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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1934)
PAGE SIX ' Medford Mail Tribune i "Ewrofft In Southlrn Ortool Rod! Iks Mill Trillin," Dallf Eie.pt aaturdar MEUKOIII) rilNTINU CO. 15-3I-2I N. Kir 8U Fawn " HUBf.HT W. HUUU tailor Ao Indapeadant Npaptr Enlerad u aKond elm snU at HXtford Orifon, under art of slareb 8. I8H. 8l8CUirTI0N BATES Br Mill In AdiioM DHIy, OK rear " DaJIr. ill srontiu DalU, oat Bonta By Carrier U Adraoc Madforo, Aibltno, Jstisonrtlla, Cantral Point. Pbotols, Mot, Gold Bill and on IMiMin. I)ill, one rear Dllly, ill Bontbe 8.2a Dally, on month 80 All tarmi, eaah Id adranea. Official panar of the City of aledford. Orrieltl otr of Jaekaoa Counlr. MEMBKH 0' THE ASSOCIATED PUES8 lltcclilm rtlll Leaaed Win Berfln Tti Aiaorlated Preai to aieluiltrlj entitled to the mo for publication of all one dUpateber credited to It or otlierwtie credited tn thin papn and also to the local nevi publlibed herein. All 'Icnu for publleatloo of ipeelal dlapattbet bereln are alu reeened. MEMBER OP UNITED PUE88 HF.SIIIKII OP AUDI1 BUHEAD or CIUCULATI0N8 Adrertljlni Repreeentatliee M. C. MOIIENSEN 4 COMPANY Orrieea In Ne Tork, Ctrieago, Detroit, 8tn rraneUen Loa Angelea Seattle Portland. MEMBER , 1 mm MEDFORD MATL TRIBUNE, MEDFOIiD. OREGON, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 17, 1931 ie Smudge Pot By Arthur emj. JudgeDayand Good Government EVERYONE wnnts good government. But we can't have good government unless we support good government. During the pnst year, Jackson county has had one of the hest if not THE best administrations of public affairs in its entire history. The man chiefly responsible for this is County Judge Pay. lie has not only introduced harmony in county affairs, he has introduced the highest type of business efficiency. He has made good in a superlative way. It is incredible to this newspaper, that any fair minded per son be he Democrat, Republican or Independent, could seriously advocate the retirement of Judge Day at this time. Not only common sense, but plain SELF INTEREST, so clearly dictates the opposite course. e e JUDGE DAT has barely started. And yet in that short time, he has done more to restore good feeling in Jackson county, and put the affairs of the county on a sound business basis, than any other county official holding office in recent years. It is to the interest of us all, to give him a chance to finish out a normal term. And it is only common justice and fair play to Judge Day. Certainly if we fail to recognize good government when we have it, and refuse to support it, at the Foils, we can't expect good government in the future, nor will we deserve it. EARL Day is that rare combination in public life, a practical farmer and an experienced business man; he knows the rural problems, for he meets them every day in his own life; and lie knows Jiow best to solve them, for in the. last analysis they can only be satisfactorily solved along sound business lines. Courteous, considerate and conscientious, hard working al most to a fault (at least often to his own detriment) Judge Day on the other hand, has demonstrated clearly that he hasn't the weaknesses which so often accompany such pleasing charac teristics, for woe be to the person who tries to impose upon his good nature, or mistakes him for merely another politician, a soft soaping "yes-man." He is as far removed from that disappointing and ineffective type as is the Columbia river from Hutto Creek. Devoted to the welfare of this county, sympathetic with its people all the people (and their cares and problems) nevertheless when some principle in which he believes is involved he can be as in as tlie proverniui rocK ne wi'iirs a ithti tsiuvc, um mi . The 1300 Hungarian mlneri, "" threatened masa aulclde, and came done to doing It. tinleaa their vagea .-1.-.4 nu n,. wni.k. had i woe imocu w ii. .rr. "C S&niwho knows him or his record, doubts there is an iron hand be- toilera asked for 81 pr week In- neatll it. create In pay. American workera truck lat aummer because they wj s10,.t what earthly reason could be advanced for the people ?t mwt Cnyebiinkr co" Vnecan of Jackson county to change horses in the middle of the hear lamentations that conditions Ltrenln repudiate the best administration of county affairs, they .nought Huasr 7.7,7. au" have enjoyed, in lo '.-these many years, and having been GIVEN thine of communtam. j government, refuse at this critical time, to RETAIN itt Tueadny was cold enough to make ye ailiimit there is none. And we are confident the people IlTVLT" Te of Jaekson county will show by their votes on November 6th, furred fair sex. We have no patience with Mr. Sin clair. Our hope Is that he Beta bur led under ft anowatorm of ballota in November. Wa regard him aa a hypo crite and an Interloper. (Woodlawn. Calif.. Democrat). Wherein a Cali fornia Journalist, speaks up firmly and emphatically. Several caws of flu are reported, that defy both Dock Thayer pills, and $4.75 per qt. whiskey. A number of agriculturist! have invited your corr. to come out and ahoot C. Pheasants on their lower eo's, for hair the birds alaln, (It anyi. and the right to revoke the Invitation, and chase us off their places. Several Junior Oalihevlkia have developed a Mae West complex. They can't wiggle and talk out of the corners of their mouth, aa well as their brothers Impersonate C. Chap lin. Fordlstas continue to skedaddle south to California, so full of hone, fears are felt they might burn down the poor-farm. The hullabaloo over the ousting of the editor of the "Oregon Dally Emerald' UofO. campua publication has subsided, though for a time, it appeared that the ouster would be worse, than had the star fullback broke a leg. The average citizen doea noih know yet. Just what the erup tion was about, though he haa heard rumcra that "free speech waa Im periled." "Pree speech" la the favor ite refuge of demagogue. In neea of something to defend, while smoothing out their ruffled dignity. In the first editorial of the ousted editor, he wrote: "The Emerald shall oppose compulsory military training. It shall be a pacifist newspaper. It shall fight for the right to publish beer advertisement, be lieving a certain percentage of this type of advertising revenue belongs to this newspaper. The Emerald, not withstanding this platform. Is not a wet newspaper, but a temperance one." The first two sentences tell the atory. The campus editor was a pac Sf 1st. except when It came to fighting for beer ads. JOB OF A JUKI I. Ml tale Is one of woe. The thing that mainly haraasea a thoughtful Judge, it appears, is the gross dis parity between what the criminal law can really accomplish and what the public expects of It. He ha be fore him a narrow schedule of pun lshments, and It Is counted on to achieve a Ion? aerie of goods, rang Ing from the reformation of the con crete criminal to the dissuasion of all persona who may be tempted to Imitate him, but in actual practice It always falls short of some of aims, and In many cases It misses an of them. The criminal, sent to prts on. does not really reform, but aim ply becomes a professional. Tne feeble minded, observing hla fate, no nor turn to virtue, but adore ana follow him aa a htro. And the pub lic, heat; Ing pltrously to be rid of a mrn.tre to Its l.fe and limb, oltrn falls in its desire also, for he may brenl; cut anon and resume his devil trlrr or his term may expire, or ftone tc M(lT-hftriei governor may pa -mi hi in . (Criminal and Tar olcaj. itlmt they hold the snnic view of the B.timtion. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Oct. 17. Nothing hA the electrical tnutnesa of the first ; night of a new play by a new author,; featuring a new star. In two hours and half : lives are being1 made over if the play is a hit. In that short space the author be comes a man who can pay hla debts, and a celebrity. He can follow the trail of Ml successful p a y wrlghta to the south of Prance. s Those mucn oei- ter piays, wnicu no one would look at yesterday, can now be unloaded one by one. Funny place, the world! The dice so heavily loaded against him suddenly In single roll show six and a one. And the atari Already In the first rows young and middle aged men are classifying her as the unattainable. One for whom the world would wetl be lost. At 8:15 thta very evening she wa a struts lor -up. a bundle of nerve that might explode like firecrackers. Tomorrow her name will be on every tongue. The curtain ha fallen but they want her. So ahe comes down to the footlights, radiant, cool, e'.e- gnnt. Where are those nerves? Each movement ta followed by hundreds of eyes. She ha become a far great er drama than the play ahe haa en acted. or a bench In one of the trlangluar squares. Not an elegant way of meet lng the man you may wed. But what can one do? Billy Rose's spectacular upahoot In the Broadway amusement fireworks this summer and the Just a audden fall with a dull pllnk 1 not a new tale to the street. Rose, according to best reports, originated the Iden of the 91. AO dinner, musical, show dancing combination that filled two theaters to capacity. Then for a rest he sailed away and came back, he says, to find his backer looking the other way. They aeemed to remem ber Mr. Rose vaguely but could not somehow recall his nnme. Anyway. Rose dusted himself off and began to yell "Foul" and they had a new rag to chow In front of the Palace and Iilndy'. Over a stretch of 10 years there is no New Yorker who haa attended so many pArtie as Charles Hanson Town. A bschelor, columnist, poot, atory teller, he Is considered an astet at every dinner table or midnight buffet of Importance. Prank Crown Ingshleld used to hold the bachelor dintng-out record. But during the past few ye.ua like Irvln Cobb mak ing banquet speeches he ha growf, more coy and reluctant. He appear at auspicious event only. The stage ha many sturdy players who never gave a bad performance and without whose support atari would not shine with such effulgence. think of the sturdy characterisations of the bluff Texan. Joe King. No one 1 so convincing aa a Central Office dick. You remember his dra matic line to the forlorn maJd in "Broadway" "Pull yourself together, kid I" There are downs of Joe Kings, too many mere program name. But they are the iron In the theaters blood without which would be wmic corpuscled, anaemic. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.1X LINDY IDENTIFIES HAUPTMANN Hlened letter, perlalnlnf to ptnonal licaltb and hygiene not to dle- easc dlugnotli or treft mtnt will be answered by Dr. Brady II tamue! ,elf-addreai.ed envelope U enrlofed. letter, fhould be Drier and written in Ink. Owlne to the laree number ol letter, received only a lew can oe an- awered. No reply can be made to querlei not conforming to Instruction, ftddrest Or. Hllllam Urady, 263 El Camlno, Beverly HUH, Cal. CAIX'llM LACXATE OK HIVES r.Vk For two years, report a reader, l was unable to eat fruit of any kind. Even half a cherry would raise welts zr on my oody and make my eyes and mouth swell. Last February I began taking cal cium lactate tab lets a suggested by you. Alter I had taken a bot tle of 100 I again tried eating some fruit tinned pear. My face swelled again, but not so bad ly as It had the preceding two years. I started a second bottle of the cal cium lactate tablets, and this time drank 10 or 12 glasses of water every day. I had taken about fifty more tablets when the strawberry season came. I found I could now take strawberries with Impunity. At present I eat raspberries, fresh Jams and Jellies, and I want to tell you how much obliged I am to you. i had always been In the habit of tak ing about lour glasses of water daily. Perhapa my experience will be 01 assistance to others who suffer as l did. Believe me, I use the word "suf fering' advisedly. (J. M.) I hesitate to pass along the sug gestion, lest some carping critic pounce on it and wisecrack about the manly ailments for which we recom mend calcium lactate. Lets see. we have now suggested it at one time or anather for asthma, for hay fever, for migraine, for hives, for food sensiti zation but, by Jingo, we have not yet exploited calcium lactate as a remedy for that tired feeling or for weak nerves. Hypcresthctic rhinitis Is still an other complaint I suppose victims of this would call It suffering tor which this column has recommended calcium lactate, back In i.924. Anyway, Hlppokratea and I feel ronfldent that calcium lactnte will never do any harm. If we didn't feel that way we would not suggest it. Occasionally calcium lactate in tab let form is irritating to the stom ach. If so, It Is better broken up or crushed to powder and taken with considerable water, during or follow ing meals. Tablets of fi-graln size are conven ient, but ak fair dose Is 10 grains three times a day for a period of at least ten weeks. Some persons prefer to dissolve It In water and take it with some fruit Juice, well sweet ened. I den't know that diet ha a di rect bearing, but It 1 the opinion of good nutrition chemists and psy siologlsts that the ordinary diet ot the American urban dweller Is poor in calcium (lime). Exposure of the skin to sunlight Increases the utilization of calcium In the body. So does a dally ration of cod liver oil. There Is some reason to believe that the internal secretion of hormone ol the parathyroid gland controls cal cium metabolism or utilization In the body. Foods which are comparatively rich in calcium (lime) are cheese, beans, nuts, peanuts, egg yolk, turnips, car rots, cabbage, dried prunes, oranges, milk, oatmeal, wheat. Oh, yes, sometime ago this column reported that some physicians give calcium lactate, for rheumatism, too. Don't argue with me about it. I'm only telling what they say. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Morose They Are Angina for 18 years and enlarge ment of the heart the last three months. Why do my eyes . . . Don't tell me you do not answer morose questions, but tell me about sore eyes in connection with heart dis ease . . . (J. S. A.) Answer Honestly, brother, I don't care how morose a question may be. If X think the answer will do the correspondent any good, and do other readers no harm. I'm glad to answer it to the best of my ability. In this Instance I Just don't know. ; Sulphur tn the Sebum Can you tell me why my skin dis colors whenever silver, gold or even green gold comes In contact with it? (M. C. fa.) Answer Sulphur In the sebum (skin oil) or sweat rew:ts with the silver in the alloy to form black sil ver sulphide (commonly called "oxi dized" silver). Sulphur Is a normal constituent of Pibiira and sweat, ('.nicer Not Communicable Kissed or the mouth by a woman who has cancer of the1 breast . . . (Mrs. S. F.) Answer You have nothing to fear. Cancer is not communicable. Ordin ary cleanliness (soap and water) is always sufficient protection for the person nursing or In contact wltn a cancer patient. I . J1 ft -"i Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Or. Brady should send letter direct to Or. William Urudy, M. O., 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Car. Comment on the Day's News u Maurice Chvalier, bow-legged, oya ter-eyed and undershot, excltea more necking along New York streets than any film actor of the cjay. On atngc and off, he la an astonishing example of personality' grip. A flick of his cane, tilt of hat or lift of an eybrow under hi supreme artistry become exciting. Prom the Arleona Rumhorn: "Mc lntyre column has become an elex'.r. medlclnlng against many kind of ills." My assistant will now pas among you 1 (Copyright, 1934. M.-Jiaught Syndi cate, Inc.) , f E:aa I Wolfe, Interior decorator. 1 regarded by stylists a the best dreMd womnu among the middle aged In New Yo:k. Her sartorial me tier I that of refined elegance achiev ed only by marxed simplicity. The late Mrs. I.vdlg Hovt attained a sim ilar tone, aa did also Mnxine RUlott and Mrs, Kiske. There's a distinrt camaraderie abo it the lower Kast Hide when the day's work 1 done, l.lfe hit a swing Men lesn from windows, women talk and shop, and young girls who have hut- rledly chanced their work clothes, trip along In their bet, setting out for that nightly parade which, fo: lack of jtocml oc,-ton. ts the on.; way they have of meeting young mm their own aae. On the F.t tfide il la all conventlon.il. proper. T iey h!t lit ;jn!r r-efn-e wtiulovm. Uo nhcpmh .f.fi :pr" h iVrf ti'eir ht son Ukj aaajder oil Uiiiap to a, mow Communications Not TA White Jr. To the Editor: I wish to a tat that the Ed W. White arrested fXr drunkenne last week wa not my grandson. Krt White. Jr.. of Crystal Spring Dairy, and no relation. Mr. J. O. COFFIN, Phoenix. October 10. By I'KANK JENKINS ROM Klamoth to Lokevlcw ana : back In the morning. From Klam- j ath to Medford and back In the aft ernoon. Starting at 0:15 and clear back and at work by 4:00. An hour spent at Lake view, an hour at Medford, ana an hour off for lunch at noon. The world Is moving pretty last these days. 4 V - YES, you've guessed It the air plane. The new Southern Oregon service that feeds the whole South eastern Oregon country into Medford s great airport, connecting with the north and south planes and anni hilating distance for the people ol the great open spaces, making Med ford more Important than ever be fore In Southern Oregon. a V FROM the Klamath airport at 0:15, circling over town as a gesture to let people know that act ual air service Is now a reality here at home not Just something to read about elsewhere. Then away to the southeast. Into the eye of the sun. with the shadow of the plane following along behind, like a pup under the wagon. OU may think of the Klamatn alley at times, especially In the season when the weeds are going good, a something Just a shade mussy. like a house in the morning before it mitress has had time to get It cleared up. You should take a look at It from the air. From a thousand feet up, it locks like then pretty pictures they put In the children's books each house and grounds a model of order, each farm a perfect pattern, everything spick and span, with not ao much as a straw out of place If you're a fiend ftr neatness, you should make It a point to show your home town to visiting friend. fr.m the air. D You va t.llr Admit. Attention AUSTIN. Tea. (UP) A Illy In enr ol the blolonlral poola on University of Tetaa' campua haa attracted the attention ol rooloiilta beoause ol it Mr A blossom measured M Inches In diameter. One of lt floatlrs leaves supported a child weighing 60 pounds. The lily la a Victoria Rcgi.v said to he native to the Amaron river EA',' AHTHBOUNl), you Warrant Call. Notice Is hereby given that School District No. 9, Jackson County. wi' rent No. 12Jfl to No. 13190 Inclusive are called for payment Interest to cfa.e on October 20. 10.14. Warrant to be presented for payment at the on'.v knows office of the District Clerk, City IUH ' Mfrtlortl. Oregon TorflNO may hae bought of this country as some what lacking in roads not totally nhort of them, of course, but shy o! as many as it mUhl have. Again you should take a look from a thousand feet or ao up. From that point of vantage. It looks as if there were a road eery hundrrd y.trds m every direction. How ne ecr paid for all the roads thai are visible from aloM. goodness not one of these offish, high-hat clouds that sail overhead with their noses In the air, but an informal, friendly, affectionate sort of cloua that gives every evidence of coming over and sitting in your lap and mussing up your hair. The pilot ducks it, and it goes by, looking a little dls.ippolnted. Plenty more coming up behind to see it they can succeed where It failed. OWN below, Lost River, winding and twisting and squirming like a snake with a bad case of cholera morbus. If you ever thought of Lost River as a straight-forward, open ana frank body of water, caring not who knows where it is headed for, you should take a look at It from a plane. In Its lower reaches it makes a corkscrew look like that shortest dis tance between two points we used to study about In school. No wonder the Indians who used to fish along Its banks Impressed the earlier white men as a little short in temper. They must have met themselves ao often coming back as to hove got suspicious of everyone they came up with. f SCENERY? "f" There's plenty of It between here and Lakevtew, and you can see all of It all at once from a plane. No use trying to Ascribe It. It's beyond description. And descriptions are usually boresome, anyway. pO EARTH again at Lakevlew, some 1 45 minutes after departure, spite of a headwind. (Note: No pilot knows what It is to travel with a tall wind, or will admit It if he doe. The wind t always dead ahead, cutting down the grand speed that might otherwise have been made). Bill sets the plane down a gently a a careful housewife setting down a basket of eggs, and we all pile out and head for town and some body's hot stove. FRANK Light is in the welcoming crowd. "Forty-five minutes from Klam nth." he says. "Hot dog!" When Frank settled down over in the Lakevtew country along in the late seventies and got going good, he had to make a trip one time to Klamath- Llnkville, it was then. "It took us two day and a half." he explains, "and seemed like a month. the lulls th.it rim "e LATER on. somewhere toward tne shady side of the nineties, he ill ink, they got pretty good service. You could leave lakevtew in the afternoon, travel all night, eat break f Ast at Bly, and by pounding the horses on t.e back ail day cou.n revh Utikvlile a me t.me the fol- Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson Counli History Irom the file, ol the Mall Tribune ol 20 and ID lf"" Aeo). TEN YEARS AGO TODAT October 17. 102 (It waa Friday) H. L. Noblett catchea a number ot aalmon In Rogue river on a Royal Coachman fly. A new run of ateel head enters the river. Houdlnl. "the handcuff king." to appear at the Armory. Crater'a club will stage "party" lor Portland visitors. Sale of the Medford Lumber com pany la "cracked." After Col. Charles A. Lindbergh appeared before a New Jersey grand Jury and identified the voice he heard in the cemotery the night $50,000 ransom was paid for the return of his already slain baby son, as that of Bruno Richard Hauptmann, the Jury Indicted Hauptmann for murder. Lindbergh (right) is shown leaving with Col. H. Norman Schwarzkopf of the New Jersey state police after giving his testimony. (Associated Press Photo) ACCUSED IN KANSAS CITY SLAYINGS World filers will atop In this city for a Jew minutes late today. Rain Is predicted for the valley. TWEXTV YEARS AGO TODAY October 1", mi (It waa Saturday) Pnnr Herman battleships sink oft Dutch coast, after battle In Nortn Sea wth British fleet; great battle W prospect on Western front. general election will exceed 11,000. n.mnir.Mr lenders triced bV Repub lican charge, "continuous threatening to monkey with the money hurts business. Governor Oswald West In speecn "exposes timber grab In Jackson county." Ralph' Cowgill returned on Sunday from Portland, where he saw the University of Oregon-Washington State college football game. Accord ing to him Washington State ahould have won the game, but were out lucked by the Eugene aggregation, who won 7 to 0. He being a grad uate of the first named Institution, waa very much put out by the defeat. fir t $ 1 j v fit t; j$ t ;o I'ry (Contlnuea f.om page one) literary efforts, with devastating ef fect. The wisest politicians, however, are not Inclined to count any heads be fore they fall in the basket. They are discounting surface developments and still believe, regretfully, that Sln clnlr has at least an even chance to win. Richard T. Galatas and his wife Elizabeth were among the persons accused cf complicity by the department of usttce in its revelations concerning the Kansas City Union station massacre of June. 1933, when four cf." c;r- r.nd a convict were slain. (Associated Press Photo. WIDOWED BY ASSASSINATION sv- ' fc " F f'Vi f iv,J "i rt k"i 'C The recent exchange of letters be tween General Farley and an airline was merely to give public notice that that particular airline is first in the trans-Pacific air field. That Is why the letters were given out. A rival line was preparing to get in on the ground floor by establishing a regu lar airmail service from California to Honolulu. It is generally agreed that the United States must do something about far eastern air service because the European nations are flying in p.head of us, thereby obtaining com mercial advantages. There is not yet enough business to warrant commer cial lines, but aviation enthusiast believe there may be In five years. (Copyright, 1934. by Paul Mallon.) E I Queen Marie (left) of Yugoslavia was widowed by the assassination of her husband, King Alexander at Marseilles, France, during a parade welcoming him to the French republic on a good will visit. The queen ts shown here with her mother, the dowager Queen Marie of Rumania. (Associated Press Photo) The world, you see. Md proprewea quite a little by that time, and the speed fiends were beptnnins: to sit up and take a little nourishment, hoping they mlpht pet a break some- 1 d:i alter sll. I I IIITH thrFC ami similar varns. we j ? w Mile aw rty an hour, but duty calls nnd we finally break up snd head for the sir fle'd, out by the round-up park Ii:U t.ikfs the plrine off the (.round as praoefully as fie set it down, and were off rn the baok trail. (6tuKks! The darned wind h?.s chanprd spa.n. and now we'll h?.t to hrsd baok into it, cut ri.wn ' the pcel ue mUht have ir. $ :??n-.c day. ti'.e I otii w:,l.ii;. t'.us w rt'or hopes t rule in a jlai-.e v': the wind cn its tall. B'.H that's a h am.tMl. diflt uit of furiilmrnt t . (Continued ttutn page one) its considered likely that action on the appeal will be taken by that time. Hauptmann remains in the Bronx county Jail where he has been held since his arrest nearly & month aco. If the final barrier to hla extradition Is removed, he wilt be taken immed ately to Plemlnpton. N. J.. where his trial will take place. New Jersey authorities were ready to transfer Hauptmann across the Hudfon last night if Justice Hammer had not granted the stay. MtTht Selon Held The decision blasting Hauptmann hope of evading trial on the murder charge came at a nipht session fol lowing Hauptmann's appearance on the stand In the late afternoon in which he denied, calmly and deliber ately, that he had written the ransom notes received by Col. Lindbergh after the baby was kidnaped. Justice Hammer's decision rejecting the writ of habeas corpus was con tained In a 4000-word opinion in which he summarized the evidence in the two-day hearing and referred to numerous precedents in habeas corpus actions involving extradition. Jify, cloud Kxnns up ahead Moving nlht. L'k MtU llibuue tul ad. At the mcctliK of the Aottve club :-.e!d Inst cvcr.tr.? Mr. Fe Benson presented several -t'.:clc:its from her dan-lnj pr'.iool. tn ciasic,il. tap. acrobatic trance nuxlv-.. M s Mar ;arct O -rr.b::i tp aoonipanlst for t'.-.e e-.oiip. T:'.a--e part '.?:pa tin? in the prosr .am ttpre' Jule Delter. riair.f P;o;vy. V.rr:aret Gecr. Nlla Green. Edna Harper and Jonn M.e. Ca-rh Darwin K. Burchrr. of Med ford h.ch solio.l. pave a brief talk oo;-.,-eri1;n.! the team, and Dr. DwUht K.T-d'.ry spoke on the healiiK arts bill w.ich is to be voted cn next month. WFST S C A K B O : O . . f P I Tili:ar P-'.oy. Jr. 34. icorn'ty pira.l-d ni t'.r.Uv to a chanre of larcpv M'hout a;np a word. H Is a deaf uiu;e. Use Your CREDIT and make the OLD CAR LOOK NEW Reasonable Prlres A-l Workmanship null tn n Pa ment No ramlnj Charre Wilkie's Paint Shop 3S iuth Rhrrald. Birk ot itt Ofllrr-