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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 16, 1935)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON. THURSDAY. MAT 16. 1935. Medford mail Tribune "Ewyont In Southern Oregoa Rtadi Uit Hail Tributw'' Dailj Exeapl lurdf Publtftw) by MEDK1IRD PBlNTUfU CO. 35-2T-20 N. Kir SL ROBERT W. KUHL, Editor Ad lndepndcDt Newapapaf tared aa eeoad elm mattsr at Madford. Oregon, under Act of Marco 8, 1STB. SUBSCRIPTION BATES Bj Mall U) adtutt Dallj. on fear 52 nulj, all months Dally, ne monta V . .7 By Carrier In Adtene Medford. Ashland. Jaeksomille, Central Point, PboaoU, Taiant. Gold Dili and on ttighnjs. Dally, on year I Daily, all month! niiv. dm month AU Krrnt, eaih In adranc. Offlclar paper of the City of Medford, Orriclal paper of Jackaon County. alKMHKH OP THE ASSOCIATED PHEflB The Aiioclaled Preaa to eiflimlialy enllUed U trie uw for piMJiieauoo or ui om oui credited w It otherwise eredlted lo thta oaoer . .1.. mhllahari hevalfl. too au w All rlghti for publication of apodal dlapttcbei twrein are uw woi MEMKRH OF UNITED PRESS MK.MHKH OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Adrttslna HepreaenUtlTM M. C. M0UEN8EN k COMPANY Orneei in New Yirk, Cbleaco, Detroit, Uz Frineinco f Anaelea Seattle Portland. OH wi oo ova Mar Ye Smudge Pot Hy Arthur Perry If the current accident rate keeps up. It will be newa, when and It, an autolst drives two blocks with out hitting somebody or something. The romantic capers of Barbara Hutton, 40.000,000 dime store heir ess, dim the lure of Huey ling's "Evorv Man a King, and wuw I" vear Income. It should be Every Man a Duke, and Wedded to 40,- 000,000. e At Orange. New Jersey, "Society" was placed on trial, and found guilty by a jury of 3500 parents, or not properly looking after the welfare of the Jurors kids. Well-merited paddling of students of the U. of O. continues. It roust be distasteful to a collegian, who think he la a Communlat, to be warmed up In the presence of co eds, by an American ' slave to capi talism. He should write to Moscow about It. Spring lamb and peas are the popular dish of the day. Some diners aver that the lsmb failed to cease springing soon enough. WOLNIIKI) IN UNOKIIBHUSH. (Llncaster Tidings) Mr. and Mrs. Albert Conant, who count among their ances tors ore man who wa shot through the whiskers at Bunker Hill without loss of blood, cele brated their 85th anniversary here today with their five chil dren. Throe too of blrdshot will be dis charged nt the trapshoot here in June. Interest In the meet Is grow ing. It will be a hlt-and-mlsa affair. A tl chain-letter has been launch ed to procure funds for building a new state cnpltol. Thla la a good Idea, but will probably start a con troversy over the legal qualifies tlona of the taxpayer! delegated to go after the mall. The great question before the American people today Is this: Will the government bring us the money or do we have to go after It? (New Yorker ) Trend of the times Item. A poem was aimed at Judge Kelly Tuesday, and to date the target has not retaliated In kind. A number of farmers have hay down, and are giving rain, If any. time to heat them to the barn. Both Dr. Townsend. father of the Old Age Pension plan, and Huey Long, the Kinpflnh or Louisiana, will vir.lt Oregon thla summer. It is ex pected. Both will be lucky If they get out of Portland, and the Wil lamette without bring elected to something. Strawberries are on the market. Their uneven distribution In the shortcake, as In the pre-depression dsys, hna been noted. The Republican National commit tee Is organising for the 1036 cam paign. It Is safe to surmise these despicable wretches and political buccaneer will again place victory before defeat, and strive to win ar r.'gantly, instead of losing meekly. MOT P.V IV M N1IA. (Manila (PI.) Tribune) Fernando pobiete (the unmitigated rascal!) moved by the thankless as piration to contribute hta bit to the advancement of higher education, and partly to teat the slleReclly im mutable sensibilities of modern coeds, set himself tip In a very fetching pose at the state university cam pus the other day for the mental stimulation of thrae who had eye to we He was Just swinging Into the more esoteric of his repertoire whrn l.lly Florea. Concepcion Santo Hnrl Saturlnina Reyes, before they fell Into deep swoons, called on the national defense reserves of the com monwealth to come to the aid of the party, We shan't go Into the sordid details, but euffU-e It to say the three college of education ladies did not nhow fortitude. Usa Mail Tribune want ad. MEMBE. 7 A Lot of Piffle THE Attorney General has held no member of the gtate legis lature holding a state or federal job can retain his member ship. As a result of this decision a large number of legislators have been disqualified, and their places are to be filled by ap pointment. . We see no reason to question the legality of this decision. It appears to be the law and the law should be enforced. But to hear some of the arguments advanced to sustain this action one might conclude the chief value of the state legisla ture, is as a haven for the unemployed. ONE up-state contemporary goes so far as to maintain a state legislator should be in a position to devote all his time to the service of his constituents, and the retention of any other position is not only contrary to the public interest, but is evi dence of greed, if not moral turpitude. Carrying such reasoning to it logical conclusion would mean the disqualification of practically every member of the state legislature past, present and future. For only those members retired from active business, or of independent means, would then be eligible to keep their seats. GENERALLY speaking, all members of the legislature not only hold "other jobs," but could never afford to go to the legislature if they didn't. Just why PUBLIC job should disqualify a man for legis lative service and a PRIVATE job shouldn't, is not exactly clear. As far as the matter of time is concerned, there is no comparison-between them, nor in the direction of the monetary re ward involved, i. e., greed. Private jobs are far more serious ob stacles in this direction than public ones. The idea probably is that legislators should not be involved in the "spoils system" and that when the matter of political plums are concerned, the rewards should be passed around, to cover as much territory as possible. Well, we have no particular quarrel with this. Our interest in the question was only aroused by the loose thinking and sol emn nonsense which its discussion has brought to the surface. TpiIE contention that throwing out all of the members of the ", state legislature who have received public posts, and replac ing them with those who haven't, is going to raise the quality of that body, or give this state better government, is just all a lot of apple sauce. In fact it is quite possible the exact reverse would be true, for intimate knowledge of state administrative work might well add measurably to a legislator's usefulness. In short the whole thing boiled down to its essentials is just a matter of POLITICS and nothing else. We have no objection to accepting it on that basis without complaint. But trying to elevate it as some sort of crusade with all this talk about moral turpitude, greed and the necessity of devoting full time to the public but a pain in the neck. How About It? POK.MER President Hoover is erupting again. In another in- spired interview from the "sage of Palo Alto" we learn that the NRA should be promptly thrown overboard, bait, hook and sinker, and true American To the familiar query, "What thpn do you propose!" Jim Farley's "Hard Hearted Herbert" rejoins, "nothing." AYhen a thing is no good, tin-American, improper, destruc tive, the immediate job is to get rid of it, and to ask about sub stitutes is merely begging the question. Well, there is nothing new in this third Mnst against the New Deal from our last Republican President, but if our im pression of American psychology is correct, Mr. Hoover will be accorded more popular approval entire NRA set-up is pretty sick, and the popularity of F. D. R. is rapidly waning. However, we still fail to see any reason why the idea of a planned economy should be entirely abandoned, and that is all essentially the NRA is. Nor can we sec how, if this SHOULD bp done, there could be any escape from a return to the status quo ante which would mean no plan at all, just a condition of uncontrolled and regu lated competition, with each man for himself and the devil tak ing the hindmost. I TOW about the NRA right here in Southern Oregon? Fruit is our principal industry. Has the NRA been a good or bad thing for the fruit business. Has a definite fruit code helped or hindered t Do the fruit men want the code idea continued or do thev want it abandoned! We would like to hear from men concerning this question. worked or hasnt worked right liiite a factor in clearing the atmosphere, as fnr as this particu lar political problem in this section of the state is concerned. And what has been true here has probably been true, to a greater or less degree, elsewhere throughout the country. After all, results are what sults in Southern Oregon. The Communications The Protm-ol of Zlon, To the Editor: If anybody know, will someone please explain what are these proto col! of Zlon that the papers are saying so much about. Last evening the radio told about favorsble verdict received at a trial in Switzerland, declaring the proto cols of Zlon a rank forgery and ex cluding them from the country. Why all the excitement, and what the Importance of a forgery to re ceive notice in two continents? Is this another Kruger sensation? Just what Is a protocol, snvwav? A t. BLISS. Prospect. Ore.. May 17. Ed Note: For nearly 30 years the "Protocols of Zl.-n" have been suhtecta of con troversy, and may be for 30 ears more. They purported to be docu- menu showing the determination ot j inmate the vorld. through monev nower and ! have been used in many couu tries, service, does give us nothing, individualism should return. than was the case before. The some of our representative fruit Knowing just how the NRA has here in Jackson county, would be count. What have been the re Mail Tribune would like to know. partlculsrly Russia and Oermany, to stir up antl-Semttle feeling. Even Henry Ford, sever si years ago re printed the protocols In his Dear born Independent to Justify his sntl Jewlah statements, but later retract ed concerning them. A majority of expert agree that as far as repre senting any organized effort of the Jews to gain control of the world, the protocols are a forgery, the state ment being baaed largely upon a "Dialogue In Hades.' written by Maurice Joly about the time of the American civil war. A protocol, dip lomatically speaking, la a formal ex p salon of action proposed. An Amarlllo. Tex . traffic violator told the police sergeant. " We are ex pecting a baby at our houe and 1 might not be able to come down to morrow." He was told there would be no fine. A study of hit-and-run accidents led Chief of Police J. CI. Lauben heimer, Milwaukee, to the conclusion that motorists flee because of fright and that If the drivers had stopped most of them would not htv rrH jm aemencea. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Or. Brady If a stamped self-ad dressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. Hiniam Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly HOW MANY A tcaspoonful or ordinary lump (cube) of sugar yields 30 calories. Few persons consume leas than four or five spoonfuls or lumps a day. in fact, accord ing to federal statistics the per capita consump tion of sugar Is now 113 pounds a year, and from here It looks as though not all of the sugar In- g e s t e d yields muscular energy. Unquestionably a cuijMderaole portion or It Is convert ed Into superfluous fat. Even so. It Is Incredible that every man, woman and child In the country, In the average eats sugar in excess of 5000 calories a day. The government fig ures apply to the sugar sold, not to the sugar actually consumed by hu man beings. A fair day's ration for an adult doing light work would be 2.600 to 3.300 calories counting ev ery bit of any kind of food taken. But suppose you are an exception ally abstemious person In your sugar ration. Say you take two level tea spoonfuls or two ordinary lumps in your tea or coffe daily, and three or four more spoonfuls In your cake, cookie, ice cream or lady finger, bit of candy, bite of pie, dab of pudding, thimbleful of sherbert or your fav orite fountain beverage. Five tea spoonfuls In all Instead of the ra tion the government allots you, ap proximately 6 ounces. This would yield 150 calories daily so much vel vet, over and above your ordinary food. Now If my arithmetic Is not as ter rible as usual 150 calories more or less would be & per cent more or less than an ordinary maintenance diet for an adult doing light work. You'll never know till you try and try earnestly getting along without your sugar ration for a month, how much control over body weight this seem ingly insignificant Item has. Yes. yes,, so do I. In fact I don't want any coffee at all If I can't have it sweetened. But a wee tablet of sac charin (snccharlne to you, old timer), a tablet containing from to grain, sweetens a cup of coffee as satisfactorily as a lump or spoon ful or more of sugar. Saccharin in Just the right quan tity, gives a sweet taste that leaves nothing to be desired. But get a wee bit too much saccharin in it and it tastes bitter. Have to experiment till you find precisely the right amount NEW YORK DAY BY DAY Bv O. O. Mclntvre NEW YORK. May 16. An army of iO.000 fHAL-talklng. well-bnrbcred and well-dressed men live In an area bounded on the north by Columbus Circle and south by Herald Square nd live rather handsomely, con sidering they live entirely by their wit. The New Yorker "profiled" a gimme gink re cently. They are the most expert of the gleaners along the way that Is white. They nave sharp eve for the advantage that wouli mean nothing to the average fellow, but to them means a free meal, a free seat In the theatre, a free shave and shine or even a free cigarette. Rarely do they run foul of the po lice, because their chiseling is so in significantly petty they are Immedia tely dismissed in court. They will wander out with a better hat and coat but leave something shabby be hind as proof that it hna all been a mistake. In case! They will walk out without paying manicure girls and barbers because they know they will not be chased. Thus do their minds work in small grooves. They feel a great flush of vic tory In these plnch-penny strokes Their clubs are the automata and their offlcea any corner In the 40's. He atrolled across the vast azure celled waiting room of Grand Cen tral with his long hair, thin face, ill fitting clothes, old fashioned travel ing bag in his hand a first rate pic ture of Edgar Allen Poe come to llf. He was In rertltty Professor Pteeatd of the Intrepid stratosphere flights. When t stepped into a busy exec utive' office In 53d street today he was talking on the telephone and his expression was clouding. Finally he said: "Just a moment. Something has come up I'll call you back " Then he explained that was his wav of get ting rid of phone pests. He never cal's back. Two outstanding gestures of nalv ette historians should not neglect In their glossary of what has been oth erwise a shamefully immodest era: Lindbergh stepping from his plane in Paris with "I am Charles Lindbergh." and the father of the Dtonne quin tuplets writing a newspaper to In quire the price of a birth announce ment. Dave in his Blue Room on 7th ave nue are amboltcal of the uncertain ties of Bvoadway catering. Dave's or iginal place wa modestly comfor able and prospered feeding a strlctlv Broadway clientele So prosperous In deed that after several years he d ckied on a grandiloquent splurge closing for a few weeks to chance th plain facade into a minvry. chrom ium dA?,-:e T!ie :ire-ior tvome Hi.-? a lo-v . j.."n ::. ted M spra s of indirect llit. But in the short ui- rr?v,',--'' - Hills, Cal. LUMPS, Tt'BBVf to suit your taste. The use of sac charin In this way la harmless in any quantity up to 0 grains a day. Saccharin, benzosulphinlde, is 500 times as sweet as cane sugar, is not a food and therefore serves as a sub stitute for sweetening tea, coffee or cocoa, for diabetic or obese subjects. Just another little suggestion for the stout boys , and girls who, like the gink who runs this column, want to stay young and slender as long as they don't have to give up tea or coffee. And In case anybody is in earnest about It, here Is still another suggestion: Many overweight individ uals who have Included an optimal vitamin ration In their moderate re duction regimen find that they be come less susceptible to that abnor mal craving for sweets. As some of them express it, their stomach must be shrinking, for . they are satisfied with less food than they formerly re quired. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Sugar Is beet sugar as good as cane sugar? Will brown sugar go as far as cane sugar? Price of all Is the same. (G. E. M.) Answer Yes. Heredity My husband was born with a dead die in his right eye. My right eye was Injured when I was a child and I cannot see out of it. Will this af fect the eyes of our children?" (Mrs. R. E.) Answer I do not understand what you mean by "dead die." A defect of any kind present at birth may be hereditary, but the injury to your eye would not affect your children's Inheritance, Copper When I tried to buy four ounces of iron-ammonium citrate and one grain of copper sulphate the druggist refused to sell the copper sulphate, explaining that It is poisonous and he could not be responsible If any thing happened . . . (Mrs. A. K.) Answer Fiddlesticks to your drug gist. Good druggists everywhere sell these harmless Ingredients, or dis solve them in the pint of water for you. Four ounces of iron-ammonium citrate and one grain of copper sul phate dissolved In a pint of water teaspoonful after food three times a day for a month or two, a good home made tonic for simple anemia. Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. . Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brnily. M. I).. 26." El (amino. Beverly Hills, Calif. terval of refurbishing. Broadway for- got. In no time the new place dwln t died into bankruptcy. It hangs on and Dove Is hopeful but will never close for repairs again. And there Is dormancy, too. In an entirely different stratum. Sutton Place Is marking time in lta marcn to the Mayfalr heights. It bloomed suddenly in slum squalor like a Illy in the bog. Several magnificent apartments went up and long ago brick residences were done over m black with brightly colored doors, brass knockers, Venetian blinds and featuring white picket fences. Mr. W." K. Vanderhllt. Anne Morgan. Law rence Tlbbett, Miriam Hopkins and other headline names moved in and a mild boom was on. But somehow thlrma came to a stop. Sutton Place Is still there and quite swank, but also quite unboomed. Thingumbobs: Karl Bickel is a for mer reporter who retires with a mil lion . . . Frazier Hunt Is covering dust storm destruction for a newspaper syndicate . . . Jacques Bustanoby's eyea moisten when he fashions a tri umphant meal . . . New York's largest occupied apartment is 46 rooms, twj entire floors, on Park Avenue . . Tom Yawkey, considered America's No. 1 sportsman, blushes . . . Mark Twain found mental relaxation in a sidewalk shoe shine . . . Clarence Budtngton Kelland, who lost a for tune in a '20 bank crash, has made It back fgaln . . . A Town Hall lecturer says the mod ern young man Impresses the girl he favors by going wild game hunting in Africa or defying death In an air plane. Times have changed. In our day we impressed her by putting s dash of vanilla on our lapel, bear grease on our hair and rlging through town with one foot hanging over th-i buggy-side. (Copyright, 1P35. McNaught Syndi cate) Firebug Seized Li Herbert Carl Peterson, 32, who police said, confessed setting fire to some 1? Chicago apartment build ings, one of which resulted ir death to an elderly woman. vAsso cuted Press Photo) Be correctly cornered in an Artis: Model oy KthelAyn B Hofiaiin. 1 J Comment on the Days News By FRANK JENKINS, TREASURY Secretary Morgenthau says in a speech that the Ameri can dollar la absolutely sound. True enough, probably. It is cer tainly sound enough that nobody in the world hesitates to accept It In payment of a bill. But what business wants to know is that It will REMAIN SOUND. BY PASSING a law, the value oi the dollar was reduced from 100 cents to 50 cents. By passing an other law, lta value might be re duced to 30 cents. Business would feel easier In lta mind if It had some sort of assurance that sucn a law will not be passed. jfUSSOLINI, In "an unexpected Tl speech before the Italian senate on the subject of the Ethiopian crl sis, declares that Italy Is "ready lor any eventuality." Just how much of that statement la diplomatic bluff and how much of it he really meana can not at thta distance be determined, but it sounds like putting a chip on your shoulder and daring somebody to knock It off. ' When that is done, something ex citing often happens. PUROPE loves to Tight, and prob ably would be fighting now if it could afford It. There la consider able doubt whether Europe can af ford a war, so there may still be a chance for peace. One thing la certain. Europe needn't expect to borrow fighting money from Uncle Sam. The old gentleman's fingers hsve been burned too recently. BARBARA HUTTON, much pub licised heiress to an American "five and ten" fortune, divorces Prince Alexis Mdivani on Monday, and on Tuesday she marries Count Kurt Haugwitz-Reventlow. Barbara comes pretty close f being God's gift to impoverished European noblemen. f THE correspondents Inform us that the reason she waited over from Monday until Tuesday is that Mon day fell on the 13th, and she feared it might be unlucky to marry on the 13th. It COULDN'T POSSIBLY have been unlucky for Count Kurt. She has too many American millions. THE senate, which loves to in vestigate almost anybody, refuses to investigate Postmaster - General Farley at the request of Senator Huey Long, reasoning, probably, that it's a case of the pot calling the kettle black. If Jim Farley's Tammany methods need investigating any worse than Huey Long's dictatorship methods, the country Is In a bad way. Ye Poet's Corner A Timely Thought. The web the busy spiders weave Is rettlly not meant to deceive, -Tls spread It's width that they may live. A grim necessity. So, If an Insect rushes past And looks not where he goes, alas. (He had no need to go so fasti) The spider gets the fly. Now, driver friend, the moral heed. And put a check upon that speed Of which you are so proud. You'll find yourself within the net Of outraged law too late to fret Or maybe In a shroud! MATTIE R. LUMAN. The Prospector's Creed. Since this prospector's life I have chosen, 1 11 stay till I am frozen. And I'll acceptfhe prospector's creed, Till X die from want of feed. It's no matter If I have shoes, Those things are not for me to chcose, They are Just superficial things I'll withstand the Insect's stings. It's no matter If my clothes are torn. And my hair grows long unshorn. Any place that I can lay my head Will be a good and sufficient bed. j All my belongings, I'll put on my back. : For I have no antmsl my load to pack. Even tho my trail be weary and long. I Sure Ml make tt, humming a song. For the wants of this civilization. I must search in places of desolation. ! Even tho I lose my health. And never gain a lot of wealth. Even tho my life be lonely and meek. It s for me nature's treasures to seek. And I will not halt. Unttl I have opened a natural vault. W hKttliit Heer Keg imputed. RKOINA. Sask tUPi A beer Keg j that whistles when the beer that we: the whistle gets low in the keg has been invented, patented and put ' into operation m a local tavern. ! Every week the members of the Careful Kids Safety club. Missouri Valley. Iowa, are treated to an outing or a movie if they keep the safety rules. S'.enderue ;tn Spem-ei Individual x? LVsned Corse;. Msison Jeixme tel. 467. Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson Count) History from the riles of the Mall Tribune or 10 and 20 Sears Ago). TEN YEARS AGO TODAV May 16, 1925 (Tt Was Saturday) President Coolldge'a suggestion, "that Fronce pay her waj- debts.' causes bitterness In Paris. Unsettled weather come to the valley. and showers Thirty special trains from East will pa&s through city, coming summer. A. S. Roaenbaum of Southern Pacific reports. Five moonshiners nabbed by the sheriff, and ordered held to the grand Jury. Upstate taxpayers start war on "ex cessive use of gasoline by state work ers." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY May 16. 1915 (It Was Sunday) President Wilson comes out for "larger American navy, so the nation may better express its ideal." Sen Lodge of Massachuetts, In, speech, flays "Democratic mania for debasing the' currency, and cheapening the dol lar." Sells-Floto circus shows here to rec ord breaking crowds. County court threatens prosecution of "lazy husbands." who gamble away "their pay-days." Police start campaign against "boy and girl joy-riders," and solicit sup port of parents. Ben Lampman, editor of the Gold Hill News, has been unable to occupy the editorial sanctum on account of illness. (Continued from Page One.) getically against France and the Rus sians for Polish support. Old PilsudSki was very adept In this situation. He played with Hitler one day and France the next. Now there Is danger that his successors may not be so shrewd. That means trouble. The right key to the Farley matter seems to rest in the unspoken atti tude of progressive Republicans. They said privtaely that they thought Huey Long had a weak case against the postmaster general. But they all dis like Farley and voted for a sena torial Investigation of him because they hoped it would uncover some thing better. Political pressure was strong on the other side of the aisle. In fact, It was so atrong that Huey quietly re leased a few of his own Democratic friends. His mo-e was lost anyway. There was no need to cause them em barrassment by requiring them to vote with him. Two absented them selves, two others voted against him and one, who had publicly announced his support of Huey, also voted against him. This probably will save them from the wrath of the Farley regime In matters of patronage, etc. President Roosevelt's special cabi net committee Is trying to find out how much the cotton processing tax costs consumers. AAAers point to the fact that the tax Is but 4.2 cents per pound of cotton and contend tt Is negligible as a price factor in a cotton shirt. Textile men have a dif ferent view. They say it is not so much the tax as the mark-ups as cloth passes through various pro cesses. The only real data were dug up by the federal trade commission some time ago. They Indicate the process ing tax adds about 10 per cent to the cost of cotton goods. In other words, a 1 shirt will cost $1.10 due to the tax. Auto production for this month has been ruined by the strike. The 'out put of one low-priced car dropped two-thirds in one week. Professor Tugwell has privately sub mitted to the White House a plan to build houses here for administrative assistants in the government, f A wealthy young business man de cided to enter the new deal and fin ally begged a Job in General Wood's office. He wanted to quit the first day. He came to work at 8 a. m. and was kept until after midnight. St-abt lira t ion is like the weather. Everyone talks about it. but no one ever does anything about it. Use Mall Tribune want ads. Lawn and Garden Furniture BURK'S ' n 1 y Main MEDFORD VETERINARY HOSPITAL 15 ye.irs experience In Inrje and mall snimal practice Dr. J. Waters 225 N. Riverside Phone 363 Fitch's Shampoo in.t.ntlr. Try it Special 59c MOOIX lRl CO. Jliin snd s. Central Lustlg Arrested r mm i L Victor Lustig, described as the most notorious counterfeiter o re cent years, was arrested by secret service agents In New York. Short, ly after hla arrest they confiscated $50,000 In counterfeit notes Lustlg had cached In a subway locker. (Associated Press Photo orpgou Wi'iilhrr Occasional rain tonight and Fri day: little change In tcmpL. ture; moderate changeable winds off the coast. AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE See CARL Y. TENGWALD 125 West Main St. )t DRIVE IN , FOR LUMBER SCREENS PAINT AT BIG PINES LUMBER CO. honk ost It Just select what vou need, show 113 vour license identification and tell us how vou can pay. Unit s Ml! ALSO i Motorola am! Zenith CAR RADIOS On t ln-e - i;nc Lm In in-' LEWIS S ?J P R SERVICE STATION "WE VE", i t.l A I r. i't JR CLOSE" It i on the famous GOODRICH W 1 TIRES AND III BATTEKIES M WfBuoQET PAY f ( PLAN ,oi Efl5 DOW as weekly Make Your Own Con SV. vement. Easy j f NO DELAYS NO RED TAPE VJ IMMEDIATE SERVICE WW WW i i I I I A