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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1934)
PSGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TlilBWE, MEDFOKD. OTtEfiON, MOXDAY, OCTOBER, 15, 1931. Medford Mail Tribune "Evtryont In Southern 0roo Rndi th Miil Tflbun'' Dilljr Eicept Saturday IlibllFhuJ bj MEOKOKU ritlNTINO CO. JB-2T-10 N. m 81. HOilLliT W. til II L, Editor Ao Indepcodeot Nnsptpcr Entered u Mcond elm mttar at Mcdfore Oregon, under Act of Mireti 8. 1879. 61'UHCKIKTION UATKfl By Mill Id Ad-aocs Dally, on year 16.00 Dallr. ill nontht 3. To Dally, on montn 60 By ttrrier in Aaranc MMrora, uniano, JackiomlUe, Central f'oint, I'ooeolx, Taieot, Gold Uill and on Ulgiiesyi Dal!, on hit ffl.00 Daily, U monthJ Dally, on month 00 All term, cub In adfinee. Official paper of the City of Medford. Official paper of Jaekaoo County. MEMHKH Ob TUB AKH'il'l A1EI1 PUB8i Itecelrlng Pull Leued Wire ferric lbs Aaiorlated I'reu U icluilTely entitled to th um rnr putillratlon of ill ne dtfpateht credited to tt or otherwise credited In ttal ptpct tod alto to Ui local nm published btrclo. All rlfbU Tor puMleatloo of ipecUl dlspaUfoea btrtln are aW reamed. ME Mil Kit UV UNITKD PRKtiS MEM II KK OK AIIDI1 HUHEAU OK ClflCCLATIOSa Adit-rMsIng Itepreientatliee M. C MOCKNRKN k COMI'ANT Officii In Ne York, CMmko, Detroit, las PraneUeo IvM Angele Raltle Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. The 11-year old king of Yugo Slavit can't do any worse than lome of the 60-yeor eld member of the legislature. Great surprise la expressed In Ken tucky, that a man low enough to kid pap a woman, would accept 950,000 for ber return, and then not do It. Friends of Sam H. Browne of Oer vsls, claim they are unable to under stand what Impelled Mr. Browne to attack Joe H. Dunne, who defeated Mm for the Q. O. P. gubernatorial toga. In a radio address last Friday right. They further allege, Mr. Browne did not have acnae enough to write the speech. In the first place, and secondly, does not possess enough money to pay for the broadcast. This la meaner than anything Mr. Browne aid about Mr, Dunne. The simpleton la beginning to arise, that Herbert Hoover put Mr. Browne up to his oratorical folly. TIIR CIIAltlTY GYP (IOA Angeles Times) One family on the charity list purchased a five room house for i cash while accepting aid. A sec- j ond family, voluntarily paupers, had an earned income of $50 a week. A third was paying 910 weekly on Insurance. Election beta are now being made, by several who claim they can't pay their taxes, It seems to be a rule. The more of a mess he makes of hts own af faint, the more competent he feels to run the country. (Mobile (Ala.) Regis ter) It's the one rule that never tails. Economists now argue "prices are artificial." This mny be, but same must be paid with real dollars. The hunter who has been bringing the horn of a deer around for the editor to see, will now appear with the tall-feathers of a Chinese Pheas ant. MIw Edith AMvrow, residing at N. X. 44th avenue, was granted permis sion by the city council to bake and sell plum puddings at her home (Peninsula (Ore.) Herald) The depths of regulation. Campaign Ilea are so aenrce, It may tie nerrssnry to re-condltlon some ot the lPrra crop. Two hunters have returned from sv mule-deer expedition, with a steer deer. MOMlAY NKillT I'm quite surprised no poet writes About the Joya of Monday night. On Monday night you must remain At home to rent from Sundays strain. On Monday nights, around the gloge. The pater dons hi lounging robe, IW'hile soothing snatches, sweet and low. Are rendered by the radio. Tis Monday night the world de votes To paying bills and writing notes. Then books are scanned and papers read Till hnlf-pnat-nlne finds all abed To gain from slumber's sweet delight The strength to romp through six more n funis I (Exchange) Raymond Poincare FORMER PRESIDENT POINCARE of FTance who died this morning represented very rare phenomenon, a scholar successful in practical politics. Poincare was a lawyer, a mathematician and a philosopher, and while he should not be confused with his cousin Henri Poin care, the famous mathematician, he was distinguished, in both lines of intellectual effort, and to the end of his life, devoted his spare time almost exclusively to study and writing. .... NE can't quite resist the temptation to compare his political career in France, with the career of another scholar who became president of the United States, and wss a close associate, during the war at the peace conference, former President Wood row Wilson. Both men were lifted to the highest posts in their govern ment, raised to the very pinnacle of popularity, and both were caught in the post-war reaction, and dashed from their great heights, to taste the bitter dregs of political defeat and despair. The tragedy broke President Wilson's heart and health, he died before his administration could be fairly appraised in the light of impartial judgment, but Poincare was either made of sterner stuff, or was more fortunate, perhaps both'. At any rate, though deprived of power, and relegated to private life, even threatened with trial for malfeasance in office the war president of France kept plugging along, and seven or eight years after his downfall, again became "the man of the hour" when France was threatened with financial collapse. Jt was Poincare, as premier and minister of finance, who saved France from economic and financial disaster. He reorgan. ized the currency, pegged the franc, and carried his country through its financial crisis, as successfully as he did through the world war, only another proof of his extraordinary intel lectual powers, his firm grasp of all administrative details, and his unswerving devotion to the welfare of his country. I IKE President Wilson, Poincare was a man of strong char- - acter and indomitable purpose. He never compromised with his principles, and the final success of his career, demon strated that while republics are notoriously ungrateful, hewing to the straight line of rectitude and high purpose, wins in the end, if only sufficient time is allowed. Few men in public life few men in any walk of life, are as fortunate as former President Poincare. Lifted to the heights, dropped to the depths, enjoying the adulation of his countrymen, one year; relegated to obscurity and contumely the next; the war president of France lived to be acclaimed by the very par liament that had damned him as a patriot, "who deserved well of the fatherland" as one of the most useful and valuable citi zens of France in his time. T only shows what a powerful role Lady Luck plays in the affairs of men. Some men live too long others don't live long enough still others, the fortunate few, not only live at the right time, but refuse to depart, until their work has been done. President Poincare, in sharp contrast to President Wilson, belonged to the latter category. "And of significance, too, is the fact that, a year later, of the $370,000 loaned by the .Regional Agricul tural Credit corporation of Portland to Kogue River valley winter pear growers, only $800 remained unpaid. That is nearly a perfect score, and is an enviable record for any financial institution, private or governmental. "The whole incident came to a happy ending be cause General Martin, through his past career, had valuable contacts in Washington. And the general is a man of such character that men in high position trust his word." Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Comment on the Day's News Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Or. Brady If a stumped self-addressed envelope 1 enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 265 El C a ml no, Beverly Hills, Cal. HIS DIET MAKES HIM A T. B. M. Funny, amusing, strange, touching, substitute two green vegetable, one Cull tin Marrunt. Notice la hereby Rtvfn that there re fund on hand for the redemp tion of warrant drawn on School Platrlct No 30 aa follows: No. 473. 47. 483, 4fl and 4114. Interest ceaara on Oct. 15th, )!;)4. 8. 8 ABBOTT, Clerk. School Dlat. No. 20 Get ready for wmterl cinctrUlT ZSO HEATERS. 18-ln. flreboi. HI 80: 4-ln. flreooi, 153 00. HUBBARD BROS., INC. Walk upatair and aave 110. Bank r'a gray autim. IH1 SO. mad to mMnre. Klein the Tailor. 15-os. Bin Harrington suiting. 121.90. mad to meaaur. Klein Ui Tailor. Upatair Cm Mail ITIulu want ad. So He "Knows Nothing!" llflTH fltrnnge persistency the supporters of "Airflow Joe" attempt to sustain their wierd contention that Congress man Martin, knows NOTHING about the state of Oregon or its problems. It is particularly amazing they should try to put over this foolish bit of hocus poena in southern Oregon. Only a year ago Congressman Martin certainly demonstrated he knew SOMKTHTNG about the fruit problems in this part of the state. He with the assistance of Senator McNary was ENTIRELY responsible for the growers in Jackson county securing a loan from the government sufficiently high to success fully surmount what was then a most critical situation. The following editorial from the Oregon Journal explains the servico General Martin performed for the pear industry in the Rogue River valley: "A critical situation faced Medford In April, 1933. Unless assistance could be found, utter ruin would be the lot of many people, and the prosperity of the entire community was threatened. Except for an Oregon man, the outcome might have been disastrous. "The pear industry is the backbone of business in the Rogue River valley. On it depend not only orchard growers and the many whom they employ to do culti vating, spraying, pruning, picking, packing and trans porting, but also merchants who sell to them. In normal years growers have enough money left from sales of the year before to finance the new crop, or they borrow from local bunks. Hut in March, 1033, all banks in the nation had been closed and even when they reopened many were not in position to make loans. "In time the Reconstruction Finance corporation agreed to loan 55 cents on a box for producing, packing and warehousing costs in preparing fruit for market. Hut 55 cents was not enough. Orchards had to be heated to prevent frost damage to fruit ; unless spraying were done, to control pests, there might not he a mar ketable crop; pickers had to he paid, and there were other necessary expenditures. All this could not pos sibly be done for only 55 cents a box. "Growers appealed to the RFC to increase the amount of the loan per box. Some were in danger of losing their all. Time and again they tried to reach the RFC to obtain a change of policy. Finally, the RFC finance board delivered an ultimatum. Fifty-five cents or nothing, it said. And 55 cents would not meet the crisis. "The situation was explained to Congressman Martin at Washington. When the general looked over the list of RFC directors he discovered that he knew one of the board members. "If this man McCarthy is who I think he is," he said, "then he is one of my former staff members, g judge advocate general of the army.'' "When General Martin entered McCarthy's office he was greeted with exclamations of surprise and wel come for an old-time friend. After the problem had been laid before him Director McCarthy said, 'Our board set this loan policy of 55 cents a box on what we thought good authority. But I have faith in you. If you will get me the facts 1 shall see what I can do.1 "The result was that at the next board meeting the Reconstruction Finance corporation reconsidered its decision and raised the loans to as high ss 80 cents in some eases. That was in April, 1933, Within 10 days growers in Ore iron began to receive the money. The winter pear crop was marketed and a situation that had threatened to be tragic was relieved. pathetic, queer, cordial, vituperative, anonymous, enlightening, exasperat ing or gratifying are some of the letter readers send in. The other dsy a public account ant noticed i warning In this column against eating pork, ham, sausage that Is not thoroughly cooked, since In spite of govern ment inspection hog meat not rarely carries trichina (the larvae of the paraalte in hoe; meat are dif ficult to detect by ordinary inspec tion and can be recognized only by microscopic examination). Trichino sis In man l a painful and often fatal condition. Thorough cooking of such meat 1 the best protection sgalnat such Infestation. The countant wrote to ak why I didn't advise people to avoid all ho meat. He had found that the eating of ham. bacon, pork and sausage In variably made hi mind torpid and Interfered with hi work On such foundation rest most of the freak notions people have about diet, and most of the weird teaching of self-made "food experts" or "diet special lata." Pork, ham, bacon or sausage Is highly nutritious food. It Is appetiz ing and easy to eat. It 1 commonly offered In attractive form to tempt the appetite even when one 1 not particularly hungry or when It is not one regular meal time. More pork 1 consumed In thl country than any other meat. Hog meat, fresh oi'nUed or smok ed, when thoroughly cooked, ts ideal food for the honest laborer, the sol dier or the hard playing boy. The sedentary business or profes sional man should content himself with a very small ration of hog meat. If he vie with the working man In hla consumption of pork he should not blame the pork for the dullness or heaviness that comes upon him when he is trying to digest the ex cessive amount of nutriment. Xt Is natural enough to doze after a hu$e gorge. Predatory animal always do after they have gorged on the kill. The quick lunch of many buslnew people Is altogether bad. X mean it 1 bad for health. It is fine food, all right, and too darned easy to eat. But it 1 not what the body demands, after all. Meat, potato, pie and cof fee. Not a vitamin In a stomachful. and scarcely enough mineral matter to put In your eye. For the pot i to or both raw; for the pie substitute whatever fresh fruit la In season or available; for the coffee substitute a pint of fresh RAW milk (certified if you can afford it). That make a 'fairly satisfactory lunch, both nutri tively and from the viewpoint o! health. Then If you want to make It 100 per cent perfect, substitute for the meat a couple or eggs, cooled a you like. Perhaps it Is Jack of the vitamins and mineral which rav milk, fruit, green vegetable and ega so liberally supply, that makes the business man tired and dull. It 1 remarkable how the addition of a ration of vitamin to the t.b.m.'s diet spruces the man up. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Scotch Hygiene. Have you ever been In Scotland? Tou might learn real hygiene there. In Scotland I never have seen peaches eaten without milk or cream until I came to this country, and as for put ting sugar on bread and butter. It 1 a common habit to put sugar on. You should know that we don't have a climate In Scotland except und?r glass, which make them expensive. A Scotch Reader. Answer Thank, you. but I am still a bit confused. I assume sugar Is less freely added to food in Scotland than It la here. Swim ml n jr. Is It safe to go swimming when you have ' a cough, cold or sore throat? Mrs. J. O. Answer Not If you swim in a pool or where others swim too. Send 10 cent and stamped envelope bearing your address for booklet "Call It Crl,' which explain why. Not One Whit. Accept the good wishes of six mem ber of our household. May you al ways have space In the newspaper We had Whitman' ointment made up and It banished obstinate ring worm from our household. We have tried several other of your sugges tion and always get fine results. Mrs. W. would like your pamphlet on Menopause . . . O. W. W. Answer All right. Just ask for It and then If you want to Inclose a pat on the back, write It on a separate sheet, so I can read It at leisure, If I ever get such leisure. Glad to send the monograph on Menopaiise or 'Change of Life" to any woman who Incloses stamped envelope bearing her address. (Copyright, 1934. John P. Dllle Co.) ,. By FRANK JENKINS VOU may have noticed In the pa- 1 papers a few days ago a little story to the effect that President Roosevelt think commodity prices aren't quite high enough and should go a little higher. Peraps you wondered what it meant. IT MEANS THIS: The rubber dollar 1 to be con tinued, for a while, at least, aa one of the devices of the New Deal. WHAT Is a "r It is a doll Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Or. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 265 EI Cam I no, Beverly Hills, Cal. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre i-- Ti faintly. Only Broadway ha produced her type In thl century. Another showy blonde whose vegue remains undiminished through the years is the blues chanteuse, Frances Williams. She sings with a scrapey husk and mostly off key, Is no shakes of a dancer and reveals little ability above the average cabaret performer. But she knows how to wear clothes and thus Is distinctly box office. Her name over a theater's facade brings cutomer who not only applaud but come back again and again. Personal nomination for the most striking celebrity resemblance that of Charles Laugh ton and Hey wood Broun. Mind readers and sundry seers are doing a land office business these uncertain days. Everybody want to peep Into the future. Wall Street brokers and thentrlcal folk are the most constant patrons of crystal gaz ers. A rhort walk from Columbus Circle Is a row of old brownstones known as Fortune Telling Row. Every variety of prophet U In waiting from , NEW YORK, Oct. 15 Diary: Out and bejaped by Harry Evans, the ga ze teer, about my ox-blood shirt and thence to the bras shop of Allen street to hunt for candle- notes from Madge Evans, Martin Johnson. Valen tine Williams, Faith Baldwin and Ralph Hayes. 1 W o r k e d a , smidgin and to the Hit Tower for luncheon with Arthur Brisbane, Damon Run yon, Bugs Boer, Mnury Paul and sev eral others. So afoot down Park ave nue all anlume with fine-feat hered ladles and saw plump, apple-faced Oscar beaming In a Waldorf doorway like an old English print. To dinner with the Sidney R. Kenta and the Watterson Rothaoker there. mi quite mrrry. i nen o arop in ai , for 80 cent9 canned my palm. He; urorge na loiru nrmsoy s puny vvor. nalr to n9 ,hcu!riers. had pterc for Mr. Sopwith. the Brill m yacht- j)tVT hvpnotlc vea and a bnw tie away ! man. Late to bed but could not sleep , ul trt n.r. HlB D-rUM in!un....on ! and read Montaigne's fine essay. -To WM. .-SMt mv from breams. I see, Julius Caeart" J a drowning." That nrtt summer they 'rubber dollar?" dollar, obviously enough, that will STRETCH. That Is to say, it Is a dollar whose purchasing pow er can be varied according to the Idea of some higher directing Intel ligence, buying a certain volume of commodities today, or this year, and a certain OTHER volume tomorrow, or next year. A T THIS point you will probably ask : "How can the dollar be made to do this: Heer 1 the answer: By varying the amount of gold in It. Or, to put It in a simpler way, by varying the number of paper dollars that will bo paid for an ounce of gold. We "we" meaning the government used to pay 0.S paper dollar for an ounce of gold. We now pay around 35. The law permits us to change this figure, with certain limitations, as and when tfe choose. ' PRICES, as everyone knows, are ruled by supply and demand. With a fixed-value dollar, we think of supply and demand In term of COMMODITIES, and we know that aa the supply of commodities goes up the price goes down, and as the supply goea down the price goes up. THE rubber dollar crowd says: "We will change all that. Here after we will think of supply and demand In terms of DOLLARS. If prices show an Inclination to fall too much, we will Increase the supply of dollars, thus causing the price to rise. If they tend to increase too rapidly, we will decrease the supply of dollars, thus causing prices to fall." It's exceedingly hard, you know, to control the supply of commodities, but It Is easy to control the supply of PAPER money." f -f- - THE rubber dollar crowd, you see, is seeking the EASY way out of troublesome situations saying, In effect: "It's no longer necessary to work and slave and scheme and deny and sacrifice in order to get our-j selves out of a hole that we've got ourselves Into by bad Judgment or laziness or greed. All that la neces sary Is to WAVE A WAND." MO ITBBER" dollar la a term of ' lX contempt, applied, by those who don't believe we can get our- i selves out of a hole as easy aa all that. j Its friends have a pleasanter-1 sounding name for It. They call it the "commodity" dollar, and the ; money made up of those commodity ' dollars they term a "managed" cur rency, meaning that hereafter the buying power of money is to be man aged by SOMEBODY, instead of be-1 lng left to the play of natural law. be used whether consciously or not to mislead grange member. Recent state masters and some of this com mittee have been, and now are, seek ing office. Candidate Zimmerman 1 a member of this committee. Being human, they are probably a greedy I for power and spoils a any other j politician and no more scrupulous In i their choice of political method, j Contrary to grange principles I grange politicians disregard our dl j rect primary laws. They supported Qovernor Meier as an independent In 1030, and then promptly deserted Mm without visible cause. They are now bolting the present direct primary nominee for governor. In self-Justification, they are charging that Gen eral Martin and State Senator Dunne are tools of what they claim to be a wicked power trust and other di visions of Big Bad Business, Such reckless attacks upon our prominent leaders and high officials are playing into the hands of Russian commun ism whose policy it is to prepare the soli for violence and armed revolution by first teaching the people to dis trust and then to hate those who must make, Interpret and execute our laws. There being about 30.000 grange members In the state, honest, loyal, but unsuspecting and credulous, each of whom we may assume to have In fluence outside the grange. It 1 evi dent that a political machine In con trol of the sources of grange Informa tion constitutes a grave threat which can be removed only by he light of publicity, the mean of which the Press so largely controls. C. P. 'STRAIN. Grants Pass, Ore., R. F. D. S. Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson Count, History from the tile of The Mall Trlnone of 20 and 10 fear Ao). TEN TEARS AGO TODAY October 15. 1924 (It Waa Wednesday) Dirigible zrt-3, land at Lakehurat, New Jersey after trans-Atlantlo flight. O. o. Cate and Everett Brayton re turn from a pheasant hunt with seren birds In their car. Work la proceeding fast on the In terior decorating of Hunt's Oraterlan, Reginald Parsons sells BO head ot stock from his Mountcrest stock ranch In the1 Siskiyou. (Contlnueo f.om page one) stand means a distinct change In la bor technique. The new deal publicity men are trying to put all the blame on Pro fessor Warren for his White House conference with Mr. Roosevelt. They Insist privately that the eminent gold magician wanted to see the presi dent, N and the president could not very well refuse. That would be a likely story If It were not for the fact that Mr. Roose velt talked ao much about price Just 24 hours before. The fact that Pro fessor Warren went In the front door Instead of the side door, where no one is watching. Is a fairly good in dication of what impression the White House wanted to create. It is quite true that Senator Bulk ley did not talk to the president about money before he made his de valuation prediction, but that means little either. No one expects devaluation right now, but everyone expect public speculation about it now, which is Just as good, so far as increasing price Is concerned. Copyright. 1034, by Paul Mallon. New Insurance rates have been placed In effect in New York state which are calculated to save auto mobile owners $2,000,000 a year. HO la this somebody who will 1 nanage the money? I Why, the government, of course, i And who Is the government? Oh, It's ' Just somebody that we elect to of- ! floe. j If we elect supermen to office, we may get super-results. If not, we ! won't do so well. W ILL the rubber dollar work? answer that question for yourself. the turbsned Hindu to the shawled j Nobody can answer it for you to your old crone who professes to foretell sntisfRctlon. me .mure id cuueu gr?unos. . ... But don t forget this: After you ve My single experience with fortune worked and earned and saved a dol tellers was with a professor who came j 1st and put It In the bank, you're to our river town in a houseboat call- ; pretty apt to WIint Xnow that t ed "The White Swan." He wss w;ia: i , . th. Mrni. . : wm STAY at the same value as when you put It in. Otherwise, you won't have much inclination to work and earn and save. That's the big trouble with the Sophie Turker returns from Eng land as highly publicised as any American performer of the day. When Sophie feels she has given the folk enough of her especial that she scoots to chalky Albion and bingo, blng go the tom-toms. At an age when most of her professional sisters are catch ing up with their fireside rocking, she Is at her peak. Her hot manna chan teys and deliveries are long out' d.ited, but her vitality In shouting plus a contagious sort of Joy, carries her on the crest. Dave Apollon t an other American performer who took London a Grant took Richmond. : snatched me out of the creek going ' rubber dollar. down the third time. Coincidence, ot course. But others can have fortune telling. I'm not going to play it any more. Bagatelles: Father Coughlln has one of the biggest Great Danes in America . , . Vincent Ipcz'a vslet is named Elmer ... Joe Tinker, Jr. son of the Illustrious Cub player, is a crack third baseman on an Orlanda. Fia.. team . . . Courtniv Burr ' I down to his last quarter whon his ; play. 'Sailor Beware." clicked '. . .Peter Arno likes people but prefers ) to dine In public alone . . . Alms ? Hotel Figueroa Ftguero 8L ai luth Lo Anfeles Cam One ot Lot angeler newest Hotels. 10 0 Oatslde Tm Comfort Downtown: Garage In Connection Rates from $1.50 per day without bath $2.00 pet day with oatb $3.00 pet day. twin beds and bath A B SMITH. Lessee. if eaa Coach Calllson of the high school reports, "there will have to be more hustling If Klamath Falls only beat us by a small score next Saturday." Harry Hansen and Mis Hope Ham ilton are married at Grant Pas. Cooler and cloudy weather 1 wel comed In the valley. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 15, 1914 Governor Os West visit Medford and Central Point, and delivers talks attacking "the timber trust in Oregon." Allied armies report progress along entire western front. Citizen fined $5 for leaving gasoline stored in hi garage, In letter to the editor "threatens to move back to California, where a semblance of Jus tice prevails." Large crowd attends fourth anni versary of Mann's Department store. The Elk lodge expects to have their temple completed In time to hold session therein by November 1. Farmers complain to sheriff that bird hunters shoot at anything that moves, and can't read the 'no hunt ing' sign." STOPS ITCH ON FEET AND TOES . ITCHING v RIM0WOM4 v "Kills germ ot athlete's foot" Non-Greasy. ITo bandages or m-say dressing. DEMAND DOBINAL. OaJl for It by name. WESTERN THItirT STORE 135 East Sixth St. IT miX SOON BE TIMS to buy winter coal and winter clothing. If you need extra money, see us. We will lend you up to $300 on your own signature and security and on the most liberal and con- VHliwnt tMTn Small nptlrhr or monthly payments. Inter est charged only on unpaid balance. Investlgateocr S: prompt, courteous and confi dential service. Cuo, Phowb or Wkttb. Ore. & Washington Mortgage Company 4.1 South Central. I.lcenw No. S-15I W. E. Thomas, .Mgr. MEABER, TMI ORDER 3 Communications Peggy Joyce, too, cannot be crowded out of the hendSlnes that have paged oied her lol these 0 years. She more than any other woman of her time Is a Broadway saga. She came to it out of obscurity with only a blue serge suit, tarn, and halt with a lemon -verbena tint. And becanv the mo I rxtvawtin ly gowned and Vw eted ioa;nre th fMicrt ever sax. Her beauty shows timet Imprint but Grange Vsed by Politicians To the Press: Tl. ere bemg "no agency except the press equipped to compete with Rranee politicians In molding public opinion. 1 have ventured to mall out this circular In hopes that it may serve as a reminder of the present Clavburgh. former of the Metro- .U'""J TJ'1 P"bUC, T' polltan, had an hour's interview with Hitler In Berlin recently . . . Wait Disney still likes to watch the trains , L'ome in, too. j The plan of grance organization af fords the state master and his execu tive committee great opportunity for controlling the sentiment of grange members: 1. The 300 grance halls If there mistake more ear refl pl traveling expense out of grance vlenlng than opening the dorr of the fund are" at their disposal, a. The wrorvg auto and finding a couple j Orange Bulletin ts under their con necking. I d.m't care to know. And tro). I couldn't a!! the things h c.ii'.fa ' When the state master and thtt me. Inef., I'm f-M n nbonl tw .-i-i-nlMoe ts c;nipowd of. or domt (Copyrlght. 1ST. M.'N.uigM S.nd :!,-.od by, ot'.,:c seeking politicians, tt cat. Inc.) inevitable that these laclilUe U SFKVICE MEASURED NOI BY GOO BUT BY IHE cninm X'l ' Making the Selection Obviously, it is difficult to make a desirable selection from any stock of merchandise that is not complete. This is particularly true in selcetin? a casket, due to the very nature of the task. We are, therefore, very proud of the fact that we do maintain a complete and modern display room, and a comprehensive display of caskets and funeral merchandise. PERL FUNERAL HOME Jl)y7T HA SIX TH AT OAKDALE -PHONE. 47