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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 2, 1935)
PAGE SIX Medford Mail Tribune Fttrnn in Soutlwn Oraaor) udt llw mil Itihun'' Oil il tiravt faturdar r-unlirned w IIEIirtlRII PBINT1NU CO tl-1-M N t-'lt Bl. 0um ta RuilKin KUHL. IMIW AD lnoeindent ftawpapar fcicrfd a -owl ! "allar ' Madllt Orcguo. iiwJm Art ol Marrto . lTn. 8i:. BIIT10N BATES Bl Mall ID Adiaoca ouij. on r Oallr, ill ronlK Dallj. oot ontto Br Cvrlrr lo Aftorw MoKord, MUiri. iukuDTlllo, Cenlri) Point, Phoooli. Tala. How H1U ind on rMhui. Dallr. onr (rar Dallr. "if raontar Dally, ool nontb 80 All termi euh In tdranos. Oftltlll paper 01 too CltJ Ol MfiKord. OllleUI Diprt of Jackaoo Count. UEMBKB OF THE ASSOCIATED PHEBB Brcalflm Cull Uni Tbo Airndaml Prera lo oiflwlnlf ontiuoa u tho use lor publleatlofl of all nen dlipalemr. eredltod w It othtfolw credited Id tola piper and alu u -be local oen publlibed heroin. All rllhu re puhlleitloo of apeclal dlapatebM oerelo ar alio rrwrrad. MEMHCK OF UNITED PBE8B ttEMBF.H OF AUnil HUREAD OF CIKCULA1I0NB Adrortlilnr, Kapreientatlfae U. C. MOIJENSEN k COMPANT Officer In Nc Tnrk, Cblcuo, Detroit, Sen Franclun l Angrier IHaltle Portland. MEMBEF, CSr Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry pv, .nns rtf tha hammer and a&w U once more henrd In the vtlley. building operation, reaume, andaome of the home-made laddera look lllee they had been built by Bruno HMipt mann. e Democratlo ehleftalna, annoyed by the demagogic clowning of Sen. Huey Long propoee to calm and cook him. by "poking fun at him." Thla la the right Idea, but the wrong weapon. THE INCONSPICUOUS MOTHER (Bnrbank (Calif.) Reilew) Louie Davldoff, proprietor of the fruit and vegetable atand In the Roacoe rood Center, la re ceiving congratulntlona over the birth of hie flrat child, a daugh ter. e e The "8end-a-Dlme, Share-the-Proe-perlty-chaln-letter" racket failed to enthuae gullible Oregonlana, aa much ' aa anticipated. It la much better to wait for patriotic and humanitarian paaelng-of-the-hat, then drop In a panta button and take out SSc change. e r San Pranclaco papera print pic tures of Mld-Weat oltlcena, prepared to aall for Alaaka, and new homea. at government expenae. Several are ahown armed with ukelelea. It la not likely what atarted the duat atorma, will be able to atop an Arctic blizzard. Four huge turblnea poaseaa the e lergy to do the tank of 38.O00.00O workers In the United Statea. (Sci entific Review) Paint clue to what alia the nation. e Quite a few cltlzena, heretofore "eaten up by the taxes" are now being chewed by a 10S5 model auto e e Communistic agitators at Eugene one of the acata of learning hoisted a red flag on a hill, and wrote antt-Amerlcan sentiments on the sidewalks, to celebrate May Day. The offender waa arrested, and re fused to wash away his literary ef fort aa a punishment. They should have rubbed his nose In It. e e The Washington state aalea tax became effective yenterday, causing considerable moaning In the sister state, and great agony among Port land and Willamette valley statea men. None of the latter, neverthe less, are msd enough about It, to move to Washington, and run for something In the next election. The aalea tax la a vicious law. and la so heinous none can get out of paying It. "HIII HK THE VEST nr.lilSrV' Down st the place where re put the dinner, Where there's a psln In the parts cnlled Inner, Down where we ought to bs Inches , thinner. That's where the vest begins. Down where we'd hste to have some one strike us. Down where the belt-buckle loves to spike us. Down In the realm of the umbilicus, That 'a where the vest begins. Down where I fear there's a terrible lot o' me. Down where aome people are hippo potami. In the department of laparotomy. That'e where the vest begins. Down where In youth we were some what flatter, Down where in youth were were anmewhat flatter. Down where. In brief, theres too much mstter, Thsfs where the vest begins. (Arthur Clultermsn I Oregon Weather Pair tonight and Friday but cloudy at times on the coast; ftref riei per lion tonight: modenste oVv)ol wind off the coast, nettle xJi;jr - Phone 543 We'll tin el -W jo'ii refuse cit, H.nitmt Serelae r.xi ii :t i'I.ii emtio for cash or t.-edt at Biujih) a, Jeeier. w Jm Buying Oregon, Builds Oregon AXOTHKR "Oregon Product, Week'' starts tomorrow. The annual affair proved such a success thnt, not long ago it was made semi-annual one in the Spring and one in the Fall. Such .slogans as "Buy Oregon Huild Oregon" and "Let's Sell Oregon to Ourselves" may seem trite to some people. The Mail Tribune wishes that every citizen of Oregon might seriously analyze them j fully understand the sensible logio behind them: realize that practical effort and intelligent thought is back of the movement to increase the use of home products. IT is safe to say that every person in this state will directly or .ndirectly benefit from concerted action on the part of Oregon ppople to favor home grown or manufactured products. A few obvious advantages are'- more payroll dollars in circulation ; re duced unemployment and correspondingly lighter relief burden for taxpayers of this state; added tax money from successful in dustries which will likewise lessen the load of individual citi zens. While widespread favoring of Oregon products is not a panacea for all our economic ailments, there can be no denying the fact that added prosperity is an inevitable by-product of such a movement. Governor Martin's endorsement of the "Boy Oregon" pol icy will give a marked impetus to "Oregon Products Week now being observed. This endorsement does not stop with his official proclamation it is backed by ACTION! WHILE the effects of Home Products campaigns in the pan have been short lived, manufacturers and wholesalers are reporting a growing interest in Oregon products on the part of those who hold the family purse-strings. Each successive "drive" brings more sustained results. This is encouraging 1 If for no other than selfish reasons, the people of this state should familiarize themselves with Oregon brands. They should test their quality and, all things being equal, common sense should dictate that they continue for 'J65 days in the year to "Buy Oregon" to "Build Oregon." It is in the long run, merely enlightened self-interest. Nothing to Worry About WAR departments mako, war all the time, on paper. There isnt a war department in the world that hasn't a plan of cainpuign worked up for any possible emergency, and no coun try with an army and navy, that isn't treated at one time or an other as an enemy. This is the traditional practice. And considering the world as it is, it is sound practice. In time of peace prepare for war, and the governmental department whose business is war, should be prepared for any eventuality. The recent publication of war secrets, emulating from the military committee of the House, which brought such a crushing rebuke from the White House upon the head of the committees chairman, is not quite as sensational as it appears, however. The rebuke had to be made, of course. No country can af ford to make public its military plans, for serious diplomatic complications would immediately result. But the fact that this country had plans, to establish air bases along the Canadian border, and seize certain strategic French and British islands near the American coast, in event of war. should cause no alarm in this country or abroad. It is just a part of the routine military game. It doesn't mean war with any nation is seriously contemplated, it doesn't mean necessarily that in case of war the plans suggested would bo followed. The entire business is tentative and theoretical. It is the peace time diversion of the American war department, and all other war departments, the disturbing feature not being that such make believe wars are being fought on paper, but that the details should be made public. (Continued from Page One) versation: "We republicans have one political Issue on you new dealers which you will never be sble to meet." "What that?" asked the new deal- er politely. "The tariff," responded ths repub lican. "You democrats went up and down this land In 1933 denouncing the Smoot-Hawley tariff bill and to this date you have not repesled the law or Instituted sny effective pro gram to replace It." The new dealer had to admit off-the-record that the republican might be nearly right about that. Evidence has ben accumulating lately that the new dal has aaln renewed It fnlth In rmnmnle nat ionalism. The money policy, the price policy, the NRA. all leaned toward tariff protection theorlea In the be Rinnln. This feeling waned some what In the neoond year of the ed ministration while meurs. Hull and Peek plsyed around with the poasl bllltlea of restoring world trade It is no secret that their playful explora tion have not been satisfactory even to themselves The president has been reading a book which advocate the establish ment of a national pool for interna tional trnde (tike Ruasla's amtorpi No one believes he I going that far vet. but tt Is ohviom that the foreign trade tsAiie is afiain drawing the highest attention. A new approach 1 being studied. The bet authorities believe noth ing Important oan or will be sttemp' ed until An effort Is made to stabl lire world currencies. William Bullitt, ambaaiwdor to Russia, ha a secret. While he has no. been able to do much debt or other business w th the RuMUni he hat ; managed to w.rk nut bustneds sr j rmvtfm'MH to tvr care of the au'i ' situation a the rm'vwr Adio p:vcutd turn liom touj.i MEDFORD MAIL autos. There was nothing to prevent him from renting some, although rentals in the long run would cos far more than the price of the cars. So Bullitt dickered with a Moscow auto rental agency, arranging to rent cars and apply the rental on the pur chase price. The result Is he now owns a need ed fleet of motor cars. Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson fount History from the files of the Mall Tribune of 10 and 20 Year A0). TEN YEARS AOO TODAY May 2. 1923 (It was Saturday) School board denies report It has selected site for new senior high school. Senior class of high school presents "All of a Sudden Peggy" with Gordon Kershaw as "lord Crackenthrope." Other members of the cast Included Eleanor Peter, Dorothy Brown and Jack Herri t. Skeleton of an Indian found on the Luke Ryan ranch on Butte creek. President Coo. id ft. In address at Boston declares "America la traveling too fast and spending Its future." .Warm weather of past week brines out rattlesnakes in the Table Rock district. TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY May S. 191 S (It waa 8unday The ladles of St. Mark s guild will serve a chicken dinner at the month ly meeting of the Commercial club. Proat dancer for thla rear over, ac cording to Special Forecaster Drake. Austrian capture 30.000 Ruelant in Oalirla; war costing British empire 110 000.000 per day, Premier Lloyd -George declares. Council orders clean up of city. Mrs. Ed White read a r ot. "Politeness" at the W. C. T. U. irt. In. Flora Finch in "Whose Hubby." at the Hae; "Gosh All Flshpoles." three rrl Vltauraph comedy, at the 1st : H Ifed Hallway to the Altar,1' at the Star. TRIBUNE. MEDFORl). Personal Health Service By William Brady, MJ. signed letters pertain I nf to personal tiralth and hygiene not to dice diagnoMti or treatment Kill he answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped aeif-ad-dresed 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. So reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 2fi3 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, tat. FAST IJVINO AND PKEMATIRE OLD AGE It Is logical enough that people who Jive "fast" should expect to die young. Not ell authorities agree that heredity Hmiw! (oeiecttve mate- RTT -rJBlWte. -4 rial In rtrm syphilis, alcohol ism, overeating, chronic lead pois oning and severe Infections such &A typhoid fever, pneumonia and Influenza are causes of ar t r 1 ) i c 1 e rosls. There Is a difference of opinion as to tobacco, some doubting It Is a factor, others being of indefinite view. Waiving the question whether I am an authority, I'll give my belief about it. In my practice I have quite a practice in Preventive Medicine I always find on payment In advance, for I find It tends to keep my clients from fool ing with nostrums and quacks. Real doctors should follow the plan. In the practice of plain honest Medi cine, the real doctor Is too often left holding the bag or waiting for his money, the grateful-in-advance pa tient havng squandered all his ready cash monkeying with bootleg treat ment, nnri nt-ilv urViurt hs Id urnll ilMn. j . ws. i ed out throwing himself upon the I mercy of the "ordinary" or "home" doctor. I am fond of tobacco. I know that one enjoys far greater enjoyment from It If one uses it temperately than he possibly can get from abuse of to bacco. I believe it doesn't matter whether one smokes cigar, cigarette or pipe or chews or snuffs, the effect on the body is the same. There Is no reasonable doubt to my mind but that tobacco Is Invariably Injurious to children, and we are children in the sense of physiological develop ment until we reach 22 to 25 years of age. What constitutes excess Is difficult to define perhaps It varies with circumstances. For one in my own status I think any use of to bacco In the course of a day's work or play before the after-dinner hour of relaxation in the evening is over, is likely to He excessive and harmful to health. A smoke causes the blood pressure to rise, and the blood pressure re mains high for a considerable time. Mainly on this physiological observa tion I base my belief that abuse of tobacco Is a cause of premature se nility, arteriosclerosis, hardening of the arteries. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY Hv C). O. Mclntyre NEW YORK. May 2. Herbert Wlthorspoon Is off to a running start aa the new head of the Met ropolitan opera. His home - spun touches are a welcome relief to the absurd pom posities of the retiring O a 1 1 1 Casnzza. He Is expected to hu manize the op era, to bow as low to the gal lery as the Horseshoe Circle. Born In Buf falo, his 62 years have been varied. Although he start ed out to be a painter, most of his activities have been musical. He was an actor for a time In Germany, toured with several noted orchestras, served aa first basso at the Met and has taught In many conservatories. Also lectured. His first wife was a sister of Rup ert Hughes and his second, Florence Hlnkle. a soprano. He lives In a mod est mid-town hotel and Is one of the avenue's Indefatigable window shoppers. His friendships range from the crossing cop to the biggest fig ures In art and music. Caruso loved him. He came to the Metropolitan when It waa expiring of Inanition, a condi tion brought largely by stubborn te fusal to ride with the modern cur rent. He believes opera can stand alone without the Sam Insults and Otto Kahns. And risks his reputa tion to prove tt. I have become an 18-karat fan for the quintessential lunacies of Col. Stoopnagle and Budd on the radio If there Is anv absurdity more hi larious than that sneering off-side voice as they come on the air yanh vanning "They haven't got a spon sor!" I have not heard It. In keep ing with the times, nothing they do makes sense, but their outrageou. clowning does more to debunk spon soring than a volume of serious treatises. n O'Clock TfV :v!r Paimce 13 - MUSICIANS -13 Oriental Gardens Men CAT V Ladies 40v 9AX Pll JL Jtii 20c Com and Make Whoopee 'Til 2 A. M. OREGON, THURSDAY. Hard work has been held respon sible for this decline or waning vi tality In some Instances, though it seems more plausible that excesses are the real factors In such cases. Worry, stress, anxiety, fear, hatred, envy, jealousy, Joy, anger or other emotion may Indeed be hard on the arteries If the Impulse to overt action Is repressed or one or another sub stitute for such natural outlet for the released energy Is not regularly re sorted to. Any such agitation of feel ings excites a sudden pouring out of ad red in by the adrenal glands, and this Increases the blood pressure and speeds up all the vital functions, so that the effect of repressing or con cealing one emotion Is comparable with racing the engine of an automo bile or throwing the belt off from a flywheel. At a baseball game or a football game It Is the spectator, not the player, whose arteries bear the brunt. It Is In the grandstand thnt the gravest casualties occur, QUESTIONS ANlT ANSWERS Antidote for Snnkehite Please advise me where antlvenom can be obtained and at what price. We plan a camping tour In the north west and want to go prepared to deal with possible rattlesnake bites. (K. B.) Answer Any druggist can supply antlvenln. It comes with explicit di rections so anyone can administer It In an emergency. I believe you can rent a package and get a refund on Its return unopened. I do not know the price. Cargle Please give your recipe for the for mula to prevent hoarseness a gargle, I think. ... (P. C. W.) Ans. Send stamped envelope bear ing your address and repeat request. Former Slave Your articles and then your booklet were so qonvtncing that I, for one. have dropped my long established habit of taking dally and I find your advice was right. I no longer require any physic and I fesl better in many ways than I ever did while I relied on the dally pill. . . . (O. G. p.) Ans Anyone else who wishes to be freed from slavery send 10 cents coin and stamped addressed envelope for booklet, "The Constipation Habit" (Copyright, 1835, John P. Dille Co.) - Ed Note: Perfuns wishing to rnnimunlrate with Dr. Bradi tlmjlrl send letter direct to Ul William Brady. M. I).. 269 hi ('amino Reverlt frills. Cal. If Ruth Ettinc'a adieu to broad- casting is Hot a lesser version of Bernhadt's farewell, she deserves sweeping bow for an uncommon show of common sense. She goes out at her peak, bulwarked by a sizable fortune made possible by a commend able thrift. 5he type of off-key blue chansons of which she was an arch prlestess Is turning the bend of the road. She steps out of her vehicle in time, well remembered, well liked. Archibald MacLelsh, who wrote the poetic drama of the depression. "Panic," while editing the dollar-a-copy magazine "Fortune," Is the newest hail of the Intelligentizla. Now a thin escetic with a bulging brow, he was nevertheless once a back for Yale and swimmer of note. He is planning a stay In England to write a series on the reign of King George. Thus an editor who writes, too. Incidentally, George Horaee Lort mer was about the first distinguished editor to crack the notion editors could not write. He created a flurry with his "Letters of a Self-Made Merchant to His Son." I used to wait at the depot for the 10 p. m. for them. But these were his best effort. Several other writing excur sions after that fared badly by com parison. There are Instances of es taollshed writers turning editors and in each case the ability of the writer was lost and never regained. Charlie Towne is an exception. Paul and Margaret Whit em an have a plz-Latln gibberish they Indulge on merry occasions and which Is under standable to no one but themselves. Billy and Phyllis Sreman also have a double talk patter that's the despair of llsteners-in. Sophie Tucker and Fannie Brice. as I remember, have a Yiddish Jabberwock that can go on Indefinitely and with mutual com prehension, Then there is the Rus sian actress, Elena Mtramova, whe talks antlphonally with her husband She gives a subject of the sentence and he the predicate. Morris Gest and Cobble have a Chinese sing-song lingo they profess to -understand. Thingumabobs: Ople Read Is put ting the finishing touches on: "Sa tan's Side of It. The Autobiography of the Devil as Revealed to a Sin ner." . . Rita Welman recovered from an Illness to find herself white haired. . . Vincent Astor never goe to a party without a present for the host or hostess. . . Marilyn Miller HAY 2, M35. spends most of her time at parties Hgging. Add memories: Warming the flan nel night gowns before the open grate at bed time. . . A package of Sen Sen for the Saturday night date. . Bronzed milkweed pods in the par lor. . . The hum of telepragh wires on a frosty morning. . . The sissy who took a towel to the ole swlm min' hole. . . The ice tub in the cellar covered with carpet. . , The taste after dried leaf cigarettes. . . Shining shoes with banana peels. . Sunday walks to the resevolr. . . Bitting on the cellar steps and look ing sad a few days before the circus came to town. (Copyright, 1935. Mc Naught Syndi cate.) Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. THE most interesting story in the papers In many a day starts oti thus: , "Crying babies, mothers weary from travel and fathers wary of a comlnfe sea voyage failed to dim the brave expectancy of 67 Minnesota families who reached San Francisco today en route to Alaska and a spectacular pioneering project." The project la the founding oi new homes In the Matanuska val ley. THESE 67 families are refugees from the drouth -stricken MJddie West, and are being transported b the government to what may be ac curately described as about the lat i frontier. In the Matanuska valley, 45 mil: inland from Anchorage, they will t given 45-acre homesteads, and t up in business. For five years tr will have nothing to pay, and ; the end of that time they are c pected to start repaying to the go ernment the estimated 93,000 it wn cost to establish each family in th: new location. How long it will take to make re payment depends on a lot of thing chiefly their own initiative, energy and business ability. ONE of their number, talking t: reporters in San Francisco, say;,. "Matanuska valley sure ought to be a lot better than where we v: been, what with It getting 56 below zero last winter and nothing grow ing on the land tn the summer.' y j crn reflection of the old pioneering spirit that built the West. WHEN you think of the Matanusks ' valley, or any of the far north ern valleys of Alaska, what sort o; picture does It call up before you mind? Frozen wastes, probably, with th wild Arctic winds sweeping eternal!: over them. Thats..how most of ur think of Alaska. - The picture is Inaccurate. 1 the interior northern valleys, ana the winters are long eight or nine months of snow and cold. But it may surprise you to know that In the summer season tem peratures of 100 to 115 degrees arc not uncommon much hotter than here In southern Oregcn. The sea son is short, but the days are long --approximately 20 hours of sun shine. In this short season, with almost constant sunshine, plant growth is exceedingly rapid. Corn, tomatoes, beans and a variety of the crops, both garden and field, with which we are familiar, come to proper ma turity. Alaska Is by no means the frozen waste that most of u think It. IT is a common statement that the new land Is all gone that we no longer have the outlet in times ot depression that we formerly had. That Isn't true. Alaska Is new land. WASH OUT 15 MILES OF KIDNEY TUBES Win Back Pep . . . Vigor . Viulitj Medical anthoriHps atrrte that yonr MA tera contain f MILKS of tiny tubi oi liter which hrlp to purify th blood and terp rou healthy. If yoa hv tr""Me with too frequent bladder passage with tcanty amount caus intr burning and discomfort, the 15 MIl.E af kidney tubes need wanning out. This dan ver signal may be the beginning of nagmns backache, leg pain, loss of pep and vitality, lettins up nights, lumbago, swollen feel and ankles, rheumatic pains and disxinesa. If kidnert don't empty 3 pint every day and get nd of 4 pounds of waste matter, rour body wiH take up these poisons causing ehou trouble. It may knock you out and lay yon up far many months. Don't wait Auk your drugwht for DOAN'S PILLS . . . a doctor's prescription which has been used successfully by millions of kidney tuf. ferers for over 40 years. They give quick relief and will help to wash out th It MILES of kidney tube. But don't take chances with stronr drugs or so-called "kidney cures" that claim to fts yoo up in 1 minute, for they may seriously injure and irritate delicate tissue, insist pn DOAN'S PILLS ... the old reliable re lief that contain no "dope" or habit forming drug. He sure yon get DOAN'S PILL it rour drurg.it. C 1934. Foster-si Uburn Co Lawn and Garden Furniture BURK'S II 1 I Mill! I rl I n and It has a lot of GOOD land-, re quiring only aettlement and Industry to malw It produca. PIONEERING methoda, of course, have changed. In the old daya. the prospective settler loaded hl gooda Into a covered wagon ana started West, relying upon his own resources and his own efforts to gel there and make a go of it. Now the government finances tn: migration. But a lot of things have changed in the past century, and we ( do a lot of things better now than we did 100 years ago. It may be that pioneering la one of them. It all depends on the PEOPLE, ll these 67 families, and the others that will undoubtedly follow them, have the right sort of stuff, they'll make a go of it. Communications Venn! To the Editor: We marvel at the charitable Inclin ations of the Hon Mayor of Medford and Supt. of the Water Commission who traveled to Klamath Falls at their own expense to help a wander ing politician put over on the tax payers of the city of Klamath Falls a l THE ' Q j, Starts A Sensational TOMORROW PRICES SLASHE On All Spring Silk Dresses All New Spring Stock SALE PRICES Clearance Sale on Coats and Suits at Cost and Less vffaif the Jeadtrf . rjja mi Fresh color for faded porches Get ready for summer evenings on the front porch. A fresh coit of paint will make it a pleasant place to lounge. Bass-Hueter Porch and Floor Pjint comes in good underfoot colors that harmonize with both ex ' terior and interior color schemes. It guards against pounding feet the daily wear'n' tear on porches and steps, floors and stairs. Bass-Hueter Porch & Floor Paint For wood, concrete or linoleum Dries in about four ho:irs. Our Builders' Bureau of Information Offers This 3-Point Service! Financing Details Thr rry bet lumber anil buthiliig materia! h1up .ihtiilnitble plu frvi(f that will plfiie wm, i;ierlrntT(l workmen are avail able tlirmigh our of fir, for YOl K b. PORTER LUMBER CO. South Fir H.500.000 00 bond Issue that we do not need. It a Just too bad that the ?otera of Klamath Falls are ao incom iy,nt that they must ask for so i much outside advice. E. M. CHllX-uiis. Klamath Palis. May I. MILK 30c per gal. "Grade A" Milk and Cream from Tested Cows Kershaw MUk Depot 106 N. Ivy St. MEDFORD VETERINARY HOSPITAL 15 veurs experience In large and mall animal practice Dr. J. W. Waters 225 N. Riverside Phone 369 AND UP fx BISI'PMt 0 j. j j ' .v nut clafUy Sl InfnnTMttnn anil, if ! irril. Iianrilr Ihf fir-tall, of flnanrlnjt umlpr Ihr N. H. A. Free Planning Service Uf nlll cladl a.l my tn plnnnlne ? our hnro. or Impiotrmfnl In your prrMMit linu. Materials and Workmen Phone 12,