SfflDFOBP HMG TKIBUTTE, 'JHJL'JJifUrm OHEUCCT, MOTTD3T, KEP'rJL'ALBJgH 10, 1931' Medford mail Tribune "Evtryoiw la SouUwn Ortgoo Hum ui mil rribuM" DlilJ befit Biturdv PutUlMt 19 HIDrOIID fUlMING CO. IB-ir-n .1 rt sl eoukut w. uuuu, biiur Ao Isoapsodsot Ntwtp&pw nurae M awcnd cun astus tt fcudrare. Othoq. ante Act of unit , isi. aUBfH'KIPTION RATES R Mail In Adtifica Dillj, M fW (.0U Dally, ill nootta 1.T6 Dtllr. om moot!) 00 Parrltf In AdtlMft lUdford. Astl JukWDftUt, Ctnttai Point, Pbotolx, TiiwC Gold BUI tod oo Ulftbi-ira. DUlj. on rev fl 0u Dtlly, noDtm.. I Dillr, oo month .00 Ail terms, eta In sdrtias. Offtdil papw or tt City of Medford, OfflrUl piptf of Jaektuo Couotr. MXMBEB Of TMM ASSOCIATED PKK8S cceinoi run besno niri ownc , ItM AuLCltted Hren It eielinhctr taUtlod to th4 om for putillcatioD or ail aen dUpaUAoi credited to It or otbervlM credited to tbtt paper and also to u inew oei puniunw Herein. AU right (of ouhllettloo of ipeda) dlipaleOM ttreio ire sue reeerteo. HEM H KB Ofc (JNI1KD HKMHKH OP AUDIT HUBEAO Of C11ICULATI0NB Adferttilni Hepreuntitltee U. 0. MOUKNREN a COM I' AM Office, to Ne fork, Chlo, Detroit, Bag rranclseo Lo- Armeies Seattle Portland. Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Perry. Good progress iu made Saturday Bight towards Prohibition, whenever and wherever Opportunity offered. Quite a number 01 females and Juve nllea wero out acting tha fool, and In many Instances were not acting. Oregon faces the dire possibility of seven (7) candidates for aovernor. Political ambition cannot be con trolled like the wheat, the hogs, the corn and the cotton, but there must be a way to fix their aclf-startcrs so they won't work. ... The paranoia of Ben. Huey Ing of Louisiana has calmed down, alter a week of tantrums. Many of the best fruessers of the land are pre- itirtini that the Senator, wun mi dictatorial capers, Is gradually work ng himself around to the day when he will be asking the stata prison rrien how ha wants his shirts Ironed. ... The Sonsta Committee Investigat ing munition manufacture and Bales, has uncovered information that sir Basil Zaharoff sold Greece suoma .ir,. Brsill a battleship, and was. all In all. a flrst-clasa salesman of death-dealing material. What the gen eral run of folks would like to know Is where the American bandits got their sawed-off shotuns and machine guns, used In the spring and summer robberies. ... There was a strike of Communistic workers In Bulgaria Friday, and, as yet there has been no sympathetic strike In Peruana. ... POLITICS TO TAKE STAGE" (Hdllne LaOrando Observer) If this comes to pass, and a long ride re sults, politics will not be able to re cover and straighten out and b as much of a nuisance as usual. ... Many parents do not reallr their offsprings are riding a bicycle In auto traffic worse than a drunken driver drives. I ... C. Von der Hellcn, the eminent Wei leu country-Jake towned Saturday and was rushing around, like he had hay down, and a shower coming. ... A cltlten returned from tha Mid West reports the drouth was torrlble, and he saw several aoctlons that were dried up nearly as bad aa a church lawn. Poverty and new auto, continue conspicuous. T1IF. ItFTOIIT COt'RTEOl'S. (Ileml llllllPtln) Our attention la called to a para graph entitled "Eastern Oregon," In the column written for the Sunday Welcome by Portland's city commla aloner Clyde. Mr. Clyde writes: "I have Just returned from a short vacation trip to eastern Oregon and Cambridge, Payette, Welser, In Idaho. 1 want to say thst X appreciate Port land as never before. All I saw on my trip was sage brush, sand, Jack rabbits, rocks in fact It was a deso late and barren country, outside of aome green spots that were Irrigated. If I owned h and the section I visited I would live In tha first place and rent the second If I could." Clearly Mr. Clyde Is a gentleman who haa traveled widely, observed faithfully and understood accurately We supgest thst next time he go to h for hla vacation. Thst would suit us all. O. n. P. Honors Wnman PORTLAND. Sept. 10. IPi Mrs Charles K, Hunyon of Multnomah county wsj today elected national committeemen from Oregon to suc ceed Mrs. Pat Allen of Portland, who recently resigned. Ohio llrnkrr Passes CINCINNATI, Sept. 10. Ml Wil liam E. Hutton, 89, founder of the Cincinnati and New York Investment house bearing his name, died todiy of pneumonia. He retired from the business aeversl years ago. . Use Mall Trlbuua want ads. MEMBER 77ie Last Call 'I'HK Mail Tribune' "bargain week" closes tonight at ten o'clock. After that time the yearly rate will be, by carrier, $7.20 instead of $5; and by mail $5 instead of $3.50. In the past ao many subscribers have bitterly complained because they weren't allowed the bargain rate after the time limit bad expired that we are advising all, who wish to take advantage of this material saving, to do so, before ten tonight. If unable to come to this office, they can send check or money order in an envelope, which if mailed today, will be accepted. - The bargain period has extended over ten days. It was publicly announced many weeks before, and the time limit has been broadcast, day after day, through the columns of the paper. The Mail Tribune feels that under such circumstances the responsibility for failure to take advantage of the bargain rate rests with the subscriber, not with this newspaper. This is in the shape of a warning and a last call. The bar gain rate will positively not be extended after ten o'clock to night. There will be no other of next year. There is still time to get in to do so will have only themselves to blame. Some Press Agent! have been much interested in the work of Joe (Airflow) V Dunne's press agent in the news columns of the Orcgonian. This boy, whoever he is is doing a grand job. In practi cally every issue he makes the front page, which is something few press agenta can do. And to say that he is "selling" Joe to the Oregon electorate in true Barnum and Bailey style is put ting it mildly indeed. Today we read, for example, that "Dunne was warmly wel comed" over in Malin. The great man talked twice before "crowds of farmers" and told them that the development of the Klamath irrigation district from a sagebrush flat into a rich country was one of the "sagas of the Oregon country." This was sufficient to justjfy Jr. Kalina, mayor of Merlin, declaring that "his people will support Senator Dunne," against all other candidates. . A FEW days before the genial G. O. P. candidate was in Oregon City. In that flourishing metropolis Airflow Joe opened war on "swindle ranks". He informed the pop-eyed proletariat that if he is elected governor all "swindlers and crooks must go to jail." Joe's faithful Boswcll- added republican nominee was in fine fettle, and his spirit took hold immediately in the crowd who cheered his remarks." Think of gubernatorial candidate having the courage to open war on swindlers and crooks, in OREGON CITY 1 The day beforo Mr. Dunne was at North Bond. Here he issued his challenge to the reactionary press, which he said were "merely tools of the powerful petroleum interests" and dared not speak out for "what they must know to be right." This must have referred to that iniquitous organ of plutocracy anil special privilege the Oregon Journal 1 "pHEN on September 4th, Joe was over on the coast where "farmers, workers and inhabitants of the famed Curry county coast line from Brookings to Langlois were greeted by benator Joe E. Dunne." That Here Joe, according to the bouncing press agent, made a ten strike among the old timers. R. Port Orford, said "a bunch of coming in for your inaugural your democratic friends to give can sure take the trip." But Grandpa Trice was not There was Ophir R. W. Miller, head of the clan of Millers "who is said to be related to nearly everybody in Curry county." Clan Leader Ophir had a friendly talk with Joe when he (not Joe) "had finished his task of To which the press agent added this gem of shrewd political observation: Mr. Miller, Independent for all his 81 yearn, finally agreed to let tha man he says will be the neat governor of Oregon help htm carry his milk a quarter mile to the dairy house." That certainly gives Joe not only the pioneer but the "Inde pendent" vote I And so it goes on Page 1 of We can't blame the other Republican candidates for being a triflo sore at the free publicity Joe is getting, and tho slight notice they receive. But they have no reason to and hire themselves a press agent, one who can mnke the first page of the usually cagey and conservative Orcgonian, day after day throughout tho campaign, get a million dollars worth of advertising and not pay a dime for it! Communications Wants CCC Camps Permanent To tha Editor: For two or three decades those re sponsible for the handling of our for est sress hsve labored under the Im pression that If a little forest growth wre Rood any amount more would be better. Drive out over the Jack- sonvllle-Ruch htghwav and observe what results from following such an Illogical theory. What happened there In Just a few hours time Is going on every yesr wlt'i sessonal regnlsrlty throughout our forested arras. No blame for this can be laid at the door of the flre-ftghtlng forces. They an doing all that ran be asked or eipected. The fault lies fsrther back and higher up. Our CCO rampa should be msde a permanent affair. They should em ploy at present wages all our Idle dim who care to work in them. The for est service should use them to thin out the dense brush and reproduction and clean up the accumulation of debris. If my source of liilnrmittlon Is correct Germany, Baltrerlnnd end other Kuropesn countries follow (his method In the rare of their forema and consequently forest fires are un common there. Thla would convert our rnrrsta inlo plscr of beauty In-I trad of a jungle and a fire trap It would also IncresM the gracing "bargain week" until September under the wire. Those who fail this telling statement: "The term "and inhabitants" is good N. Price, 80 year old pioneer of us old pioneers are figuring on in January, and we are getting you a boost in November, so we the only venerable optimist. milking the cows this morning." the Orcgonian, day after dav. complain. They should get busv value of our publle lands which un der the present plsn ts becoming a ' ming or tne past. i . ; ! e-vev i i th moisture Is . . Demonstrate it in your gauiru by permitting mass of weeds to grow among your corn. If an Individual falls a few trees In the clearing of his land, the de bris Is called a fire hsmrd and must be destroyed Immedlstely. The same condition ran go on for years In our forests until they berome Inaoreeal. bl and that Is railed conservation When a fire hsrard exists In a city the public la considered to be Justi fied In demanding that It be removed We think It high time the public arise and demand a new deal In the handling of our forests. Bureaucracies thst smack atrongly of dlctatorlsm do not take kindly to publlo crltlrlsm. However, we feel I hey hav had their rhance to prove their contentions and have tailed. Individuals and organlratlons like the Orange should take the matter up with their lawmaking bodies, pref erably before they are elected. Ask If they believe In a policy that Is gradually destroying our forests, dry. Ing up our streams and endangering the lives and property of the public IIKRT HAim. Jacksonville. Sept. e. Phone Mi We'U nam away you rafusa. City &aoltarj aerric. Personal Health Service. By William Brady, M.D. Signed letten pertaining to personal tow.it b and bygtene not to dil ute diagnosis or treatment tvUI be answered by Dr, Brady U a stamped it If -ad dressed envelope la enclosed. Letters ihould be brief and written in uik. Owing to the Urge number of letters received only a few can Oe an swered. No reply can be made to queries nonconforming to Instructions. Address Or. WUltam Brady. 263 El famine, Beverly Ullis, CaL AMBULANT TREATM ENT OF HYDROCELE. In the July, 1932, Issue of California and Western Medicine appeared an authoritative, scholarly, practical ar ticle on the treat ment of hydro cele, by Dr. Nor man J. Kl J bourne and Dr. Charles J. Murray of Los Angeles. It was the clinical prize paper of the an nual session of the California Medical aasocla tlon that year. Various meth ods heretofore In use had berlous drawbacks. The sim ple tapping and withdrawal of fluid gave temporary relief but could not cure, of course, and hence had to be repeated at Intervals indefinitely. The commonest surgical method, the use of aeton or a gauze packing In the sac waa too crude and uncer tain to merit much confidence. Any lacislon In the region Involved the chance of subsequent Infection and not a few patients operated on suf fered months of disability because of such infection. Sometimes hemor rhage occurred after hydrocele opera tions. Abscess was an occasional com plication. In most cases the patient had to remain In hospital ten days or longer, following operation. These are only the main drawbacks. - Since the publication of the paper the senior author, Dr. Kil bourne has continued his atudlea of the Injection method, not only for hydrocele, but also tor hemorrhoids, and with grat ifying success. He now treats hydro cele by Injections which produce pro longed local anesthesia. Such treat ment haa caused no Infections, has cured the condition In most cases, has been practically free from pain, and best of all has not detained patients from their regular work or business. It Is Interesting to note that a con siderable share of the patients who seek these modern methods of treat ment are physicians or members of physicians families. I have observed that physicians or members of their families crowd the reception room of the colleague who haa mastered the diathermy extirpation of tonsils, too. and Judging from the number of the brethren I have referred to men who are skilled In the ambulant treat ment of hernia, the doctors are a bit btased about that. In the past some physicians have attempted to cure hydrocele by In jections of such Irritants as Iodine or i phenol (carbolic) solutions. But these are likely to cause such violent pain and shock as to disqualify the pntlent NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Sept. 10. In the man ner of Arnold Bennett's Journal: we saw the last word In sidewalk cafes today, florin Ung g side Al's In the 180'a upper Broad way, a cnins oi awnlnged terr.ice with a half dozen tables. M. read a d e p rceslng essay on how taxation la smothering America at breax fast. Someone said last night the Herbert Bay ard 8 w o p e a ran a night and day shift of servants, In cluding chauffeurs. They are pro digious entertainers and their home was one of the few places Ring Lard ner cared to visit. Dean Cornwell post-cords he Is visiting Siena, an Italian town with 50 towers. Old and remote. I could not help thinking of Pra- zler Hunt when 1 saw the news reels flash Doufilaa Fairbanks' return, Hunt lived In London 10 years, also vary ing years in other world capitals, and returned a snuare-tord country boy. Fairbanks. M months abroad, has a decided British accent, Rawthor! Too much sklpp'.ng about In read ing of late. I whisk through pagju of description at a glance. I'm re solved to read but two books a week and slowly. I begin on a life of Shakespeare by Harris. Next. Stark Young's "So Red the Rose." I hear H. O. Wells playa tennla in bare feet. There waa a tilt of talk about 'he recluse lives of rich men. That J. P. Morgan arrives at a different parking place in the Wall Street section daily, the exact spot being phoned t1 pri vate wire as he starts. Two guards men meet him for the short walk to his office. He uses only unshovy leaser priced oars, loves the theater hut only attends abroad. Hamlsh and Amis MoiAurln hsre rounded in from India. Hamlsh with the most rol licking barrack room verse ever I heard. I typed it for Squire Mauck. Oeonre Buckley and Cobb. I hare had what Clare Brs used to call " a tfcht fit day.- Brist'.v busy and a feeling at sundown oi some accomplishment. Courtney Cooper, sending me a xylophone. spoiled two days last weok. M. final ly h!d the thlnu. Reciting stuff the fuellleton Fortune dished up about The New Yorker and It 40.000 a year editor, Harold Ross. Ross may be a malsde Imaginalre and tacelUte all over the lot but he lands on hm rcet and there's little doubt he made the nwgarlna what It is. Also prov ing a successful editor does not have to have the glossy severity of an evening shirt. The ftist clap of Au tumn these nights A lsdv irtitw i'.i rshlry f.unta hr fFn ni'ner" as a "beautician" was at Us ...: for work for days or weeks. Now that Dr. K 11 bourne has shown that the condition responds satisfactorily to Injections of a local anesthetic, there can be little reason for Injecting any thing bo painful. At the time of the presentation of the paper before the annual session of the state medical society qiilnlne urethane solution was used, but In further research and study Dr. Kll bourne haa found an other solution which proves more potentas a prolonged anesthetic, and this Is giving highly satisfactory re sults, that ts a cure In the great majority of cases, with only rarely a recurrence. Recurrence waa more fre quent following the older operative methods of treatment. Compared with varicose veins. In fected tonsils, hernia or hemorrhoids, of course hydrocele Is unimportant unless you happen to have It. I men tion the method of treatment because It Is another straw that shows which way the wind blows. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Home Made Tonic Started using tonic Iron medicine you gave In your article. In two weeks my complexion cleared up and I feel much better. I had been troubled with pimples and blackheads for I long time. How long should I con tinue taUlng the Iron? Tou said something about adding copper to the iron . . . 8. H. Answer Complete Instructions for making and taking the Iron and cop. per are given In booklet "Blood and Health" ask for it and Inclose 10 cents coin and stamped envelope bear. tng your address. Boozer. Does drinking a glass (2 oz.) of rye whiskey (190 proof) slow a person's mind and body? My friend declares that when she has taken a few rye highballs she can do twice the amount of work she is a stenographer. B. J. J. Answer That Is one of the charac teristic symptoms of Intoxication the boozer always thinks he Is stronger, faster, better, smarter, braver and healthier, while the Intoxication lasts. Every one who Is sober can see how deluded the boozer Is. Invar iably such a dose of alcohol In any form slows down the physical and mental activities, dulls perception, re tards reflex reaction, weakens circu lation. (Copyright, 1034, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to eommunlrate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Ur. William Bradj. M. D 8 El Ca mino. neverljr Hills. Cal. maufry and said Chinese women were making the greatest push In pulchri tude. Changing the contour of their eyes by brow plucking, etc. She pointed to the rogue of Anna May Wong in London. Oarbo going Chl neaey In her costuming, and so on. The tragic death of Irene Franklin's plano-playlng husband, Jerry Jarne- gm, ahocked us. We dined with them in California so gaily recently. Valentine Williams, the novelist, Is another to verify the Joyous abandon of London. It surprised him, London born. One wonders If lt'a the last fling before the rattle of musketry again, a aanse macabre I Williams la becoming an Oppenhelm, mixing suave villains with adventuring lsdles. I like mystery to begin In a flashy care, a liner smoker or on a fast train. James Cagncy struck most of us as an agreeable fellow and likely this amiability got him Into that Com munistic Jam, but he should straight en It out pronto. A curious thing I nave noticed lately all the people In my building who used to go regularly to tho theater now go to the movies Instead. A passing t did not see In the pub Ho prints was that of Chamberlain Dodds, the decorator and the epitome of that many splendored thing Morley calls the comic spirit. He Introduced me to the only liquor I ever really liked Cointreau. At Weber'a In rue Royale. So many city folk hav. turn ed lately to cabinet-making, Deems Taylor, Fred Knowles, Floyd Gibbons, et al. They say It requires more of the art of concentration than golf. A depression tonic. John Anderson and Lee Olwell varandahlng at Mon tauk were on the phone today with sprightly ohtt-chst. I blvouscked a moment, at the re quest of a Ban Francisco friend, this afternoon with a garrumphlng and gouty old Tory of a club lounge. He waa having his "hitch of Bourbon noat"; referred to the metropolis as the City of New York and sneered st revolution. In communistic Russia, he hooted, the only property owners are the brand new crop of Soviet cap italists, and his rosrlng har bar shook th. anelent rafters. (Copyright. 1934, McNaught Syndl rate. Inc.) 4 Local Florists Attend Conclave DFNVER, Colo. (Spl.) The new Slower styles for the coming fall and winter and other questions of Im portance to the flom! Industry are bring settled here this week aa a part of the annual convention of the International Florists' Telegraph De livery association, with more than 6000 members throughout the world. Among the asoo florists In attend ance are Mr. and Mrs. M. Morthlsnd of Medford. Cse Msll Tribune want ads. CORNS SORE TOES DrScholl's Zmqpads I i tnOTHI 1 I I AND HtAU I I 1 .(MOVl 1 I LlMSsaawr Comment on, the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. rY,HIS paragraph la -from an Asso 1 dated Press dispatch dealing with the textile strike. Read it carefully and sea what you think of It: "At least five persona were killed at Honea Path, South Carolina, and an unidentified number wounded at the Chlquola mill In a gun battle between a strikers' 'flying squadron' and mill employees seeking to go to work." TP HAT la to say. In this time of gen- eral unemployment and conse quent suffering, men WANTED TO WORK, and in the battle Ur PRE VENT them from going to work five persona were killed. One's natural tendency la to sym pathize with strikes, because the strike la labor's weapon of last re sort to force better wages and work Ing conditions, but when methods such as these are resorted to In order to prevent men from working who WANT TO WORK, sympathy becomes badly strained. f ORO RAQLAN, speaking at Aber a-j deen, Scotland, before the British Association for the Advancement of Science, expresses the belief that the black and white races In America will merge Into one. "I believe," he told the scientists, "that before many centurlea have elapsed there will not be a single per son In America without a certain portion of negro blood." WELL, thla writer, for one, believes otherwise. ' But since Lord Raglan's prediction refers to a time several centuries hence, it Isn't anything to get greatly worked Up over. There are plenty of other things to worry about RIGHT NOW. UP AT THE DALLES this week, they are holding their tenth Old Fort Dalles Frolic a celebration reminis cent of the days when The Dalles waa the county seat of old Wasco county, known as the "mother of Oregon counties," and originally em bracing the entire area between the Cascades and the Rockies. In Oregon, seventeen other counties have since been carved from old Wasco. w1; ITH ' modern transportation, it would be possible to go back to the original condition when The Dallea waa the county aeat of one vast county taking In all of Oregon east of the mountains. Of course w. wouldn't Ilk. it. be cause we have the Idea that we want the aeat of our government close to us. But we could get away with It, If we had to, and could save lot of tax money by doing ao, AT A LATER date, Klamath, Jack son and Lake were all one county, with Its aeat at Jacksonville, and In some way or other people got away with that condition, In spite of the fact that In those day. transporta tion waa exceedingly slow. We wouldn't think of trying auch a thing now, in spite of Infinitely better transportation facilities, be cause, aa already stated, we Ilk. to have the seat of our government close to us. And besides we couldn't begin to agree on where would b. the beat place for the county seat. BUT w. shouldn't forget that as local governments have multiplied and governmental services have ln creaaed taxea have Increased also at a rather staggering rata. We can't have our cake and eat It, too. If we're going to Insist on more government, wa must expect to psy for it. Be correctly corseted la , an Artist Model by Kthelwyn B. Hoffmann.. LOAN 5 On Your Oivn Signature YOU CAN bouow up to $J00 on your household goods hf re quickly and confidential ly. No indorsers required just the siimatures of husband nd wife. No embarrassing in vestigation. Repayment terms will be arranged to suit your convenience. Ore. ti Washington Mortgage Co. 43 Sonth Central W. E. Thomas, Mgr., Llrenw No, s-l"7 Flight o Time (Medford ana Jackson County History from Che Pile, of fne Mall Tribune of 0 and 10 rears Ago.) TEN YEARS AOO TODAI September 10, 1924. (It Was Wednesday) Perfect weather and large crowd greet opening day of the county fair. It turns off chilly, ed the mercury drops to 40.0 degrees during the night for the coolest weather In nine weeks. Cells In Jollet state prison made ready for coming of Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb, Chicago "thrill slayers." William Jennings Bryan addresses large crowd at Ashland, and declarea "Coolldge la a reactionary," and "though I opposed the Democratic nominee at the convention, I am for him now." Pear shipments to date total S34 cars. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY September 10. 1914. (It waa Thursday) Allied arralea continue to drive the Germans back, on the Western front; forces of the Czar win great battle at Rawa. Leonard and Alfred Carpenter leave for Spokane to attend the state fair there. The Prospect citizen reported as having taken a wife, haa returned home alone and strongly denies hav ing contemplated such a move. The Jackson County Democratic central committee announces It will fight "Uncle Joe Cannon." Republican congress msn from Illinois, and speaker of the house for many years. Eighteen inches of snow falls at Crater lake rim. (Continued trom Page one) statement with true Joy. Walking away later, Moore ob served to another official: "There Isn't a smarter bunch of newspaper men in the capital than cover the state department." At the treasury, they know politics as well as money. The denials that a500,0OO,0O0 tax Increase la being planned must be considered In that light. The question of Increased taxes la a warm political Question rlaht now. The treasury probably will aay nothing about It until after the con gressional election, when the tax In crease plan will be announced. Newspapermen do make errors once every ten years or so. A local paper carried quotation from Postmaster General Farley asserting the Demo crats would gain 18 senate seata next time. Farley'a friends say he meant six, and are gunning for the proof reader. A now deal cabinet officer describes Upton Sinclair aa a new atlck to beat the administration with." Some of Treasury Secretary Mor- genthau's friends are whlllng away ineir iaie momenta oy staring a Jest ing rumor thst Controller O'Connor For Your FLOORS QUICK DRYING TOUGH AND DURABLE When yei enamel a flooi TOU want fltw enamel that dHea fast. You want the finish to be smooth and durable so that It's easy to keeo dean and abla the wear and tear of constant use. Lowe Brothers Qukk-Drytng Floor finameJ Is made to do these things and to five the floor exceptional beauty. Come In and ae the many colon. raurae BIG PINES LUMBER CO. FACTORY BLOCKS A Whole Load $4 MEDFORD FUEL CO. Tel. 631 K a X Is 'being mentioned" for secretary of the treasury. They know how Mr. Morgenthau Ukee Mr. O'Connor and have ordered plcturea of Mr. Morgan thau'a face when he hears about It. (Copyright, 1034. by Paul Mellon.) 4 WINDOW GLASi e sell window glass and win replaoe your broken windows reasonably. Trowbridge Cab inet Works. NOW ippoLESS lCi) PRICE 41 T -Js -. 4 -! VVt(W 3 . 4 i h - FICK'S HARDWARE STORK May t ai Sales and Service for Jackson County 131 W. Main. l'honc 300. Medford, Oregon THE MAYTAG COMPANY, Manufacturers FOUNDED 1893 NEWTON, IOWA Forhocid not having electricity, arty Maytag nay be had with Gaioline Multi-Motor dtiliat additional coU 10-8-34 Me m 1 TOURIST PULLMAN SERVICE TO ' CALIFORNIA Now the Shasta carries a tourist Pullman, providing economical sleeping accommodations to Cal ifornia. Tourist berths are ex actly the same sire as standard Pullman berths, with fresh, clean sheets blankets and porter ser vice. The following fares are pood in coaches, also in tourist Pullman (plus berth); Roundtrips TO San Francisco .... $16.00 Los Angeles ?28.70 A tourht lower berth from here to Stin Francisco costs only $1.00 ' Fasltfis J. C. r.tlll.C. Ascnt. ? Hotel Fisjueroa ' Hsnerna St al : ;i llltk. I.n Antrles ' i Calif One or Los i ! ';i':Sl nseies" newest Cv . . iioirim. s: ' . . ? t- ' I loom ot V... r-1. Comfort. Dovntnwn. r.ariice In Connection Bttr from fl.50 per dij ntthntit bath 2.00 pf tUy ullh bith f.1.90 per rln twin Orrt nfl bstb n iH I It I ee.