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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 5, 1935)
PAGE TWELVE Medpord Mail Tribune "Etrm la SeutMrn Orqoa) Hudi thi Hail Tritaunt'' Dailf Eie.pt 6Ujt(1iJ PublLrwJ tiy MCDrORD FHWTLNU CO. It-lt-la N. Hr at. guUEHT W. BUHL, Bwr Ad loatp.Ml.ol Nmw bun M kosH dus 1' M4tord. Ontoa, iMv Atl at Much , I8'- SUWHII'TION BATES Mill to AdiMM DiiU, on- ftr ;? DUll, lb cults Duij, oo ocii liflsoorttU, Cemr.l Point, PtoealJ. IlleM. Gold Bill mi on awus. Dill,, OM IMI ?" DJI, III awntll i? Dtllj, on, month Bu AU term, esid to ukioes. Offleltt piper of tt Clt Modford, Official p Pt of JtttUoo County. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PHESS Iba AiecUteJ Prtu it tielutitfll nUt!W to flW UM lOf pUDUMUOD W 111 u crwlltsd to It ot otherwlw ertdltsd In tat PP 1BO S130 W K w (juuia-i AU right fo publlatloo of itcUl dipttn MKMBEB OF UNITED fB8 UEMBEK OF AUDIT BliKEAO UF CIRCULATIONS AdrerUitng ReprtienUlltM U. C. MOtiENSEN li COMPANY OfflMi In Nit T-k. Cbleo, Detroit, la Fr&oeUoo Lot Anceiw Beat t If Portland. Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Vary Ball fences In the rural areas awarm with squirrels, whose hides will be "moleskin," or "skunk stole" re anow Hies next fall, tf not aooner, toe way the weather la ectlnj. The Pratt Institute of New York haa figured out. via experta and a survey, "that each housewife In the United Btatea h" due her an aver age weekly wage of $84.93" for ser vice rendered. Thla la no more than right, If they can get It. The latest report la that another doctor la going to locate here soon. He was here yesterday looking over the prospect. (Dorrla (Calif.) Newa) A good, but limited field. A wltneea In the Bruno Haupt- mann trial haa been Indicted tor perjury. The wltnesa testified the night the Lindbergh ransom money was psld he saw a man "resembling the late Isldor Ftach Jump ever a cemetery wall." The etat of New Jersey haa unearthed wltneseea who testify the witness, at the time be eays he saw the cemetery wall Jump ing, waa In an auto accident seven mllea away. For this neat bit of timely lying, the atate of New Jersey feels, the liar should be given an opportunity to lie out of the peni tentiary. Horse thieves are reported operat ing In the auburban areaa of Port land. Thla Indicates foreslghted cltl ena should take the lock off the gasoline tank, and put It on the oat bin. The Messrs. Long. Johnson and Coughlln radio word war has cessed, all oombatanta agreeing to call It "quits." No matter what they call It. the public doubta If they stop. . While the weather contlnuea In differently trying to be spring, there are algna of spring a-plenty In the wide open editorial spaces of the atate press. The La Grande Observer notes buttercups In the fence-cor ners. the Bend Bulletin editor re porta a transient bemtar the first In a long time nicked him for a dime; the Astoria Astorlan-Burtget that speed Idiots should retrntn from emulating Sir Mnlrolin Csmpbell on the near Pacific shores; the editor of the EtiRone Reglster-Ousrd ex presses a yearning to go fishing: scribe on the Coos Bny Tlmea gawks over his typewriter to far horlrons, and longs for a sea trip: and lost Sunday the Oregonlan printed an editorial on snakes, as luni: as any snake out of Its hole, to date. Ha aides the above cross-section of what currently alls Oregon Journalists. 'Salem scribbler expressed a coy de- alre to do nothing at nil. and. fur thennore averred. It waa hard work doing that. He had no leslre to fish speed, anil, botanize, aid the poor or see a snake. Me seems to have hit a popular. though unadmitted chord, we now vehemently second and, Ifs not spring fver. "Harraestng" of public utllltlea. a favorite Oregon sport, has been dis continued, so the chief payers of taxea and mnlntalners of payrolla will be left niuuf, throwing a num ber of politicians out of something to howl and look wise about. Moat of the Investigations were the bar vest of the sweet delusion ''electrlcit y without cost to the taxpayers." a slo. gsn that thrilled the votera. no end. In 1931. What the taxpayer really needa Is fewer rat-holes, down which public funds can be poured, with out getting any r ults. Ml Mr Mini UK IMOMHiS Tho Oreat preparations are be ing made for the celebration. There bss been a glee club organized for the Fourth which causes no smau amount of excitement. While the c'.ub waa practicing their plecea a few evenlnga since quite a number heard the noise and lost no time ascending to the tops of trees and building, aa they had never heard auch breaks before; but they tlilnk It a temporary aberration of the mind superinduced by excewlve In sanity, laO If. Ax Col,) Wlv HIMIII rW Editorial Correspondence PALM SPRINGS, April 2. Yes, have to hand the gunshine palm to this plane. Hot as an oven, not a cloud in the sky and ttie Main stem crowded with young and old in "shorts" or less. We have no objection to "shorts" for the babies or the young people, but there should be a city ordinance against such ex posure on the part of older boys and girls, particularly the fat ones. And when shorts are accompanied by high heel top shoes, long silk stockines rolled down above the shoe tops, and a "bras" harness tinder an inverted platter sun bonnet, a jail sentence should be mandatory. Lucky there are no horses in Palm Springs. The "hot mama" attired as above, who just passed us on the street, would plunging horse flesh, in the gay Eventually no doubt Palm Springs will return to the Indians. At twenty paces, scores of local of gingerbread, could put a few feathers in their hair and qualify for "extras" in any Hollywood "western." The white people here are true sun worshippers, just as were tne iwo Americans who once owned Palm springs but were moved to the reservation. The final outcome will be interesting from an ethnological standpoint. As advertised in the Los Angeles papers, the desert flowers are in bloom, and from any vantage point the panorama of color is very beautiful. There is no the Bakersfield area, there are sand 8nd sage brush, instead of and barrel cacti are in bloom, also verbena and strips of prim roses. The display is especially gorgeous a few miles from here. There are several squiffy and this part of California properly one last night. The experience reminded one only more so. As the car chugged light suddenly flashed from the was flooded with pitiless illumination any watchman could take us in from shoe lace to collar button. A "plain clothes man met us, opened tne door and said good evening. Another silent figure inspected filed in. This too is essentially a week bound to be a quiet evening. From the inner balcony we looked down upon a sunken garden dance floor, bathed in a deep dim moonlight, from palm shielded spot lights. There were three or four couples, gliding about, to the lilting muted strains of a four-piece orchestra. They had just dined and wined at 5 per pliite. There is nothing cheap about these places--a favorite rendezvous for the big shots of Hollywood arid sportive millionaires. The entire interior looks like movie sets. The light is indirect and subdued, there is a myster ious hush everywhere, one feels a sort of tension, as if something surprising were about to happen, but, as far as last night was concerned, nothing did. Behind the long bar, the bartender was typical of the place. A bar and a bartender, traditional Yankee institutions. But this wag no typical bar and no typical :bar tender. A bar in subdued light almost funereal, a bartender silent and imposing of course this was a quiet evening but one felt, this bartender never unbent, never smiled, never said, generally, "what will it be, gentlemen? , or scooped froth off beer mugs with a papor cutter. There was the same eerie qual ity about tne waiters. The one tie, a starched choker collar, blinked through gold rimmed specs and at tne fasadena nay House might have qualified as. a ecturing protessor with a message." He was subdued without being self effacing: he was polite witnout being deferential. one felt ho would be cool, collected and resourceful in any crisis. These qualities were easily understood when later we discovered it is tins gentleman s job to collect 75 cents for each and even- drink he serves. Down another flight of steps empty except for the croupiers sitting about, at the roulette wheels, craps and 21 tables. A quiet night indeed. A lone woman walked in and placed a dollar on the double 0-0. Very politely she was informed no ono could play with money teu dollars worth of chips must be purchased. - And according to our guide only, those who are as well known as their bank accounts, can buy chips in this desert night club. After a dance or two the ditto, one was vaguely conscious ii. was unpossimo to say men a door opened aud a crowd came in headed by n fat man in eveniug clothes, aud a shock of enrlv white hair. He had a perfect learned to be his wife, one "di tne gambling room, papa sat of chips and played the board, by literally covering at least 90 of it. for every turn of the wheel. This was something new in Pur limited experience, but when f.iOO ahead at least so we were None of our party played, not encouraged to tlo so. On our nt being observed, from certain windows and doors partly ajar. Reaching the entrance, the car was driven up bv the' plain clothes mini, while another one opened the door anil helped us in with a dignified good-night. The night was clear and beauti ful, no moon, millions of stars unusually clear and sparkliug. We looked hack at the club, an imposing pile of stone and con crete, sitting there alone in the desert, sentineled by palm and cactus, miles from nowhere. We felt we had teken part as supes in mnvie thriller but never been allowed to really get behind the scenes. ft v- p NEW- YORK DAY BY DAY By O.O. Mclntvre NEW YORK Thoughts while strol ling; The tine of msgnlflcrnt con tranis: An ex-bnnk president hailing a street cnr. Dnve Apolton's King of Hearts hair-cut Wonder how John. D. J r. would look In a b t r e t. Rich young commun lute with pre agents should be some thing for the book. Look allies; Bud K til and snd his son.; Wht became of 7. e I m a O Neal?, Lf It krp up' they'll be exchanging a fftock Ex- I rhanc.e scat for a pas to Rosy s. All J me Dig limousines iiave police wills- ties. For kidnap trots. What a swell t autobiography Oeonte Ada could ' turn out, if he would. I Nnlxxly can gvln like MUton Berle. Or cloud up like Charles Wlnulnger. J Best of the Jtei-r liters llenry Hull. Wuy aj a-tins editors sura out 1 MEDFORD MATT, have caused a riot of frenzied, nineties. residents, tanned to the color such riot or mass of color as in dots and dashes of color in the quarter sections. The yuccss exclusive gambling clubs, in "INTRODUCED" we visited of the old "speakeasy days up the gravel drive, a search darkened tower and the car us as the door opened and we end resort, so Tuesday was a series of ultra-modernistic who attended us wore a white to the gaming room, entirely music was perfect, the floor of something doing just why retinue with him, we afterward and five daughters. They invaded himself down with a basketful we left the old bov was about informed. residents of Palm SnriiiL's ar departure, we were conscious the window: All the up snd coming writers are snapped up by Hollywood. Achmed Abdullah calls spats ankle awnings. Add hiccup names: Oliver Oogarty. What the theatre needs Is Joe Cook. That ts. more giggles. H. L. Mencken over from Baltimore with out his brief case. You d think role porter orlslnattv) "top,- it raged In the Oav P0. What hiintvnH m Charles M- Schwab's cpitmlsmT And bare those radio Happiness Boys quit happying? Every time a tax-payer, the mupj. geta his hed above water somebody swats him with an oar. The red head. Irene Hayes, all in green. Rita Welraan and her husband. Mickey Marks, skipping along. Any time I go sklppy. they'll probably wheel me home. Why not start by sharing Huey's wealth? ' Mayor La Ouardla. half Italian himself, banned the hurdy gurdy men without a sentimental whine. He reeards their music as sheer clat ter Mcst grinder are Sicilians who rented their pianos by the day. But for manv of u whoMt muticil talnmenta are alight, tha evanlsh meut Is a wrench. Next to the han som cab, the hurdy gurdy man was the most New Yorklsh Institution we know. There was something touching about his deep dejection. He rarly made a dollar a day aud his coaUlbuUQft to slum chtex waa TRIBUNE. irEDFORD. Personal Health Service By William ttlgnetf letter! pertaining to personal beaJtli and hi-glen not to dliease dlafnofli Of treatment wllJ be mwered by Or. Brady If a tramped aeir-ad dressed envelope U enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large n a ruber of letters received only a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. K'Ulls m Brady. 163 1 Camino, Bererly Hills. Cat DIABETES STILL In 1632. according to official ata tlstlca. the death rate from automo bile accident vtia 3J9 per hundred thousand of pop ulation. Unless my arithmetic is ss terrible sa us ual that ' means that, oh. well, I can't bother to be so precise, let us say a fair elsed army of us art destined to be annihilated by Ucenaed Killers this year. Then, too. we encour age the work of these licensed killers by licensing them to liquor up when they have, a Job of killing to do, for a little alcohol In a driver's blood not only e.ovs his reaction time snd makes him a menace to all other dri vers and pedestrians but also be numbs, hta conscience or sense of right and wrong, If any, so that he can dispatch his vie time without qualm. The law In Yankeeland goes further than that. Not only la It legal and In some circles quite the correct thing for an automebllo operator to dope his wits and his conscience with cock tall, highball or other drink but In the event that the potential killer pulls off a Job and thru some Inad vertence geta hauled Into court, tha law comes to his rescue once morn, for It Is so cunningly arranged that the culrplt haa only to swear he was not drunk snd, there Is no precise test by which Intoxication can be proved. Scientifically, actually, we can deter mine in any Instance whether an in dividual la under the influence of al cohol, Just as certanly ae we can de termine whether an Individual has defective vision or hearing. Enlight ened countries apply such a teat In routine police practice. But here In Yankeeland the law prefers not to recognize such a test, and the law yers make a lot of Jack out of the peculiar circumstance. Some times Americana remark on the cheapness of life In other coun tries. It la pretty cheap here, too, li you havent money or influence. In 193 J the death rate from dia betes was the same as that from au tomobile accidents In thla country. It Is now fifteen years since Banting discovered Insulin, a remedy which if you can afford it. will control the dis ease and save your life. Insulin waa patented, so that no one can make it except under . license of the patentee. The patent waa as no small Item. All day he turned the - crank and looked up In mute appeal. A penny pleased, a nickel would keep him a half hour and a quarter was a windfall that often bewildered him as to how to express his thanks. This parn graph was In spired, by the way, after seeing one weary Tony. In faded corduroys chas ed from In front of a vile clip-Joint by a blustering cop. Irony in over plusl Alexander Woolcott has become the tlttupy oracle of the book busi ness. There Is magic In his mere mention of a new volume over the radio or In his gazetteerlng. Never a professional book critic, his en dorsements touch of a firecracker sata from coast to coast. Publishers would rather have his praise than that of a half down top reviewers. Conspicuous among his three-sheet-lug triumphs was "Oood Bye, Mr. Chips," a thin wistful volume thru most critics dismissed with a scant line. Then "Maurice Gest" and "Lost Horizon." which had tain on shelvrs sometime, were apuzzed into the best seller division. The eruption of Madison Square types takes place In that wavering purple betwpeu twilight and deep dusk. Queer human specimens, like those squirmy white things under old rocks, seep In from nowhere. There Is the hat less fellow whose snowy hair falls on his shoulder like a lion's mane. His cheeks have the plnkness of youth and ils eyes are robin bright. He writes things, son nets one presumes, on a pad. Then the turbaned Hindu who kneels on a grassy plot and salaams toward the east. The smiling blind couple chattering like magpies. The book black who can discuss Spinoza. Aud the ex-Jockey, cracked up In a cplll, now grouping In a mental fog and muttering of vanished glories. Au thors like Madison Square for "at mosphere." Sinclair Lewis drops by often. So do Faith Baldwin and Kathleen Norrls. when In town. Will Roger's feminine rival lor the gum chewing championship Is also a performer and a grand one. Lynn Pontanne. no less. Of course she never exercises her Jaws In public. i Always at home or In the dressing room. But when she puts herself to It. phe wsga a mean cheek. The late Ulyan Taahman was also a furious gum chewer In private. So Is Yvonne rrlntempn. Incidentally. Lilyan Tash. man waa the greatest Joy dress making establishments ever knew. She bought by dozens. News Item: "He topped two big T-bones and trimmings with a quar ter section of pumpxin pie." That's boardln'l Catnapers lived KUten CAMAS. Wash. (UP) A Persian kitten, tight gray when he disappear ed from the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Berreman, was coal black when ' he returned two months liter. Though the color would not wash off. the Berremana believed the kidnap ers had dyed the kitten s hair, to conceal his Identity. Vienna Professor to lecture VIENNA (UP) Professor Dr. Ar thur Haas, noted physicist, will lec ture next Inter in the Drexel In stitute of Philadelphia, tt is announc ed here. Professor Haas previously has lectured at Ysla un! varsity. OREGON, FRIDAY. APRIL 5. 1935. Brady, M.D. TOO EXPENSIVE signed to an Institution and the roy alties used for scientific research. Thus the victim of diabetes la com pelled to support medical research, which msy be Just and right, but I don't be lie re It Is Just or right to compel the poor to support medlcai research, and I believe the medical profession has lost one of lta finest traditions by giving tacit or open sanction to the patenting 6f a remedy on such conditions. If the state will not or cannot support medical re search, then the burden should rest upon the shoulders of the rich. Suppose some research worker dis covered a cure for cancer. Following the newly established precedent he might choose to patent the remedy and aa&ign it in whole or part to the laboratory or medical school where be carried on hie work. What s sorry position the medical profession would be in asking the poor victim of can cer bow much he could pay to live. - QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Kidney Stone and Vitamin A. Aa I am a sufferer from stone In the kidney I am greatly Interested in this newspaper story and would like to have your comment. (T. F.) Answer The news Item tells of the surgeon's belief that kidney stone may be prevented or cured without operation, by a diet which maintains normal acidity and provides adequate vitamin A- This will do no harm In any case, and persons subject to urin ary calculus, stone In kidney, bladder or ureter, renal colic, gravel, nephro lithiasis, tt it la variously known, had better have a go at tt. This disease should not be confused with gall stones. The best sources of vitamin A are escarole (chicory greens), romaine. lettuce, carrot, butter, cream cheese, Parmesan cheese, American cheese, liver, peas dried or green, tomato raw or canned or tomato Juice, spinach raw or canned, string beans. ejg yolk, prunes, kidney, dried or whole milk, banana. Medicinally, cod liver oil or halibut liver, or shark liver or salmon oil Is rich In vitamin A. Abused Feet. Cause and a remedy for thick cal lus on bottom of feet. (S. P. M ) Answer Vicious footwear. .9en,1 stamped envelope bearing your ad dress and ask for monograph on Care of the Feet. (Copyright 1935, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D.. 265 El Camino. Beverly Hills. Cut (Continued from Page One) per cent, the annual service charge would be less than a billion. For five years after tha war. we paid more than $1,000,000,000 Interest a year on the debt. The debt now Is less than 10 per cent of the total wealth. Britain's Is around 30 per cent. Service ol the British debt requires 7 per cent of Income, ours 2 per cent. The amount of money in circula tion does not mean anything. That la where the Inflationists are wrong If thev were rtcht. we would be having greater pro5perlty now than In 1P29 because there Is more money In circulation now than then. Cir culation Is ioo. 000 .000 now. ex actly ai.OOO.ooo.OOO more than In "20. J The velocity of circulation Is what counts. That means turnover ot credit. Credit is at S28.000.000.000 now, aa against S36.000.000.000 in 21 (federal reserve board memlvr bank credit. The reasons credit will not. circu late now are several. The two big gest reasons are: ( Fear of busi ness men Mbout what the govern ment may do. Tills may be only partially Justified, but it exists. Those who have gone ahead (such ss autos) have not been disturbed by this factor. bt Business fer that, the bottom may not have been reached. Therefore, refusal to plsn i ahead or spend money on equtpn.pnt. ; If we could get steady progress for four or five months (Instead of upward four months and down two or three! this would vanish. j Credit is faith One cannot exist wtthout the other. Therefore, until Mr Roosevelt establishes Tnlth or i establishes itself, you cannot have j credit circulation, business expan i slon. complete recovery. M l.l. RITTMHOIM Comment on the Day's Nezvs By FRANK JENKINS PEACE Talks Shift to Moscow," a headline tells us. The accom panying dispatch adds: "Representatives of Great Britain and Soviet Russia met today In Mos cow In sn effort to straighten out the tangled state of European peace." T TERES a suggestion, offered for Europe for what It Is worth: If you'll hang all your dictators, shoot all yourt diplomats, drown all your munition makers and confine your remaining kings and queena in feeble-minded institutions, leaving the making of war In tha hands of the plain, ordinary people who have to do the Buffering and dying, you'll find that In the future there will be comparatively few wars. MORE war: A Los Angeles dispatch tells us: "Embattled housewives were In the throes of a meatless revolution today first skirmish in a campaign of food boycotts which they hope will spread throughout the country and shell-shock the high cost of living back to normalcy." The butchers, It seems, are to be the first point of attack. T ETS take a little closer look at thla scheme It being wise these days to take a close look at ANY scheme that comes out of Los An geles, which hatches up about half the foolishness that pesters the coun try. What has happened? Why. the price of meat on the hoof, out on the farm and out on the range, has gone up something like doubled In the past year and a half, as a matter of fact. So the price of- meat in the butcher shop has to go up also. That Id all there la to It. FOR ten or fifteen years we cried our eyes out because the price of farm products was so low. We said tt was scandalous, and congress and the legislatures started passing laws to relieve the farmer. We. the sovereign voters, stood on the sidelines and egged them on. Now, partly In response to these laws but CHIEFLY In response to changed relations of supply and de mand, prices of farm products are going up. You would think, natur ally enough, that we sovereign voters who cried great salt pools of tears over the plight of the farmer when his prices were low would throw up our hats and cheer lustily and hnp- plly now that his prices are getting high. But do we? We DO NOT! We complain until you. can hear us a : mile without half trying. THE poor butcher, whom these cranks in Los Angeles are Jump ing on. Is between the devil and the deep blue sea. As the price of meat on the hoof goes up, the price at which he must j SELL his meat to the customer mmt : go up also, or he will go broke. But as tho price goes up his customers ! pat LESS MEAT.t and since he is making no more per pound than he did before his total profit goes down. ; You can't make a profit if people quit buying what you have to sell. - TTOR years It has been dtng-donged Into our ears that everything would be lovely and the goose would ' hang high if only prices would GET HIGHER. In an efiort to FORCE them higher, we went off the gold standard and are now doing busi ness with rubber dollars. But when prices- BF.OIN TO GET HIGHER we yell our heads off tn pro test and begin to talk loudly and threateningly about starting boycotts. Human beings are funny creatures, aren't they? Landed Has on Sfccrnper. LOS ANOELES l UP) A six-Inch striped, small-mouthed bass was landed on the ronf of n 14-story downtown building. L. M. Crow, en gineer, went to clean out a water tank on the roof. He opened the outlet valve and the fish dropped out and started flopping. Student Earn Their Way Dl'KHAM. N H . (UP) According to Prf'iclent Tvler Dennet t of t he University of New Hampshire, two thirds of the students there are earn ing part of their way. v ' fin. 11.T I Flight 'o Time (Mrdford and Jaikson County lllitorr from the flies of the Mall Tribune of 10 and 20 Years Ago). TEN YEARS AGO TODAY April 5, 192S j fit waa Monday) Gerald Chapman, notorious msi! bandit, and picturesque crime fig ure, doomed to hang for murder of Connecticut policeman. Frederick Heath haa recovered from the removal of his tonsils, and la back In the drug store. Sunshine intermingled with clouds and April showers come to the val ley. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hess and Mrs. Dora Hess, and Mrs. David Grif fiths, motor to Grants Pass to visit Walter Hesa. Medford high typing team, under direction of Mrs. E. C. Jerome, win county honors in contest at Ashland. Thirty-seven business men motor to Copco No. 2, under construc tion on the Klamath river. Tax collections slightly below those of last year, sheriff i mports. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April 5. 1915 (It was Monday) V. S. Collins resigns as superin tendent of Medford schools. Victories of czar's forces on the Polish front break Easter lull in fighting; British perfect deep-sea net to catch U-boats. Next Friday is the 50th anniver sary of the surrender of Gen. Robert E. Lee to General U. S. Grant at Appomatox. and many local G. A. R members recall the historical inci dent. "Cablrla,1 the "motion picture tri umph showing the splendor of Egypt, the grandeur of the Alps, the opulence of Africa, and the spirit of America," at the Page; "Let's Play Postoflce" at the Isls; and "The County Chairman" at the Star. FULL GOSPEL PASTOR TO I Sunday morning's service at th Full Gospel church will be in the nature of a farewell for Rev. J. Logan Stuart and family. Rev. Stuart, who has been pastor of the local tfhurch for the paat 15 months, will leave Sunday for San Bernardino. Cal., where he will assume charge of the Full Gospel church. Pev. Leonard Weston of San Diego. HEATH'S DRUG STORE AND TOILETRIES $1 Calonite 79c Giant Size Listerine Antiseptic ..... 59c Gillette Blades 19c 14 oz. Ovaltine Pepsodent Tooth Paste 31c S. M. A. 90c B 1 ' Alka Seltzer Premo Seltzer Johnston's Instant Sassafras Guaranteed Alarm ' Woodlark Squirrel Poison 40c aaavaiWBaavaiBaaaaaaaaWBjr 14 oz. Union Leader 64c Peptans Stomach Powder 29c STUD The Store That Ladies' Rest Room - Medford BIdff. Phone 884 Cal., will assume the local pastorate Tuesday, coniuctlng services that evening. Use Mall Tribune want ads. mill DAD DYNGE'S DANCE SAT. NITE ORIENTAL GARDENS Two dances Two Orchestras One admission Men 35c Ladies 10c LOOKIE LOOKIE LOOKIE HERE COMES COOKIE and the rest of the Gang to Dance at Bonney's Grill Sat. Nite Good Music By Carl Larsen's Boys 3 53c Spray Gloves pair 5c 49c 39c 1 Fudge 29 19c Clocks 98c Pint Vacuum Bottles 79c 3c Fills Prescript! ions 7mA DRUG STORE