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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 22, 1934)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON Medford Mail Tribune "Ewyont In Southirn Ortgra fttibt Uii Mill Of bust' Dally Bieept SiUirdif fclKIKO)N PBINTINU CO. ItUHKitl tt. UUUL, KdltM Ad lodepeodeitt Nnwipiper Botered u iKood clw mitut tt Medford Oregon, under Acl ol Uarcb 8, 18T9. ilUrSSCKIITlUN KATK8 ft Mill in Arhacct Dally, one rear ti.W) Villi, ill cmntta 3 & Dallf. on awnui 80 Rv Carrier In AdTanc Medford, Aialand, JiekioorllJa, Central Point, Pboenlx, TaJeot, Gold Ulll and od Binhwiyi. Dally, dim rear 6fU Dallf. li months 3 26 Dally od muulb 0O All lermi. easb In adrabc. Official pupw ol tin City of Medford. Onielal paper of Jackioo County. MKMBKK UK TUB ASSOCIATED C It CSS Heceirlna full Leaded Wirt Benlea Tbi Atclaled free la aicliuliely mtlUetl to the use for pnhllratloo ol all newi awpswnw credited to It or othemlM credited lo ttol paper aod also to tbe local oc published herein. All right for ptihllcallotJ of ipeclal dlipatctiM DerelD are tiw renea. HKMHKH Or UNI'lKD PKESS SIEMHEH OP AUUIT BUKBAU UK1 CIHCUUTIDNB Adiertlalrig KepreieMatliei M. C. MlHiKNHEN COMPANt Office Id tin York, Chieaao, Detroit, 8u Frtnclftco Uii Angele Seal. It Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. These be the summer days, when prize optimists appear to allege how much they "enjoy the heat," while sweating beautifully. Such claims are the depths of optimism. Neither has It been hot enough to melt the righteousness of proper ladles, who say: "It's 4 degrees hotter than H. The torrldlty never amounts to much, until the type blurt mild profanity freely and feelingly, without hiding behind the alphabet. The proposal to pay everybody over 60 years of age $200 per month, with orders to spend it, within a month Is a silver lining to the clouds of ad vnnced years. It Is a cruel and fan tastic scheme, that creates false hopes for old folks, and some demagogue may slip into high office, by preach ing it. The adoption of the idea would sure liven up the first Satur dny nights, after pay-day. "Everyone Is Invited to get-together Jn the church Friday evening. Be freshments will be served, games played and, the mixed quartet will sin." (Pipestone (Minn.) Herald) Gosh all Friday! Item. ' Miss Shirley Stansberry, 4, called this a. m., and despite her youth, hates a compliment with the vigor of 44 feminine years. Five years ago yesterday the first signs of the depression appeared on the economic horizon. It has been disgustingly monotonous and people, with few exceptions, are infinitely weary of It. Thurston Daniels, the outdoor en thusiast, has four (4) cabins In the hilts to be) robbed every fall. ft. W. Hogg, Route a, Sal cm, Demo crstlc candidate for the state senate from the Joint Benton-Polk district, acquired a love for farming whacking the lead pair of steers In breaking sod on a Nebraska homestead and has never lost that fondness for life as a farmer. (Oregon Voter) However, politics seems to be alienating his af fections. Messrs. Huey Long and Ad Hitler, outstanding paranoiac of Louisiana and Oermany, and both flirting with sudden denth, or the penitentiary, in matters concerning votes, have ripped a page from Jackson county tactics and strategy. They also deem it well to know who counts the votes, no matter who costs them. Many of the 1034 model autos claim "a babe can drive one." and forsooth It often seems they were. It la n month ere the deer hunt I na season opens. Mirny plan to be caught for a salmon, ere they get shot for a deer. The desire to kill some thing is still rampant in some bosoms, though not as fervid, na in the days of Coolldge and Harding, when every body was hip-deep In Prosperity, and It whs possible to drop everything, and quit John, to commune with na ture and rare for a telephone to ad vise the coroner of a tragedy. There have been deer season openings when hlllhillles crawled under the barn, and remained there, until the invading phalanx or anuteur hunters had passed over (he rltte, The hillbilly tins great respect for the ability of a city greenhorn to hit everything but what they think they are shooting. TKSTIMOM AtnerluiM Medical Journal) I used to ent wheat lea for breakfast every morning. I'd split open the top of the packnge with a bread knife, sprinkle a qunntlly of the cereal In an ordinary oatmeal dish, pour In Just enough cream, and rout the mixture with some plain white sugar. It wrtsn't so bud when, grasping the edge of the bed to pull myself out morn ings, I'd Wnr the bed to bits under me. I didn't mind particularly when the steering wheel of my car crum pled iinder my hands and we turned ever three times Into the ditch. I thought it was a Rood J'ke when I banged the door of my home and the house fell to the ground. But when I tried to kiss the only girl I ever loved and broke her neck, I cnt hack to grape uutv, But It Isn 7 Hot! IT will come as a startling surprise, to the people of this city to ind that yesterday Medford was the hottest place in the United States. If there was any complaint about the heat we failed to hear it. Business went on as usual. There was no gasping or cursing. No hurry calls for ice packs or did a rushing business, but so did the golf club. When the mercury hit the maximum of 100, none other than H. Chandler Kgan, celebrated his 50th birthday, by setting a new record for the revamped course of 69, two under pat 1 Nothing approaching a heat prostration was reported, even the weak and seriously ill, in our hospitals, found the weather no added strain, Nevertheless there it stands. On Tuesday, August 21st, 1934, the hottest place in the United States was Medford, Oregon, Which only goes to show government weather statistics fail to tell the weather story. rRY heat in a clear atmosphere is ONE thing. Damp heat in a humid atmosphere is quite ANOTHER. Hot days and cool nights tell one story, hot days and hotter nights, a very different story. It does get hot in Medford, according to the mercury in the glass tube. The thermometer registered 100 yesterday, it may go higher today. But it NEVER gets hot, as the Middlewest and East, know heat. It puts sugar in the pears, and makes the tomatoes look like bloated cherries; but it doesn't put hundreds in the hospi tals or scores in the morgue. We therefore suggest government weather reports include not only the heat but the humidity; not only the maximum for the day, but the average for the 24 hours. Such a report would tell the and the least important part of War on Christianity "Mercy and pity be damned" shout the German Nazis. Warfare on Christianity is to be renewed. , Naturally. It is the inevitable course of any European dicta torship. For the basic principle of Christianity is the brother hood of man. No dictatorship can waste time whether it be the dictatorship dictatorship of the Russian proletariat. Dictatorship must be hard, it must destroy. It must by necessity be the tyranny of a few over the many." Any obstacles in its path, regardless of their nature, must be swept away. obstacle. So down it must go. Paganism is not now in Germany. Nictzche was its great apostle. In militant fashion he promulgated his anti-Christ. .... NEVERTHELESS the warfare on religion in Germany pro mises to bo less successful than in Russia. For communism proved to be a practical substitute for religion in Russia. It be camo a new religion. Nazism has no such spiritual fervor at its base. It is essentially political, a will-to-power, a frenzy of supernationalism. We will be greatly surprised therefore if Hitler takes up the Nazis' latest war cry. Sooner or later we predict, he will strad dle this issue, as ho has so many others, and seek to effect a compromise. Hitler is essentially an opportunist. He is a war lord one minute, Hn apostle of peace the Nordic circles; he is tolerant toward all races and all religions, when he speaks to tho world. Ho has enough trouble without taking on the Christian church at this time. This war on Christianity promises to be merely an incident in tho German tragedy, not a theme signifi cant or sustained. Cleansing the Rogue TriES on the Rogue river in southern Oregon have made better progress toward solving river pollution than have their sisters along other important Oregon streams. Grants Pass is rejoicing over the recent PWA grant for its sewage disposal plant and Medford is likewiso jubilant over its assured $100,000 system. The Grants Pass Courier observes that on the installa tion of the two systems, the last remaining important sources of contamination will bo removed from the Rogue, from its source to its mouth. This is a worthy accomplishment, one that speaks well for the civic enterprise of the Rogue river cities. It is proof that their regard for their beautiful river is not confined to lip service only, but is genuine enough to call forth their efforts on its behfilf. And they can do it no greater service than free it from pollution. A clean river will safeguard the lives of human boings and fish alike and will argue strongly for an increase in the tourist trade for which the a magnet. River purification is a highly Toward its attainment the cities way. Portland Uregonian. MI-SALOON LEAGUE LEADER WILL SPEAK Al FIRST METHODISE Colonel Prank B. Robert, who Wayne B. Wheeler's successor as na tlonnl counsel of the An tl -Saloon League, Is making short tour of Oregon mid fpokd at the Centenary Wilbur Method l At church In Portland Sunday and at Salem In the rtmt M. E. church Sunday evening, on the new prospects of temiwrance reform Colonel Ebhert 1a now comuellor of the MeMiodtAt Board of Temper ance, Prohibition and Public Moral and ha been for two years the mo clnte or clarence True WUaon in the public work of this board. Colonel ambulances. The soft drink boys whole truth, not merely a part the weather story. over the brotherhood of man, of the German Fascists, or the pitiless, ruthless. It must crush, The Christian church is such an next. Ho is a Jew hater, in river has been for years so strong desirable objective in Oregon. of the Rogue are pointing the Ebbert ia a veteran of tha 8panUh Amerlcan and the world wari. He graduated at De Pau university and at the Chicago Law school. H haa been stat superintendent of tht league In Kanai and in Illi nois; has tried many caes in thoae atatea and before the supreme court of tbe United States. No man living has been associated with the great orators. Bryan, Billy Sunday, "Pussyfoot"' Johnson, Wayne B. Wheeler, Blihop Hughe and Bishop Cannon and Alvin C. York, the world war hero, aa frequently as he: he has traveled mont ha wit h each of these and other notables, and the common remark la he Is as good as any of them. He speaks In the Plrat Methodist church tonight at B o'clock and it Is a great chance for local cttirens to hear him and see how the drys plan to come back. - Oklahomas sale tax of t per cent netted the stats 14,300,000 in Its first j ear ot operation. , . Personal Health Service Hy William Signed letten pertaining to pertunal health and hygiene not to dia eae dlagnu.lt or treatment will be antwered bj Dr. Bradj U a lumped eir-addreued envelope la encluwd. Letter, ibould be brtel and written in Ink. Owing to the large number ol letter, received only a few can be an ttvered. No replj can be made to querlea not conforming to inuructlona. Addreai Or. William Brady. 263 El (.'amino, Beverly ulUa, Cal. AT THREE THE CHILD SHOULD BE QUITE DRY. In Germany, according to " Peer, bed-wetting occurs chiefly in psycho pathic children; that Ls, .it is a func tional neurosis. Nelken, another CJerman physic ian, regarda In voluntary evacu ation of the blad der during sleep as due to 'ner vous irritability." Both meaning much the same thing. Prolonged indaffere nee; wrong mental at titude of parente or others; coddling; poor discipline; abnormal excitement of the child es pecially late In the day or in the evening; permitting the child to have such stimulants aa coffee, tea, cocoa or even beer and wine; parents re garding the habit aa natural In the family because some forbear had it; nagging the child about It, especially In the presence of others; these are some of the factors which go to make the child "neurotic" or "psycho pathic." Dr. Ralph Hamill, in this country, found that the child with .the right encouragement could refrain from wetting the bed after a reasonable earnest endeavor. Just aa you or 1 can awake at an unusually early hour in the morning if we earnestly wish to do so to keep an appointment. Many physicians regard bed-wetting as a fatigue neurosis. Or In popu lar parlance It is a nerve weakness, and to a system of training of the automatic nerve-muscle mechanism that controls the bladder ls helpful. The child is required to follow a clock schedule for emptying the bladder throughout the day, say every hour In the first week, and after that every two hours, and the success of this plan depends on the faithfulness with which the schedule is adhered to in all circumstances. After a regular habit ls established, then the child should be required to control the de sire for five or ten minutes, now and then. The administration of mild nerve sedatives, such as the bromides, hss been tried in some cases, but with little benefit. More effective In strengthening the automatic neuro muscular mechanism Is the prolonged administration of calcium chloride or calcium lactate. Mix a rounded teaspoon fui of powdered acacia (gum , arable) with one ounce of calcium 1 chloride or calcium lactate and dis solve this In a pint of water. The dose for a child three to eight years of age Is a teaspoon ful, with any sweetened fruit Juice or fruit Juice NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Aug. 22. So far the press has hailed Tammany's new Sach em, James J. Doollng, a young knight of sombre atten uations. So much so, the general belief is that the tiger's new roar la Just a sllken volced purr. Doo llng at 41, blue eyed, somewhat dapper, Is a con trast to the usual 14th street blua- I ter. Few o u-ts 1 d e Tammany polltl- WWl cai circle ever heard of him. A bachelor with no flair of the usual Irish ry for the ladies, he has lived quiet ly with his younger sisters and at tended to his law practice. He likes a flower In hi lapel, the movies and reads a novel almost every night. With no affection of pugnacity, he la expected to build order out of his organization's disintegration and has gone about the herculean task quiet ly. Objectors see In him a personifi cation of the tiger's claws being clip ped. But Insiders predict an amazing leader. He's a sort of Jim Cagney in real life. One thing is certain he has none of the detachment, the remote bleak ness, of his predecessor John P. Curry. Doollng hss warmth . of cordiality without being effusive. They say he knows how to make friends. A very needed gift. A chastened Tammany needs them. Incidentally, the ward heeler, that detestable legacy of another day. is al most In total eclipse. The ward heeler was a booming voiced clar passer who farmed out his Hie to the busi ness of graft. A pagan suckled In a creed outworn, New York had several thousands. He was a superb figure lor Opper and. the other cartoonists. Jay Price sends me a clipping of a Missouri editor's sum up of New York. He says Oscar Wildes definition of a cynic perfectly describes It "knows the price of everything and the value of nothing." The fact is none Is so observing or values as the established New Yorker. He la the only person to acruttn.re his dinner check and ride herd on the tip to the precise 10 percent. Every theatrical ticket agent will tell you that paying 110 to see a $2 show is because people here on a fling will pay the exorbitant ts-llf, The silly New Yorkers of the fluah Wall Street type might do It but they were in the minority and scarcely exist at all to day. If one searches off the beaten paths In Greenwich Village there are many evidences of what New York was like before splendor went to Its head. Hire and there squeezed In the Jumble is an old date-ttrpa n cottage of lonz Ao. I found one wandering wuh Brady, M.D. beverage. This should be given be fore meals twice a day over a period of six or eight weeks. If the bed wetting stops after a few weeks the calcium should be continued for a few weeka longer anyway. Some readers may notice that this Is the same remedy' I often suggest for hay fever, asthma, migraine and what have you. But please don't be sarcastic about It. I'm just a kind hearted old geezer trying to do the best I can for everybody, and if my medicine doesn't cure anything, at least I'm pretty darn confident it will do no harm. Besides these suggestions I have a lot of other practical data gathered from the medical lore of many coun tries and many years, and any parent or guardian who sends a stamped ad dressed envelope and asks for the monograph on bed -wetting may have It with my blessing. But I have no information or advice to give unless you mention the child ls yours. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Any More Older Girls? I am a member of the Order of Older Girls and I am made aware of it now and then by creaking Joints and general stiffness. What have you to offer a poor girl in this sad state? Miss W. L. M. Answer Oh, a dash of lodin, and one thing and another, all described In booklet "The Regeneration Regi men," which will be mailed you on receipt of request accompanied with 10 cents and stamped envelope bear ing your address. Older boys are wel come to the same help. And a lot of folk who are not so old need the corrective, protective diet to stave off the ills that bring premature senility. Pure Milk. Article In magazine said undulant fever contracted from raw milk. We are worried. We have always used raw milk . . . Mrs. W. Answer We prefer it to the par boiled stuff at our house, too but we use only raw milk from tubercu lin tested herd. If undulant fever prevails in the community. It may be carried In milk. Of course, par boiling (pasteurizing) kills that or other disease germs In milk. But I prefer raw milk when I can get it pure. In your community I think you should bring the raw milk to boll for a minute, to be on the safe side. If you can afford certified milk, that ls the purest, safest milk you can have, and of course, it Is raw. (Copyright, 1934, John P. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Ur. William Brady, M. D.. 26S El Ca mlno. Beverly Hills, Cal. Floyd Gibbon the other evening fea turing an oak postern gate from which once must have hung a brass lantern. There was a amalled flagged garden. A Jackdaw in a wicker - work cage with an open door sat with a cheerful expression on a perch. Small countrified flowers grew In a border. Ivy hung from the walls of the cottage. A peek through a half opened door revealed a pictur esque dining room; a beamed roof with tool marks In the wood, a great red brick hearth, flagged floor, long refectory table, grandfather clock and mellowy dim family portraits. Nat urally, I expected an antique shop but It wasn't. A corner policeman told u an elderly couple had lived there quietly since he came to the beat 12 years ago. Broadway dance schools have suf fered least of all businesses In the neighborhood during the slump. Ned Weyburn and Arthur Murray have several floor filled with flying. Jig ging feet from 10 a. m. until mid night. Oddly enough, those who are seeking professional careers are In the minority. The majority are the middle aged who feel the need of exercise and do not care for such outdoor recrea tion as golf and the like. It seems to me the best profession al dancers auch as James Barton, George White, Jack Donahue. Bill Robinson, Ray Bolger, Patsy Kelly, Doyle and Dixon and the like came up from the sidewalk ruff -scuff. Many were "buskers" who Jigged for pitched penle and the sheer love of dancing. They had no special technique but grace, and a song in their heart, Turning Into 62d street this eve ning I clumped amack Into the big gest Great Dane I'd ever seen and almost did a standing Jump out of my skin. I know now how the fellow felt passing grandma's who was rush ed at by old Clay and yelled: "Call off your dog off or I'll knock off his head off." (Copyright, 1934. McNaught Syndi cate. Inc.) Satanic Trinity Topic Tonight of Evangelist Lewis "love (a an experience of religion) workoth no ill to his neighbor." "Love seeketh not her own," and "Love your neighbor aa yourself," were quotations set forth by Evange list J. Lewis Arnold last night to em phasize the Bible doctrine that man Is his brother's keeper. This philoso phy put into practice through a vital experience of religion would go far toward solving the political and economic problems of our day de clsred the evangelist. The subject for tonight's message at the Free Methodist church at 10th and Ivy will be "The Satanic Trinity" The following questions will be dis cussed: "What supernatural force Is in the world to destroy men?" "God said he would send them strong de lusion. Why?" "Who are deceived? Are you?" There will be service esch evening at 7:45 and the public is cordially Invited to attend, says the Rev. K N. Long, p.vitor. I'M Mtll Ttiuuua uil ada Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson Count History from tbe Files ol the Mall Tribune ot c and 10 rears Ago.) TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY August 22, 1924 It Was Saturday) Five fine steel heads caught by Rev. Jouett Bray were exhibited in Lam- ports window, and attract much at tention from tourists. "Go Slow at Gold Hill. Small town cop on duty." 1 warning sent out by California Auto association. Cong. Hull of Peoria. 111., vtalta city, and warns "farmers LaFollette ls not your friend." Prince of Wales sails on visit to America. Local deer hunter lost in the Mt. Pitt district. Astoria motorist reports to the po lice he saw Ray DeAutremont, one of the three brothers wanted for the Slsklyous tunnel murders and train robbery, on the Pacific highway be tween this city and Ashland. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY August 22, 1914 (It Was Sunday) Allies take offensive in great bat tle that rage from Mons to Luxem bourg; heavy losses sustained- by both sides In two days battle; Austria abandons Invasion of Servia. Hob Deuel was fined $10 by Judge Gay in the police court this morning for speeding. This ls the second of fense and fine for Deuel In two weeks. A mild lecture was administered by the court. Carl Y. Tengwald acted as deputy coroner while John Perl was fishing the past two days. William Altken receives copies of London papers give first hand ac counts of the European war. They are much in demand. Field Marshal Kitchener reports, "the war will strain the resources of the Empire." Communications Says It Wouldn't Work, To the Editor: It should not require the great brain organization of an official economist or brain truster, as you claim in Friday's issue to see how ridiculous is the $200 a month old age pension scheme of the Long Beach doctor. It is claimed that it would not weaken the profit system or the Institutions built upon It. But it would. It would wreck it completely. And for that little imperfection, It hasn't a chance to get through. So the 200,000 petitioners are sure to be disappointed. One of the offshots of its adoption would be the draining of all the gold from America and the consequent wrecking of the entire financial struc ture. It ls true that a highly com petitive society can get along with out gold as a medium of exchange for a time. But only for a time. How ever, It must have gold as a measure of value. It la very essential for this function. But gold ls needed or will be needed to give substance to money or what circulates as money. That ls why the big powers are so bent on hoarding it. It ls needed in such great quantities that, could it be forthcoming, it would lose Its quality its function as a measure of value. This requirement of gold, 1. e., that It be both plentiful and not plentiful at the same time is one of the many outstanding contradictions of the profit system. Strangely enough It is almost everywhere disregarded in discussions of the money question. It accounts at least In part for so many of the wild theories concerning the "life blood" of capitalism. R. HEGNER, Gold Hill, Ore. Aug. 21, 1034. JASON LEE PAGEANT PLANS ARE DROPPED SALEM, Ore.. Aug. 22. (AP) All plans for the proposed Jason Lee pageant at Willamette unlverlsty this year were definitely given up yester day as the university board of trus tees met and voted to drop the pro ject, at least for this year. Lack of time and various outside distractions were given as reasons for the action. 4 - The department of agriculture la breeding disease resistant tomatoes because of the great Increase In to mato Juice drinking. At The TOGGERY'S SXI.OOO Men s Wear Sale Men's Shirts Pre-shrunk Broadcloth $1.75 Value. $1.29 Wi brandy i II 90 PROOF L Missouri Nominee Harry 8. Truman (above), Kan sat City judge, won the democratic nomination for United States sena tor from Missouri. He was backed by T. J. "Bifl Tom" Pendergast, Kansas City political power. (Asso ciated Press Photo) (Contlnuea trom page one) rates. They have a pile of statistics tha-a-a-at high, and are supposed to have found out more about the na tion's finances than was ever known before. The offices of nearly all the top officials here are now air-cooled. , The very day that the AAA pub licly announced it would prosecute food code violations a private office memo was sent around through the AAA urging everyone to keep mum on that subject. The NRA mail reception boys, who open all letters, came across a prize one some time back. It was an inti mate communication from a lady in New York to an NRA official. When it reached him three days Inter It bore a hundred fingerprints. The under-cabinet officials are re organizing their luncheon club to meet weekly at an exclusive down town club for private discussions of the new deal. They suspended during the summer. Under State Secretary Phillips Is in charge. - No less than one senator and two representatives are claiming exclu sive credit for the grazing bill in their campaigns for re-election. It ls very popular in the west. Professor Moley may not be In the new deal, but he still has enough In fluence to hold a train (as he did Monday) to get back to New York. 4 The Japanese tobacco monopoly bu reau is reported to be encouraging native farmers to grow the Virginia type of tobacco from which American cigarettes are made. 4 jfiilp juurLwurtuLw: do your feet BOTHER YOU? your shoes run over at the heels or soon lose their shnpe . z slip . . . spread . . . bulge over the soles? Merc is your chance to learn how these conditions can be prevented . . . also how you can obtain relief from tirtxi, aching feet, hurting corns, callouses or bunions, itching feet and toes, weak arches or any foot ttoublc. No charge or obligation. Be sure to attend this SPECIAL EVENT Dr. Sertoli's persona! represent ative from .Chicago will be at our store, on Saturday, August 25th We will make Pcdo-grarh print of both vour stockinged (vet giving you the prints without charge, so that you may see just how you utand in the matter of fet health . . . also sample of Dr. Scholl'i Zino-pads for quick removal of a corn or cushioning a snre spot from shoe pressure, and an interesting booklet, by Dr. Wm. M. Scholl, "Treatment and Care of the Feet." JIl J gin. gIl iEPARTMENTSToRK) T WILL BE GUEST Dr. Sterling V. Mead of Washington,, D. C, author of dental text books ano , an oral surgeon of national reputa--. tlon. will meet with the dentists of southern Oregon and northern Cali fornia at the Hotel Medford at 6:00 o'clock Thursday evening, August 30. . After the dinner in his honor, Dr. Mead will deliver an Illustrated lec ture, after which a general discus-, slon will be enjoyed. In Washington. D. C, Dr. Mead1, owns and, with the assistance of two other dentists, two anesthetists, two X-ray technicians, and 18 nurses, ope,., rates a four-story dental hospital which confines its activities to oraL surgery and radiography. VERTICAL GRAIN CEDAR SHINGLES ' KOFI A QUALITY ROOl' FREE ESTIMATES 1:1 At The TOGGERY'S $35,000 Men's Wear Sale Dobbs Hals Lightweight. V. SB Values fa LliA..J..Ji,i., BIG PINES I Lumber Co. C PHONE 1 TRECONv. W WVj ROSE,CITY r! Two Hotels That Afford yfpCl ALL iSN Comforts fj& fv) at Rates $$.2 $ ALL Sf i , aSoPo. mm feafhman . - 't'l'. - 1