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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1935)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TIUBUNT:, BEDFORD. OREGON. SUNDAY. APRIL 14. 1935. Medpord Mail Tribune "Emwnt w South OrraM Htidt Ihl Mail Tribune' Dni; Except ftiiurdai Published by MtlWftn MINTING CO. 15 3T-ati N. Vt HL ROUtCHT . KUUL, Edit AO Independent Newpapef Ef!tri u MctiDd cite matter at Medford Oren, under Act of Man . UT8. 8U:'.S(KlfT10N tUTM Br Mall lo aiIiiki Daily, on rear luily, ill month Pitlj. on month. IUUJ. one oomo Br Cirrler Id Athinee Medford, Aanland, JacknnfltU, Central Point, PbocoU, Tileot. But aaa on minmj. Dallr, one rtar Dallr, li nontht Dallj, month All term, caib Id editnee. Off km paper of the Cttj of Medfofd. Official paper of Jkiiod Countj. MB KM OF THE AIMiOClATTI' fKEfli Kweinna run The AoocUted Preta la eiclusiwlj entitled U th ua for publication of all oei dlipeiehee credited to It otherwise erediWd Id tbla paper ton ueo w ' All rtibU (or publtcalloo of epeelal dlapaubea Bart id are aiw rKru. MKMBEH OR UNlTr.D PHEW MEMBKH f AUDIT BUHKAO OF CrKCUUTIONS Admtlilnc KeprctCDtailtea H. a M(MJENSEN COMPAKT OfMtM In Ne Vori. Chiraco. Detroit, Sao francUM Ij Antei Seattle PorLlind. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry Student at "Old Oregon" ttrucx Frl. for world peace, and to get out of military drill. The campu aenti- ment U to fire a coach oftn. but never a cannon. I The economic altuatlon hereabouts continue, to improve. Many have new autot by the steering wheel, and the aame old bear by the tail. Atty Bill McAllister caught a Hah Thuri, caualng him to feel like he had won an appeal to the supreme court. The state aaloon la getting ready to move to a more centrally located apot with no alley for a customer to use, from force of habit. Civic gumption la at a low ebb. Nothing requiring the laaulng of a proclamation by the mayor, or the naming of 17 committee, la even In alght. . The alfalfa and wild mustard are coming up fine, and it now look like then would be enough hay to make a greater hay shortage than in 1034. The Older Girls are all busy fret ting about how their Easter bonnet will look. The county la fixing up the county roada that were hard hit by the late alleged economy. Live merchants are displaying atraw hau, ao Inclement weather la feared. An old-faahioned section crew of four men was deliberating around the depot on the lHh lnt. Hermy Offenbacher of the Apple gAte towned Sat. and reports every thing coming up and going up. Roy Pruttt is back from Oklahoma, which la full of dust storms, bandits, and democrats. A shlvaree the first in 00 days was committed Wed. evng. and was allowed to ceaae of Its own cuaaed neas. Constituted authority la power leoi to abate this type of nuisance, as long as the groom dors not resist, being roasted with his bride, on the red-hot prow of a truck. 3801 dops have been Hrenaed In the county. Indicating that very few canine are now hiding under the barn. Kitty ball is being substituted for lawn mowing, by that portion of the male population who can't bowl or play golf. The oldest R. Maru boy is showing signs of being a rakish halfback, which it what the Nipponese colony have been oraylng for. like the far mer prays for rnln. when there la none. Next fall "Bnni-al!" will be mingling with "Rah! Rahl" The fltht cae of summer flu this spring has showed up. K. Ulrlrh, the Prospect hill-billy, towned Thura. He report the stock men as yet have no cnuae to smile, but he was pipRlliiR. Juvenile hunters now roam the hill and dales with guns, and ao far have hit nothing but Inanimate objects. such aa barns and phone poles. J. Frank Wormian, the banker-farmer of Phoenix, towned in mid-week, with his whiskers nrntly pointed and his Democracy Intact. The Don Runyard hoy U growing like a wred and takes as long atrp as his Pup a There la considerable building go ing on. but many ran remember hen there was nothing to nail but lies, and many of them. The fields are full of tractors, whir ring like slot machines. The Prospect hull team, headed by tii Indomitable Dewey Hill, has In vited all the ball team In the county to come up iul beat them soma time nan summer. Editorial Correspondence SACRAMENTO, Calif., April 12. Before leaving San Fran cisfo, had the pleasure of spein? the famoui fiertrude Stein walk from the elevator in the Mark Hopkins hotel to a waiting motor ear arewnpanied by her secretary Aliee B. Toklas. But Miss Stein, TIIl!OL'(iII her secretary, turned down your correspon dent flat when it tame to granting an interview. Miss Stein, we were politely informed, had given all the interviews to newspaper people, she intended to give while in San Fiani'iseo and was fed up with the profession anyway. She would give us a press card to any of her three lectures around the bay district, hut our schedule wouldn't allow us to wait around for that. So we had to be content to watch the eccentric literary genius, stride MANFULLY from the lobby of the hotel to her waiting ear. It's probablv just as well for US. AVe talked with one of the S. F. newspaper gals who had interviewed Miss Stein, and she put it down as a terrifying experience. Miss Stein, she said, was picasant, enough as SUCH THINGS GO, but her personality was overpowering, and her presence strangely disquieting. "Of course she is insulting" the girl explained, "but one expects that. She told me I couldn't read, was feeble minded, and like all other American newspaper folk, abysmally ignorant. let that didn t bother me at all it was the Stein line and not said unkindly. I felt she honestly believed it, and from her point of view was right. It wasn't what she said or did, it. was the sinister power and what is the word DEHUMANIZING effect of her presence, that got me down. I had crammed up on her stuff, was primed for a good interview, but when I got before her and started to pop the questions I had prepared somehow they didn't count and I didn't count either. Nothing counted hut Miss Stein. I was merely dirt beneath her feet and WHAT feet. I was never so glad to get out of a place in my life. I felt she was from another world and not a human world, and I was a poor little human worm, darned lucky to escape. Talk about your Frankensteins or "Men from Mars," if the movie people could just PUT Miss Stein on the screen, they would have a horror that would pack the entire audience out feet first. She is overpowering as some manifestation of Nature is overpowering. And I am no longer an impressionable high school kid. Don't tell me she is a literary rnarmtan or just a plain nut. I know better. I don t know WHAT she is, but if there IS such a thing as the reincarnation of some unearthly force, then this Stein person is it!" We might say in explanation the young ladv reporter had observed the sacred cocktail hour at Ihe Mark' Honking inst before this outburst, so the extremity of her reaction may have been somewhat alcoholic. However after seeing La Stein navigate from the hotel to her car like a snow plow in skirts, we can well understand how a personal interview with such a forceful and formidable crea ture might get one down, particularly a girl who in her own newspaper work had always found her physical attractions and light patter a great help. One feels physical attractions, light patter or personal charm would have no weight with Miss Stein in tact would irritate her extremely, and she would take n malicious delight in showing her irritation, and takinc her vin. tim down. That may have been it. However never having had more man a iicenng glimpse ot the lady, we are hardlv compe tent to judge. She looked like a "character" a freak verv masculine, very homely, eyes very much alive in n face that somehow looked DEAD, that was all. Decided to stop here en route home California legislature. A newspaper friend motored us up via Marin county which was beautifully clean and green after the heavy rain. Was amazed at the expanse of water, a a . im. proached Sacrninenlo reaching almost to Davis. The causeway bridge that formerly proceeded for miles over the lowlands now goes over a muddy Lake Michigan. The water literally extended to the horizon, in some places the fence posts entirely, and the phone poles over half, submerged. Was not surprised to learn the losses in crops around here, nartieularlv in nsnariiini. will total at least half a million dollars. Many farmers in the Yolo by-pass area have moved into Sacramento with their families and belongings. More work for the Red Cross, and the F.E.R.A. We wonder whv all state canitols in the Tlnitnrl Sltfitnu li,i..a been built the same-all miniature St. I'eter's with the while ionic, I up stucco Moors, the circular brass rails under the 'well," over which a discouraged legislator conl.l im..., splash himself on the tiles below but few i,f them' do. The same flags in glass cases, the same oil paintings on Ihe walls, the same sort of stale representatives, the same sort of lobbvists. the same sort of talk in the corridors, the khih.. miVl,iin.,i.,o,i 1 elderly women clerks wobbling about, in the halls, in fact the same everything as far as the fundamentals go. It mav mean this is ON r, nut inn. alter all. i? v r Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. mined letter, pertalnlnf to perional health and htrlent not to dlwaie aiiinosl, or treatment will be antaered lT Dr. Brady II a stamped elf-ad dresked envelope li enclosed. Letter, should be brief and Britten In Ink. owing to the large number of letter! received only a rew can be anlwered. No reply can he made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William llrady, 265 El ( amino. Beverly Hills, Cat. THK STERN FATHER AN I) THE SPOILED CHILD. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, April 13 Figuratively I'm becalmed and enjoying the ex quisite languor of lolling In a men tal dor. U a one of those day when I'm going to write solely for my own amuse ment. Toy with trivia, float with the vagnrlea and feci no responsi bility toward the reader. Many of us lately have been seeking too fier cely for the why of the whither Awareness of en ormity makes us dirry. It is pleasant to lie back and relax Into a different rhythm of thoupht. We may not m anywhere hut we do not are m to be suing places straining So in this columnar to and fro-ing I shall cau-h at the chaff only Min nows, well arnsoned, are more edihl? than whales. I noticed last niht tn a he-food barar that Francis Alber- I tantl, once the kid member of the ! staff on the old Kvenlng Mall, fev ! tured a bald spot (ringed with rev ! "A foi -print of time" he explain ed. Damon Hunyon Is Hie only aotlva newspaperman untouched by the years He !a rvu'tly s I first met him In Rsv Leonu'a office JO eara ago Damon will never d:cus Ills aipe. He ha no b:r!hlns Neither has Anita Uros A lev n there somewhere. Each is ao youiifi- A gentleman of the cinema indus try aeems ceiUm of an evxtua to Florida. "I'm buy inn nothiiig." he aaya. "I oannot put on The Chief." I'm wtMHlevlnn what has hevome ol the -ll it'-'ii, i-i.i p'.r.ne who hustled he brought some one's else baggage In alarm and Berlitz French I shriek ed: "C n'eat pas la meme thing'" Everybodv roared, a feiiAn. t-nvaa.- of that trip passd me near Brentan- u tne owier nay. "Hello la meme thing!" he called, I'm thinking of the porter because in the excitement of hl retrieving my rightful baggage I gave him a $10 bill for what was In tended to be a dollar. We go through financial craahea and lose thousand, but the losaea we remember are the 10 bills given haplessly, likely to those who need it. We drove through mob-rldden Har lem the evenlnst after Th Mw-tinn had the llatleasness of the debauchee arter a major Jag. Never before have I seen the aftermath of such violence. It la starklv terrorizing. FV.nr in th oar aald nothing the way home. It ta preposxereoua to think America cn recover under the present strangling tax legislation. We are In deep wat ers. Maybe sinking! OhiRpiugi ou ui i.iat tr.p At caatouu, I ehould like to write a bicgraphy ao excellent aa 'The Portrait of an Unknown l-ady." It la Nancy Hoyt's sum-up of her exciting sister. Elinor Wylie. who died ao young. And on writing: That' a scholarly, informa tive column Rufus Steele turns out on the Monitor In Boston Lily Pom coing from cure to cure to achlee thtnneaa la a reversal of the usual diva's desire. There are the conger. itally thin. I'm one painfully so. 1 Kotve on the most fattening foods pate rie fols gras. glasses of thick t-ream. candles But the scales never twitch upward All thin men want to be huskv like Alan Dawn or Sprul'.l Braden. The best they get Is the lump of digestion. At the Colony I was fascinated b7 the antics of an accomplished hrandv drinker with hts enormous goblet He hsd the ruddiness of curates of the English countryside, a sort of blown-up Belaaxw He warmed the tflaj-a by hand-rolling, sipping, res piring, admiring and holding It aloft Julian Street, a temperate author is 'he American authority on wines In K,;K.v'f s nvin flaunts hi uV.ir;1 by to lack, ol knowledge of vine. A correspondent of indeterminate aex submits a problem: My son has one child, a girl tnree years old. He la stern to wards the child. She Is men tally aensltlve. He often pun ishes her se verely, so that she cries deep ly and inten sely, and then commands un der threat of more punish ment that ahe stop crying at once. The child makes all the effort she can, but how can emotion so excited be subdued or controlled Instantly? Is not such a practice Injurious to a child's mental health? I am not concerned with the physical punishment she gets, but I fear for the results of compelling auch repression of emotion. If you assure me there Is no danger, then I shall rest at ease. U there Is danger In it. will " you please write me a reply which I can show to my son. From Sherbon's "The Child" (Mc- Oraw Hill, New York) I quote this pertinent observation : "Nothing so surely seta the habit mold in the undeslred pattern aa does overemphasis or punishment or the creation of a violent emotional situation." From another -chapter In the same fine book: ". . . The more drastic the j child's sense of thwarting or in- j Justice the more Intense is the I energy charge In the nervous system. To struggle with a child who is stimulated by a surplus of adrenln in his blood stream is to add fuel to the fire. He is physically (chemically) un able to relax or come out of his anger-tension until this energy charge has - spent Itself. When both parent and child are suf fering from 'adrenln intoxica tion' conflict may continue un til the child is exhausted and often the parent has- commit ted excesses in punishment which nppall him when he comes to himself and views hlB conduct In retrospect." Recently the press had harrow-1 tng reports of two instances where young fathers slapped to death babes a few weeks old because the babies cried and would not cease crying. I suppose every father who has had anything to do with the intimate care of his children will feel a degree of sympathy for these unhappy ones, still, there is a sadistic element In this violent pun ishment of children. I still believe in whipping in some circumstances for the dis cipline of children, provided the punishment Is administered when the parent is not In a state ot anger. Yet It seems that the most effective discipline Is that which i the Intelligent parent enforces by means of a simple system of re wards or pleasures given or with held. To many readers the allusion to "adrenln Intoxication" In the para graph quoted from Sherbon'a "The Child." will not mean anything. Adrenln is the Internal secretion or hormone of the adrenal glands, and under emotional excitement there la a marked Increase in the 'amount of this poured into the blood. It causes liberation into the blood of an Increased quantity of blood sugar, the physiological fuel for muscular exertion; It increases the power of the muscles; It raises the blood pressure: it shortens co agulation time of the blood; It makes the breathing deeper and faster. In short It prepares the individual to fight or to run away. When this natural impulse and readiness to fight or run away la repressed, the effect on the body Is physically harmful. So the young father who punishes hla child and forbids her to give any expression to the emotion thus aroused In flicts a poignant cruelty upon her. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Rye for Food Economy A rural reader offers this aug- gestion : I suggest that you mention rye bread, "pumpernickel." With rye meal at less than 3 cents a pound in 60 pound quantities, it makes a cheap food. Rye and white flour, salt, and water: save some of the mixture In a bowl, cover with salt, and let It sour for the next batch; the bread Is flat without It. Yeast, of course. Excellent with cheese, ba con grease, etc. (F. T. M.) Answer Rye flour Is practically of the same nutritive value as wheat flour, containing slightly less phos phorus and iron but more calcium than does wheat. Rye contains the same vitamins that wheat does. II rye or rye meal or flour Is cheaper than wheat or wheat flour, I think It would be a smart thing to use it as F. T. M. suggests. Senna What Is your opinion of the practice of taking senna every night, either as a tea. or the leaves chew ed, or chopped up with figs, to keep the bowels regulated . . ,(W, S.) Answer It Is a bad habit. Send dime and stamped envelope bearing your address, for booklet "The Con stipation Habit." which will teach you how to free yourself from all such slavery to physic. Heart Stopped Almost How about the English gardener whose heart stopped. Was he dead and yet came back? (H. F. D.) Answer I dunno, I wasn't there. My Impression la that feeble beat ing of heart is difficult to detect in such emergencies, and that re ports of such cases are always more amazing In newspapers than they are in scientific Journals. Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brad iliD.Hri send letter direct to Di William Brady, M. D., 265 C Camino. Beverly Hills, Cal. which may account for much -of its decadence. Sam Hellman, of the magazines. Is in many ways most volatile of con versationists. Hts is the running fire dialler like sparks in dry grass. He onn resort to genial low-brow!sm or exploit a dictum on Roman culture The best down-to-the-ground talk er I evoi knew was the late Harry Reichenbach, press acnt. He had no schooling but his knife-blades of sar casm slit pompous windbags wide open. He was a born heckler. Among cultured talkers with always some thing to say la Col. Joe Hartfleld. the lawyer. Also Karl K. Kitchen, who blushes. This, as I promised. Is a column of brouhaha But I've- had a wallow In passive reflections. A vaudeville trouper played my Ohio town the other day and writes that a mer chant there ald: "Why. that feller used to sit around this store all day. Wouldn't work or nuthln'. Just sit. Still at ltslttln' and doin" nothln.' (Copyright. 1933. McNaught Syndicate) Bmtd (Continued from Page One) Hie inside on that Is that Miss Perkins took up her benching pri vately with Quarterback Roosevelt In New York recently. It is understood that she pointed out (not. perhaps. in detail) that Rtchberg acted a ball carrier on the automobile code over labor's protests, the newspaper code matter befoie the national labor rela tions board, and the cKiuctte code Miss Perkins was not only Ignored In nil these cases, but nctualty over ruled on ihe cuaroue code. This is at least one good reason why she wss given the rubber Indus try ball on the thieatened strike play. Flight 'o Time ( Med ford and Jackson County History from the flies of the Mall Tribune of 10 and i0 Year Ago). Comment on the Day's News FRUIT DEAL WITH F TEN YEARS AGO TODAY. April 11, 1915 (It Was Tuesday) Trout sen&on to open tomorrow; many local citizens take vacations till end of week to get out Into the streams. A general rain falls over the state. Ashland decides not to hold a Fourth of July celebration this year. By FRANK JENKINS "HIS headline looms from the front page: "House (meaning, of course, the lower house of congress) Passes Bill Banning War Profits," Good enough. Among the outstand ing dt graces of all history are the great fortunes that have been made out of war. BETTER still, however, would be to see to It that we STAY OUT OF WAR, thus eliminating the oppor tunity to make war profits. JF War comes soon, it will start in Europe. This country has Just as much business In a war In Europe as s lamb has In a convention of wolves and would get exactly what the lamb would get. Wt found that out back In 1918. A 19-YEAR-OLD Los Angeles ne gro, convicted of the crime of first degree murder, la hanged at Ban Quentin prison. Four days after his death on the gallows, It is discovered that an ap peal; carrying an automatic stay of execution, had been perfected but apparently forgotten. It was discov ered in the files of the clerk of the court. When the appeal was found, four days after the condemned man had been hanged, It was immediately filed ; and transmitted to the supreme court, where, the dispatches tell us, . "If legal machinery does not break down, a stay of execution will be Is- sued to aave the life of the dead man." f-f SOUNDS absurd, doesn't it? And It IS absurd. But probably no miscarriage of Jus- i tic has occurred. It is difficult enough in this country, goodness knows, to convict s GUILTY person. So, It seems likely, about all that happened was that the Los Angeles negro was hanged sooner than other- , wise would have been the case. i i THE Oregon State Motor Assocla- i tton, in a bulletin Just Issued, makes this startling statement: j "If, once a year, a foreign bombing ; plane were to wipe out the people ot 1 a city th size of Salem, the public would do anything within Its power to avert the repetition of such a ca lamity; yet last year in the United States automobiles killed enough peo ple to populate both Salem and Bend." THE public, If it would, could pre vent this staggering annual tol. of death, which la due, in the main, to CARELESSNESS. HERE In Oregon, which Is certainly no worse than the rest of the county, the motor vehicle death rate per 100,000 of population was 33 In 1934, whereas In 1933 It was only 37.1. That Is to say, Instead of becoming less careless, we are becoming MORE SO. PARIS. April 13. (AP) The Franco-American apple and wheat deal of March 23 was threatened with collapse today when the French government held up licenses to Im port two heavy shipments of Amer ican fruit landed at Le Havre yes terday, which It was feared would spoil. The apples must be left at the docks until an agreement la reach ed. Importers said the government held up the licenses because al though French wheat had been sold in the United States a method l payment had not been arranged. FASTER BUSINESS AIDS COAST AREA SAN FRANCISCO, April 12 (AP) Retail trade was stimulated by Esswr buying after lagging for a few weeks, wholesale trade gained gradua'ly and industrial activity wi up slightly. The Increased silver price spurred mine stocks and en couraged miners but played small part in the total Industrial pic ture. Farm products prlcea moved, mostly higher. ALL MAKES OP WATCHES repair ed by expert watchmaker. Brophy's. Jewelers. 1 Ose Mall Trlbunu want adi. I BEAUTIFUL NEW CRISP PLAN BOOKS FULL OF THE LATEST IDEAS AT YOUR DISPOSAL . . . PLUS TOTAL COST ESTIMATES. BIG PINES LUMBER COMPANY PHONE ONE OVER (jl'ARTER CE.NTl'RV OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE nnnsmssin ATTENTION! FRUIT GROWERS DORMANT OIL Let's clean up those apple trees! We can supply Neutrol-A-Emulsion which is manufactured by the fam ous Balfour Guthrie Co. v Also, a complete line of GENERAL CHEM ICAL CO. LEAD will be available at our warehouse, the POPULAR ORCHARD BRAND in both ASTRINGENT and STANDARD, size 4 lb.. 5 lb., and 6 lb. bags. We will sell you only what you use. Any unbroken packages of lead can be returned for credit. American Fruit Growers, In SOUTH FIR STREET 7000 Reds Pie NANKING. China, April 12. (AP) Natlotial government military au thorities today announced govern ment armies, under the personal leadership of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek, killed 7.000 communists In heavy fighting about Kewiyang. Kewichow province, the last four days. C MANX NSAN FRANCISCO Xy5Sgg32S 'I'liiiiiuii NEW Innovations, Service and Comfort The Mart Con tn tent The Bct Accommodations The Fincit Mli Tub nd Shower Baths Circuleting lee Water 150 ATTRACTIVE ROOMS Ii jo. MOO, 1150. lloo SINGH ItSO. 1100. tiiO. WOO DOUBLE SAMPLE ROOMS t-m 1U0 SPLENDID RESTAURAN1 EXCELLENT COFFEE SHOP GARAGE SERVICE AT DOOR VmettnM at me Manx fe HARVEY M. TOY. MANAGlNG-OWNER 23iS5?S POWELL AT OFaRREU. IN THE HEART OF SAN fRANClSCO "Bruno," the Mall Tribune dog, Is given to a homesteader, but Is ex pected to return, as he did on three previous occasions. Ne wauto light law will be enforced, traffic aides announce. O. A. C. expert reported as favor ing both Holly street and P. & E sites for new-high school building. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY. April 14, 1935 (It Was Wednesday) Balmy evenings prevail, and the Pacific highway Is filled with autolst taking the air. Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, wife of former president, undergoes operation in New York hospital. Carload of 1915 Reo autos arrive In city and attract wide attention. Last Saturday E. W. Carlton and John McBrlde brought home from Med ford two new Ford cars of the latest model. As Mr. Carlton is a man who figures on an investment from every ancle, this purchase- fig ures well for the Ford automobile. tTsble Rock Tablets.) A horse belonctng to George Alford of Phoenix, committed suicide, when Its bend became entnng'.ed In a chil dren's swlns, and was choked to death. MARION TALLEY WEDS MUSICIAN SECRETLY NF.W CITY. N Y , April 13 -Ti Marlon Talley. former Metropolitan opera star, was socrrtlv married here Mtuch 23 to Ado'.ph Fk-kstrom. a New York musician, it wim disclosed today 1th the fill ne of ttie marrliue 11 ('use return at the cc-unty clfrkeof ftce. I'm alaU Iiibuii want .a. ALBANY HOBO JUNGLES WILL BE ABOLISHEC ALBANY. Ore. April U (VPi Trsnsients hereafter will not tarry ! A'.hnnv. the city council decided to j day It ordered owners of waterfron' property where the hobo "Jungle" U situated to remove pavkln boxes, ahacks and other helter uvrt I homrM men. If the property own ! era do not eliminate the shacks, the city w:U do it at their expense, tt n.w derided. e e.er) Saturday n:$:u at M. N. HOGAN & COMPANY Southern Oregon's Brokerage and Investment House Announces an Offering at Par To Residents of the State of Oregon Only of $100,000.00 (40 of this issue has already been sold) Commercial Finance Corporation 5 Year 6 Collateral Trust Coupon Bonds Interest Payable Semi-Annually Bonds in denominations of $100.00, $500.00, $1000.00 TRUSTEE First National Bp.nk, Medford Oregon SECURITY These bonds are the direct obligation of the COM MERCIAL FINANCE CORPORATION, secured by a deposit with the First National Bank. Trustee, of $1200 of collateral for each S1000 bond issued and outstanding. In addition to the pledged collateral these bonds are a prior obligation to $90,800 8 Preferred Stock. SiS.000 7 Preferred Stock a.id $50,000 Common Stock, all outstanding as of Feb. 28, 1035. DEPRESSION RECORD All interest and dividend require ments have been earned and paid in full and in addition a surplus and reserve of over $25,000 has teen built up. PURPOSE of this OFFERING Birsine?s growth from 8281 000.00 in 1927 to over $1 000,000.00 in 1934. make additional working capital ditinbli. Call or Write for a More Descriptive Circular M. N. HOGAN & COMPANY 214 E. .ain frreet Phone 1151 Hi