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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1935)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MATT- TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, WEDNESDAY. MAY 29, 1935. Medford Mail Tribune "Emyoni in Southtrn Ortgon Reads Iht Hil Inbunt'' Duif fcaeept ssturdtj MCDrUItD PRINTING CO. ll-3T-0 N. Hi 8t not lb BOBEKT W KUHU Rdltor Ao independent wpipet Enured u leeood elm matter tt Medford Oncoa. under Act ol Mtreb 8. 1879. I Slli'-SCKIPTHIN BATES ftp Mill lr Adtsau Daily, oo' tretr Dally. 1s montbl '1 nalN. an month r. r.iri.r m Adrance Medford. Asbland. Jvkunflllc. Ceniril Point. PbfXRil. TaKM Bill rw1 nn ttiahvin. Dailr. ow rar 'S'21f Dillr ii oonthl Dtil. our monlb 80 All Urmi. eub In tdranee. Official oaper of the fit? of Medford. Official oaptf of JackuiD County. MEMBER OK TUB AHH0('1ATEE CHESS Becefrlni Full leased fflr Berries lb AitodatH) Pren U ritwlrelj tntlUed to ttw um for publlntlon of ail oen dUpatcbai indited to It u otticrvtu credited ts Uilf paper tad alio to 'be local cf published herelo. All rtjbu fw pul'licatioo of special diapause karats ar tUo rened. MEMHEH OF UNITED PKK88 MEMREU OF A1JIM1 BL'KBAD OF CIKCULA1IUN8 Adterthlnf Kfprentatlrea H. C. MfMiENSEN COMPACT OffloM Id Nf Yti. Chtnutu, Detroit, Sa Franfiw l- wr Real tie Portland. MEMBER MOOOWMIT Ye Smudge Pot Bj Arthur Perry Band concerts an unfailing sign the order of the veiling in many Oregon towns, nhmfa of nolice have issued the traditional warning to boys and girla not to run and squeal, wnue mo band la Dlavlna." Juveniles always run and squeal" at band concerts. Often their elders do not blame them, and reel like It themselves. An Idaho resident addressing a communication to the editor of the steemed Portland Journal, endorses beards for the stronger x, urges their general growth, and argues they meet the approval of the fair and foxy sex. A flowing benrd would be an effective weapon In the hands of an Irate lady much more eo than the traditional rolllng-pln. The felo nious possibilities. If a situation arose, whereby she had one hand full of whiskers, and the other full o rolllng-pln, are limitless. Later a clti sen would be hard put for explana tlons. The black eye would be due to a stick of wood flying up (not to mention flying strslght.) The yanked out whiskers on the firm chin, would have to get caught In a wringer. Automotive engineers have per fected safety devices for the 1030 model cars. An Invention that will cause a motorist, with too many gin fines, to be content to go to sleep on his front-porch, Instead of the front at. while drlvlnn. would be a dandy. The U. 8. supreme court decision nullifying the NRA caused a number of valley diplomats and statesmen, heretofore unable to find the depot, to again threaten to move to Rus sia. t A Los Angeles father of nine children, while diRRlnn a well In his back yard, struck "pure gasoline. This Indicate Luck Is beginning to use a little Judgment. Usually such good fortune la showered upon a cltlnen already with more money than he knows what to do with. Members of the California left 11 a ture, officially designated as assem blymen, receive $13 per diem pay The results stack up well with the 3 per diem. Oregon variety of eo lone, but lasts longer. Papa and Mama Dlonne, parent of the famed quintuplet, are bit terly disgusted with the Canadian government for taking charge ot them and supervising their care. In- tead of permitting Paps Dionne to rent them out for exhibition pur poses. The parental disgust Is not expected to reach It peak, however, until the benevolent Canadian gov ernment starts sending the quintup lets, to school, Some of the Sixth street kid drivers have qualified to race with the men on East Main. Warden Frank D. Whlpp today sus pended two Infleldera and two out fielders for cussing umpires Satur day when the prison team won it fourth straight game. (Press Dis patch) Grounds for begging pardon. The Shot-at-Sunrlse Committee ol the CofC. will meet this afternoon to weigh the fate of a couple of prosperous tourists, who while stroll ing down the Mnln Stem last even ing, were overheard to say : "The town is not big enough to have de cent street lights." Huge AtltRiitor Main SPRING, Tex. (UP)-Three fisher men killed an alligator which wu 12 feet long, 23 Inches broad and weigh ed 600 pounds, while fishing on Spring creek, near here. They said It had lived In the creek for several years. "KICKEHNICK" Undergarments that fit at Etnelwynn B. Hoffmann's WINDOW OLASa We sell window g !aaa and will replace your broken windows reasonably Trowbridge Cab inet Work. Use Mail Tribune waut ad. Just "The Poet" in Us WIIAT a beautiful place this old world is ! What color, what lush, gorgeous greenery, what an exhibition on all sides of fresh new life, particularly if one arises early on a May morning, after a rain the night before, and wanders forth just as the sun is coming up over Roiy Anne I . What could be more beautiful, inspiring and perfect than the world the world of nature, .TL'ST AS IT IS! How unneces sary and incongruous it seems, that in such a world, there should be sorrow and suffering, strife and frustration, hostility and discontent. The world, one concludes is so much more success ful, than the people who inhabit it. And yet? . . . and yett . . , following that early morning pilgrimage, the clouds gathered once more, the sun retired before them, the light behind that transparency of breath-taking and soul-inspiring beauty suddenly went out, and we returned to the daily grind, in an atmosphere of chilly disillusion, to find the Weyerhaeuser boy, had not been found; Washington was still milling about in panic and confusion over the Supreme Court decision ; dissension had broken out to mar the first birth day of the Dionne quintuplets, and a bomb had blown up a New York building, with an undetermined number of people buried in the ruins! , , Well who can sayl Where do feelings come from anyway? Do they proceed from something as universal and commonplace as the liver, or equally biological if somewhat more obscure, are they merely the product of the ductless glands? Or is the source deeper and more profound, somewhere in the recesses of what w like to call the spiritual nature stimulated by just what we never know. , Ho hum! More likely it is none of these things. It's just Spring, an unruly alarm clock, and the "POET in us" coming out ! "Hearts and Flowers" TJOWEVEB the above may serve as well as anything as an introduction to a few remarks about the Medford Garden Club, and the annual Flower show, which is now on display at the court house. We have written before about flowers and flower shows, gardens and garden clubs, and can think of nothing new to say, except, . . . With the world in its present with dissension and controversy raging, with no satisfactory conclusion or definite goal in sight, it is refreshing and re assuring, to turn to the beautiful things this world can produce, and realize that no matter what a mess may have been produced in human relationships, in the world of Nature peace, harmony, constructive progress and success, is ALWAYS possible! llE believe U was Lloyd George or was it Sir Edward Grey? who wrote that when affairs of state became especially distressing and disheartening, he cancelled his official engagements and spent the day in his garden pruning here and spading there,, returning to his duties the next day not only stimulated and refreshed, but invariably discovering, that things were not half as hopoless, as he had feared them to be. It is interesting to note in this connection that two of the most successful nations in the world today from a material standpoint, are the two nations which have carried gardening ti the highest point of perfection, Great Britain and Japan. Per haps there is some subtle connection between these two facts, far stranger things at least have been scientifically proclaimed. AT ANY RATE, we commend the local Garden Club on the success of their recent state convention in this city, and congratulate them upon the high quality, effective arrangement and fragrance of the present exhibition. The work they are doing, we repeat, appears to us more im portant and worth while, under conditions which now prevail, than they have ever been before. In our home gardens, in increasing the beauties of and interest in nature that surround us; in devoting a little more time to things that take us out of doors, bring us closer to nature and the fundamentals of life, bring pleasure both to ourselves and others; there is a source of revitalization, stimulation, and renewal of hope and faith, a Irm "e noise, tury u.m, wincn is, we Relieve, PUBLIC benefit, at the present NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O.O. Mclntyre NEW YORK. May 39 The tele phone, considered by many civilisa tion's greatest boon, often becomes life's most seri ous Irritation in the B 1 g Town. Of inestimable value In emer gency. It never theless become sn 1 n a t rumen t from which the busy man must shrink to sur vive. The most in genious defenses srs built up to turn the tele phone caller sway wltnout offense For Instance, should Ihmeone try to call up J. P. Morgan or a person of similar importance, he finds him self In a maze of Mick-panslng thnt really becomes ludicrous, yet no sug gestion of Blight Is Implied. Prominent men who are married often have their telephones listed in namea of their wives, nils Is known to their Intimates, who are thus able to reach them. There are many in npartmen. houses whow phones never ring. The operator instead takes the name and number of the caller. I Csll slips are Immediately sent up and the recipient may call thow to whom he or she wishes to speak ; Then, of course, there are the tele- ; phone enthusiasts such as Rex cole. who not only answers every call, but Installs private phones for his Individual use in the homes of Inti mates. Theodora Dreiaar la in Hollywoc well . . . state of confusion and unrest, and futility of the tonsv t urvy nothing less than a time. genuine for the summer but not to write for the movies. He ts on another sort of writing assignment. He has been the most conspicuous spurner of movie gold. Once he listened and professed to have become so outraged when he saw the finished product he of fered back sll the money paid to scrap the picture. That could not be done, but he will never, never make another try. The sidewalk csfe. catching its second wind, ts far more numerous this summer than last. Every nook and cranny blooms with a few tub bed trees and several brightly covered tables. The larger places Chatham Walk. Park Lane Gardens, etc have been augmented by the largest of all, the former sheep fold, sur rounding the Tavern on the Oreen in Central park. The old Claremont. refurbished, on a sweep of the Drive. suggests some of the popular places ! in me dvis. Ann tnen there s the , Fifth Avenue's Amen Corner bar near Washington Arch. The flock of grazing sheep that once ranged the south meadows ot the park, with the patriarchal shep herd like a figure out of a Bible land scene and magnificent collie, a gift of the elder Morgan, otfered a pastoral vista that was the city's last touch with rural simplicities. 1 used to stop occasionally to chat with the shepherd. At that time, befitting his role, he had never been to the theater or ridden in an auto and was devoutly religious. He was a ringer for Edwin Murkham. One notices, too, a thinning of thp i sun-down walkers who made a cir- j cle or two of the graveled path of the reservoir a vesperal hour rite Andrew Carnegie, an unfailing nu- I lar, of course, is gone and Oeorge ; M Cohan ha been out troupiiv for ! a year as has Bert I vtell. both j i fM-: voir a.Ulut SMna JVrber was olten seen, as ex i'-ws Hunt, 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 Dr. Brady if a stamped self-ad dressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink Owing to the large number or letters received only a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr William Brady. 263 El Csmlno. Beverly Hills. Cal. HOW A COMMOVPLACE OCCURRENCE BECOMES A MIRACLE A little girl came down with infan tile paralysis In August, It Involved muscles of the legs and feet. A year later she had made a fair re covery but still had some limp or which she pre- to school... Not because she was paralyzed but from a perfectly aatural Inferior ity comp.cx vnich & ehlld is almost ce-taln to develop when such a han dicap come. Children are savages, you Know, and without any thought of malice or even consciousness of the pain, they laugh nt the awkwardness or the disability of a playmate, espe cially one who has previously been as strong or as swift aa any. By the way, here is a common situation in which parent or teacher can do much to Inculcate true manliness or wom anliness In the character of the child. The parents of this victim of polio myelitis are typical neurotics, both of them, and no wonder, for they have tainted blood In their vein; never mind which taint, but suffice to Bay that poor material was used In their making. I mention this, not because 'X hxs any bearing on the child's ill ness, for I am sure It hasn't, her Ill ness being a casualty of respiratory Infection. But it throws considerable light on the conduct of the parents in tl.ia case. Just a year after the attack of poliomyelitis the neurotic parents heard talcs of the miracles a charla tan in another city wrought In cases of paralysis, deformity, crippling from disease or Injury, by the laying on of hands. Justifying their course by the thought that "doctors can't do any more for her," they took the child to the charlatan and submitted her to his hocus-pocus, not Just once, as you might expect of a miracle worker, but for a regular course of treatments. Today she walks and runs," the fatuous paient declares In a printed testimonial two months later. "She lb a new beln. She still has a slight drag in her walk, md we are going to take her back for another treatment for that. It rakes a little time, of course. Nature has to help in the cure . . .' In otitr words the chili is pre cisely ii the condition she would Rockwell Kent, Howard Chandler Christy, Stefanson, the explorer, and It was probably the only place where at rare Intervals Mrs. Flske was seen in public. But firemen are always there several of them at all hours of the day. It's their exercise and promenade ground. The most romantic of the old tav erns Is The Brevoort now a freshly painted battleship gray with a green facade. It still maintains a concierge platform and a director In cutaway graces the foyer with a continental scatter of Jackknlfe bows. Until a few years ago it had only a dinky push-button elevator. Nearly every famous American novelist and those from abroad have tarried there. Its tucked-away registers would reveal signatures of William Dean Howells, Edith Wharton. Hugh Walpole. Hit lnlre Belloc. Mark Twain, Booth Tarkinston, Harry Leon Wilson. Meredith Nicholson and such mod erns as Dreiser. Lewis, Hemingway. Nina Wilcox Putnam and Arthur Somers Roche. It admitted well-mannered dogs long before the Euro pean Rltz-Carlton broke down the canine resistance that once afflicted most smart New York hotels. Those of us who become hope lessly flustered at a policeman's bawling out will appreciate this scrambled taunt of a rebuked mo torist to the crossing cop near Dut ton's on the avenue : "Nothing to do but stand still doing nothing or walking around listening for any thing you can see!" (Copyright, 1P3S. McNaught Syndi cate) Communications President Is Upheld To the Editor: The unwarranted criticism one I hears of the "president's veto" of the bonus bill calls forth this communi cation. , Whether from selfish reasons or not, people who disapprove of the veto, must at least admit that we have a "president" who Is not afraid to voUe his honest convictions pub licly for all the world to hear. Many months aco. I heard, vis the radio. Commander BeUrano of the (San Pranclsco American Leiin banker make the statement that he una not interested In the economic condition of this nation, but that he was back of the payment ot the bonus. Such a statement comtn? from a banker should give all good American cit Icons much food for thought. Now let us consider the bonus as a Itchinrt nnd Soreness ot" HEMORRHOIDS Grateful relief from the maddening tlistrrss, follows the ae of Krinol. Nursrs rromunirnd it becsuso Its medication is so safe and soothing to trndrr parts. 1 have been In 11 the charlatan and his miracle business had ntver been heard of. But the patents, poo dupes, are Infatuated with the kind of pub licity tho7 obviously enjoy, and the unfortunate child derives pleasure from the attention thus focused upon orag in the foot her. Th'j is the wny to train neuro by reason of i tic. UnUss something happens tc bring thfse credulous parents to their ferred to avoid senses, the child is quite likely to ce playlng games come the subject ol hysteria which and even going will handicap her whole life. Any victim of infantile paralysis who makes tho gains this child made In the first year after the attack may fairly expect to recover perfectly In another six months, thru regular ex erclses alone. Here Is a cornnv.nplacs occurrence exploited as a miracle. That's the way Ignorant folk i;ke It. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Please let me know If diathermy treatments ould be good for high blood pressure, I om offered a port able diathermy set at le than cost. (M. R.) Answer No. In any wee it would be foolish to Invest In such apparatus unless your physician advises it. Aw. Now, o Kidding My remedy for leg cramps at night you should apptove, I think. It Is a laugh I But really laugh, and laugh hard. Instantly the cramp disappears and leaves no soreness. (Mrs. O. E. C.) Answer I hope you're not kidding the Ol' Doc. At that, there may be something in It a hearty belly laugh try it. some of you folk who have nocturnal leg cramps and tell us whetner It works. Hot Wafer Like to drink a cup or two of hot water at times when I feel chilly. Is It all right to drink the hot water from the hot water faucet? Is the iron ruat In the water good for, the system? (J. S.) Answer -It Is all right. The iron will do no harm, may even be utilized by the body. Have You Hair to Care For? I wash my hair every two weeks, yet I have dandruff a few days after a thoro shampoo. (Miss A. M.) Answer Send stamped envelope bearing your address, for monograph on care of the hair end treatment cf dandruff. Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D., 285 El Cnmino, Beverly Hilts, Calif. mortgage held by the war veterans against the federal government, this mortgage together with accrued In terest falling due In 1045. Let us suppose that the federal government holds a mortgage on your home that fulls due In 1945. Would you feel that the government would be Justified In demanding at this time (19?5) payment not only of the face value of said mortgage but also payment of accrued Interest up to 1943, the date mortgage falls due? Lay aside your selfish desire for personal gain and consider this mat ter dispassionately. Would it be sound business? If the positions were re versed would you do it? No, not one of you would submit to the collection In 1935 of a mortgage on your pro perty which falls due in 1945. HENRIETTA B. MARTIN. Medford. May 39. (Continued from Page One.) lnattng NRA group took the position that it had to codify e wit body if It was going to codify anybody Right it that point is where the NRA movement got out of the realm of interstate commerce and Into the grave where the supreme court nov has burled its good features ss well as the bad. What floored the new do-Uers about the court decision was the unanimity of It. They knew It was going to be bad. but they did not know it wou d be that bad. They had no advan-e warning of Its sweeping character You could tell it from the looks o:i their faces when they heard about It A good example is what happen! in a hearing being conducted by the national labor relations board. Chair man Blddle was presiding when the decision wss brought In. He inter rupted the witness on the sand and announced: "Well, gentlemen, there seems to be no rea.on for going any further with this," The attorney for a union asked that the witness be permitted to conclude his testimony for the record, and th'S was permitted. The new deal crowd was more snx- Bffmind rnmHUim Crater Lake Aerie 2003. Fraternal Order of Eagles Announces a BENEFIT GAHCS For New Drill Team Unifcrn t TflNIRHTT Dvnge's Soecial 10-Piece Orchestra I UI1IUII I 9 "p.m. till 2 a.m. MenOc. Ladies 20c Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS KIDNAPING flares again, this time at Tacoma, where the nine-year-old son of J. P. Weyerhaeuser ts ab ducted while on his way home from school and held for $200,000 ransom. KIDNAPERS haven't fared so well of late. Among all the celebrated cases that filled the papers during the year or so when gangsters were turning from the busted bootleg racket to other fields, only one remains unsolved the Robles case and even there an Indictment has recently been brought which may unravel the mystery. Blgtlme kidnaping has been gener ally unprofitable, but it still holds the lure of easy money and where easy money beckons loose-moraled ad venturers will always be found to follow. KIDNAPING has been unprofitable because it la INTENSELY UN POPULAR. Even the fact that the victims of kidnapers are usually rich people, be cause only the rich can pay large ransoms, has not been sufficient to win for criminals of this breed any backing of uninformed public sym pathy. Everybody abhors a kidnaper. This widespread abhorrence of kid napers has given to the forces of law a backing that has enabled them to get results. 4 IP WE had similar backing for ALL law enforcement, we would have far less crime relatively little of it, as a matter of fact. But there will always be some crime, regardless of what may be done because crime SEEMS to certain weak-minded persons to offer some thing for nothing. To persons of this type, such a temptation is too strong to be re sisted. rIS a fairly safe guess that the kidnapers of little George Weyer haeuser will be caught and punished. All the resources of cities, states and the federal government will be devoted to that end. and the officers engaged in the search will he able and honest. In spite of all the tom myrot that Is talked to the contrary, criminals are no match for the forces of the law when the law's forces are used honestly and determinedly. We could stamp out the bulk of all crime If we would only bring to the task the energy, the honesty and the de termination we have brought to the contest with kidnaping. Crime flourishes because of public apathy toward it. tous to learn what the supreme court would say about the NRA than they were about the gold decision Labor Department Solicitor Wyzanskl ar ranged a special secret cable code so his office could flah him the news while he attended the labor meeting at the League of Nations headquar ters in Geneva. Different states of the Union we-c selected to designate various rullnss. Thus. Arizona would mean the court had ruled NRA out: New York would mean the intrastate phases were ad judged Illegal. Whta they should have cabled him was the name of the one state he forgot to mention: "Little America." The Inside crowd says the bet prospective candidate for chairman ship of the new social security board is Josephine Roche, now assistant treasury secretary. She ran a coil mine successfully In Colorado. An other probable appointee to the board is Edwin E. Witte of Wisconsin, who helped draft the legislation. A spirted Inner contest is on among some other applicant for positions on the board, most of whom will be disAppotnted. One day recently the nomination of William J. Ger'.g of Arkansas to be a member of the Mississippi river com mission w.w suddenly withdrawn br the President and replaced by that of Harry N. Phar, also an Arkansan. for the seme Job. Behind this event lies a little s:ory of politics with a moral It bean when War Secretary Dern met Senite Democratic Leader Robin son (of Arkansas) at a social gather ing. Mr. Dern greeted the senator warmly and then startled him by sav. lng he had Just named sn Arkansan for the river commission. This was the first Robinson had heard of it. He began making in quiries aiound a to why Arkansan were being given Jobs over his head FT tends pointed to his invaluable ser vices to the administration this ses sion. Finally this talk reached the right Democratic authorities. The Justice of Robinson's conten tion wss so evident that the Presi dent went to the unusual extent of withdrawing a nomination alroaci sent to the senate. The lob went to a Robinson man with 30 years' ex perience &s an engineer in flood con trol wor. Flight Time (Medford and Jackson Couni History from the flies of Che Mall Tribune of 10 and 20 year Ago). TEN V'MS ViO TODAY May 29, 1925 (It as Friday) President Cool id ge declares for 'stricter enforcement of prohibition by local agencies." The city pays honor to its soldier and sailor dead of all wars, with a parade and services in city park. The parade Is headed by the G. A. R. Attorney Porter J. Neff delivers ad dress of day to large crowd. The country dance season has opened, with dances in every nearby town. One group of local folks Jour neyed to Crescent City for a social evening. Diplomas are given 83 boys and girls at graduation exercises of the high school held last night at the Cratertan. Auto tires to go up in price June 1. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY May 29. 1915 (It Was Saturday) President Wilson plans "firm reply to Germany" In answer "to evasive note on Lusltanla horror." Steps taken for tho formation of a "Co-operative Water Users League' among farmers of valley are taken. Charlie Chaplin In "His Night Out" at the Page; "The Diamond From the Sky", with Lottie Plckford. at the Star: "The Lass Who Loved a Sailor" at the Isls. J. F. Ayres and wife were In town Friday and when I met him the first thing he told me was that he was mad and on Inquiring the cause said that your correspondent who writes "Along Rogue River" said that he had an auto, and he was mad because it was not so. So after this we scrib blers must know who has autos If we want to keep people in good hu mor, but I think he will get himself a Ford and then will be good-natured. (Eagle Point Eaglets.) KELLY ATTENDS FIRST BONUS BOARD MEETING SALEM. May 29. (AP) Edward E. Kelly, of Medlord. today attended hla tlrst meeting of the World War Veter ans' state aid commission, since he was appointed a member of that group to succeed Waltr Fisher of Roseburg. ) NEW FORMS READY FOR PWA FUND APPLICATION PORTLAND, May 29. ( AP) C. C. Hockley, state director of the public works administration, today an nounced new forms for application lor PWA funds are to be provided. TOWN TAVERN for No. 131-C PINTS 3 $1.45 for No. 131-A-9UARTS 1Q0 iiOO wow J PROOF You Are Missing A Treat If You Don't Eat HUSON'S HOMEMADE ICE CREAM ! LUNCH MEATS GROCERIES All Picnic Supplies This Store Open Holidays and Sundays Husons, Confectionery Formerly De Voe's land asked that those seeking public j works money write his office for the ' new blanks instead of filling in form ! heretofore in use. DRIVE-IN FOR LUMBER PAINT at BIG PINES LUMBER CO. PHONE ONE ftPWisuwif.Wf'W IMTlMlIti OUR.-" INSURANCE complies wih Oregon's NEW FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY ACT OUR- PRICES ARE BELOW the AVERAGE Special Bates to Farmer. (HI TP TEIlM UUI" PAYMENTS ARE YOUR TERMS WITHIN REASON PA-Molme, INSURANCE s WjENGY SINCE I90 Jackson Co. Bank Btrig. Phone 414 Lawn & Garden Furniture Awninp MEDFORD VETERINARY HOSPITAL 15 years experience In large and small animal practice Ur. J. W Waters 225 N. Riverside Phone 369 WINDSOR . for No. 177-C PINTS $1.45 for No. 177-J QUARTS HI SI