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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1934)
' PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOUD. OREGON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune "Ewyont In Southtrn Ongoa Rudi the Mall Tiibuni1' Dillr Ewpl Aaturdaf Hubllihed bf HEHKOH1) I'RINTINU CO. S5-2T-29 N. Fir 8U HUHEHT W. BUHL, Editor An Independent Nevipaptr Enured la iMOttd elm mattw tt Uadforb Orfton, under Act of Mirth 8, 1811. The World Series, etc., etc. 8IH8(KirTI0M BATES Mill In Adiion Dally, one year fB-O'J Dally, ill month 8..T Dally, una month AO B farrier In Adtanea Mfdford. Albland, JaekaoDTlUa. Central Point. Phoenix. IaJftrt, Gold Hill arul nn IHffham. DalH. ana rear Ifl.OU Daily. (Ix month I 2& pail, tat month .60 All term, eaih to idunca. Official paptr of tha City of Medford. Offlela) paper of Jacktoo Countjr. MEM BE It 0 THE AHHOL'lATCIi PHEflS fieceirini Full Lfued Wire Berries Tha Aiaorlatcd Crew ll iclUAlf ly entitled to trie uat for publication of all newt dlipalehc credited to It or otherwlis credited lo tbl paper and also to the local neva pubmhed herein. All 'igbU for publication of ipeclal dlapatcoea berelD ira uu reeened. HEMHKH OF UNITED PHE8S IfEMKKK OK A linn RUUEAU OF CIRCULATION'S Admitting Reprnentatlfet IL C. MOfiENSEN A COMPANT Office In N York, Cbicaco, Detroit, fan rranclaeo Lot Ancelea Heal lie Pnrtland. MEMBER R.. HPHE world series, starting today, promises to pretty well absorb the public interest for the remainder of the week. With one team getting into the title bout, after one of the hardest up-hill fights in baseball history; with the other, rated as an also-ran when the season started, bringing the champion ship to a city, that hasn't been on top for over a decade; there promises to be more color and suspense in the contest than usual. Baseball in the writer's opinion, isn't the best sport in the world, but it is a good one, and more essentially American than all the others. It also furnishes a nice example of successfully combining rugged individualism with regimentation. RUGGED individualism is particularly noticeable in the pitch ers and batter's box. The pitcher has very little to con sider except the stick in the batter's hand, the plate; and getting the ball over the latter so it will elude the former. The batter is equally on his own. He is in a position to win the game single handed; and single handed lose it. With other members of the teams, individualism exists but isn't so important. There is team play to be considered, there are assists and proper support; and pepping up the boys' morale. Generally speaking the team that plays best together wins, "all for one and one for all." Regimentation comes in via the rule book and the umpire or umpires, the world series games have three. The umpire decides whether a player is out or isn't, whether the hit is fair or foul, whether the inshoot nicked the plate or went wide. Persanal Health Service By William lirady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to d Il ea ke diagnosis or treatment will be nattered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelope; li enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Oulng to the large number of letters received only & few can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Cat. CLIMATE AND CHRONIC RHINITIS H OW we hate and curse the umpire, when his decisions Ye Smudge Pot By Art h lit Perry. Thl la the last week to register for the general election. By not reg istering, on or before next Saturday, your voting will not Interfere with your bridge playing or duck shooting on election day, November 0. "The Republlcan-Publle Defense League" will be formed. Many sadly bettered and thoroughly chaatened Republicans, feel that the public ahould be left out of this, on the grounds they are not In dire need o! defense. , , ! Another deer hunter was around yesterday, exhibiting as fine a pair of horns, as we ever clapped an eye on It was a treat. ' DISCREPANCY VS. EXPECTATION. (Edgewood (Calif.) News) Our school opened Sept. 10, as per schedule, but to date, Sept. as. no pupils have answered roll . call. Knowing the teacher aa well as we do, we are sure she will expect her month's salary next Friday night, when her month Is up. Just as tho there were no de presalon. Some people are queer that way. Citizens not busy winning the first game of the world series for Detroit or St. Louis, are about ready to make another arrest in the Lindbergh case. Politicians are getting mad, and lit soon be sneering ominously at the other fellows' candidate. , V. Van Dyke, the mighty hunter, who was lost and found,' has agnln found himself, and Is back at Ed Im port's, but Is still cautious about wandering Into the end of the store where there la a buggy-whip thicket, and a baseball bat forest. YOU TEM, 'EM. (Red niuff (Calif.) News) But to shorten my yarn. The senior children run their death traps through Grant avenue at 00 or less. They are thus a menace to the Juniors and raise a cloud of dust. And we wish they would atop it T They still have Franklin street to speed and race on and Frank lin street ts newly oiled and com paratively safe for such foolish ness. There Is considerable off-hand re joicing In these parts, because P. Gary Calllson. the football coach, and former local boy has made good In Eugene. His squad larruped the Uctans, 30 to 3, thereby knocking California egotism and home and for eign wise-guys to three (3) of the four (4) winds. It waa alleged that Mr. Calllson was Just a good high school coach, whose success had been largely due to the thinking of his predecessor, and, that this year he waa up a rafter, and the first howla of the campus wolves were heard In the offing. It was going to be a mel ancholy autumn for "Old Oregon's" football hopes, and a sad finish for P. Gary, First came Oonzaga, to be dehorned. 13 to o. Then came the Uclana, red-hot and full of hem Ange les bologna, nun a hlgh-prlred coach, and a silver cornet band. The more optimistic predicted a tie score, and prayed for such. The majority were prepared to bawl. Tt e fore, noted above, proved that Mr. V. could paddle his own football equad, and he now looms tip aa prominently aa one of the Dean boys. Friends of "Old Ore gon" suddenly woke up lo the fact there was a coaching genlua In their midst, and started advocating that he be given a 6-year contract, no matter whose reelings get hurt. Such la Fame I All he needs Is a couple doren young men. with all their arms and tears, and mental -faculties, to pro duce happy Saturdays for "Old Ore gon" Plan Oiater Cutlng Kducailon PROVIDENCE, R. I. I HP) A cam pa nn haa been started here to ex plode the old theory that oysters are not eatable during the months with out an R. Dr. Thomaa H. Connolly, prominent Narragannrtt Ray oyster man, artld that medical and actentlft expert mould be employed In trv: drive to rout the popular "superstition." ber. Then presto! Terry is declared safe on his slide fof home well that umpire isn't so bad after all, in fact he is just about as fair and square an umpire as one could find. ON with the game!" Vq that's vrrv Anipripnn too. as well as verv human. But consider if you please, what the game of baseball would be if there WERE no umpires, that is no regimentation. If rupged individualism were allowed to prevail, each man for himself and the devil take the hindmost! What a game TIIAT would be. It wouldn't be a game, it would merely be a riot, and baseball as we know it, would meet a sudden and untimely end. fV course no one LUCES regimentation. Xo one likes to be told what he can and can not do. We all yearn, deep in our hearts, to be able to do one of these fine days, just as we darn please. But that day never comes. And probably it is just as well, not onlv for ourselves but the world, that it doesn t. For life is rather like a game. Until the millenium arrives, until human perfectibility appears more likely than it does to day, life, without regimentation would probably end as dis astrously as tho Great American game without umpires. Wo curse the umpires. We rail against the rules and regu lations. We yearn for rci'fcct liberty to do as we please. But in our soberer moments we realize that HAVING rules, and living up to them, is the price we must pay, for enjoyment and perpetuation of "tho game." No New Deal in Oregon? ON his recent visit here Joe Dunne dismissed the New Deal and all other national issues, as matters of no concern to him, or to the people of Oregon. We have no doubt of Mr. Dunne's sincerity in this direction. He does regard the Now Deal as a lot of hooey, and honestly be lieves the principles of the Roosevelt administration, can in no way affect the welfare and development of this state, and are therefore entirely irrelevant, as far as the gubernatorial race is concerned. BUT in this as in many other things, the Republican candidate ifi mliifnlrpn Oregon is, though some of our eastern friends will dispute tho point a PART of this country. Whether the New Deal policies are carried out, or abandoned, in this state, will certain ly have a vital bearing, upon its economic, social and industrial development. Take the Samuel Instill case, which started in Chicago yester day, for one example. Now Oregon in a small way has had its Samuel Instills there was tho notorious A. E. Pierce holding company for example, which victimized over ten thousand peo ple in the Portland area. If the good old days are brought back, as Mr. Dunne and his followers wish them to be, there will be more Instills, more A. E. Pierces, more holding companies nnd get-rich-quick investment trusts, but as governor, .Toe Dunne would have no interest in checking them. All that sort of thing he would put down, as a lot of hooey. A medical colleague aays he won dered If I had not let myself in for something when I conceded that cli matic changes might aggravate chronic rhinitis. He says my teach ings about spray infection have led him into per. aonal difficulties with people who made the painful mistake of cough ing in hia face (when he waa not paid for It) or coming Into his home with a h'ijh power cold . . . and some of these people are now saying with great glee: "See, Doc Brady him self admits," etc., etc. In the first plase, I have never conceded that cold, drafts, wet feet, dampness or Insufficient clothing might aggravate chronic rhinitis. In the next place, If the poor Idiots get any comfort out of that misunder standing, let them enjoy It. The ilfe of the victim of cryophobla must be pretty sad at best. I do believe that wearing exces sive clothing, overheating dwellings, shops, conveyances, schools, churches, theaters and excluding drafts and dampness, are common factors of crhronlc rhinitis, chronic bronchitis and related conditions. Or If your can think of better words of two syl lables, I believe the bad habits Just mentioned are the chief cause of chronic catarrh. My colleague wonders Just what would happen to surgical patients If the operating room were kept cool. What effect would a draft have ou a patient under ether? While heat Is necessary In the treatment and pre vention of surgical shock, he has an idea a surgical patient would do bet ter If the operating room were kept not warmer than 75 degrees F. and the corridors and the patlent'a room or ward were kept at the same mod erate temperature. What more effective way could we devise to dehydrate a patient than by keeping the patient for an hour or more In a superheated operating room, bathed in sweat, and then put ting the patient Into a hot bed with hot water bottles or other artificial means of maintaining the excessive heat? What is the sense of encour aging loss of fluid through the skin In that way and at the same time administering injections of salt solu tion under tho skin or into the veins to restore the loss? Aside from that, what essential dif ference Is involved in cooling off nn anesthetized patient and a conscious one? 1 Two recent works on operative sur gery, one by a German author, one by an American. Both eminent sur geons stress the Idea of protecting the patient against pneumonia by guarding against "drafty corridors" and "exposure." As I have remarked many times, a good skilful surgeon Is generally a pretty poor physician. I mean he Is not so skilled In general therapeutics. If he Is really good In his line of surgery he can well afford to defer to better men when a question of general therapeutics comes up. But these days the surgeons are grabbing alt they can get and if they can pose as all-wise before the admiring pub lic, why, that's great prestige, and prestige ts great for business. My colleague says he quails at tho thought of suggesting to one of these thick-lenses that he doesn't know what he's talking about. Alt right Turn the blighter over to me and I'll tell him. The notion that a patient will get pneumonia from draft or ex posure or from not having the room overheated, Is comical, and no one but a surgeon would have the face to spring It today In a book. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Bargain Cure-All I noticed advice regarding cure of cancer. I have cured cancer with very common plant It takes 35 to 36 days application it draws It out with out the least pain. I hold this recipe at 1000. If It interests you write to Mrs. S ). Answer. If anybody ever does dis cover a cancer cure and tries to keep knowledge of It from the public, the wretch ought to be hanged. Slippery Elm Friend and I argue about the ef fect of slippery elm. I contend shrinks the Internal organs and 1 harmful. Mrs. V. W. G.) Ans. I don't understand what you mean. If you mean slippery elm, that Is harmless enough. If you mean alum, that is an astringent and may cause poisoning, but does not shrink anything. Bad Habit What do you advise for chronic constipation? (E. C. M.) Ans. That you send 10 cents and stamped addressed envelope, for copy of booklet, "The Constipation Habit." ; Huitt l'p. Slowpokes Only 4 per cent of the malt to this column la air mail. Come on, tight wads and atowpokes. let's speed up our correspondence, both ways. Air mall postage rate Is now only 6 cents for each ounce or fraction. Use It and don't complain so much about the freight or steamboat service. (Coplyrlght, 1034, John F. Dine co.) Comment on the Day's News- By FRANK JENKINS "pHE RAILROADS ask the lnter- A itat commerce commission, which la the government, for Increased freight ratea. If they don't get them, they say they won't be able to earn fixed chargea on their lnveatment. THE ATTORNEY for the railroads, In presenting hla case, aaya: "The railroads merely seek to ad vance the price of what they sell when costa they CAN NOT CONTROL make such action imperative." HAT does he mean? Simply this w Ed. Note: Persona wishing to communicate with Or. Ilrndy should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. I)., S8S F.I Camlno, Beverly Hills. Cal. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre aLa. XlWUI not SUCH a policy in the st of INTKUKST to the people of this state house at Salem he people of tins state! Wc believe it would. The collapse of the Instill Electric em pire in tho middlewest cost the investors, most of them small ones, over a billion dollars. The collapse of the Tierce company in Portland cost the people hundreds of thousands nf dollars. Were these eataMrophies, merely inevitable by-products of the depression? No. The depression was tho exciting cause, no doubt. Hut the chief cause was (freed plain greed, tha desire to Kot-rieh-quiek, "Aim flam the jinlliMo public while the flim rlamniinn is good I" One of main purposes of the New Deal is to prevent this sort of tiling. The control and strict regulation of holding com panies and investment trusts was one of the first reforms that the IJoosevclt administration demanded and one of the first secured. Don't the people of Oregon believe in a reform of this sort, don't they want, as chief executive of this state a man who is in sympathy with such action, and can be depended upon to secure similar IcgMution. within the borders of this state! We believe they do. And the only candidate who is pledged to support the New Deal pnicieN--wlin in fact has the slightest IN I KKIiST in them, is ticucial .Martin. not average more than one to they NEW YORK, Oct. 3 The showy grandeur that was New York's has vanished like one of those fugitive morning fogs that blow up from the harbor. At the first con sequential first night only sit men appeared In full evening dress and but seven wore the dinner jacket. The chauffeur- "1 driven car along Fifth avenue does blovk. Moat of the iamous jevew are in cold storage and the insurance has been canceled. A sudden con sciousness hit the town In early Sep tember that display was bad form. Even the beauty parlors thai have ridden the crest during the depres sion' are facing their first slump. Peo ple with means are spending their money but to help the other fellow. They have come to realize such ex penditures are a form of personal in surance. Swank dinner parties In home and cafes have been abandoned for the season. The biggest loss Is, of course, among purveyors of luxury. Those who are buying Jewelry and fura re doing so solely as Investments. There is some gaiety, but it haa a simplicity never seen before. In one of the Bay district ot Brooklyn Is a Japanese colony of men who have married white wives. More than a dozen In all. So far there has been no divorce and one couple has been married 14 years. While they suffer from certain social oatraclta tlcn. the grouping together makes It less pronounced. In Chinatown there are said to be only five white women married to Chinese. They are seldom seen. Constance Bennett Is a favorite among Japanese moTle fans, by the way. Orenrllle Klelser, author. Is a stu dent of words and their nuances. For years he has Jotted down phrasing that have appealed to him. Among these topping hit list are; The sky mellowed to evening rose . , . Grey dusk was merging into velvet mgiu . , . She spoke with Jumpy loquacity . . . The climbing sun flooded the wcirld with gold ... A gesture stem med the rising tide cf words . . . Rising on successive terraces of mem ory. I still think it so-so. fine. But not pretty Recently I trumpeted for the where abouts of Jerry the Greek, who was at Jack Dempsey's heels with spaniel de votion during his championship. Jerry was a rubber as I recall, a barnacle o" an early training camp that stuck. Prom Los Angeles he writes: "Things have not been so good. I had a mis hap. Two years ago in Chi I was held up and slugged, breaking my check bone in five places and resulting in seven major operations. Outside that I'm O. K. and will soon be back in the boxing game." Mishap Is cer tainly no over-statement. Few Idols had a more faithful fol lower than Dempsey's Jerry. He was In his corner at every ringside, slept, Hindu fashion, on a pnllet outside the champ's door, bristled like a watch dog at the approach of strangers, and during the final days c, training re fused to permit food to leave the kitchen that he did not taste for pos sible poison. When Dempsey lost to Tunney the . first time, Jerry wept continuously for three days and nlglrts and lost 13 pounds. Speaking of boxing, veteran rlng slders are pleased Jimmy Johnstone has been signed up again to control the mstch making at Madison Square Garden. Every effort was made to plow under the doughty, dapper, gritty Irishman. Almost every month there was a rumor he waa to go. and Page One pictures of his successor. But Jimmy, clenching hla cigar tighter, took the bastings and carried on. His penchant for handling abuse with a shrug was a deciding factor In his retention. They needed a tough guy for a tough spot. He could take it. Johnstone is a devoted fam ily man, the father of 11 children and talk escapes In sudden blurts out of the side of his mouth. The government, 1 which has been practically running the rail' roads for many years, has passed laws which the railroads must obey. Obey lng these laws Increases their coots. In order to get back their Increased costs, they must have increased rates. WHAT are these laws passed by the government whose effect la to increase the cost of railroad opera tton to the point where increased rates are necessary If the railroads are to remain solvent? Wet), In the main, they are laws requiring the payment of HIGHEK WAGES, In one form or another, by the railroads to their various classes of employees. There have been other laws, oi course, whose effect Is to Increase the ccst of railroad operation, but the wage law have gone farther In that direction than the others. AT THIS particular point, let us ask another question: What will happen If the railroads are permitted to increase their rates in order to get back their Increased cost of operation? Why, THIS will happen, of course; Increased freight rates will enter Into the cost of practically everything we use. That Is to say, because ot increased freight rates prices of prac tically everything we eat and wear and use generally In our everyday ai falrs will have to be Increased. These Increases In cost will afreet railroad workers, along with all the rest of us. Then, because their cost of living has been Increased, they will have to have STILL HIGHER wages. Higher wages will mean still higher freight rates. And so on. THE PRIMARY purpose of NRA was to bring about more employment at better wages. Fine. We were all for that. But more employment at better wages meant HIGHER COSTS, in order to get back the higher costs in volved, NRA permitted higher prices. Then, as we began to pay these higher prices, we discovered that our Igher wages wouldn't BUY ANY MORE than our lower wages used to. That is the weak spot In NRA. ! IT IS the weak spot In all govern ment control of industry and busi ness. As government, by means ot Its various regulations, increases the ccst of operation. It has to permit INCREASE OF PRICES or the whole J structure of business will fall and there will be no employment. As prices Increase, cost of living in creases. As cost of living Increases,: wages must be Increased to make up the difference. Higher wages mean still higher cost. It runs Into a vicious circle. That Is one big reason why It is so hard to increase prosperity by passing a law. v ! 4 There's a lilac-breasted pigeon peck ing at a window pane of my study. It means something. But I'm afraid to ask. (Copyright, 1P34, McTfaught Syndi cate, Inc.) In my first reportortal days in New York 1 covered a commonplace mur der in a Rlvlngton street tenement A tired mother, fed up on the chronic abuse of a drunken husband, felled him with an sxe. Somewhere I wrote that the man and wtfe were "bunk ered in the btu-kwah o; life'' and thouuM that pretty fu.e. It was de leted by the blue peiK'Unl butcher ' BU'k Mike" we called turn of the copy desk GRANTS PASS, Oct. SISpl.l Breaking open the mayoralty cam paign in the Grant Pass city elec tion a month before the November balloting, C. A. Hoxie. regular repub lican nominee for the office. Tuesday announced hla withdrawal from the race. The consequence of Hoxie' decis ion will be the appearance of ttv najiie of the democratic nominee. Roy A. Thomas, upon the November bal lot alone. Communications lowing an occupation that has prob ably the least connection with the affairs of Oregon state government, and call for as little attention to state business as any that csn be im agined, seems to have aroused In this venerable gentleman, no feeling of ! possible incompetence to fill the Job. It has been said "a little learning Is a dangerous thing." If. 30 years ago, Mr. Martin had been actively en gaged for several years assisting In handling the business of running the great state of Oregon, as a legislator or other officer, and had observed the complicated nature of the business of being head of this great corpora tlon, and the vest fund of Informa tion, and the tact and skill necessary to properly handle the Job. it la very probable that the most powerful of persuasloa could not now have m duced him to accept the Job at the atge of 74, if It were handed him on a sliver platter, with detailed printed dlreotlons of how to meet and handle every problem that could arise, as hla experience would have taught him that the governorship of this state is not a suitable vehicle upon which to arrive comfortably at the ripe old age of 78 years. If we must choose a governor from a three-ringed circus, let's not choose the recently found passive exhibit "A" in the sideshow, but rather the man of 52 years, Joe Dunne, who has been actively connected with the( man agement of the show, and carefully studying Its problems, for over eight years. DON R. NEWBURY, President, Medford Chapter Orcgun Republicans. Medford, October 3. f Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the riles of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Years Aro). (Continued .om page one) terest rate yet offered on Installment buying. On these loans, the banks run little or no actual risk, but the amount of clerical work Involved In handling such small Installment loans makes bankers shy away from them, even at the 9.7 per cent figure. It keeps the bookkeepers busy. The truth Is that the original plan. first worked out by the new dealers, would have cost more than 1 1 per cent. It waa only after an expert Installment loan man was called in from a New York bank that the actual interest was cut down to 9.7. columbiFatTowest MARK YET RECORDED VANCOUVER, Wash., Oct.. 3. (AP) The Columbia river this year reached the lowest level ever known. The stream stood 3-10 of a foot below tho zero mark when observations were made yesterday at tho municipal ter minal. Three or four times in the past 25 years the zero level had been reached, but never before had there been a sub-zero reading. GUNS Repaired and Cleaned Ex pert work Medford Cycle 23 N. Fir Phone 64a We'll dsui away youi refuse City Sanitary Service TEX YEARS AGO TODAY October 3. 1934 (It Waa Friday) Willamette university of Salem playa Oregon to a scoreless tie, and it is alleged "three ringers from Kan sas" played on the Salem team. Wind storm roars over the valley, and "awakens the town at 5 a. m." Record breaking registration for all elections predicted. Installation of fire escapes at the Jackson and Roosevelt schools ara completed. The Frank and King tent show, after a record run here, moves to Ashland, and the opening play, "Th4 White Slave Traffic", attracts a smal audience. The company abandons plana for a week's engagement. Rainfall for September was above average. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 3, 1014 (It Waa Saturday) Mr. and Mrs. Corning Kenly leave next week for Chicago, where they will spend the winter. The Colony club held their literary meeting Friday afternoon at their club rooms In the Medford building. Tea was served after the program. Espee freight nearly crashes Into horse and buggy driven by a sewing machine agent at the Main street crossing. Fierce battle at a country dance with two men In hospital and two more In Jail. Russians claim a great victory ir. eight daya battle on the River Nlt" man. V.F.W. E LOUISVILLE, Ky., Oct. 3.AP) A threat by National Commander Jas. E. Van Zandt to throw out a heckler who was disturbing a speaker today was backed up by a tumultous dem onstration at the Veterans of Foreign Wars national convention here to day. Shouts of "Throw him out!" and "Hurrah for Jimmy I Hurrah for Pear son!" drowned out everything else as a dozen men converged on the spot where someone had shouted: "Why don't you stop!" as Frank Pearson, head of the unemployments service of the U. S. department of 1&W bor, was explaining the efforts made to find Jobs for the unemployed. Pedestrians Lose "Heads" HARRISBURG, Pa. (UP) Analysis of accident data received to date this year has convinced the state division of safety that one out of every four pedestrians confronted with immedi ate danger of accident "loses his head" in the emergency. STOMACH ACIDITY QUICKLY RELIEVED Newbury Doesn't Like Martin. To the Editor: I read your Interesting editorial of last Friday, entitled "The Great Joe Dunne Circus." and was surprised to find the most effective statements in tt were based upon misinformation about Senator Joe Dunne's announced platform. Since you liken alt good, effective campaigning to a three-ring circus, X know you'll pardon my carrying the analogy a bit further. In this "three ring circus" campaign for governor, we have as the only exhibit In the main sideshow tent, a true world won der, a wonder not in whst he his done, but in what he believes he can do. He Is a major-general of the U 8. army, with 34 years of army serv ice, retired at the age of 74 as too o'.d to lonser carry on In the vocation he has been studying since hi youth, but still young enough to leern one of the most complicated of businesses, that of being governor of Oregon. The fact that until his retirement, with a pension of P.0OO a year for the remainder of nis Ilfe, he was fol- Aparhes I se Tent llomea PORT APACHE. Ariz i VP- For the first time in history Apache In dians. last of the larce trihes to be subjusated in America., have moved into tents and are using stoves in their villages Eiclit hundred hi abandoned their grass "wicktupv f government tent village, p.twns $ Twfuty-sotnt years later ;eaca for tut tents. NOTICE GLADIOLUS GROWERS It has come lo the nolle oi the (ilndltilus Association thit imir Gladiolus bate nui nloomed out, or hate wilted If your (ladlntns hare not done i well a the should we will mtrct vou i en r den and try inri help rou tolie your prob lem Innri (or ncttei Olmi htMim Phone 10;3. So obit citton (itaillolti Awclatlnn Secretary of State Praises Dr. W. B. Mayo New Tablet Formula While on a recent fishing trip Fran C. Jordan, Secretary of the State of California, had an acute attack ol in digestion and gastric pains. A friend gave him Dr. W. B Mayo tao.ets. which relieved hla suffering immedi ately. "I cannot praise your special formula too highly." Mr Jordan wrote Dr. W. B. Mayo, who has perfected a special new tablet formula for reliev ing Stomach Distress caused by hyper acidity, stomach acidity and result ant gas in stomach, indigestion, over eating distress, heartburn and "sour" stomach. Among the scores of enthusiastic patients whom Dr W B Mayo has treated with his new tablet formula are Panny Brtfe. screen, stage and radio celebrity; Mrs. Max Baer. wife of the heavyweight champion of the world; Martte Bowman, national avla trlx idol; Lou Daro. famous sports promoter; Charlie McDonald, manager and matchmaker of the Hollywood Legion Stadium, and others. If you have any troubles for which Dr. W, B Mayo's Special Tablet For mula are intended to relieve, dont suffer another day. write and accept full details about this exceptionally generous trial offer, which enable you to take 75 of his tablets anc t prove their value to you without risking one cent. By return mall you will also receive FREE and without cost or obligation his valuable book about relieving Stomach Dlstriss caused by hyperacidity, with letters from famous and prominent people whom he has successfully treated with, hla special tablet formula. Write Dr. W B Mayo. Dept 25. 3733 Wllshlre Blvd.. Los Angeles. California, today without fall. Wood's Drug Store. JJ " " M " M U U U ( j Coming! THE HAPPY i KITCHEN s Less Work! More Fun! 6