjusts family differences and intercedes for those- who uu afoul the law. Robinson Is a typUai levee-strutting type with a derby cocked on one side and clothes that would shame a zebra. But his cocki ness is In good fun. He Is a very hum ble citizen whose tap dancing, al though past, 50. brings him 11,100 a week. He has played more benefits than Eddie cantor. And with less ballyhoo. . The bicycle revival continues Its fast pace. Central Park has a steady stream of peddlers as have the high ways further out. The igirls wear sleeveless Jerseys, shorts that merely cover their hips and berets with a bright flounce of tassel, gloves match ing the tassel. Many are the richly up holstered maids, we used to see in stunty roadsters and Paquin sport togs hitting it up for Long Island apase. And in their new biking roe appear to be having even more fun. The only other customer In a 46th street barber shop today was getting the works a 2 mud massage and violet ray spray. A manicurist was glossing his nails while the shine boy's flannel was hitting up a flour Ishlng ack stack -ackety tack. I peeped Into his hatband going out. It bore the name of a merchant at Amarlllo. Tev. Twenty years ago It might have worn a GaUipolla, O., label. Country boys, coming to town, always bust loose first in the barber-shop. (Copyright, 1934, McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) Smart florists report a perk, presag-' Ing at least a mental upswing. Tlvl well dressed man Is dropping in for a i morning lapel flower again, a gestu:e mat almost vsnlshed when the brok. ers went broke. This morning X saw Frank crownlngshleld adorned with a blue corn flower; Owen Davis, Jr.. a, white carnation; and Aubrey Bade, a red rosebud. Also, fewer men are hat less along streets this summer. And up In the Jungles of Harlem the dusky dudes, who featured purple and j-ellow ground length overcoats. are now going In for sideburns clear down to here. Giving many of the high yellows a Spanish grandee effe:'.. Duke Ellington was first to sport them. And Cab Calloway gave them extra panache. The most attractively uccoratd home In Harlem Is that of the ln;r Ethel Waters, who rode to fame on a wavering blue note, along 7th avenue She turned a high-priced Interior decorator loose carte blanche. The first floor Is, quite appropriately, a study In brown from heavy chocolate to light septa relieved only by a gen eral carpeting of honey shade. She has, next to Bill Robinson, become wealthiest of the colored performers her fortune topping that of Florence Mills, which waa slightly over 1100. 000 at Its peak. O, yes, one of the Black Belt's newest night spots Is called the Ubangl Club, where Afrlcsn bush torn to ma beat i barbaric bolero until dawn. Harlem's richest and. by long odd the most celebrated citizen. Bill Rob tnson, has been by poulsr vote elected "Mayor of Harlem.' ing to word from the Montana club of which John K. James Is president and Mrs. R, A. Botts secretary, All Montanans are Invited to at tend the picnic and bring their own lunch. Coffee will be furnished by the club. A program will be enjoyed and the day's festivities are sched uled to start about 11 o'clock In the morning. By FRANK JENKINS. IN THIS column recently, you read of a lump of raw, virgin gold, picked up In the hills of Southern Oregon, weighing 34 ounces and seven pennyweights, and worth 11015. ft ERE Is a confession: . 1 1 This writer, gazing upon that lump of raw, virgin gold, felt a stir ring of the pulses, a quickening of the bloodstream, an itching of the fingers a desire, that Is, to head out into the hills and hunt on his own account for raw, virgin gold. 4 T WASN'T the amount of money 1 represented by the value of that lump of gold. This writer Is a newspaper pub lisher; has been such since the be ginning of his business life, and knows nothing else. As a newspaper publisher, he has been able to make a living, such as It Is. As a prospector he would be a cold and dismal failure knows that fully. and has no delusions on the subject. SO IT wasn't the desire for sudden riches that caused that stirring of the pulses, that quickening of the bloodstream. It was the sight of that lump of raw gold that did It. There Is something elemental about a chunk of virgin gold; some strange, romantic thrill that quickens tho imagination. Deny It all you will. It is there. NATE OTTERBEIN, who has lived a reasonably long and full life and has seen much, agrees with this writer that this Is so. Nate was in Seattle at the time of the great Klondike rush, and saw many of the miners, the lucky ones, come out of Alaska, loaded down with sudden wealth. These men, he says, spent their money feverishly, with little apparent attempt to get the worth of It as It was spent. Their chief purpose, Nate says, ap peared to be to get rid of their money, to throw It away in riotous living, to unburden themselves of It, so that they might get back Into the hills and the gulches of the Klondike and take up again the search for the raw, vir gin gold. Not all of them, of course, but a sufficient number of them to be im pressive. c ' THIS writer wasnot alone in the viewing of that lump of gold that Bob Burns picked up in Southern Oregon the other day. A dozen others stood around and looked it over, and heated It, and marveled at Its size and color. Listen: In the eyes of nearly all of them was a strange glitter, induced by that chunk of virgin gold lying there in their hands. You could see It plainly, If you looked. T AW GOLD, "when" found, has mighty thrill. And raw gold, when MISSED, leaves a seared wound that never quite heals. This writer, wandering through Alaska a few years ago, was stranded for a few hours on a dock at Juneau, waitinn for the boat to leave. On the same dock was an old, white haired man. He had a story in his sys tem, and he told it freely probably was used to telling It. He had camped, about 1896, on the very spot where the first strike was made In the Kloudyke In 1808 was moose huntlntr and had built his fire on the gravel of the creek bed where the first gold had been dis covered. There was gold, undoubtedly, in the ashes of the fire where he had cooked his moose meat. But HE hadn't found it had wan dered on, instead, and so had missed one of the great romantic opportuni ties of all time. HIS VOICE dripped gloom, and tears of disappointment stood in his eyes, after all these years, as he told the story. It wasn't altogether the riches he had missed that left that searing wound that pained still after more than 30 ycars It was the thrill, the MISSED thrill, that Is of the raw gold that he might have been the first to find, but wasn't. There's no getting around It; gold is strange stuff. To date 53 applications for loans have been approved by the Produc tion Credit corporation for the Med ford district, according to Secretary Luther J. Deuel. The average amount, Secretary Deuel states, "is well over the $1000 mark." The Medford dis trict comprises the counties of Jack son, Josephine, Coose, Curry and Douglas. Loans In Jackson county are chief ly for fruit production, and some stock fattening, in Josephine for ag riculture, in Coos and Curry for dairy and farming purposes, and In Doug las county for turkey raising and farming. Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the Files ot The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Years Aro.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY June 13, 1824. - (It was Thursday) Republican national convention nominated Coolldge for president on the first ballot. Auto races to be held at the fau grounds next week Pussyfoot Johnson, famous dry leader, vlBlts Ashland, and describes "the rout of alcohol." Foots creek resident charged with attacking his cousin with a crowbar. Mrs. Rose Schiefflln of this city. Democratic national committee woman resigns from post. TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY June 12, 1914. (It was Friday) Three city cows die after eating sprayed prunings. County authorities chase down country rumor, "the courthouse ring has stole the road fund." Prosecu tions threatened. The "Sleepy Seventh" leaves for Fort Stevens for a ten days encamp ment, "with the first full attendance of the year." Merchants of Ashland have reached an agreement whereby their store will be closed at 9:00 o'clock on Sat urday evening In order to shorten the working hours of their employes. Mass meeting of Siskiyou Heights residents called to protest against raise In water rates. . Silver NEW YORK. June 12. (pj ver quiet, unchanged at 45. To Montana Mrs. Eugene Thorn dike of this city, left on the train today en route to Willow Springs, Montana. EVERY day Kellogg's Com , Flakes are the big value in cereals. Now specially featured for a limited time only. The most popular ready. to-eat cereal in the world. SEASON'S BIGGEST VALUE Meteorological Report June 12, 1934 Forecasts Medford and vicinity: Fair but with occasional cloudiness tonight and Wednesday. Cooler Wednesday. Oregon: Fair tonight and Wednes day with occasional cloudiness and scattered afternoon thundershowers in mountains. Cooler In interior. Local Data Temperature a year ago todey: Highest 94; lowest 56. Total monthly precipitation 0.39 in. Excess for the month .06 Inches. Total precipitation since September 1, 1933, 16.56 inches. Deficiency for the season, 6.52 Inches. Relative humidity at 6 p. m., terday 36; 6 a. m. today 65. Tomorrow: Sunrise 4:35 a. m., sun set 7:47 p. m. Observations Taken at 5 A. M., 120 Meridian Time fTTf 5f (Continued irom Page One) Italy and France tmmedltaely de cline to serve on such a committee and the meeting adjourns. No runs, no hits, no errors. The roaring noise in the labor de partment lately Is not due to the steel strike situation, but to sea shells. For a long time the news has been suppressed, but It Is now out, that Labor Secretary Perkins' hobby is the collection ot shells. She has many rare ones from far beaches. Once In a while, when she has time, she takes them out and looks them over. If questioned closely by friends, she .will confess that she believes Mr. Roosevelt's hobby of collecting stamps la a rather dull business. SCHEDULED SUNDAY Montanans of aouthtrn Oregon will hold thflr annual picnic in Llthla Ukt ail locillt) Fark at Aihland next Sunday, accord. Cloudy Clear Clear Cloud7 P. Clj. Clear Clear Clea.' Clear Clear Clear Clear Clear Clear Clear Cloudy P. Cdy. . P. Cdy. Cloudy Cloudy Bicycle stolen A report that a bi cycle belonging to Bob Uttrell, 703 Sherman, waa stolen last night, was filed at the city police ststton this morning. It showed that the bicycle Is a Zenith make, equipped with bal loon tires. Boston .................. 78 Cheyenne ............ 80 Chicago ............... 84 Eureka .................. 60 Helena 88 Loa Angeles 73 MEDFORD 88 New Orleans ... 86 New York 83 Omaha .................. 84 Phoenix ........108 Portland ...... 88 Reno 68 Roseburg ............. 03 Salt Lake 88 San Francisco .... 64 Seattle 80 Spokane M 04 Walla Walla 100 Washington, D.C. 88 93 50 98 93 96 98 ' 90 74 66 56 70 54 94 98 60 96' 94 63 68 68 66 Miles On 1 Gallon? Scientific Laboratory, 067, TV heat on. lit., report an amazing new vnVr automatic gas saver. 500 profit. Fits all auto. Anyone ran attach. One ent free to Introduce quirk. Send address ana car name today. Don. yon have to tug and pull to gel the Ice-trays Out?" "A VI eenrie not. z " ' :rrr. ' 'wmmmmmm.wwmmmmmmm an isa i ii is arra wia. rn-mt vw.i The Fritid.lrt llluitrattd directly above ii Model Staodaid 4J4 Instantly at a finger-touch the ice trays slide from the freezer of the Frigidaire '34. And that's only one of the splendid features of this fine. Super Scries Frigidaire. It has everything automatic reset defrosting; a cold storage compartment for frozen foods; the new Frigidaire Servashclf even an interior electric light. You will find the Frigidaire '34 makes more ice 120 big, husky ice cubes at one freezing in the model illustrated. K' has Lifetime Porcelain inside and out . . . double Hydrator capacity ... a Sliding Utility Basket for eggs and small articles . . . extra space for tall bottles. And it uses sur prisingly little current. But you really should see the Frigidaire '34. Drop in at one of the show rooms listed below and learn how easy it b to own the finest Frigidaire ever built it is the only refrig erator that is a product of General Motors. Leonard Electric Morris B. Leonard Holly Theatre Building. Phone 427