Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 25, 1935, Page 6, Image 6

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MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUXE, MEDFORD, OREGON. THURSDAY, APRTL 25, 1938.
PAGE SIX
Medfqrd Mail Tribune
"Cvemra in southern Origoo
Riadt Uit Mall Tribune"
Dailf Bleep! Baluroai
MKIIKOBI) PMNTINU CO.
J52I-J9 N Til St
ROBERT W. BUI1U Ed
Ao independent Neeapepef
Entered aa aeennd elesa matter it Medford
Orefn. under M MirH 8. 181.
.15.01)
,. '
,. .80
Inland.
8ini8CKIPTI0N BATES
Br Mill In Adrenee
Daily, on' fear V
Dally, ill months
Dally, one ownu) .V,W
Jaeaaomlllo, Central Point, Ptoeoll, Talent. Bold
Bill anil on Bluliaaje.
Dally, or rear '"
Dally. Ill month!
Dally, ooe mania ou
All termi. eisn In edranea.
Offir.il) paper of tin City ot Medford.
Official paper of Jaekaon Count?.
Big News
MEMHK.rl V THE AHHUC'IATEU PRESS
ItrCTI.Inl Pull Uaied Win ,
Tba Aodaled Pren la eielualtel? entitled
tba u for publication of all newi diipaleliee
credited to It ui otnemlie credited in tnlr paper
and alio to -he local new published herein.
All rUhU for publication of apodal diapiuaea
herein ari also reaerted.
MEMBEII OP UNITED PRESS
MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU
Of CIRCULATIONS
Adrertlslni Repreamuttiea
M. C MOtiENSEN A COMPANT
Offlcea In New V'irl. Chicago, Detroit, Ian
Prancluo l Amelee Seattle Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur I'erry
n. v ! Tovmend. father ol the
aoo' per month old age revolving
inn nlam nOW DrODOaea 100,-
000.000 fund "to teach people to
thin." The rough aketch of tne
,. revealed In preas dupawneo,
makea no provisions to pBy the peo
ple for thinking, or allegsdly trying
to.
The town to be hai already been
named Fall city and all It lacks l
,n,.i.nnn (Umatilla News) The
lack of population to a town l akin
. tha lark nf votea to victorious
candidate.
The eaUsemed Balem Statesman re-
rrnilv flaunted an editorial cap
ir.ne.rt: "Mountain Out of An Ant-
HUl." Thla is a good trick, performed
.vniuidvniv heretofore with a mom
hill.
Several are flitting about In new
uto. Owlne to the return 01 con
fldence, those thus blessed no longer
feel like a sinner at a camp-moevnm.
e
Annarentlv. the record for pug
rw.ltv at a dance la held by Starr,
Okla. There were 38 fist fights,
during: the course of one evening.
The muslo was fine, and the marahal
a genius at looking the othor way at
th right time.
THE announcement President Roosevelt will talk to the nation
next Sunday over the radio, is big news.
For many months, the President has been urged to resume his
radio talks, report on his stewardship, reply to hia critics, and
again assume an aggressive and constructive leadership.
To all the- demands he turned a deaf ear. Many of the
influential members of his administration believed the President
in giving both the congress and his political enemies a free rein
for so long a time, was making t serious mistake. .But Franklin
D. had another idea. And as usual his idea was right.
WITH the huge security bill passed, with the business index
constantly risinir. but with the country as a whole still in
doubt about the future and what it portends, the time is ripe
now for a clarifying note from the "White House.
Had the President since the congress met, jumped to the radio
every now and then, to answer his critics, elucidate his policies,
appeal lor popular support, anyming ne migut an or any
would have been discounted in advance.
Radio talks from the President would thus have become an
old story. There would be no particular public interest in the
nnouncement of another one. Pursuing such a course, moreover,
the President could not have avoided revealing his hand, destroy
ing any element of dramatic suspense.
X biding his time, resisting all importunities to go off "half
cocked", holding his fire until he could see the whites of their
eyes, President Roosevelt merely demonstrated once more, that
when it comes to the tactics and strategy of practical politics, he
stands in a class by himself.
Thanks to his restraint and thorough understanding of human
nature, the President will now not only have a record breaking
audience, but he will have an audience that will hang on his
every word.
The radio appeal, cornea at the exact psychological moment,
to have the maximum effect, and the minimum reaction.
Unless all signs fail Sunday, April 28th will go down in the
history of Roosevelt's first administration, as a date to be remem
bered, and one marking an important milestone in his political
career.
It is, as we nee it, make or break. The skill of the preparation
and the perfect timing of the entire program, INDICATES at
least it will NOT be the latter.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D.
binned lettera pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease
diagnosis or treatment mil be answered by Dr. Brady it stamped self-addressed
envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink.
Owing to the large number of letters received only few can be answered.
No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr.
William Brady. 265 El Caralno, Beverly Hills, Cal.
NO COLITIS IN THIS COLUMN
The Acid Test
DEADLY PARALLEL.
(nostonTninscrlpt)
A parasite la a
man who demands
that the govern
ment provide gas
for his automobile,
so that he can
drive down to col
lect hla relief
money.
(Oregonlan)
The essence of
relief: Govern
ment gaa for our
automobllea with
which to drive
down and collect
our dole.
By thla time the two men Isolated
on a Lake Ontario Island for five
months, who only heard Tuesday
that Bruno Hniiptmnim was con
victed of the Lindbergh murder and
kidnaping, have located a bank cor
ner and settled the European ques
tion, and what alls money.
"Maybe you have B6S In your
porketl" (Auto Ad) II Ifi there
you put it there, and we don't mean
maybe I
e
Jt will soon be hot enough for
the fair sex to wear red dresecs and
summer furs.
a
What became ol the 1033 hitch
hikers Democratic motorists were al
ways seeing on the highways with
a sign on their back reading: "Don't
pick me up. I voted for Hoover."
e e
S. Morris, the T-IWck. 8-Valley. O
Hlll tiller, towncd Wednesday. Mr.
Morris waa viciously chased by Wail
Street throughout the last sales
tax campaign, so to mnlntnln his
lead, he turned around Irnrleasly In
the middle ot the block.
...
No rinte has been set tor the
threatened special session of the
legislature, so the wheels can stsrt
turning sgsln.
e e
"lilMML" M "HYr."
(M ; II-Killlrt III )
Another case, revealed by rec
ords. Is that ot a San Franciscan
who applied for relief. He was
given a Job which paid him 16
weekly. Later Investigation dis
closed the msn was receiving 'Jfj
monthly Irom a son enlisted In
the civilian Conservation Corps
and an additional 1:18 monthly
as a pension lor Spanish war
service.
e e
Observers report that while trie
moss of the people are susceptible
to nutty notions, and willing ap
parently to try anything once, they
are not Willed." In other words,
the demagogues have not been able,
as yet, to mold them into one man.
as when they wired the populace for
"electricity without cost to the tax
payers." The Dub Watson boy has recovered
from the mumps, and Is riding over
the humps. In s new V-VIII.
-
Us Mall frlDuiM want ads.
THE acid test of the President's speech on Sunday night will
lie. wlipr.lir.r- or not. it defines and clnrifipa the Roosevelt nro
gram sufficiently to restore public confidence. (If "restore" is
too extreme a word, to stimulate it.) .
For that is all the country needs, as we see it. It is not
definite dnngers, but doubts; it is not what we as a people know.
but what we don't know and fear that is so seriously retard
ing recovery.
We don't mean by this the speech will be a failure, unless it is
followed by wild cheers from Wall Street, aud an immediate
upward spurt of the stock market. To expect the former is
to expect the impossible j and the latter is relatively unimportant
anyway.
What we do mean is the effect of the speech upon the rank
and file, upon the people of this country as a whole, as a deter
mining factor in popular psychology.
Will this speech so affect the average man that he will say
'Well that's OK I can understand that, this must be done,
that can't be done,-tho President is perfectly definite here, he
can't be entirely definite there YET, but at any rate there is
nothing to be scared about. We aren't going Fascist, we aren't
going Communist, and we aren't going broke; we are going
slowly but surely back to first principles of a free democracy,
and all in nil a bet tor one."
If tho popular reaction should be of that general nature, then
not only would President Roosevelt, by more clearly defining
his aims and beliefs and objectives, render a great service to
himself and to his party, but to the people of this country.
If, on tho other hand, the popular reaction should be the
reverse, merely a continuance of confusion and doubt, a futile
echo of the curly I'olyanna refrain "we don't know where we're
going but we uro on our way," then, good night 1
It would be a case of the President choosing the EXACT
psychological time for taking the people of the country into his
confidence being as frank and explicit as a man in his position
and under the circumstance CAN' be and committing the fatal
blunder of not doing so.
A correspondent la wroth because
the subject of colitis la so diligently
excluded from discussion here.
He emphatically
asserts that he
geeks neither di
agnosis nor treat
ment, but having
suffered for sev
eral years and
having tried (a
number of weird
treatments)
without result, he
merely wishes to
ask the alleged
physician who
writes the med-'
leal articles for
the paper whether there la a cure and
where to obtain It.
I (Ol' Doc Brady) write only the
health articles, bo that lets me out.
It la not Just out of the meanness
of my heart that I dodge considera
tion of colitis here. It Is because I
don't know anything about It and
the subject doea not seem to me to
fit In a health column.
Now I hope readera who Imagine
they have colitis will not quit Jusl
as soon as anything turns up that
seems to me to be worthy of passing
along. I'll pass It along. For ex
ample, here la the latest suggestion
from science: Lack of sufficient vi
tamin B Is one factor In tho causa
tion of colitis. Further details In
booklet "Building Vitality" for copy
send ten centa and stamped enve
lope bearing your address.
Class B neurotics tell me I'm singu
larly lacking In tho attributes which
one expecta In the good physician,
notably sympathy and patience, and
thla Is corroborated by all my rela
tives and acquaintances who have
attempted to come at me with symp
toms and. Fellows. I hope you 11
never know whet I have suffered for
your sake, ducking one curbstone
consultation after another. Con
science or not, I don't think I could
sleep so well If everybody, well or 111.
were exposed to colitis and other mal
adies in this column. On the con
trary. It la a comforting reflection, as
I drift off to Innocent slumber, that
very few victims of autolntbxlcatlon.
nervous breakdown, run down condi
tion, neurasthenia, torpid liver, ca
tarrh, obstinate cold or chronic rheu
matism can say they got It from Ol'
Doc Brady. An occasional reader may
get a pain In the neck but the col
umn la Intended for regular resdera.
and I know a lot of them enjoy ex
cellent health, for they tell me so.
Colitis can happen, I frankly admit
Yet I believe the real cause of the
Comment
on the .
Day's News
trouble many of these amateur atu
denta of medicine ascribe to "colltU"
la artificial interference with the ali
mentary unction, particularly the
abuae of physlce, enemas and so-
called bowel washes. This unhealth-1
ful habit can be corrected In moat
instances if ony the victim' prodig
ious conceit can be reatralned long
enough for the doctor to disabuse
hia complacent mind of a few of the
morbid ideas Implanted there by
long line of charlatans and nostrum
vendors. Slaves of the habit who
may resolve to win back to freedom
should f 1) lay fn a supply of a pound
of whole flaxseeds, and (3) learn the
elementary physiology of digestion,
the autonomous regulation of Intes
tinal motility. (I have a booklet
"The Constipation Habit," which set
you back ten centa and stamped en
velope bearing your address, but I
merely mention the fact I'm not
asking you to buy it.)
For that matter, real knowledge of
physiology never makea anybody sick
and often aids materially In the
quest for health.
By FRANK JENKINS
ELIEF ADMINISTRATOR HOP
KINS made this Interesting state
ment the other day:
"We recognize In relief a difference
in the standards tf living. Some
people live In better houses. We may
give a person who has a higher stand
ard of living more relief.
I think It's right, within reason
able limits, to give relief on the basis
of the person's environment.'
Flight 'o Time
(Medford and Jr""' t'',u'
History from the files ot the
Mail Tribune of 10 and 20 Tears
AfO).
(Continued from Page One)
, O.IT.STIONS AM) ANSWERS
Which Color no You Prefer?
I like the way you speak of lodln
In place of the highly colorful mer
curochrome. ( Plastic Surgeon.)
Two cases among our employes
where amputation was narrowly avert
ed, due to use of mercurochrome and
later lodln, or vice versa, on simple
wounds Borne sort of chemical re
action occurred which has a destruc
tive effect. Company surgeons now
caution against using mercurochrome
and only lodln is provided In the
emergency cabinets. ( Employer.)
Answer I never have seen a good
reason for changing from lodln. for
first aid disinfection of minor
wounds.
A Solvent Sucuesterl.
Has anybody thought of using rain
water for that terrible disease In
which the whole body ossifies? 1
know rain water will dissolve the
lime accumulated In a teakettle, and
years ago my physician said I had
stone in bladder I began drinking
rain water exclusively and got cured.
(Mrs. B. L. O.)
Answer Thank you. At any rate.
It can do no harm to try. Rain water
collected from the roof, after the early
rain haa washed the roof, 1b quite
wholesome enough for drinking.
(Copyright, 1935, John F. Dllle Co.)
THAT Is to say, If you've always
been used to living pretty well,
but go broke, you're entitled to more
than the fellow who hasn't been used
to living so well and who also goes
broke.
It'B an Intereattng theory, but a
little hard to ewallow. To this writer,
It seems that relief Is something to
which we are entitled, In an emer
gency, only as a means of meeting
our minimum necessities until the
emergency Is past and we are again
able to make our own standard of liv
ing.
But perhaps that'a an old-fashioned
idea In these modern days.
SPEAKING of relief, here's an Inci
dent related the other day by a
man In whose word this writer haa
complete confidence:
In a community here on the Pa
clflo Coast, a fair sized SERA project
got under way, and they went to the
relief rolla and took from them a
considerable number of men whom
they put to work.
Shortly afterward, they found the
relief director out among these men
persuading them to go back onto re
lief. As his relief ..rolls went down,
you see, his relief appropriation went
down also, and that didn't look like
good business to him.
It's a strange tale, hard to believe;
but then these are strange times we
are living In.
The London agreement will not
break up Indla'a game. Under It. she
Is ostensibly permittee! to sell 3S.O00.
000 ounces of silver year. But. un
der a trick clause, she may accumu
late deficiencies In her sales of any
one year. Last year, she sold only
30,000,000 ounces. So this year she
could therefore sell 40,000.000 ounces,
Of course, India la not the only In
ternational allver speculator. There
are some In China who are said to be
finding smuggling worth while. Also,
the telegraph wires etill run from
New York and elsewhere to the free
Montreal sliver market.
TES YEARS AGO TODAY
April 25, 1925.
(It wa Saturday.)
The membera of the local fire de
partment in full regalia and with all
the firs lighting apparatus, as well as
most of the councllmen and the may.
or. O. O. Alenderfer, assembled on
the Southern Pacific grounds by tho
station this forenoon at 10:30 o'clock,
and proceeded to pose while Johu
Palmer took their pictures. No one
was Injured.
MOTHERS SHOW OREAT INTER
EST IN BABIES Headline In Mall
Tribune.
Two hundred fifty boys and girls
take part In bicycle parade, down
Main street.
The farmer who has received the
most relief money from the AAA Is
the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co..
one of New York's richest corpora
tions. It is an unadvertlsed fact that Met
ropolitan haa acquired thousands of
farms as a result of mortgage fore
closures in recent years.
When the AAA restriction program
came along, the new dealers found
the Insurance company one of the
biggest landowners.
Last March 1, the AAA released 500
checks to the Metropolitan, covering
corn, hog and wheat contracts. This
was only one payment. In fact. It
was delayed because of an Inside dis
pute caused by Metropolitan's insist
ence on certain changes In the con
tract forms. Since the firm is an ab
sentee landlord, It wished a wider
clause written into the contract
which would relieve It of certain ob
ligations. The matter waa adjusted
after four montha debate.
Heavy smudging throughout the
valley, with orchsrdists prepared for
snother Jack Frost visit in the morn
ing. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
April 25. 1918.
Bank robbery at Rogue River con
tinue a deep mystery.
John Bunny, famed film comedian,
dies In New York from a complica
tion of ailments.
Land and sea attack on Dardanelles
underway; American women delegates
to peace conference at The Hague
denied right to reach destination.
E. M. White and James Kershaw.
Jr.. of the Antelope, sell their clip of
mohair wool.
Odd Fellows hold annual picnic at
Jacksonville on the courthouse lawn.
A. F. of L chiefs are not cheering
over the latest gains In membership,
bringing it up to 3.500.000 dues-paying
members. The reason is that the
twentieth century fund simultane
ously estimates that company unions
now cover 2.500,000 workera and have
gained as much as the A. F. of L.
Ed Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr, Brady
should send letter direct to l)r
Vt'llllnm Brady. M. D.. 2B5 E
Camlnn. Beverly Hills, Cal,
I notice slso In a down town drive
yesterday that Hnhn'a restaurant,
moved several blocks northward. Is
still In operntlon. On the Park Row
site It was the luncheon rendezvous
of Journalistic blRWlgs. And the scene
of pay day splurpes of reportorlal
and copy desk slaves whose usual
mid-day hunRer was assuaged at the
plain pine counter of Horn And
Dolan's. One snw at Hahn's such now
legendary fiRuros as Frank I. Cobb.
William Johnston. -BUI Laffan. Mac
Cauley, the cartoonist, and Boss
Lord of the Sun. The capacious old
fashloneds In thick-bottomed tum
blers were lusty libations. A strong
mnn, Indeed, who could flown two
and return to the otllco without a
list.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. McJntvre
Jibes of all are for absence back
scratchers themselves. Oeoroe Adc
made the nation laugh without per
aonal allusion. The best of Mark
Twatn'a sallies and Ring Lardner's
were impersonal.
And Tod Saucier today tanned me
for a peep Into one of those modern
little bars in East 61st street, done
in white leather and purple-edsed
sumptioufmess. A glass cnee against
the wall reveals a throw duck
the Dark Aces. It Is ,a bottle
table-wnter with this dingle-dangle
around its neck: "This Is sold with
the understanding It wit not
mixed with alcoholic beverages," (
Thingumabobs: The second Mrs
Buster Kenton has opened a beauty
salon In Hollywood . . . The Rlalto's
newest Eugene O-N-tll Is Clifford
Odets, whose play scenery cost 2W
. . . Anna May Wong scrrcd the
biggest triumph of any visiting artist
to Sweden this year . . . Disraeli
had chills nightly for three succes
sive years, but lived 23 years more
. . . Phil Baker Is a sucker for grand
opera . . . Roy Howard Is a graduate
of the Indianapolis manual training
school . . . Herb gwope and Al Smith
dine together at Dlnty Moore's once
a mcnth.
ATHLETIC POST
AT
(Continued trora Page One)
NEW YORK, April 3S. There is
specious belief In New York that
everything uttered by Alexander
Woollcott, George
S. Kaufman and
Dorothy Tarker
is devastatlngly
brilliant. Each la
droll enough and
good for a fair
quota of laughs,
but their mirth
is not hUay
world-rocking s
the log rollera
Indicate.
Many, for In
stance, have
.a!4 grown weary ol
that sj-olten printed tale of Kaul-
msn, having a bsd evening a poker,
exclaiming: "I have been trey
drucM." A thousand and one spirit
ed poker games are whlpsswing
with faster ones than that every
Saturday night, as Kaufman would
readily admit.
Then there is Mrs. Tarker'a re
puted riposte fr Miss Hepburn; "She
runs the gamut of emotions from
A. to B " One doubt somehow Mrs.
Parker would calm It for Its variant
appears in an early '80 Hoetetter s
almanac. Further the art of repsriee
oddly enough, is nH confined en
tlrely to the Algonquin dining room.
Much of the .M.:nni:n aitsdnba
In stinging Mi
These are dark days, too, for those
human symbols of personal luxury
known as valets. They are aa extinct
as the liveried footman of the limou
sine. Only a few wealthy playboys
and top theatrical stars maintain
them. Chiefly they were English.
Filipinos or Japanese and the more
expert were paid 1100 a week ana
keep. Best known of the stage valeta
waa "Shorty." the gnome-like figure
who also was a stooge for his em
ployer, V. C. Fields. His death pros
trated Fields for a long time.
The writing Terhunes have sturdy
rivals in the writing Oeraghtys, chil
dren of Tom Oersghty. veteran news
paperman, now representing the elder
Fairbanks in London. Two sons, Mau
rice and Gerald, are attached to sce
nario staffs In Hollywood. The young
est daughter, Sheila, is rounding out
a Journalistic course to Join the
writing clan. And Carmellta, married
to a scenarlaat, was writing for fan
magaalnea when 12.
A gardenia seller stuck his handful
of flowers In the cur window this
evening, He was an enthusiastic red
head with his own home-made floral
slogan. 'Perk up with a posey," he
said. He made a sale.
(Copyright. lf:5, McNaught Syndicate).
and leave for Boise In September, ac
companied by Mrs. Burgher, the for
mer Miss Maurlne Johnston, a teach
er In the Medford high school.
Burgher graduated from the Uni
versity of Idaho in 1030. and was as-1
slstant freshman football coach there
that year. He won seven major ath
letic awards while in school, besides
being captain of the football and
bnsketball teams In his senior year.
He was elected president of the senior
class, was president of the Blue Key.
national honorary society, was presi
dent of his fraternity. Beta Theta Pi.
and a member of the Silver Lance,
men's senior honorary society. He is
a member of the local Kiwanis club.
"I have had five enjoyable years In
Medford." Burgher stated today, "and
I regret the necessity of leaving the
city and the many fine friends that
I have made. The boys that I have
worked with are a fine bunch.'
No Successor Named
E. H. Hedrlck, superintendent of
Medford schools, announced today
that Burgher's departure would be a
real loss to the community. "Burgher
has not only proved himself a fine
coach, but a splendid moral Influence
upon everyone with whom he has
come In contact. We are sorry to lose
him, but realize that his new posi
tion offers him more opportunity
than we are able to give him," Hed
rlck said.
As yet no one has been contacted
to fill the vacancy, but several ap
plications now in Hedrlck's hands
will be considered.
THIS writer haa no quarrel what
ever with relief that Is genuinely
and Imperatively needed, and much
of It undoubtedly Is. But acceptance
of relief that Isn't Imperatively need
ed and we all know that a lot of
that goes on Is building up Tiablts
that In the long run will do this
country no good.
AT A gathering of Republicans at
a luncheon in Washington last
week, this principle, among others,
was enunciated:
"The country needs national lead
ership of the type that 'thinks things
through. "
That sounds good, on the face of it,
but doesn't mean much. The dema
gogues who are stilling up so much
costly disturbance have thought
things through and concluded that
the way to get votes which are what
demagogues want and need is to
PROMISE EVERYTHING, regardless
of possibilities of performance.
Just thinking Isn't enough. What
i we need is thinking that Is STRAIGHT
AND HONEST.
The NRA board has quietly ordered
the government to pay fifty-two gov
ernment representatives on coal code
authorities, who formerly had been
paid by the Industry. In all. the in
dustry haa paid these men about
$250,000 since the codes became effective.
Texas Farmers Experiment.
PORT NECHES, Tex. ( UP ) Gull
Coast farmers of ,thts section have
undertaken several' forage crop ex
nerlments to lead development of
dairy and livestock pastures by In
troducing a new legume known as
serradella. The legmne, said to be
almost as nutritive as alfalfa, is par
ticularly adapted to poor soil condi
tions which prevails generally in thla
region. Farmers under the leadership
of County Agent J. F. Combs, have
experimented extensively during the
past several years.
4
Use Mall Tribune want ads.
Assistant Commerce Secretary Dick
ininn iB t.h latest new dealer to
write a book. His is
Middle Way."
"Hold Fast the
Thfl nra board member (Marshall)
who signed the Brookings report crit
icizing the NRA left town the next
day on an automobile trip.
Brookings will hit the front pages
again shortly with critical reports on
the farm and banking programs.
3
TO
Schilling
Lemony
YjXtract puit the j j
pure flav'or of fresh lemons
lemon pie. -rnr
llitlil Homl, suspect
rORTLAND. Ore.. April 25. (AP)
Harold Merchant, member of the
Portland seamen's union, arrested
this week In Modesto. Cal , was re
turned to Portland today for ques
tioning about recent bombings of
Portland and Seattle service stations.
He was ordered held without ball for
the district attorney.
Use Mail Tribune want ads
GRANTS PASS ROTARY
ELECTS NEW OFFICERS
GRANTS PASS, April 25. (Spl.)
A. E. Voorhlea was elected president
and Morris MUbsnk vice-president of
the Grants Pass Rotary club Wednes
day noon at the club's annual elec
tion meeting, presided over by Ward
Hammond, retiring president.
Six new officers In all were elected
by the club out of a list ot 32 nomi
nees listed during the past several
meetings. The new officers and di
rectors are:
President A. E. Voorhles.
Vice-President Morris MUbank.
Secretary R. W. Clarke.
Treasurer Sam Baker.
Directors H. C. Cavanagh and C.
V. Slgnor.
1
New BtiRgv Ordered.
CHIUJCOTHE. O. (UPI Henry
Schneider, who transformed his car
riage works Into an automobile reno
vating plant during the World War.
Is bulging a buggy, and for a cus
tomer. He said he couldn't recall
when It was he built his last buggy,
but It s been at least 20 years.
OTHER
FIRST OF MAY
Three CCC companies will leave
the Medford district May 1 and pro
ceed to new summer camps In the
Vancouver Barracks and Boise. Idaho,
districts.
Co. 1652, which has been at Cape
Sebastian, will go to Camp Emi
grant Springs near Meacham. Oregon.
The company Is commanded by First
Lieutenant Donald E. Lindsay, with
First Lieutenant Orant H. Edwards,
contract Surgeon Ruber G. McCall
and Educational Adviser Orlando P.
West. The company will go by special
train from Marshfleld.
Co. 1626. which haa been at Camp
Steamboat, will go to Camp Five
Mile, near Burns. Oregon. Co.
which has been at Wolf Creek, will
go to Camp Gap Ranch, also near
Burns. They will go by special train
from Roseburg.
Co. 1626 la commanded by Capt.
Luther E. Morgan, with Second Lieut.
Keneth A. L. Johnson. Contract Sur
geon E. Noel Smith and Educational
Adviser George Melalnger.
Co. 1629 Is commanded by First
Lieut. Roy W. Otto. Contract Surgeon
Floyd D. Lewis and Educational Ad
viser Fenton R. Muldowney.
roiiow
SPRING
HIGHWAYS
and all the Nation
by GREYHOUND
De luxe easy-riding buses, with expert
drivers, take you at a saving of both
time and money, revealing scenic
grandeur only seen from the highways.
LOW FARES TO ALL POINTS
EXAMPLES I
O. W. R. T.
SAN FRANCISCO $7.60 $13.70
LOS ANGELES . . 12.40 22.35
SAN DIEGO . . .14.65 26.40
Plan Now to Attend the
an Diego Exposition
Women write 15 per cent of the
million or so letters received each
month by the department of agricul
ture, the consumers' guide of AAA re
ports. They ask questions on how to
plan houses, diets, children's clothes,
gardens and budgets.
A vagrant wonder In this column
aa to what became of Allrgrettl's
brings a letter from the last surviv
ing member of the candy makera.
Mrs. Q. Allegrettl. now past 70 anu
living In San Franclaco. She operate,
a small factory that turns out the J
outer swei confections tne icunoer
originated 50 years ago. Al'egrelti
Is a name basking In rontempora.
neoua splendor with Delmontco. Mo
quln and Sherry. It's a hark baok to
not the growler, sun parasol and Ascoi
Holds False Teeth
Tight All Day Lone
Paatcpth, a new improved nowde:
keep piste fvom dropping or slip
p I nit No urn m y . p jw t y fee 1 1 1 v
Sweeten! brent h. Olvc rol tel '
comfort 11 dftv Prnlsod by pvp
And dentlM everywhere AVnt'd worn
Gel ritMrtl, at your rtru:i;:.t. Thrc
siren.
Fitch's
Shampoo
Rcmovm rintrifT
InMnmly. Try It
tetiitiht, TSf N-ttliHi,
X-TRA EGG PRODUCER
Money Back Guarantee
x-Ti ice
MOWCIt
ea)
Sfit'cia
I 59c
Hoops cm i. co.
.Miln an J s. l?n(tiil
The bt t no
etrn tot to ou
$2.35 cwt.
Phone
833
X-TRA EGG PRODUCER is prepared with all the necessary ingTC
dients for high egg production, high quality egg, low mortality and
proper body maintenance of the hen. Fibre has been greatly re
duced. Using the best herring meal and oat groats effect a much
higher digestibility and lower fibre than in other feeds.
See us now regarding BABY CHICK
SUPPLIES, such a Starting Mash,
Feeders, Founts, etc.
F. E. SAMSON CO.
SEEDS nd FEEDS
229 N. Riverside
Phone
833
It Is really remarkable hal can
be done at small epene. A duty
dark attic can he transformed Inlo
an atlnirthr pnre hednmm.
CAM. I s all our plan,, hilnnii.i
tlon. senlre. .euirtns; workmen,
etc, are VRFE or COST OH Oll-UGATION.
Woods Lumber Co.
lark'fin at tifnee. Phnnr in?
then to hear. Aud the moat vicious I tw.