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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 30, 1935)
PXGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL' TRIBUSTS, JFEDFORD, OREGON. THURSDAY. MAY 30; 1935. Medford Mail Tribune "Eriryoa, IP Southern OrtgM Retd Ihl Mall Trlbuni'' Dalit Kxeapi Baturdsj Purjlliwi by MIBrUBIl PBIXII.NU CO. u-jr-a n. rit bu ip BO BEFIT . KCIIU Editor AO InjependaDt Newpapar Entered sa Mood "tlM " MMori Oregon, under Act of alarrb 8. laTfl. 13.00 1.16 SlillSCKIl-IlON RATES Br Malt la Adtapc, Dalljr. on rear Dalit, all montbj. ... Dalll. one montl) -ou Br Carrier In Adrance Mrdford, Ashland. Jltrjonrllle. Central Point. Ptoenil. Talent. Uold BUI anil on Biltlmara. Dellr. one (ear Dally. .li month! " Dall, an month eu All lermi. cash In adranea. Official paper 01 the City M Hertford. Official paper of Jacaioo Couotj. elEMHKtf OK THE ABKI1CIATEII PHK8S Kecrlilnl Full I""1 m" Bt"1c Itjo Auoeleled Preaa l aldoslrely entitled in tU uu tor publication of air neva dUpatcnea credited U) It m otberftlw credited In tlilr paper lad slao to the local nen publUbad oereln. All rlanta (or pulillralloo of epedai dlapeteoea herein are abo reamed. MEMHKtt OK USITKU PKKSS MHMI1KK OF AIIDI1 BCJUEAtl OK CIHCULAT10N8 Adrerll.trte Itelireeetitallret U. C. HOtiCNMiN COMPANY Officer In New Y'ri, ClilMRO. Detroit. Baa Kranclico l Aiiiiele Hialtle Portland. MEMBEH. MDOOWMIT Ye Smudge Pot III Arthur Terry How Come? LliTI.E filtEKS TENTS. "THE MTTLB GREEN TFNTS. WHERE THE SOLDIEHS BLEEP; AND THE SUNBEAMS PLAY, AND THE WOMEN WEEP. ARE COV ERED WITH rlXDWERS TODAY; AND BETWEEN THE TENTS WALK THE WEARY I"EW. WHO WERE YOUNO AND STALWART IN BIXTY TWO. WHEN THEY WENT TO THE WAR AWAY. "THE LITTLE GREEN TENTS ARE JUITI.T OP BOD. AND THEY ARE NOT I.ONO. AND THEY ARE NOT BROAD. BUT THE SOLDIERS HAVE LOTS OP ROOM; AND THE SOD 18 PART OP THE LAND THEY BAVED, WHEN THE PI.AO OP THE ENEMY DARKLY WAVED, THE SYMBOL OP DOLE AND DOOM. "THE LITTLE C1HEEN TENT IS A THINO DIVINE; THK LITTLE OREEN TENT IB A COUNTRY'S BHRINE, WHERE PATRIOTS KNEEL AND PRAY; AND THE BRAVE MEN LEPT, BO OLD, SO PEW, WERE YOUNO AND STALWART IN SIXTY-TWO. WHEN THEY WENT TO THE WAR AWAY." (Walt Mason). Obsarvsra report there "Are la schools of political thouulit eiletent In the nation." Tt In urnsrally be lieved It would he more arcurats to cell them srhools-or-trylnn-to-thlnlt. a Hljrh school Rrartuatfa will welve their rtlplomee tomorrow nlRht. In cluded In the Hut ere conple ot athlete who got their spHltns:. pnlnt ed no bnrne. end were Rood for 1ft yerde Around Irft, end. when It counted the moat. a The hlnh court decision. levlnf the "Blue Ersle" rrn. reur-ed In dlRnetton to boll In a number of mnrt Heirree Democrats. They blnmed the opinion upon the rascality of the Republican party. Ineteftd of the In blllty of Conarcaa end the Presi dent to reRtilete humen Rreed. The Proapect bell teem will lnvede Pnrtte River next Sunday, bended bv Dewey Hill, who le both the Desn boye of St. Louie, crnmmcr! Into a single pelr of pnnta. The Pop Ostes mustache, recently tr mmed hv h e own hend. la covering repldlv. end no longer look like a fender Ironed nut by a bather . Morris, the O-HIII. T-Rnck. and H-Vsllev peasant, towned yesternsv Mr. Morrla outwitted the rein. He eut. hie hev to cause It. end then defeated the rein In a rnce to the barn with the hev. "Prom thst alnfle plant Brew a Vlnevarn and from the crrerw Hc ehue made a wine. Put etrnntte to relate, when hla trlenri drank eome of the wine thev aunt. 1 ke hlrflS When tliry drnnk more Ihey were hrave end mlolitv ee llona. But when they drnnk too much they hehaved In the manner of jA.-kneeea " (Prom an ad for chnmpnene In "Tlie New Yorker"! And. wna ever after on the road to he a epred -Idiot. It waa rhllly enouch tlila morning for a eold water bath enthu.alaat to come downtown, and allege he took one. a There aeenia to he annte complaint In the claim that the ale of the letters need In plertng the namee of the present Los Angeles city offic ials on the hronre tnhlet placed In the new ctrlfllth Observatory, are eo much larger thnn the name of the late Mr. Orlffith, who provided the money for the building iB,irbnk (Calif ) Review! RcdlM 1 Ihutton ot glory hlta A anng. Ililee Kincle Trapped IBERIA. Mo fUl -One of ihe largest e.iglea ever to he caught In the Or.nrka was enptured In a steel trap on the farm of John A. Blan kenahlp recently. The bird isas an 11-poutid grnv eagle, with a wing spread of aeven feet from Up to tip Three goats had disappeared from Blankenship'a tlorks hefore the racle waa trapped PR I H oovf'iow locited At t.V WE are mystified by the United States Chamber of Com merce. It in supposed to and undoubtedly does repre sent business, large and small. When it speaks it presumably speaka for business. And yet only yesterday its new president, Mr. Harper Sibley, issued a broadcast pleading with business executives to maintain their codes, regardless of that decision, and by intimation at least, deploring the invalidation of NRA. One is justified in assuming the president of the U. S. C. of C., has favored the NRA, and would like to see it main prin ciples and purposes carried out, as far as that is now possible. Yet ever since the Blue Eagle was hatched and particularly during the past year, American business AS A WHOLE, has ridiculed the NRA, cracked jokes about the everlasting alphabet soup, and maintained repeatedly that what business recovery has been enjoyed, has been not BECAUSE of the New Deal, but in SPITE of it. Time and again influential and representative business men have voiced the sentiment, that if only the administration would drop its social istie foolishness and abandon its un-American REGIMENTATION, let business alone and lot it go its own sweet way, then nothing could prevent the greatest era of prosperity, since the golden days of Mark Ha una and the full dinner pail. And yet with thiR DONE with regimentation suddenly knocked for a loop, with the shackles on business imposed by the NRA, dropped off, the leader and official spokesman for the United States Chamber of Commerce, instead of rejoicing, issues a fervent plea to business to retain and maintain their NRA codes, VOLUNTARILY! TT is certainly very confusing. Can it be that President Sibley does not speak for the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, or is it true that the U. S. Chamber of Commerce does not represent American business Or does American business favor the NRA after all, and has favored it all along. We admit a complete inability to make it all out, and wish some one with a better head than we have for such cross eyed puzzles would explain. P. 8.: Finally as a result of the end of NRA the N. Y. stock market goes DOWN! What Price, Peace? IN browsing through a recent. Congressional Record we came nnnn rpnnrt. of repent world nance svninosinm oonrllteted over the radio by Senator Costigan of Colorado, Norman Hap good and a certain Mr. Mittell of Washington, D. C. The following extract from Senator Costigan's remarks we believe are worth reprinting, on Memorial Day: Let ua learn And declare, once And for All, that we are through with Idle pronouncement for peace, and will waste no further time In discussions with tkose for whom peace, like paradise, hsa become An unreel and remote ahstrsctlon, toward which meanlnglesA and eentlmentAl teara And pveyerA are directed. Thus to sdor pesce la to betray it. True peace will never be captured until A new world sees and determines to Achieve tt for what It reelly la a llfe-SAVlngr. creative. And anw.lngly beautiful reality. It cannot b won by anything less thAn Adventurous, generous. And measureless courage; matchless Imagination; and absolute dedication to those manifestations of democratic equAllty And economic welfare, of whloh peart Iteelf Is, after all, a priceless byproduct. In spite of every falsehood ver uttered ebout It, peace Is cesseleeely and constructively active, not Insipidly passive. It It positive, not negative). It perpetually challenges all worthwhile potenllalltlcA of mankind. It la the only unbrenkAble guarantee of material and human conservation. It Is m superior to war as life to death. Peace will never be permanently gained until men and women are organised for fraternity, not hostility; disinterestedness, not . prejuoice. science, not wanton waste. To benlsh WAr la the ttti pendoua teak set before a generation In some respects Ill prepared to meet It. Ita teatA Are almost certain to be applied within a staggeringly limited lime. Yet the contest must be waged and the Isstlt grAppled with, for the prlM Is All that tht present end future hold of rslue to humAn belnge. Like trevelert caught in qulckssnds wt sink even aa we apeak. Time la mercl lesa. We must extricate otirselvee At once by heroic mesne or dlseppear. traceleaa And forever, from a whirling plsnet sban doned to the formless void from which It ceme. A trifle declamatory perhaps, but everlastingly true. Oregon Leads in Recovery LJKRK is some good news: Oregon is leading the way of all the Pacific coast states in the matter of business recovery, according to information received this week by the State Relief Committee in a national survey indicating the number of cases (resident families and single persons) receiving emerirency relief from public funds. The number of people on relief, these figures show, is undergo ing a noticnble decline. Portland is in the vanguard in the recovery program in that the percentage of decline of relief caseload was six percent in April over March and the percentage of change in fund obliga tions incurred for relief in April as against March was minus 22, indicating the business and the industrial as well as seasonal employment on farms is absorbing thousands from relief rolls. Petween March and April of last year, a period during which the liquidation of the CWA program was completed, the number of cases receiving relief and relief expenditures increased hv oO percent and 4(1 percent, respectively. COMPLETE recovery is certainly slow, hut it's just as cer tainly on the way, and up and down the coast Oregon leads! Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal nealth And hygiene not to d I lease diagnosis or treatment 1il bt answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelope tt enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be aniwered. No reply can be made to querlet not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. nilllsm Brady, 265 El Camlno. Beverly Bills. Cal. heard of the pA.ig of Ben Throup ransom paid. NO CHILD would be with regret. As the husband of Ruby I BBfe. De Remer. one of tht best known I . -,, iized atate. auch as ours of the Pollies' beauties, he was long . -..te.r. f the a conspicuous first nlghter. He in-1 th 0 ,h herlted a fortune In coal mines once ! Individual has to be submerged for estimated at ces 000.000. One of nls the good of the greater number. closest friends, a well known Broed- TT IS A TREAT TO Bl'Y SOME WHFAT A retidtr uyi ht bought . ruAh-l of wiet t the mill for 91.30, cleaned ready for grinding, h telU how this unground wheat i uicd In bis horn: Put such quan tity at desired (not too much, for It awells tn cooking) In wafer and boll for 5 mtnutea. Then let It t&nd from 13 to 34 noun. After thl a long Aoalting boll on moderate fire t'.li toft aa dealred I ine pmtmniHi-y Dolling is to prftvert fermentation.) Keep It in the Ice box, and heat up aa required, and It will be found one of the finest, most palatable, antinfying and healthful breakfaat dlshei In the world. And lta coat is little. I have suRgeatecl that whe&t may be ground In the ordinary coffee mill. A household wheat krlnlcler la now available In the store i. and It la es pecially designed for cruahlng wriest or othrr whole gralnm or vegetables. Another man gives the method used In hla home: We grind the wheat In our coffee mill aa fine aa pcaalble, place In dou ble boiler, cook for IS or 30 minute the night before, set on bark of stove, and In the morning place over flr-i Just long enough to heat through. It beata all the "sawduat" cereals and la much cheaper. If you undertake to use wheat. Just aa It grows, aa fcod. don't be fuvy about an occasional bug. larva or "worm" In It. Any such incidental meat In fhe wheat la perfectly harm less, cooked or raw. Even the purent cereal products are as likely to ffi "webby" on long standing aa la wheat Here Is a recipe for wheat muffin: 3 tftblepoonfu. shortening 1 egg well beaten IV eupa finely ground or krlnkled wheat 3 tablespoon fill sugar cup tweet milk 3 ten spoonfuls baking powder i teaspoonful salt. Beat together shortening and sugar, egg. salt and milk. Then add t.i ground wheat, and the baking pow der and mix lightly. Bake In well greaaed muffin or gem psna. Thti makea e'uht muffins. A Colorado cook offers fchla recipe for Wheat Mncnronno. Beat an egg with a cup of grau lated auar until very light, add 5 trblerspoonfuls of ground or krlnkled whent and one cup finely chopped al mond. trop on, buttered tins ana bake for 30 minutes. The same cook gives a recipe for n heat rookie. Beat together one - half cup mi 1 Sc. one-fourth cip old-faahloned mo RMcn (no sulphur dioxide), one egg two tablespoon fuls lard or butter Add 3i cupfuls ground or krinkled wheat, 2 tenspoonf ills baking powder, 'i teanpoonrul salt. Drop mixed bat ter from spoon onto well greaaed tin and bake for an hour rinally. If you care to take a chance, here's Ol' Doc Brady'a recipe for Wheat Bread. 1'4 cups sweet milk 3 teaapoonfuls old - fashioned mo- 1mc (no sulphur dioxide) S tablespoonfula lard V7 cake compressed yeast j cup lukewarm water 5 cups ground or krlnkled wheat Teaspoonful salt. .Scald the milk and cool to about body temperature. Mix lard, yeast and molasses with enough lukewarm water to make smooth paste, then add the milk. Now mix In the wheat t-y make sponge, and knead or be it aponge for five minutes, and set ir warm place till it riaea to double Mm Now add the salt and knead thor oughly once more. Half fill greased tins with the dough, and llgntly ruo over douRh with lard. Let stand in warm place till dough fills tins. Bake from ono to one and & half hours Be careful not to Jar the dough when putting It in the oven or the whole works will ro flat on you. and heaven knows we men have enough to en dure as things are. If you want something tantalizing, add ifi cupful or a cupful of ratsinf. or walnut meat or both, finely chop ped and eoaked for a few minutes in scalding wster then dried, when you mix in the wheat. waylte who died several months ago, waa Billy Emmerich. Thingumabobs: Somerset Maugham refused S250,000 for a year's chore In Hollywood . . . The Howard Chand ler Christya dog and cat scream when separated . . . Zelma O'Neal, who did a professional fade out on Broadway, la a big hit In London doing the same routine ... A Broad way column: "The shape of Moln tyre's head Is rather difficult to de scribe" . . . Wilson Mlzner'a old crack about the knob on a dollar umbrella will give you a general idea. Ql USTIONS AND ANSWERS Needle In Leg. Two weeks ago ran needle in fleshy part of thigh Just below hip bon-s X-ray tken. doctor cut silt in leg but failed to get It. Yesterday an other x-ray showed needle just bb low the surface. Will it fctor out. or how can I have It removed? Mrr S. V. B. Answer Unless It hurts or be comes inflamed why do .'.nythims about It. Needlea often remain em bedded in the tiaue for years ami never do any harm. If It la so ner the aurfaoe It should be reidtly re moved through a small Incision Ir the skin and gTaspIng the needle with forceps. Don't worry about yarns of such things traveling to t heart or anything like that Thou are Just fishwife yarns. A needle often travels through the tissues, but even ao, it does no harm. rimik it. Due to excessive acidity of tin1 stomach and gas I am taking a tea upoonrul or more of 5oda (aleratus) daily. Is this harmful? B. O. Anawer It la. If taken habitually Better take five or ten grains of pre pared chalk, calcium carbonate, which servee the purpose without upaettirij metabolism. Torn or Callus. Plevs print the formula for your famous corn cure. A. L. Answer Thirty grains salicylic acid dissolved In one-half ounce flexibl collodion Paint corn, callus or wart with It once dally for week or more. (Copyright, 1935, John P. Dille Co.) Comment on the Day's News By FRANK .IRS KINS TWO black headllnea stare from the front page. One tus at the heartstrings. The other stirs contro versial opinion. This Is the headline that tugs at the heartstrings: "Boy's Father Beady to Pay." . OP COURSE he is. If the curly-headed boy whose picture looks from all the papers were YOURS, what would 1200,000, or any sum you might be able to lay your hands on, mean to you In comparison to his safety? It would mean nothing at all. IN THE case of this boy, as tn all kidnaplng-for-ransome cases, two forces are working against each other. One Is parental love, which seeks only the safe return ot the child, at any cost, and doubtless looks upon the efforts of the law to find and punish the kidnapers with fear and foreboding, aa ENDANGERINO the child's life. The other force Is that of law and order, working not merely for one child and one set of parents, but for all children and all parents. THE other headline reads: "NRA Held Unconstitutional." The supreme court, voting unani mously this time, holds that congress, in the case of the NRA. handed over to the President more power over business than ia constitutionally his. NRA, speaking broadly and subject to certain exceptions, undertook to say to business: "Hire more men than you can at present afford, pay higher wages than you are paying now and RAISE PRICES to cover the cost." To those business men who did this, It ought to say by Indirection: "We will attempt to protect you against the chiselers who seek to un dersell you." AT THE time when NRA was launched, which waa a time of grave emergency, this sounded good. But aa time passed, and price actually were raised to cover rising costs, people began to discover In large numbers that their higher wages under NRA, If any, BOUOHT NO MORE than their lower wages be fore had bought. In many case . they bought less. The fear also arose that if PRES ENT business Is permitted to charge higher prices to cover higher costs and If prewnt business Is protected againat FUTURE competition, mo nopoly will flourish. f- NRA, at the moment of its launch ing, seemed to promise something for nothing. But experience Is prov ing that it brings no such thing. Enterprises that promise too much for too little are nearly always disappointing. One of Twins Dies After Few Hours ASHLAND, May 30. (Spl.) Twins, a boy snd a girl, were born to Mr. and Mrs, Warne Cowdery. who 1 on the Pacific highway betw.-en Ash land and Talent, at the Community hospital early Wednesday, but the girl f e-i led to 1 1 ve past the al xth hour. The infant boy and the mother arc IF KIDNAPING were permitted to ln S001 "Edition A become safe and eaay. aa it would be If the law stood aside and made no single move while the kidnaped child waa being returned and the Be correctly corseted ln an Artist Model by Ethelwyn B- Hoffmann. Flight 'o Time (Mi-dford and Jaikson County Histury rrom the files of Che Mall Tribune of 10 end 40 Year Affo). TEN YFARS AGO TODAY May .30. l.t?3. (It waa Saturday.) Tne Oregon compulsory school bill a Klan backed measure that tore the ataw apart is declared Invalid by the United States supreme court TMomas R. Msrshell, war-time vlca- prcsldent of the nation, near to deatn. A vear ago today the mercury roe to 102 degrees. More autoa needed for National Guard trip to Crater Lake, June 20. Two more dance orchestraa are formed for the summer season. Records of the weather bim-au show that .95 inch of rain fell the past month, causing the wettest May la 13 years. TWENTY YrinS AGO TODAY May 30. IflliS. Memorial day is observed with the annual parade, and exercises at the Page. Strawberry raisers of the) Ashland district report their patches are "raided by lady hikers," The members of a musical comedy company, who appeered here last week, are allegf-d to have departed with a shotgun they borrowed from a local tore for use ln their play. President Wilson abandons "watch ful waiting" policy against Mexico. Rumania ready to enter great war against Germany. Use Mall Tribuue want ads. East Side Pharmacy Freshly Decora t e d New Fixtures Added Frfslily dcr-orated and entirely re arranged, the East Side Pharmacy, populnr drue store at the corner of East Main and Riverside, Js now a model of attractiveness and conven ient. A silver and black color scheme has hffn carried out in the new wall rapes and show cabinets. These new fixtures will make it possible fr Pa" trons of the East Side to enjoy self service as practirally all merchan dise is now effectively displayed. At the rear of the store a prescrip tion counter has been Installed and the office upstairs has been enclosed behind lattice. Numerous other im provements have been completed un der the direction of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Smith, who have operated the East Side Pharmacy In the same lo cation for the past ten yenrs. Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct tn Dr. William Brady, M. D., 2 OS Kl Camlno. Beverly Hills, Calif. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK. May 30. Washincton I Square's best known fashion plate Is the 70-year artist. Reginald Birch. His dally saunt- ei with that touch of cultur ed hoyls h n e s s. from the avenue pent house stu dio to lunch ket these days. It seems to me read ers would be spared much sopno morlc balderdash If more apprentice scriveners followed the same plan. And in the long run there would result a finer crop of word crafts men. After all. even tratned medicos practice their scalpel didoes on cad avers before they open cash custom This Is the time of year I like to Uirn to that weekly the circus, vaudeville and carnival folk know at. "Billyboy" and the publishing world as The Billboard. In Its pages one may learn late news of the last of the gipsies the pitchmen, lot dem onstrators, streetmen. novelty saies- The Players suK-,mpr1, m(,t!tc1p men and coupon I' .Ill IIHIW. mil i'lM- raWieAaA. EE tightly waxed 13,500.000 PWA FUND FOR CAPITOL BUILDING URGED BY PLAN BOARD POnxl.AND. May 30. ( AP) The governor' planning board yesterday votod to recommend that Oregon ap plv Immediately for I3.500.0O0 in PWA fund for the construction of new "capttol group" of buildings at Salem. The board explained the protect termed a "'-apltol -oup' since mvpuMBatlon nvgM iii-vv thst aeerl unaU bui'dmg. wo a id U more lessi- bl than one large structure. It waa voted to retain the capltol at Salem If a suitable site can be obtained. Tha recommendation, made at a meeting with Governor Martin, called for a 45 per cent outright grant (ll.67S.ooo, and a 5a per cent loan 1 1 1.935.000 ) Although legislative action Is nec essary before Oregon may tncur any debt exceeding 150 .000. the board declared steps to obtain the. loan should be taken immediately to plac this stat tn the front rank of tho seeking PWA funds. No indi cation of the date for a special aes ston of the lettislature has been given. The tatehouee at Salem was de toed by fire April '.'V gests Count Bone's morning' stroll from the Arch to the Place de la Concorde Reggie, as he la known to In timates, features mustache, white spats, colored collars to match nls shirts, cuff buttons and kerchief to oleud with the color scheme, a mal- ! area stick and lapel nosegay. He is famed for an achievement he tried to live down. Forty years ago he drew the an gelic and beautiful child that is known wherever books are read as "Little Lord Fauntlerov." The wist ful lad In the velveteen suit and ! ,n8 spreading white lace collar talking to Hobbs. the grocer, became the best known Illustration of the period. Th "Fauntlerov curl" was as much or a rage among youngsters as the hair bob of a later decade. A rougher age classified Fauntlerov as a sissy and this embarrassed the creator. He has illustrated hundreds of books and magar.ine stories but it's the Fauntleroy drawings they remember. workers. With the first spring buds these romanticists become birds of passage and always on the wing. They hibernate mostly around New York Conev Island. Asbury Peru. Atlantic City and the like. Here is an army that has ridden the depres sion top-gallant. They never whine and life and the open road are al ways high adventure. Hear strains from the glad sonss as printed In letters to "Billyboy" ; nBS "Doing fine In slngle-o medicine. putting over unameni nae a nouse afire!" . . . "Big up and up In New Orleans but Dallas Is a strawberry town" . . . "Working glass cutters and sharpeners at present and clean up. Regards to Doc Thurmer' "Knocked out a century tn first. two weeks with a med and coch wagon" . . . "Even with a poor flash in side street doorways, more than made expenses traveling north" . "Sopped up 50 a day with poo ooo cushions deepite dust storms." Broadway, Hollywood and Paris GEORGE'S CASH GROCERY NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS AT 608 EAST MAIN ST. Here Are A Few of Our Opening) Come In Southern Oregon peo ple are cordially in vited to visit this new. conveniently ar raneed store Just a block from the busi nes district, featuring the lowest down-town prices, yet with all the advantages of a suburban store per sonal, friendly service and plenty of parking apace. For YOUR con venience, this atore will remain open un til 8:00 o'clock eve nings and holidays from 8:00 a. m. to 10:00 a. m. and from 4:00 p. m. to 6:00 p. m. Come In! See how pleasant It Is to shop here and what bar gains you can secure! OEOROE WITTERS. Proprietor. SUGAR 3V2 lbs. 19c MORNING MILK Tall Can 3 for 20c CRESCENT SPICES All Varieties 2 oz. Can 7c SOAP P. and G. Crystal White 7 bars 22 RICE Long Grain 3 lbs. 19c LESLIE'S SALT 2 lb. Shaker 2 Pk?s. 15c Tab and rep show folk, the few left, have a fascinating dialectic ail their own. Important words In a sen- 1 tence are scrambled with f's liar this: "The malfnager is solfore at the newfew mf ingenue" meaning "The i manager Is sore at the new ingenue It is the trouper's ay of excluding I townlea from conversation sacred to the profesh. Sounds easv but takes a j nimble tongue and practice. t Have vout fountain pen repaired IU10U. 114 . Ccnural Around the airports they whisper, perhaps unf airly, that Wiley Post s I repeated failure to conquer the trans continental strato route can be trac- ! ed to his break with Harold Oatty Post had the nere of the team, they say. but It was Oatty who attended to those little details Men msKe the difference between successful filth and a cra.-k-up From an earnest oun writer "Xm writing solely for the wastebas- -fr rPTVg IN WE ARE AT YOUR SERVICE AT BIG PINES LUMBER CO. ri'ovr. hm: , saa atvisi MEDFORD VETERINARY HOSPITAL 15 yrars epeilnce in larce and na!l animal prsctlce Or. J W n.iicn Z2b N. Riverside Pboue 36'J incr. - - -. ; -. Convenient. v located (3-4 clocks to leading Kmks-tores Garace directly across the street 600 beautifully furnished rooms Jtrractive Dinir.e Room Smart Cotfce Shop Beer Tavern Arabian Room Supper Dancing Drug Store and Fountain Cigar and News Stand (om emion Halls Pail Rooms Banquet snd Meeting H.u.s SBirberS'rp Prv.jrv Silcn Tut1.iK BirKa Ta;'uT and Shoe Repair Shcp Laundrv V.5iH K..:e5rtnd Tces THfucur HOTEL MULTCMAI rORTIAND OREOCV Souvenir Sop TeifAZ-ipH Cr.-e