MEDFORD MAIL TRIBTJST5, BEDFORD. OREGON. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 13. 1935.
P2GE SIX
Medford Mail Tribune
"Everyone in Southern OriflM
Besdl the Mill Tribune"
Dalle Eieept Saturday
Published W
MEtlKOHli rHINTlSO CO.
JS-aT.18 N. Hi L nMl
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Offleee In New Tori, Chlraio, Detroit, fat
Pranclieo Lot Anielet Beattle Portland.
MEMBER.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur I'erry
Automotive expert! think they have
perfected an "lnvlalbla headlight."
That la not ao much. When the
present headlight ia turned on full
blast, you can't sea anything.
Portland patriots continue to raid
the hinterland, to ahow the dear
people the way out of the deprea
ion, by pawing the hat, before and
after the main address of the even
ing. The action of the legislature, in
deciding not to call the ateelhead
"a R&me fish" (If It makes any dif
ference, failed to atart nine law
vera velllrut "Whercaa," with ma
chine-gun rapidity,
as In the old
days.
tievoral cltlaena have been run
ning around laughing, Oosalpi have
been unable to determine what Bor
row they are concealing.
The height of civic cordiality faaa
been reached by Grants Faaa. where
a moratorium haa been called on
tourlata observing the parking laws,
This means the home autolsta will
have to go away from home to turn
around In the middle of the block.
-., A Los Moll not hen la oredlted with
laying an egg of mammoth alee. Hen
and egg are both doing well. (Rd
Bluff (Calif.) News) The kind that
are usually laid on the edltor'a desk.
.
The president may deliver a radio
address, In an effort to dent the
Idiotic formldableneaa of the leading
fool notions.
t
Up In Lawrence, Mass,, the em
ployes wanted to take a pay cut
and the bona wouldn't hear of It.
That'a more news than If !- men
had bitten six doga at the aame mo
ment. (Memphis Commercial-Ap
peal) Correct!
Astronomers report "the major
major planets are moving away from
the earth." The way things have
been going, nobody blames the plan
ets, and quite a few have been con
templating the an me thing.
"GOVERNMENT LOANS HAVE
DRAWBACK" (Lakevlew Examiner)
Like the common garden variety
of loans, the drawback Is the pay
back. The Bow tfe Arrow society will be
reorRHi.lr.fvl. The Bow & Arrow doe
not rate very high aa a lethal wea
pon, but cannot puncture an inno
cent bystander when "unloaded."
Considerable petty thieving pre
vails, and Is blamed on almost every
thing but the cusaednens of the
thief.
Rulea for pedestrians will be for
mulated and distributed In connec
tion with a "Safrty First" campaign
Many pedestrians who would never
think of walking In front of a lady
In the parlor, wilt do that very thing
when she Is driving an auto.
Pioneer fire laddies fen ted last
nlftht, and recalled the days when
every time the fire whistle blew, all
the 4da In town beat them to the
conflagration.
Sunshine Is badly needed for plow
Ing. and the calling of year-round
larlneaa spring fever.
About 17.000 has been raised for
Itauptmann's appeal, ao the defense
lawyers still have eonfidmre in their
client. (Indianapolis News) Twas
ever thus I
mhsimi r. orniK i ii low
To Hp la a natural Inatlnrt; the
truthful are those who lfarn tha
IvIliK l loollsh. 11ir It natural
Instinct In every living thing to be
dishonest; the honeat are those who
Icirn that honcaty la the beat policy.
Tnn la a errorm natural Inatlnct
to be Idle; the Inriuatrlmil are thoae
n!:n Irnrn Hint Idlenraa la a bad
ImDlt. Everyone! la a natural glutton:
the tempera'. are thoae who learn
Hint trnprrnnc. I. heat i Ed Howe
Mnnlhl- i
Use Mall IrlDwu) want Ada.
MR A
Utilize the Waste
AVERY worthy organization, the 'Welfare Exchange in the
nlrl pitv hall buildintr. ii in need of help.
Not financial heln. It needs
It onlv enirapcs in barter, exchange
'
And all it wants are TIIINUS.
things. But old things, worn-out things, things that at wis
season of the year would be normally headed for the ash can.
Tint renditions, as we all know, are not normal, mere are
many people out of work and in
for one reason or another, can t
not to.
Ihpv could use manv things,
furnishings, garden tools, bed clothes, or what have you. And
they are more than willing to work to get them, rut the dis
carded second hand articles in good repair, so they and others
can use them.
But nothing can be done without the raw material, and the
Welfare Exchange is in need of
SO now with the season of Spring house cleaning at hand, is
t.h time to cathcr up the odds and ends, that are no longer
useful and only clutter up the right of way, and transport them
to the old city hall building.
There willing hands will put them into usable shape. It is
ii.. mavl I.., tl.ie urolfnro nrpnnizfltinn. pan transform
tcaujr aiiia'ui nvr ......
articles which the owners regard
will bring warmth, added comfort, and pleasure to inose less
fortunate than they.
So look over your household tonight Mr. and Mrs. Citizen,
pick out the things you neither need nor use and, have them
carted to the "Welfare Exchange. Tou will thus be killing two
birds with one stone. Make the matter of house keeping easier:
and benefit your fellowman.
The Menace of Huey Long
TIE three-ring circus and medicine man show, carried on by
the Honorable Huey Long in the senate recently, attracted
such nation-wide attention that the cause of it all was overlooked.
This is unfortunate. For as
address made by General Hugh
Kingfish's noise and fury was
Huey's or Father Coughlin's replies.
"We regret space does not allow the reprinting of Johnson s
peeeh in full. It is well worth
finance its republication and
would render a real public service.
However the following extracts will give some idea of what
the General thinks of Kingfish
can secure a copy of the Congressional Record for March 5th,
may secure the full libretto, which we would suggest be placed
in their political archives for future reference.
Thla la March . Two yeara ago thla morning. In a national
gloom aurely aa dep aa that of the daya when Washington atood
In the anow at Valley Forge or Lea inarched over the mountain
wall toward Gettysburg, Franklin Roosevelt knelt at an altar and
prayed. Then ha went to the capltol and reglatered the vow In
heaven that placed upon his back aa heavy a freight of human
hopea aa ever waa born by any man. Our truat waa In him ao
completely that the general prayer waa: "Provide him with all
power that he may aave us." Today, ahadowa have fallen thwart
that faith and It la my purpose here with what force Ood haa
given- mo to smash at two of them.
The chaos of that hour haa been too often told. Banks, hold
ing tha savlnga of the entire country, tottered. Tho head of the
United State Chamber of Commerce waa urging that the Presi
dent be made Industrial dictator, and tha very captains of big
business were) aaklng Washington to save them.
Agrloulture bled whlta by yeara of disaster waa praying for
a miracle. Force, aa the only means of escape, waa being used to
resist foreclosure of tens of thousanda of farms and homes. Labor
was helpless Ita organization prostrate and vanishing Its wages
drying up and Its hours extended.
No one will ever know the full spread ot unemployment at
that moment. Nor will anyone ever know how close were we to
collapse and revolution. We could have had a dictator a lot
easier titan Germany got Hitler and we would have had one but
for tha President himself, to whom the whole Idea was hateful.
A democracy la the best government In tha world for peace
and proaperlty. but It Is the worst government In the world for a
great war or a great crisis that Is the reason for alx dictators In
Europe. But there la one alngle exception the phenomenal
habit of the American people, at any sacrlflc. to give a conatl
tutlonal President extraordinary powera to stick together with
him at the houra of extreme peril. In the worst armed crisis In
the world, Woodrow Wilson proved that, acting together under
the Constitution, our people could wage modern war better than
the most absolute military autocracy in Europe.
In tha worst business crisis In the world. FrsnkJIn Roosevelt
proved that they could thus fight depression better than any
dictator under the sun. Wilson expressed the rule. "The highest
and best form of efficiency Is the spontaneous cooperation of a
free people." In 1933 we had that cooperation. Just aa In 1911
and 181B wa had It. In 11)3.1 we have It not. Tha lack of It. In
the dark threat that still hsngs over thla country. Is the greatest
menace of our Immediate future. The men who have sought
with some success to break It up may have mora to answer to the
country for than they at this moment dream.
You can snort at Huey Long, but this country wa never
under a greater menace than from the break-up of spontaneous
popular cooperation being engineered by the combination of thla
dangerous demagogy with the direct assault of tha old social
Neanderthalers the archltecta of the 1M9 Boom or bust and
of our II black yeara of bitter bondage to despair Peaceful re
covery la being threatened with a grinding between the upper
and the nether millstones of extreme group selflahnesa.
At this point I want to make It very clear that 1 am spesklng
lor myself alone a gratuitous volunteer. Nobody In the adminis
tration has been consulted about this speech, although I have
advised on the project of making It with my best and wisest
friends outside of government new dealers, old dealers, and
Coughllnltca. It may Interest you to know that, without one
single exception, they advised against It. "If you want to hang
yourself, go to It." Nothing did more to convince me that this
speech hart to be made. If demopogy nsa reached the point
where a man may risk his public standing by attacking It, It is
time for somebody to get up on his hind legs and howl.
I am well aware of what the plpera will say about ma that
I am either drunk or cray; that I once worked In New York
myaelf and am a tool of the Intereata. Nerta to thatl I never
made a more deliberate apeeoh. That I have rich friends la a
(set. 1 slso have poor friends. 1 am poor myself. But It Just
happens that I don't owe anybody anything; that I never got
anything from snyborty without paving for It; that X am on my
own; and that I csn rest on my record for eaylng Just what I
think whenever I feel that It ousht to be said and for taking all
that'a coming to me for saying It. And thla lime It will be
plenty.
You don't aee much In the newspapers about tha Pled Plpera.
the gresteat force of this Ilk la the radio, through which they can
pollute cur great popular pool of Justified resentment. For want
of work It alta Icily betore It receiving set while ther Is pumped
Into It dally two Ingredient red pepper for It raw emotions
and. tor It hope, enticing promlaea of a money miracle, manna
In tlua wilderness of deapair "like the coriander aeed. white,
and the laste of It like outers mad with honey, of which he
that itathereth much anal! ha nothing over, and h that
gathereth little shall have no lack." That we aald by Moses of
a miracle performed In trie deceit of silnsl thousanda of yeara
aim; but It la the. ehortefct. clea e-t statement of the monev
magic prollered by la Pipers ' Im Uial jslherath much ahJOl
no money. In fact it uses none.
of articles, for services.
.a. 1 t .
.Not new tnings. .oi vamaDic
need. There are many who
get on relief, or would preier
articles of clothing, house
raw material.
,
as valueless, into articles, that
we regard the matter, the radio
Johnson, which caused all the
far more important, than either
reading, and anyone who would
distribution in pamphlet form,
Huey, and those who have or
have nothing over, and he that gathereth little shall have no
lack."
Promise and performance possible only to the Lord God
Almighty I
Why, to give every family iS.000.00 the wealth of the United
Statea would have to be one hundred and fifty billions; and If
some had a million and so on down to 15.000 In tha usual grade,
aa Huey proposes. It would have to be five hundied billions, which
is more thsn 12 time aa much a It I and more than 6 times aa
much aa It has ever been. Huey says. "Divide our wealth", and
he tells how to take It by taxes, but he never yet haa told how to
distribute It.
If you seized all property tomorrow by taxes and sold It st an
auction tax sale, nobody would have enough to bid a tenth of
It value. You would cut the price of America SO percent,
and nobody but a foreigner could buy It. When valuea bounced
back, the few buyers would be fabulously rich and the rest of us
unbelievably poor.
Yet they ask us to go with them gsyly down pathwaya by
them called new. but that In truth have been trodden time and
again In the world'a history but never to the rainbow's end they
promise. In the many, msny times that those path have been
taken since the world began, never once did they fall to lesd to
chaos and destruction, bearing slways first and moat heavily
on the very class to which they now appeal.
Why, If these men know what they are talking about, their
attempt to delude helpless, trusting sufferers to such a doom 1
unspeakable. . If they do not know, then theirs is an act as rash
and murderous as that of the tinker who tried a surgical opera
tion on the human heart because he said that it wa only a
pump anyway and so entirely In his line of work.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D.
Big net letters pertaining to personal
diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-addressed
envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink.
Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered.
No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr.
William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal.
BASHFUL AND
Please send me a pamphlet on In
feriority complex, writes a young
woman. I am bashful. I do not seem
able to carry on
a c o n v ersatton
with any one I
don't know very
well or with an
older person. I
feel self - con
scious . . . boy
friend. We see
each other three
or four tlmea a
week. My friends
say It Is foolish
for an 18-year-old
girl to spend
so many even
ings with a fellow. He la nineteen
and we intend to marry In a few
years. Do you advise me to keep
steady company with him for three
or four years? Have been told to
go out with other fellows, but I
have no desire for other dates . . .
I have no pamphlet on Inferiority
complex. Almost all normal persons
have such complexes, together with
dash of superiority complexes. To
discuss these feelings in the abstract
may make Interesting pamphlets or
books, but I can't see where such
morbid Introspection helps the victim
of self -con sclousness. On the con
trary I believe this quack psychology
la actually harmful to the untu
tored layman, as harmful as the
more familiar old 'doctor dooks.
almanacs and p.m. testimonials were
to the simple suckers of yesteryear.
Not being gifted with second sight,
of course, I don't know, but In read
ing this girl's letter I wonder If her
difficulty Isn't merely the fnte of
her narrow existence. Sounds rather
silly and dumb, doesn't It, the way
her hectic week Is marked by three
or four visits by the boy friend? If
the affair purports to be normal and
serious, can you conceive fifty years
of the same dreary business? I can't,
And Im aa sentimental as tt la safe
for a man to be. I can even remem
ber when I waa nineteen and won
from a pippin a gorgeous striped
necktie on the first election of TR
as governor, and how father failed
to enthuse about the tie. "Young
man." he counselled, "there'll be
plenty of time for this billing and
cooing when you've finished your
medical school."
To this girl, and to thousands of
other youn persons with a similar
difficulty. I recommend the public
library. Not as a convenient place
for "dates." but as a fine school of
a larger life. Visit the library and
Communications
I.ene Mnjcte
To the Editor:
I think that most of us will agree
that the Rogue River Valley Is a
lovely and rather wonderful place to
live.
There are plenty of charming peo
ple, sparkling streams and beautiful
mountains to say nothing of many
gem-Uke lakes that surround us.
But when It comes lu the climate
being the best In the world, as I ob
serve you have said on many occas
ions In your paper, I cannot agree
with you.
I have spent my whole life on the
Pacific coast. In the states of Wash
ington. Oregon and California. Many
years in each. In the Grays harbor
and Puget 8ound districts of Wash
ington, in the Rogue River valley and
In the Bay district of California as
well as In Santa Crut. Monterpy. San
Luis Obispo, Bakerfleld and Los An
geles. I have worked and lived In all
these places from several months to
many years, and having ninnys been
a person to take great interest In the
weather, perhaps my opinion should
bear some weight.
I believe that the best all around
climate I ever have enjoyed is at Los
Oatos In California. In order, accord
ing to my experience. I would place
as to all year climate (places that I
have lived some timet Los Oatos.
Santa Crur. Monterey. San Luis Obis
po, San Jose, San Francisco, Puget
D
A
N
C
E
DINTY MOORE
AND HIS
ORCHESTRA
DREAMLAND
TONIGHT! TONIGHT!
MEN ttc LADIES lfC
henlth and hygiene not to disease
SELF - CONSCIOUS.
tell the librarian that you have never
done much serious reading but would
like to begin, and you would like
some advice or suggestions aa to
what to read. Biography, history,
travel or exploration, poetry, science,
humor, politics or economy the li
brarian Is trained to find out your
preferences or likings and to help
you select something you will enjoy
and profit by. Nor should you feel
embarrassed about approaching the
librarian In thla way. I have done
so scores of tlmea and hope to do
so many more times, t learned the
habit by observing some pretty im
portant people consulting librarians
In Just that way.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Johnny Cake.
Is corn bread made with butter
milk and soda easily digested and
healthful if eaten every day? M. B..
Wyoming.
Answer Yes. provided the diet
also Includes fair amounts of fresh
milk and fresh fruits, greens or
vegetables, t
Wild Tea.
Some of my friends have been
drinking (a brand of wild tea), and
telling me It Is a remarkable tonic
. . S. P. C.
Answer They repeat what they
hear on the air. The tea Is a kind
which grows wild in South America
To ascribe greater virtues to it than
one derives from higher grade culti
vated tea Is silly.
Muscle Cramps,
Much interested in the suggestion
to take calcium lactate to relieve
or prevent cramps In legs at night
Please tell me what to get and what
dose to take and for how long.
C. H.
Answer Take 10 grains of calcium
lactate after food three times a day
for a month. Dissolve It In water, and
take with a dash of syrup or sugar
and fruit flavor.
Everything Requires Digestion.
Have heard that water, some fruit
Juices and honey do not need to be
digested. Is thla true? N. D. E.
Answer Water, ol course. Is ab
sorbed as water, without any chemi
cal or physical change by digestion.
But fruit Juices and honey require
digestion, chemical" and physical
changes, before they can be absorbed
or assimilated.
(Copyright, 1935, John F. Dille Co.)
Ed Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
ihojld srnd letter direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. D.. 2B5 E
Camlno. Beverly Hills. Cal.
Sound country, Los Angeles. Rogue
vnlley, Aberdeen and lastly Bakers-
field.
A great many people will probably
shout to Heaven at this especially
about Puget Sound. I will be con
sldered all wet here anyway but the
winters are not much worse there
and the summers are Infinitely bet
ter. At this time of year we are very
liable to forget the Dog days of sum
mer In this valley.
There Is no place among those that
I have mentioned, that has not a
much better summer climate than
we have, with the exception of Bak
ersfleld. I know that to people from the
middle west and the east our valley
seems to be the last word In co.nfwt
as to climate, but to an old Pacific
Coaster that Uvea our three states
In a rather wild, woolly and perhaps
prejudiced way, I cannot agree that
we In this valley have the best cli
mate in the world. The world la too
big.
Nevertheless, after many years of
wandering up and down the Pacific
const. I am here, have been here sev
enteen years, hope to be here a long
time more and I love It. hot breere-
lesa summers and all.
LUCIAN H. WILCOX,
Route 4. Box 33 S
Medford. Oregon
March 13. 1935.
See Malson Jeanne for things that
wear. Dependable quality is what
she has there.
Cse Mall Tribune want ads.
o
A
C
E
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O.McIntyre
NEW YORK, March 13. Probably
America's champion address changer
la E. Lloyd Sheldon, former New
York newspaper
man and now a
movie mogul In
Hollywood. In his
metropolitan days
he used to sleep
one night In a
Bowery lodging,
the next night
at the Waldorf
or Holland House
and another night
night at Mills
hotel.
During his Cal
ifornia residence,
it haa been nothing ior
him to live in ten different houses,
apartments or hotels In a year. Some
times a marble mansion In Santa
Barbara, then a leased house in Pas
adena or a patloed palace In Beverly
and back perhaps to some obscure
hotel.
A runner up for Sheldon Is Don
Clarke, the novelist. In the past five
ytyirs he has had five different apart
ments in New York, three different
houses on Long Island, two In Massa
chusetts and at the moment he has
acquired a sea shore home in Florida
and visits realtors dally for sugges
tions. The late Arthur Bomers Roche
leased a villa for the season on the
French Riviera and remained less
than two weeks. Tommy Millard In
long ataya often goes to a different
hotel every week. Michael Arlen has
occupied 20 different flats In London
and Paris and has now gone to an
Austrian Schlosa.
Among the rarest of sisterly devo
tions Is that between Mrs. Rex Beach
and Mrs. Fred Stone. They exchange
dally letters when they are too far
from each other to use the telephone
Always they attend the theater to
gether and rarely do they go sepa
rately to social functions. Likewise
they both write daily letters to their
mother who is in Florida.
One of New York's best dressed
artists Is Rae Van Beuren, whose
classic profile Is second only to that
of James Montgomery Flagg. Van
Beuren goes In for browns and beiges,
with grass-green ties, so becoming to
red-heads. McClelland Barclay is an
other of the fashion plate artists
who suggests some of the drawing
room men in his magazine illustra
tions. Russell Patterson Is alto the
dudlest of dudes. Successful artists
are no longer seedy.
Elsie De Wolfe, reputedly, gives the
most satisfactory as well as effort
less dinners of any New York hostess.
She does not resort to atuntlng, but
clings to the older formalities. Her
dinners start promptly and have a
way of ending around 1 1 o'clock.
Ward McAllister believed dinner par-
i turned sour after 11. The su
preme trick of entertaining Is Jockey
ing people home before the deadline.
New York's windiest spot has shift
ed again. Once It was the old Plat
Iron corner at 23d and then by some
freak of architecture the corner of
Broadway at fi7th street. Now Radio
City carries off the honors. There Is
si certain strip of the plaza where the
wind takes on hurricane proportions,
I- has claimed two toupees and one
set of uppers. And Kate Smith skim
ming along on tip toe.
The star of the flying trapeeze. Al
fred Cadona. cracked up In a fall to
the net. has become equestrian di
rector at the Hagenback - Wallace
show. But the famous act in which
his wife and brother still perform
will be with that circus billed as al
ways, "The Plying Cadonas." Clyde
Bcatty, the lion tamer, has also left
the big circuses to Join a small one
that will bear his name. The Kirl
with the long blond curls who rides
Aide-saddle so daringly. Dorothy Her
bert, will do the Beatty act. Am one
her versatilities Is an elephant skit
which she handled two seasons.
And high up among the versatile
is Dr. W. Beran Wolfe, the young au
thor of the best seller. "A Woman's
Best Years." He Is a skilled musician,
an accomplished akl Jumper, an ex
pert in movie photography, turns out
magazine articles and an exhibit of
hi- sculpture was recently on exhl
bltlcn In Rockefeller Center.
svt-lffl
How many times a
day can you use this
help
v. ce V I X
lou'lX 1V l that this service, always so
convenieK and sometimes immeasurably
valuable, quickly saves you its small cost.
Home Telephone A Telegreph Co.
Of Ol
I Then there is Eddie Eagan, boxer,
I globe trotter, Rhodes scholar, maga
zine writer and lecturer, who is now
an assistant district attorney. He lse
devoting much of bla time to boys'
clubs, specializing In breaking up
street gangs, the cradle of ao many
crimes. His wife, the former Margaret
Colgate, aids him In this commend
able work.
Only his modesty saves him from
Ripley's collection. He is a tall dom
ed, bookish fellow, collector. At a
dinner Peggy Joyce waa mentioned.
He Inquired who she was. Every
body laughed, but he was perfectly
honest. He had never heard of her.
(Copyright. 1935, by McNaught
Syndicate)
Flight 'o Time
(Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of the
Mall Tribune of 10 and 20 lean
Ako).
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
March 13. 1925.
(It was Friday)
Medford high defeated by Franklin
high of Portland. 32 to 16. In open
ing game of etate tournament.
Frost Expert Young expects no
smudging for another week, as or-
chsrdlsts prepare for annual Battle
with Jack Frost.
White robin" reported seen In the
Seven Oaks district.
Gardens in the Sardine creek sec
tion covered with a light snowfall;
Reese creek reports heaviest snow
of year.
Improved Order of Klansmen" to
be formed by Portland residents.
Herbert Hoover, secretary of com
merce, predlcta, "a year of pros
perity." Traffic officers arrest, youth with
nine spotlights, all burning, on his
"bug."
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
March 13, 1815.
(It was .Saturdsy)
Turks announce they will burn
Constantinople before they will allow
city to fall into the hands of the
British; Russians force back Ger
mane along the Polish front.
The Wednesday Bridge club met
wlh Mrs. Gus Newbury, and the
Olrls' Thursday Bridge club met
with Mrs. RalDh Bard well. Mrs. H. U.
Lumsden entertained the Friday I
Bridge club.
Light sprinkle falls over vslley.
but "Is no answer to farmers' prayer
for rain."
The Page theater will hold a voting
contest, with a Maxwell auto, "equip
ped with electric lights, self-starter.
and a demountable top," aa the main
prize.
4
Lawnmowera time to get them
sharpened and repaired: called for
and delivered. Medford Cyclery. 23
N. Fir. Phone 261.
4
New Navy Blue Hose. Malson
Jeanne. Holly Theater Bldg.
Use Mall Tribune want eds.
TR THIS NEW
FOOT REMEDY
Costs Little and Makes Feet Feel Fine.
Foot sufferers gather round: get
right up close and listen. Here's good
news for you.
The real 'Corn Killer' Is here at
last. Ice-Mint, the New Discovery Is
said to quickly end foot misery.
Hard corns, soft corns, or corns be
tween the toes, also toughened cal
louses. Just shrivel up and lift off
easy. It's wonderful. There Is no
pain or soreness when applying lire
Mint of arterwards, and It doesn't
even Irritate the ekin.
Think of it: Just a touch or two of
that cooling, soothing Ice-Mint, and
real foot Joy Is yours.
Ice-Mint prevents foot-odors and
keeps them sweet and comfortable. It
Is the real secret for fine, healthy
feet, and keeps you free from foot
troubles. Every person who has suf
fered with stubborn corns or tender (
feet can appreciate the cooling,
soothing comfort that it brings; es
pecially women who wear high-heeled
shoes, and men who have to stand all
day on their feet. Try it. Get a few
cents worth of Ice-Mint from your
druggist today and give your poor.
tired, suffering, burning fc-t the treat
of their lives. There Is nothing better.
THfRN ORFCOV
Ill 10 PREPARE
FOR FROST ALARM
Frulteirowera using orchard heating
equipment for teh protection of their
crop ehould at this time consider the
condition of their orchsrd thermom
eters and frost aiarma and have the
same tested for sccuracy, state Coun
ty Agent L. P. Wilcox.
An unreliable thermometer or
alarm may be the cause of wssteful
burning of smudge oil or frost dam
aged crop of fruit. Take no chances
on being misinformed by these In
struments, but have them tested and
the Inaccuracies recorded.
Testing of thermometer and alarm
la a free service offered to all inter
ested parties by the county agent's
office In cooperation with the U. S.
fruit frost service. Testing should be
done each season aa thermometers will
vary in their readings from year to
year.
Grower are therefore asked to
check over their equipment, discard
the broken Instrument and to bring
the others In for testing. Do this
st once In order that this part of the
frost service work may be completed
before the danger period arrives.
Lawnmowera time to get them
sharpened and repaired: called for
and delivered. Medford Cyclery, as
N. Fir. Phone S81.
Phone 642. We'll haul away your
refuse. City Ssnltary Service.
GET THIS
BOOK .
T ANSWERS EVERY
PAINTING QUESTfON
FREE
BIG PINES
LUMBER CO.
PHONE ONE
Expect)
much of
The Talace Hotel
San Francisco,
J.
Expect much of
San Francisco s famed
Palace Hotel for you will
receive much. Expect large,
modern, and comfortable
guestrooms," for example,
The Palace covers a city
block of two acres, yet it has
only 6oo rooms, all of them
large, all with bath. Expect,
too, courteous forethought
for your needs; fine food in
distinguished restaurants;
beautiful surroundings; and
shops, theatres, financial and
commercial districts close at
hand.
From j ftr day (single) up.
PALACE HOTEI
SAN FRANCISCO
Archibtld H. Price. Manager
Convenience nd Kntnom)
Stup in ua k I.AM)
Hut el San .ahlo offers:
Cum tort
without Uttravatance
Central i.orarino
Brt!' II.IH' to $1.75
FKrtt IMK AOs
MOllfcHN cuttte swot
Direct iunt lu tlniri. mh
Main HUhwi. (9sn p,hh,
Avenue) itrrrttj to iutu m
Managrmmi
BARK) a 81HANQ