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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 30, 1934)
M"ET)FOTtD MAIL TRTBTTNE, "NIEDFORD. OREGON, THURSDAY. "AUGUST 30, 1931. page eight Medford Mail Tribune "Cvfryont In Stvthtrn Oraew Una! Uil mil ItHum'' Dill; Kietpt tiurdl? PuliUiMd W MKUKOXD PE1.YIINU CO. stir-it . ru at. nm i HOBBin W. KUttL. titlat AO Indapaodaat Nanpapaf Inland u aad du aatui al Uaafori OtH. A Md S, !'. UB(1IPT10N RATES Br MtO to AdtiDM Dallj, an rar ISO" Dally, lis BoMbs S.fS DtUr. oh aoeto u Br Cirrtar lo Ail'anea Madford. Ashland, Jaiksootllla, Cantral Point, rtewUl, hint. OoW Bill and oo Biabvara. Dalli, ana rev SI.OI) Dalli, all aiantba I.Jo Dallr. oo aiootb AU tafma. cub lo adfaiica. Official papar of tba Cltl a Madfort, OflldaJ pi par of Jaatooo Couotr. l!IMBKK OF TUB AMUCIATIU PBESB Bwcinm rull Uuad Wlra Barrlca Tba Aiacclatad Preaa la aieluslialr antltlM to tna usa for publlcatloo of all oeva dlaoaubaa errdltcd to It or otbenrb. eradlted to tbla oaoar aod alao to tha local oeaa publlihed ttcraln. AU rltbu far oubUcaUoo of apadal dlaoaUto Oar r Id ara al. raaanad. afEMyEU or omitD I'uras UESIRKK Or AUUIT RUaXAO or CIBCHUTIONB AdrertUlnf RepraacDtatltaa L C. M0IIEK8EN A COMI'ANI Offleaa lo Nea Tori, Cbltaio, Oatrolt, Sao rraoctMO Loa Ancalaa Scallla Portland. MEMBER fl. u.i. Ye Smudge Pot Bj Arthur Perry. A high churchman describe! the American people aa a gum-chewing, Jazz-crany, movie-loving, llquor-dr Ink ing, home-detesting crowd." He forgot to mention oplum-emoklng and anuff ehewlng. and the gum-chewing count of the indictment la apt to cause widespread Indignation. Next Sunday Judge ColvJg will com. plete 00 years of laughing at Father Time, without playing golf. He has consumed more Congressional Records and Oregon lan a. than any other citl ren of the commonwealth, and has fought everything from Indians up. He Is an orator of the days, when an orator had to say something, or keep ttll. He was secretary of the com mercial club during the boom-days, and often astounded easterners by quoting Shakespeare. TREND OF THE TIMES. (Red Bluff (Cal.) News) Things are Hot what they used to be. The foreman In the News office reports that to candidates called on his department this morning to discuss advertising layout, and when they were gone he had to go out and buy him self a cigar. In ye olden day he would have had all his pockets filled with cigars and been too drunk to smoke. see Hen French of E. Pt. towned yes terday. He is one of the old-fashioned farmers, who starts plowing from the fence corner, Instead of the bank corner. Tha state liquor commission an nounces It will regulate beer-parlora tn residential areas. If not too late, this Is much better than letting the voters do it the next time they get a chance. There has been consider able complaint from all over the atate, that roisterers kept sleepers awake all night with their howling, and en route home at high speed are apt to knock a house out from under a enoour, even when there was suds to gMEKie. There Is also a well-defined notion In circulation that neither the beer or the imbiber thereof, Is under control, and It may be necessary to take It away from all to curb the smart-alecks. Word from Russia, Via William Rogers says that women Communists In Moscow are digging ditches. At first glance this seems terrible, but people who have met up with the American brand of lady communists In action, think It Is a very fine Idea, SOUND. t'ri.IFTINO. (Movie Review) Although there Is the usual as sortment of Warner Brothers choruses and befeathered assem blies with wild tricks of camera and lighting, I was the most pleased with the modest little laundry number, with that pretty arch little couplet of t'.ie laun dresses: "When I'm home on Sundays X miss all these undies." a. Hunt of the magic lantern. 1 busy resisting the wind of a sales man for a wind-resisting auto. The success of Upton Sinclair, at the polls with his "End Poverty in C llfornla' slogan, should be a Joy and Inspiration to candidates In Ore gon. In dire need of a plank In their platform, that will both enthuse and befuddle the voter. To be sure, Mr. Peter Zimmerman vaguely promises to whack up all the wealth. If elected governor, but he does not state who will do the whacking, or who will be whacked. Still another gubernato rial aspirant, reallelng that an appeal to the pocketbook beau one to the heed or the heart, Is thumping away on the same general Idea. Neither show the voter the color of the ge- mr:o. so are no great shucks, at r-':rnt. A nice way to end poverty in Orrgon. wculd be to pass a law r aliltiR every man his own mint, and equip him with a money-making ma chine built on the simple mechanical lii.fi of a hamburger grinder, PBune 64 ;t we'll nam sa) fou re use City daUry Samoa. Snow Plows and Crater Lake THHE announcement of the federal government that it will not operate snow plows on the highways in Crater Lake nation al park this winter is arousing protests in central and southern Oregon. And well it may, because the continuance of the plowB is not a small question with them. In fact, it affects perceptibly tourist income in those areas. Operation of the plows does not keep the roads open, of course, during the winter months that is, usually. At times, automobiles have succeeded in making their way along the slip pery, snow-covered highways within the park. We have a faint recollection of pictures showing such feats. But they are com mon exploits. Usually the winter sports fans who reach the peak leave their cars on the lower levels and proceed on snow shoes to their destination. No, the plows do not keep open the roads, but by pushing aside the greater part of the excessive snow fall, they contribute to an early opening in the spring. When plows are used, the park is accessible in April, but when they are not employed, tourists cannot reach the lake before late June. This time differential is important to southern and south central Oregon. Moreover, it concerns all of Oregon, too. .For the beauty of the park and the magnificence of the lake are such that they are a resource of the entire state. Oregon is better off, when it is available to the publio throughout spring and summer. On account of the altitude, the Crater Lake season is short enough at best. Oregonian. An Honest Finder HIS pocketbook having been uwu a-"-.v,ja, vVivso vuuiii; , IHiica 1IUI IHCH IJI 1UVCI IUU jU U- grammed it as gone and forgotten. "What man, he reasoned, who picked up and gazed at the tempting money contents inside would bother to find the owner? A few days later the postman brought a package to Miles Hartwell of Riverton. To his surprise and delight, inside the wrapper was his lost pocketbook, with all the contents just as when he lost it, save that enough money had been taken to pay the postage for return of the package. The finder was Ralph Lonsdale of Essendale, British Columbia. And as related by the Coqnille Sentinel, the package was mailed to its owner from Grants Pass. There is a lot of good in the world if you try to find it. Oregon Journal. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Aug. 30 With Dorothy Parker married and reading In Cali fornia, Irvln Cobb drafted to Holly wood and Wilson M Inner gone from the mortal scene, I re'l t'ner eems no sFaV : jfr York uPon which to nans; the bright quip. They were the three unfailing pegs. Somehow, It gave a gag es pecial plume to Dreface it as com- ing from one of tAj .M&cj these three. As a result, thousands of stories and wise cracks credited to them were not their handiwork at all. Although each has a pronounced flair for the devastating mot. As a matter of fact, many of Broad way's choicest puns, dusted off a bit, have been spawned by Frisco and Roger Davis, an Indifferent actor who acts as a sort of personal clown for Fannie Brloe. Eugene Keloey Allen, dramatic critic for a garment dally, also sponsored swift ones credfted to others. There has been a distinct falling off in this crackling form of humor since vaudeville went Into eclipse and the majority of cirbstone comedians be came highly paid gag-men in the movies. The old-time barroom, too. was the hive for razoring remarks that convulsed the town. Nothing Is quite so lonesome look ing as a lonely boy on a quietly aris tocratic New York residential street. As a rule, he has no playmate tn the entl-e block and, so great Is the fear of kidnaping, someone la always watching him. I saw one today In K. 8flth standing beside a fire plug, dig ging a toe In the sidewalk and look ing vacantly nowhere. "Why aren't you In the country?" I asked. His re ply was direct. "Papa hasn't money any more." he said. Statistics show that Invitation au diences to radio broadcasts do more than anything else to cement the art ist's most valuable asset fans. Peo ple who see a broadcaster at work are not likely to miss dialing tn for months to come. Ed Wynn likes to watch others broadcast. So do Amos 'n Andy. John Held, Jr. Is one of the few suc cessful combinations of writer and artist. His books hav fair sale, hts short stories and articles are in de mand and he never manages to keep up with ordera for drawings ot his cut-up collegiate. Held la slso one of the few established writers to de sert the b!g town. He has selected New Orleans, also a growing locale for fic tion, and spends moM, of hts time there. Harlem now has a negro colli n mist whcee pieces appear under the head ing, "This Hectic Harlem' In the Black Belt's leading giieette. the Am sterdam News. His name la Roy Ott- ley and the quarter halls him as Har lem's Mark Helllnger. He writes of the highlights and shadows of the mtln arteries seventh and Lenoi avenuos and has quite a knack for the graphic. Already his year's collection or ntories sre to be published in bonk form under Die quaint enough, title: "One Yesr in a Coal Bin " B'li B'rnif is one of the IVw broad carters lo m restraint about family 1 WaMM! lost as he rendezvoused on Ban- affairs. Only intimates know of his singular devotion to a ie-year-old son in a military academy. His references to the lad are adolt such as the time Ed Wynn and son were dining at the plaoe where Bernle appeared In Chi cago. He introduced Wynn and es pecially extolled Wynn'a son as one of the moat remarkable boys of the day, a fine athlete, a fine this and a fine that. But as he wound up he ex claimed: "If Culver Is listening In. I'm only kidding." That was a reveal ing little touch of sentiment for his boy but not many knew it. Bagatelles: Mrs. Morris Ocst has never stepped foot in the now sold Belasco theatre since her father died . . . Marilyn Miller Is reputed Ameri ca's richest actress . . , Elsie Robin son's serial, "I Wanted Out," drew .more fan mall than any other writ ten In 20 years . . . Ocorge Raft once played drums In an orchestra . . . Peter B. Kyne removed 15 pounds re cently, writing a novel . . . Luther Reed haa finished a biography of his friend Joseph Urban . , . Mary Boland uses the longest clgsrette holder in Hollywood , , . Winston Churchill Is an expert bag puncher. Readers often well, two did any way ask how one measures a column. How to know the number of words. They seem to think It a trade trick. It Isn't. A fellow Just somehow haa a feeling he's said enough. And there, by gum, Is the end of the column. (Copyright, 1934, McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) 4 fULINARY Vraft.... By Estella Dorgan, Director, Hume Service, the California Ore goo Power Company The Versatile Cucumber There la an expression "cool as a cucumber," which describes one qual ity of this Interesting green vege table commonly. However, as de lightful as It Is tn cooling salads. It Is quite as pleasing In cook ed dls'.es and may be used late Into tha fall nicely. To take the strong taste out of fresh cucum bers, cut about an Inch off the heavv end and Estella Dorian rub the two cut surfaces together vigorously. A heavy lather will appear. Wash this off and use the cucumber without further "freshening." Sitlnli Cur timber Hoata Peel the medium sired cucumbers, cut tn halves lengthwise, then scoop out the centers, combine the centers with diced celery and pineapple (or other fruit) and a smalt amount of mayonnaise and refill. Make a "satl" of a lettuce leaf and set it up with a toothpick. Place the "boat" on a larpe lettuce leaf and garnish with parsley. Cucumber Cur reel the cucumbers in strips, no as to leave some of the dark green on the finished "cup." Cut crosswise in two-Inch allces and remove the center. Marinate this center material In French drrmlng then combine with cold salmon or crab meat. Fill the ops. rounding them a bit and prlnkle with paprika. Serve on let tuce and garnish with mayonnaise and parnley. Molded llllh rinertpi-le I pkg. lemon flaxored gelatin Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to per sons J bealtn and hygiene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment wtJI be answered by Ur Brady U a stamped elf-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written lo ink. Owing to the large number ol letters received only a few can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 263 El Camlno, Beverly Ullls, Cal. THE REMOVAL OF TATTOOING. The vogue for tattooing of designs upon the skin Is a good measure of the degree of degeneracy In the race. A community that tolerates this practice is clearly of low moral tone. A state or province that has no statute fixing a suitable penal ty for tha hide ous crime of mu tilating the body, to say nothing of the risk of Infec tion Involved In the operation. Is not greatly concerned about the wel fare or safety of future citizens. In public clinics where the riffraff and the underworld and a certain type of the elite seek treatment at the expense of the city or stats, the mo ron who exhibits a specimen of the tattoo artist's work accurately places himself In the social status list. It Is a sorry confession of degeneration. It is something our system of education rather encourages, by conspiring with the quacks and crooka to keep the rising generation Ignorant. Once having been so mutilated, If the victim is a defective without re deeming grace It doesn't matter so much, tho it would surely be bet ter for the state if such individuals were not permitted to remain at large.. But often the tattooing Is done at a time when the victim Is Incapable of understanding the enormity of the offence. Later, with sobriety, comes the wish to hide the shameful stigma. Surgical excision of the mutilated skin and grafting of skin from a less conspicuous area Is the best way to dispose of the blemish In most cases. Where the tattoo covers a large sur face of skin there are two alterna tives. Either an attempt to erase the design by skilled tattooing to match as nearly as possible the natural color of the skin, or tattooing with acid which sets up Inflammation and a dry superficial eschar which is thrown off. leaving a white scar. Or the careful use of caustic ointment will bring about similar sloughing of the dyed or stained skin. In Muchener medlzlnlsche Wochen- achrlft Dr. H. In der Stroth describes ',2 cup cold water 1 cup boiling water 1 cup crushed pineapple 3 T vinegar 1 cup shredded cucumber 2 T plmlento, shredded Combine gelatin with water and fruit Juice In usual manner, then add the vinegar and remaining in gredient and pour into damp molds. Set In a cold place (refrigerator cab inet) to set and cover with waxed paper until ready to serve. Unmold on lettuce and garnish-with mayon naise. Warm Dlthes Baked Cucumbers j Peel large cucumbers and cut a slice off lengthwise. Remove the cen-. ters and combine part of this with j a meat or fish di easing, using crack ers or cornflakes and one egg for foundation. Fill the cucumbers and replace the slice, fastening with toothpicks. Season to taste. Place in a buttered baking dish and bake one hour at 350 degrees. (Use covered dish). Sprinkle with paprika before serving. Creamed Cucumbers Use large cucumbers for this. Wash, peel, and cut into cubes. Cook in small amount of salted water until tender. To each cupful of this pre--aiAred cucumber use 3 tablespoons of thin cream and one teaspoon of flour blended smoothly and stirred into the hot pulp carefully. Add a little pap rika and butter Just before serving. which should be done as soon as the combination Is ready. French Creamed 9 large cucumbers 3 tablespoons butter a tablespoons flour 1 cup liquid a teaspoon salt 'B teaspoon pepper 1 egg yolk 1 tablespoon lemon Juice Pare the cucumbers, cut in halves and scoop out the seeds. Cut each half Into three sections crosswise and cover with boiling salted water and cook until tender. Drain and reserve one cup of this liquid. Melt the but ter, add flour and the cooled liquid, stirring until boiling and smooth. Add seasoning and pour slowly onto the beaten egg yolk. Return to range and cook one minute, then add the cooked cucumber and one tablespoon of lemon Juice. Serve at once. Fried Cucumbers Use large cucumbers. Peel and slice in half-Inch sections crosswise. Dip in fine crumbs, beaten egg and crumbs again. Fry in deep fat. or melted butter In frying pan, until a golden brown. Serve with tartar sauce. rirklM Fasy sweet Pickles 3W tiny cucumbers a-S cup salt 3 quarts vinegar i cup mixed spices 3 tablespoons mustard 3 tab'.eepoons sugar 3 tablespoons salt 1 ginger root 3 pounds sugar Scrub the cucumbers clean, wipe dry and plaoe in a larpe dish. Sprinkle with the 3-3 cup of salt and cover with boiling water. Allow to stand over night, then remove the brine and wipe each pickle dry and lay in a rnvk. Sprinkle the mixed spices over thee pick tea and lay the ginser root on top. Mix the vinegar with 3 tablespoons each of mustard, sugar and salt and pour over the pickles, stirring until each one Is covered, then set away in a cool place. Weigh of pickles, atirrlnft them well. When all the suprtr has been ued this way, stir tl.crouRh'.r and store tn open crock or senl If you wish. l'e Mail mbune want ads. in detail the use of such an ointment In tha removal of tattooing. He says tha method la so simple that the gen eral practitioner can readily use it. Of course the best that can be ex pected is a smooth scar In place of the tattooed skin. The treatment requires four weeks. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Pleasant Treatment Friend suggested honey In comb strained, and a tablespoon ful dally, for hay fever. I tried It, and felt Im provement Immediately. Altho timo thy is now In bloom I am not suf fering the usual discomfort, (a. W. W., Louisville.) Answer Anyway It la pleasant treatment. Try some honey, you vic tims of polllnosls, and let us hear whether it helps. Cooling Drink Please comment on the use of the following as a cooling summer drink: One-half dozen lemons, five pounds of sugar, one ounce of tartaric acid, two ounces of citric acid, one tea spoonful of Epsom salts, three pints of boiling water. Squeeze the lemons, mix Juice and other ingredients, lot stand 1!4 hours, strain and bottle. Use one or two teaspoon fuls In a glass of water as a hot weather beverage. (E. L.) Answer Comparatively harmless, tho I believe the beverage -would be much improved by using at least a dozen lemons and perhaps some or anges too, and omitting the tartaric and citric acids and the salts. Plenty of citric acid in the lemon or oranges. There is no particular purpose served by adding the tartaric acid. Another Discovery" Article in magazine telling of the discovery by a doctor in Henry Ford hospital of the use of tannic acid for burns . . . (S. W. C.) Answer Nearly every doctor discov ers the same thing at one time or an other. In a hospital with expert at tendants, the tannic acid treatment Is excellent. For first aid or home use It Is not so good. (Copyright 1934, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D 265 El Ca mlno. Beverly Hills. CaL Tomato Juice I Canning Recipe 1 apple box ripe tomatoes 1 stalk celery , 4 large onlona 2 large seeded green peppers a cloves garlic Chop above ingredients together and simmer In preserving kettle for 3 hours. Strain through coarse sieve, add Juice of 3 lemons, V cup salt, 1 tea spoon pepper, 1 cup augar. Heat to boiling point and add pinch soda. Be sure bottles are sterilized and fill one at a time capping each bot tle as It Is filled. The Immediate capping insures keeping quality ot Juice. For cocktails, chili sauce, cat sup or tabasco sauce may be added. Tha sugar and garlic give the fine flavor. STAYTON MAIL SOLD ' TO SALEM NEWSMAN SALEM. Aug. 30. (") E. D. Alex ander, publisher of the Stay ton Mall for 33 years, announced in this week's issue the sale of his business to Ralph urtls, Salem newsman. Curtis had been employed on the copy desk and as sports editor of the Oregon Statesman here for seven years. Previously he spent six years on the staff of the Bend Zulletln. Huge Rock Balances Self BOSTON (UP) A rock weighing about 500 tons and measuring 18 feet In length, 13 feet tn width and IS feet in height, still balances on two square feet of earth on top a hill In Franklin park. It la composed of thousands of smaller stones press, ed together. 4 F. W. Bartlett. Medford's Taxiderm ist and Furrier, will open shop on or about Septal st. at 30 S. Central, 4 Forfeits Bail Syr us Johnson. 46, a transient, forfeited $10 cash ball this morning in city court, having been arrested last night by city police on charges of being drung In a public place. 4 Use Mall Tribune want ads. Beautiful Permanents $1.95 and up Shampoo and Wet Finger Wave 75C ALAINE'S Across from 1st National Bank JHolel Figueroa nturnu St. at II" h Lo. Anjrlra ;';j!jL Calif. On, or Loa Anttlra' ntww mUiV llnlfla. lii;! 100 Oulaldr Room, of C;""1V-ia,i Comfort. Potvntown Curat, tn Connection Rat,, from Sl.sn rr ity without bam fMio prr day Kith bath 3.00 prt dat. twin tiraa and batn A B. SMITH. Lmm Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS DO YOU know what an edelweiss is? It is a little white flower that grows high up in the Alps In Switzerland, where the yodel ers live. The blossoms look somewhat like those of an orchid. Their petals, when they first appear, are green, like the leaves, but gradually turn white from the edges Inward, until only a thin line of green Is left down the center. YOU probably know all these things, anyway, from reading, but here's betting you didn't know that edelweiss Is grown right here in Southern, Oregon. But It is. Over In the high Klam ath country, which In some ways Is not unlike Switzerland, George Qroves, bookkeeper at the Swan Lake Moulding company, has a little flower plot beside the office building of! the plant, and In this little plot he has a dozen or so edelweiss plants that are now blossoming vigorously. They are Interesting because of the number of times we have read of edelweiss In Swiss stories. M R. OROVES grew these plants from seed sent to him from Switzerland. They are all the way from a foot to two feet high which, he says, Is considerably larger than the wild ones growing In Switzerland. They are really quite pretty. When cut and put In water, he says, they will keep fresh as long as two weeks. MR. OROVES took an old lady from Switzerland out to see his edelweiss a while back, and she waa as happy aa an Irishman when he finds a little clump of shamrock. "In Switzerland," she told him, "I have climbed away up on the moun tain to where these lovely flowers grow. They let you pick Just six of them no more." The Swiss, you see, want to KEEP them. Not a bad Idea. MR. GROVES, incidentally Is some thing of an experimenter, for In addition to the edelweiss he has one plant of the Andes mountain po tato. This potato, which Is supposed to be the ancestor of the civilized spud, haa meat as red as that of a beet. It Is grown commercially on a very small scale, being used In, salads to add color as well as taste, YOU may not are to grow edel weiss, and you may not be all TEMPERED RUBBER STEEL for Toughness . II you hav lean thii famoui World' Fair tet, you know thai Triple Tempered Rubber, at used In U. S. Royals, it the roughest tire rubber In existence. Other U. S. Royal features are of equal lm- aOinnmttti epeudabUltjj 1 OahMcentMei by rerftfOl d 0ewwteesat by iBTrfs'weaea tMei HtJTOrtJl t 11 hf Rogue River Chevrolet, Inc. Chevrolet Cars and Trucks Complete Service Genuine Chevrolet Parts E. A. CALKINS H. D. BYINGT0N C. M. HURD 32 NO. RIVERSIDE , PHONE 188 a-tltter over Andes mountain pota toes. But at least It Is Interesting to know that here In the high, clear Klamath country we can grow, If we happen to want to, almost anything that can be grown outside the trop ics. CALIFORNIA lsproud of Its eucs lyptus trees. Well, over In Coos county, near Co qullle, we used to have four aa beau tiful eucalyptus trees as anybody ever aaw on the Pacific Coast and prob ably would have yet. If somebody hadn't cut the tops off them to let a line of wires through. California, Texas, Louisiana all the states down along the border are proud of their live oaks. In the Cow Creek canyon and the Canyon Creek canyon, here In South ern Oregon, we have live oaks as good looking as anybody's. There Isn't much that grows any where that can't be grown here, If we really try, Flight o Time (Medford aDd Jacksnn County History from the Flirt 01 me Mall Tribune of (l and 10 Ifran Asn.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY August 30, 1924 (It was Sunday) Air circumnavigation of globe is completed by U. S. army aviators, when they land In Labrador. Oregon City youth "given the mit ten" seta fire to home of fiance. Upstate hunter using light while hunting for deer. Is shot for a cou gar. Herri n, 111., in the grip of a bitter Klan war, blames trouble on sheriff. Public schools of city to open to morrow. Mr. and Mrs. John Mann return from a vacation trip to San Francisco. 363 cars of pears shipped to date. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY August 30, 1914 (It was Monday) Paris prepares for the coming of the German horde, and capital may be moved to Boulogne. Terrific fight ing on the Austro-Russo front ends, as the Russians start running. Low clouds tn the west give or chard lata hopes for a much needed rain. Valley Howells bring 13.17 box In Canadian marts. Espee brake man shot In Ashland yards by two tramps. Associated charities refuse to aid man, "who boasts I have not worked since Cleveland was in the White House. WINDOW OLAaSiv We sell wlndou glass and will replace your broken windows reasonably. Trowbridge Cao met Works. Outwears Concrete . . . Matches . . In Grindstone Test at World's Fair U. Ndws " (CuotiDueo irom Page One) have been better for his molasses) company. Bernard Baruch's forthcoming au tobiography may not tell all, but he kept two stenographers busy In re lays taking It down during his recent European vacation. Donald Rlchberg's associates havsj advised him that If he wants to get rid of General Johnson quietly all he has to do Is to Induce a large cor poration to offer the general & big11 private Job, That may be done. e Cheaper in the long run. Bette looking and shape retaining. Klela tailored suits made to fit you (of guaranteed woolens) from $30 up. KLEIN THE TAILOR, 138 E. Main. I Wain tn 20 LAST TIMES TONITE! EDWARD a. ROBINSON "Dark Hazard" PICTURES CHICAGO WORLD'S FAIR Tomorrow )hmmpGed BETTE DAVIS ALAN DINEKART ALLEN JENKINS ALICE WHITE portance to you. Safety Bonded Cords, welded together with live rubber. 1 2 pounds of rubber to every 100 pounds of cord. The U. S. Bead three times safer. The Inverted Safety Breaker 84 safer against blowouts caused by separation. Replace smooth, heat-weakened tires with tough U. S. Royals. Act today. S. ROYALS with a heart of Geld! Play Safe! Start Your LABOR DAY Trip On a Set of U. S. ROYALS