Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1935)
PAGE TWELVE MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUXE, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 21, 1935. Medford Mail Tribune "CnrvOM ID Southern Origoo Rutfi tilt Wail Trlbuna" Dally ICxcpt Saturday MKUKUHD PB1NTIMU CO. SI-Sf- N 111 '8L. BOBtttl W BUHL. Bdltw AO IwleptDdcDt Newvitaper loUrMl t ttcood el oatur it Uedford Oncoa, under Art ol Marcb 8. 18T9. .IhlSmilTlON BATES ly MiU ID Adtiot DillT. on' rw Dillv. lis months 6.00 MS Dtlij, om fflonUi JscUomlU., Centwl Point. PBotnll. TslMl. W 1U tor) 00 riltbnn. DtlU. oor Dilly ll monlhl n.ll. nn raonto -ou Ail Um. euh U td'UX. Oftleto 0MXI 01 loi Oil ol Hertford. OfHcUl OOP" of JicUod Couoty. HEMHEH U THE A880CIATKD HHKS8 uwidrn full Loued Wirt BerTlco no Auodo'm fren Is urlunhely ntlOM lo QM til (Or OUMIMUOD or .11 tww erodJtod to It ut olhenrtw credited In tol moot tod 1M to tilt loeil new puhltahed Herein. All rtinU for pulillatloo of ipeel.1 dlipitebot otrolo v Im rouned. KKMHEB Of UWITEP UtED. WEMBBH OF AUUI1 BUREAU OPf CIRCULATIONS Adrertlilnj KepreMnUtlrtl IL C. MOUENSEN COMr'ANT OflTM lo New Viri. Oilcan. Detroit, U Ye Smudge Pot Bj Arthur Perry Th. "Socl.1 Security BUI" erf the pr.Hd.nt. providing for bigger pock.tbooKs. .tart, oil handl canoed by an endorsement of. Huey SETuS 'th. legal suspicion It may b. 'el... leglelatlon." and thu. .ub tact to annulment by a high court ' decision. The meoeur. provide. Jot th. end of a r.lnbow In every wallet. Committee, have Marled .neaking up on local civic problem, once mow. There Is nothing on the hori on. at present, that can b. saved by wearing a cowboy hat. nor ruined by rain. Lo. Angele. lecturer, are now In vading Portland. In many sections of th. state thl Is regarded e "chickens coming home to roost." In stead of the Portland table-thump-ra coming to eat their fried chicken and paas-the-hat. to save the farmer and aid the worker. O. Wing, the realtor was dressed up yesterday like a tired tiller. Congress ha. appropriated .600.000 to aid scientists In the discovery ol a chemical that will eat It. way through wood, Iron, or steel In time of war. This Hems like a lot ot money to spend. Just to find a ub. stltut. for 1937 moonshine. One of our charming brunettes baa become a decided blonde. At this point your corr. has decided not to writ, what was intended. to Citizen, motoring to the hills Thurs. claim they caught a tourist coming around a mountain curve, on the right aide of the road at a moderate rate of speed. It 1. now argued that the lady In th. Weyerhaeuser kidnaping Is not a. much to blame for the crime aa originally supposed, because she was only doing whst her husband order- ad, .nd being a dutiful helpmeet did It. Under this theory, she most crt.lnly was delightfully meek, when money was concerned. Rather than h.v. a domesttL rumpua she took a ehance on not getting caught by th. a-Men. 0 0 Republican, are becoming quite plentiful. The hard-shell variety tra duce the administration openly, and predict a mutiny of the voter, in 10S8. A number of farmers hae wearied of garden thieves, and announce they are waiting for them with shot gun, they know .re losded. A M-year-old West Virginia boy. and his pal of 16 summers, have been sentenced to life Imprisonment for kidnaping a sheriff, who aeems to have been about the same age a hU kidnapers, when It came to efficiency. 0 BRAIN STRAIN ITEM. (Exchange) If you will perform a simple experiment some evening at home, you will have a permanent example of the relation of thought to action. Take three nails, a hammer, and a plsno. Drive two nail, into the plsno and pull one out. The nail you leave In th. piano symbolizes an act; the on. pulled out symbolizes chang ing your mind: the one not used symbolise, controlling your thoughts. 00 Device, thst save gas, jid at the am. time act a. a tonic to aged auto, are on aale. What 1. needed I. a contraption that attached to th. Tit. Is of a vehicle will causa the expansion of credit for gasoline by alio prop.. O a "Ml. Marye Carson Is assisting her mother these days." (Salmon Bar Jottings) An old-fsshloned girl. Oregonlsns purchased 4000 more auto. In May than In the same month In 1034. The delinquent tax list, still make 17 columns. In the official papers of the leading coun ties. Two FHUlltlf. SALEM. June 31. (API Tin names W. P, WtMArnberg. Portland laborer and Charles Onty, Rwdaport foreman, comprised the list of la ta II ties among Orfgon industrial workmen during; the past week. The Industrial accident commission re ported 095 accidents for the period The working force which completed vh liner Normnndle numbered 6D0U Editorial Correspondence EOCKFORD, 111., June 18. The Rock river ig running high between its banks and the rain continues. Floods are feared in the lowlands south of town, where they have been unknown for nearly fifty years. Except for a three or four hour respite yesterday afternoon, it has been raining now for three days Wonder if the airmail ig getting through. Bad news from Hollywood Fields ill again and his friends to return to the movies for six pantomine, only exceeded by Charley Chaplin, in his charac terization of the suave and frustrated bamboozler in a class by himself, here's hoping the doctors are wrong regarding W. C. F., and the old boy will be before the Kleig lights before the summer is over. Think of the smiles he has brought to the faces of the harassed human race, young and old, during the depression, if placed end to end they would certainly reach beyond the moon. The world can ill afford to lose anyone pro ficient in that direction at the present time! We sometimes wonder if anyone is really WISE. Take Dr. Tugwell for example. With the drought of last year and the dust storms of this spring in his mind, he told an audience not far from here that in another generation the Mississippi Valley might be a desert. At the present writing there is more pros pect of it being an inland sea. wise would ever make any predictions about the weather or about the future for that matter. Glad to see Judge Landis into organized baseball, and the youthful ex-con will have a chance to make good. The text of the court's decision removed all doubt of Judge Landis' abilities as a diplomat. He fullv agreed with those who barred with those who wanted him to favor of the latter, upon a line offend the former. Not bad ! For a striking example of editing news columns to conform to the editorial policy, observe the Chicago Tribune. On page one a screaming scare head over "Roosevelt's attempt to rescue the French franc by risking the stability of the U. S. dollar." Buried somewhere inside, the President's sensible address on relief and reconstruction, to the state relief administrators of the forty-eight states. At every opportunity Col. McCormick, publisher of the Tribune, bangs the table and shouts himself hoarse over the danger to the American press from the govern ment and its threat to its freedom the "freedom of the press." Far greater danger to the American press, its perpet uation, influence and authority great newspapers into nothing propaganda, color and distort I nurnoses ! . i- In spite of the weather, there has been a virtual epidemic of ccntennaries around this part of the state, and all, Ave are told, have been successful. One at Pecatonica, one at Rockton, another at Elgin and last year Rockford started the ball rolling. One hundred years have passed since these towns were founded, but like individuals, born at the same time and growing up in identical environment, how different their fortunes and their fates. Rockford alone has made a striking success materially, from a ford and a blacksmith shop to an industrial city of !)0,(100 people. In a century Pecatonica and Rockton have scarcely changed. Elgin comes second to Rockforo in this part of the stnte, a great dairy center and with one of the largest watch factories in the country. Just why some villages grow into cities and others with equal sometimes greater natural ad vantages, don't, it. is not easy to say. In municipal as with indi vidual success there is probably a tremendous element of CHANCE. R. W. R. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O.O. Mclntyre NEW YORK. June 31. Thought while strolling: When H. T. Web ster's hair turns white. It will be like Mark Twain's un ruly mop. Patrl cla Ztegfeld now a grown up lady. And BUlle Burke younger looking than ever. A good definition of i columnist: sciol ist. Add popular ltv slumps: Base ball. Look illkei: Mu&solln and Roxy. Pierre Car- tier Is always dreMPd aa though going some plnce Important. Few writers seem so in different to money rewards aa Don Marquis. And that may be the why of his excellence. All the familiar faces under the Aster marquee gone. Louis Mnnn. Dillingham, etc. Overheard: "I'm alwaya spotted next to trained animals or midgets." City threnody: The cartons of earth for aale In five and tens. Last of the romantlo fiddlers: Joe P'ejer. Suggestion for dellcatesaena old fashioned apple butter savoring ol wood smoke. No one can atrut like Harry Rlchman. How many remember Edna Aug and her "Belle of Avenue A" song? Hope Hampton's corsage bill must run Into Important money. That sadly wistful goodbye smile of Bar bara Hutton Is haunting. Jimmy Savo helps fill the gap but the the ater has never been the same for me since W. r. Fields went cinema. Col. Ed Slmms suggests a big white colonial porch and a tall mint Julep. Picturesque name for a polo player: Laddie Sun ford. What a three-sheeting the liner Normandle got. That MrLarnln-RoM ftjtht Is becoming a aioa-seat act- 1 11 wait and catch It at Loews. George Ada used to tell a story apropos of home town enthusiasm for the famous. A man whose name appeared regularly on the front pAgea decided he would visit the scene of earlier days. When ha ar rived there was no one about the st a t ion but the sleepy old hack driver Indulging the lordosis of his calling. So he walked over and halooed : "Hello, Jim. Do you re member me?" The Jehu sat up a bit, opined h did and then was asked: "Do the people ever mention me around here?" He was told they did sometimes. i 'Sometimes? Well, what do they; .iv when I'm mentioned?'' I O. they Just laugh!" I Ewing Galloway, the photograph., ucui bail to Jut liuut towa ftite; 1 1 BaV in the morning paper, W. C. worried. Fear he will be unable months. In the eloquence of his We have an idea no one truly has admitted "Alabama" Pitts Pitts from baseball, and also play, and proceeded to rule in of reasoning that could not from those who would turu more than organs of partisan the news for selfish political acquiring considerable celebrity that took him around the world. He had since leaving, a poor boy, nursed a violent hatred for ft rich man's son who had anubbed him on many oc casions. He planned revenges. Upon arrival, the first person to greet htm and reach for his suitcase was this son. In the social unraveling of years, the fortune waa gone and the fellow underfleshed and woebegone had become the village hackman. Galloway started to step Into the cab, then, changing his mind, climb ed up and sat with the driver. Many lyrlclata believe the gangling hill-billy Pinky Tomlln Is designed to surpnsa even the acknowledged mnster, Irving Berlin, In the art or attaining the lilting lyric. Berlin's fitting of the phrase "Pull of origi nality" to a bar of music is often classes aa top by those who know. A line that sings ltselfl Tomlln's keen ear for rhythm and fitting words to music la strikingly re vealed In "The object of my affec tion can change my complexion . . " Not so grand Just to read but oddly lilting In a song. The oil in ess of the communist propaganda ooceg In unusual places. I notice In a book review of a so phisticated weekly that the critic, active communist, drags in this line extraneoualy: "Those who think in the terms of a planned society." The Inference being thst only resl tn inkers do. Doubtless radicals have lined up a a number of provocative writers for m. male, a genuine Sloe Gin Ricley vttli Ji.tinetive fruity tang that i alwayi THE E. C- LYOKS A RAAJ CO. 5a fr Nw Yerk La A4lu ProJur, .."" LYONS BELVISTA WINES Personal Health Service By William Sinned letter pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self -addressed 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 No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 203 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cal. DON'T DRINK AND SHOW YOL'R FANATICISM Had a talk here recently entitled "Drink and Show Your Ignorance." It brought 68 letters, 61 of them ex pressing thanks and asking God's blessing on me. 7 of them ex pressing Indigna tion and disgust and wishing me all sorts of sad fates. But I waa merely trying to teach what ef fecta alcohol .as on health, which ha nothing to do with heaven or hell. I lie wile of an Inebriate writes: "I wish more were written on the terrible racts about drink. No one knows the damage It doea unless they have a victim In the family. I've often thought I'd like to offer my husband as an example to show young people what It does to a per son, not only himself or herself but to others. I agree with Hitler that every chronic drinker ought to be sterilized. My husband used to say he'd like to tell every young person to let the stuff alone before It gets yu. He has seemed to wish earnestly to atop it, having even taken cures without avail. I Just feel sick when I see so many young people going to taverns, road houses, night clubs, cocktail places . . , but what are hu man lives the country needs the al mighty dollar." As for sterilizing chronic drinkers. who shall draw the line between oc casional, moderate or social drink ing? Why. in Yankeeland, we can't even make up our minds what drunkenness or Intoxication Is it de pends on how much Jack or pull the culprit has at his command when he gets Into trouble, not on the quantity of alcohol he has con sumed. The craving for drink It not trans mitted, but the mental deficiency with weak will power, weak character that expresses itself In Intemperance la Inherited. Many alcoholics are also defectives and transmit the mental defect to children. Alcoholism In either parent la a predisposing cause of epilepsy In the offspring. Epilepsy, feeble-mlndedness, insanity, alcohol ism, narcotic addiction. These de fets when transmitted to children are not necessarily transmitted true to type, but as Indira ted. a defect which manifests itself as alcoholism or epilepsy in the parent may mani fest itself as feeble-mlndedness or insanity In the offspring, or vice versa. One reason why so many young people frequent drinking places is the failure of parents to exact a ! pledge from son or daughter, and In I turn the failure of moral or religious advisers of parents to urge them to ' their side. But they dull their points to me in perpetually writing In terms of triple classification. No. 1 the capitalists. No. 3 the bour geolse. No. 3 the proletariat. Their first consideration in appraising any one Is: To which group does he be long? They seem totally uncon scious that generation upon genera tion of un-Marxtan Idealists have keyed real Americans to a different tempo. Our proletarian of today is our bourgeoise of tomorrow how am I doing. Midge? and the capitalist the day after. Pew of our success ful men achieved success by legacy. America doesn't want "soclel secur ity" half sa much aa an unlimited chance to get to the top. Communism, as a whole, strikes me as lacking the saving grace of humor. Corollary to the fact that Marxism Isn't a politico-economic cause. It's a form of religion, and. as with some religions, fosters fa naticism. Who shoved me up on this soap box, anyway? , (Copyright, t033. McNaught Syndicate) Form Toner District. HILLS BORO, Ore.. June 21. (AP) Formation of the northwest power district was completed here last night at a meeting presided over by G. W. Thlessen of Clackamas. All nort h western Oregon counties, wltn the exception of Tillamook and Multnomah are declared to be in cluded in the organisation. The latest estimate places the population of Sacramento, Califor nia's capital, at 101,600, a growth of 1600 In three years. Brady, M.D. ask children to take the pledge and to renew It annually. "I cannot understand how a sen sible paper1 will continue to print your columns of fanaticism, preju dice and bigotry." writes a reader who says my teachings about alcohol get In his hair. "In fact,- I think you're nothing but a doltish nut." Then he Is at great pains to Inform me he Isn't a heavy drinker at all. only rarely geta "tight" and occa sionally drinks enough to "get feel ing good." This reader's letter fairly represents the half dozen no argu ment or logic, Just the Intemperate language one expects from an indi vidual who requires alcohol to "get feeling good." What a dreary exist ence life must be for such defectives, between drinkB or drinking bouts. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Inferiority Complex. I wish I could tell that young woman who asked for a pamphlet about Inferiority complex how I got over mine. Dally reading of the New Testament. When we gain glimpse of the Immensity of effort required of us, what la right or wrong In every living person., we are not continually in fe'ir of that unknown quality. We know whom to respect and why. Mrs. L. S. D. Answer Thank you. Perhaps the young woman will see this and reat the Book, you recommend. I keep no memoranda of correspondenci It wonld be an appalling task, and besltes most corresponnenta would prefer not to be filed. I think. So I can rarely recall the Identity of a correspondent, once I have answered his letter. Myopia. I am a crane operator. Plant phy sician found my eyes poor, sent me to oculist, who fitted me with glasses, which are fine for long distance seeing, but they make things bulge at me up to 60 feet. Is myopia curable or not? I'd do almost any thing to get rid of the glasses. S. S. Answer Probably bl -focal lenses would give you better results the lenses you have for distant vision, and plain lenses or none for near vision. Myopia Is a change in trie shape of the eye and. there la no cure for it. The Pill Obsession. Is It true that you claim no harm la done by neglecting the bowel ac tion for a week . . ? c. R. H. Answer Something like that. U you are a vlctfm of that habit send ten cents and stamped envelope bear ing your 'address for booklet which tells you how to correct "The Con stipation Habit." (Copyrlgh 1935. John P. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. milium Brady. M. !.. 263 El Camlno. Beverly Hills. Calif. Communications He Wim tiers To the Editor: The Chamber of Commerce an nounces that It has put over a pub licity article on the Rogue Valley In the Country Gentleman. 1 often wonder about the farmers who are lured to this country by the glowing "literature" of the Cham ber of Commerce. Do they make good? Are they satisfied? Do they stick? Do they feel they have been hon estly Informed ebout local condi tions? Arc they in the long run an asset to the ViVey? One may be excused these doubts If he has driven about certain parts of the valley and found new names on mall boxes every six months or so. THOMAS V. WILLIAMS. Route 4, Box 330. June 20, 1935. Medford. Ore. Cannery man Hurt. PORTLAND. Ore.. June 21. (AP I Prank Jones. 41. of Hubbard, waa recovering in a hospital today from Injuries declared to have been suf fered when a bearing burst at the Ray-Mailing cannery at Woodburn yesterday. Jones' left eye was Injured. Ose Mall Tribune want ada. HEATH'S DRUG STORE GLE-O-NIS PILE TREATMENT Formerly $5.00 now 81. 00. Fully guaran teed, money refunded if results are not satisfactory. Coty Face Powder 69c Alka-seltzer 49c Lifebuoy Soap 6c Jergens Soaps, 10 bars for 33c mn DRUG STORE Arthur Ruhl Arthur Brown Ruhl. special writer and dramatic critic for the New York Herald Tribune, died at hla home In Jackson Heights, Queens, New York, Friday. June 7. after contracting pneumonia while attending the open ing of The Players' revival of "Seven Keys to Baldpate" May 27. He v.&s taken to Rockford, 111. to hla birth place and was burled In the family plot there Wednesday, June 12. Mr. Ruhl, author of several books, had been with the New York Trib une Intermittently since 1013 as drama critic, foreign correspondent and roving reporter on foreign affairs. For many years before he had been a special writer for Collier's Weekly. He was widely known for hla Indi vidual style, which waa the result of. hla practice of covering a story dis passionately and later writing of It objectively at his leisure. For the greater part of the last ten years he wrote about the theatre In New York, and hla column, "Second Nights," contained carefully written reviews and analyses of shows pre pared after the, excitement of first nights had vanished. In the same way, his foreign correspondence and special articles rarely were "spot news." but rather were accounts writ ten on second -thought. Mr. Ruhl, who was 68 years old, was educated at Harvard where besides starring as a distance runner, he serv ed on the staffs of the Lampoon and , Advocate. He received his A. B. degree there in 1899 and Immediately came to New York, where he Joined the staff of the Evening Sun as a repor ter. He remained with that paper five years covering general assignments, Including police headquarters, and also wrote short stories In hla spare time. Hla fiction attracted wide public attention and he Joined the editorial staff of Collier's Weekly, with which he remained until '1913. During his nine years with that magazine he travelled all over the world on spe clal assignments, and following a dip lomatic Jaunt to South America with the EUhu Root Mission he published a book on Latin-American problems entitled "The Other Americans." For a time In 1913 he worked for The Outlook, and after covering the disastrous Dayton flood for that magazine accepted the position of drama critic of the New York Trib une. Although drama critic. Mr. Ruhl was called upon In April 1914 to cov er one of the biggest straight news stories In years, the historic electro cution at Sing Sing of the four men who murdered Herman Rosenthal, the gambler Several reporters for the Tribune had turned down the as signment declaring they didn't have the nerve. One reporter at the exe cution did faint, and had to be car ried out of the death chamber. Mr. Ruhl took the assignment. however, and after the electrocutions. which took place between 5:44 a. m. and 6:17 a. m.. filed a lead that was used In putting out one of the latest morning extras In the history of the Tribune. He had filed a long detailed description of the scene at 2:30 In the morning. Mr. Ruhl went to central Europe as war correspondent for Collier's in 1915, and to Russia In 1916 and 1917. He was war correspondent for the magazine in Prance in 1918 and in 1919 he visited the Baltic states for 't. There, In 1920: he became corres pondent for the New York Evening Post. He was Berlin correspondent for the Herald Tribune In 1925 and 1926, and while there married Zlnalda Ynk ovnchlkoff. an exile from Soviet Rus sia and a member of the former land ed aristocracy. Returning to New York he rejoined the drama department of the Herald Tribune, and while not writing his column, "Second Nights." spent much time on special assignments, many of them In the Latin American coun tries. He was the author of "A Break In Training." 1906: "A History of Track Athletics In America." 1905; "Second Nights." 1914; "Antwerp to Gainpoll." 1916; "White Nights." 1917; "New Masters of the Baltic," 1921; "With the American Relief Administration in Russia." 1922: "The Central Amer icans." 1928; and "The Other Ameri cans." Surviving are his wife, one son. Ar thur Paul Ruhl; his father Antes Schoch Ruhl. and a brother. Robert W. Ruhl. editor of the Medford (Ore.) Mall Trlbune Editor and Publisher. W orked to C.rt Meal WASHINGTON (UP) A marten tn Mount Rainier National park recent ly climbed 9.500 feet to get a dish of pork and beans. The animal appear ed one morning at the park's fire lookout station. He was admitted by the ranger and fl- Tlittl For a LIMITED TIME ONLY, with every purchase of a stand ard 1100 package of Crazy Water Crystals, we will give you one lutely FREE. we guarantee mat our to- j bacco and cigarette prices jl cannot be beaten any where. . ( fflA Flight 'o Time (Mvdford and Jackson County History from the files of the Mall Tribune of 10 and in Years Ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY June 21, 1925 (It Was Sunday) Simple funeral rites are observed at Madison, Wis., for the late Sen. Robert M. LaFoUette, progressive leader. State officials and prominent up state citizens flock to city o attend grand review and parade of the Na tional Guard tomorrow. New Lumsden building at corner of Sixth and Bartlett streets nears com pletion. Continued hot weather causes In crease in use of city water. Bootlegger fined $500 and sentenced to 90 days In jail for possession of a quart of moonshine. President Cooltdge "firm for tax reduction and economy." President denies his "economy talks hurt busi ness." Declares "the main Issue Is to reduce the burden of taxes due to federal extravagance." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY June 21. 1915 (It Waa Monday) Medford defeats Grants Pass. S to 4. and Hornbrook 5 to 3. In double header ball game Sunday. County court will hire a motor cycle cop to curb speeding on the Pa cific highway. "Motorcyclists have gone completely crazy. In the evening, and must be stopped," says Chief Hlttson. Non-arrival of undressed stone, de lays construction work on new post office. B. J. Palmer Is elected school di rector at annual meeting. Robert M. Lansing Is named sec retary of state to succeed William Jennings Bryan, resigned. (Continued from Page One.) tlnuous strength In recent weeks in the face of unencouraglng news. It refuses to follow bad news. It has lost its fear. Economists have written a hundred different excuses for the phenomenon. -One is that purchas ing power is belns stimulated by fed eral activities, but such activities have not increased lately. The other ! excuses are no better. What appears to have happened Is that confidence and self-assurance are being re-established by a fatal istic anticipation that the end of the depression cycle has been reached. Navy Secretary Swanson has writ ten a personal letter to Rear-Admiral Stirling, commandant of the Brook lyn navy yard, suggesting that the admiral be a little more careful about the articles he writes for magazines. BiMind FKi.'r !, I ; i r . I' B I f I lllll lirMvyo, WHAT'S A LADY TO DO? Here's one way to stop husband's snoring but you can't kill mosquitoes one at a time. You won't live that long. Kill 'em wholesale. It's easy! Mosquitoes, flies, ants, gnats and moths tumble down dead at the first whiff of Standard Oil Fly Spray! We make this spray to atomize completely and stay in the air long enough to kill insects whole sale. It gives you more killing power for your money. Standard Oil Fly Spray excels in the most widely-recognized killing tests. v pcK c cowu" of cmjk STANDARD Oil COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA The letter was not a reprimand, only & suggestion. What caused it wis the fuss stir red up largely by friends of the Soviet here about Stirling's last piece, sug gesting that European nations should stop quarreling among themselves and recognize the danger of a spread of communism. It was somewhat gratu itous advice. There is & rumor around that Pres ident Roosevelt will put out a state ment when congress adjourns, assur ing business that the major reform program hns now been enacted, that there will be no more. The rumor is premature, but the situation it describes is not.' It Is a fact that he Is keeping congress here to get his entire rerorm program out of the way. This coming fall will start a pull-year In preparation for the elections. SATURDAY NIGHT 4-PIECE ORCHESTRA BEER ON TAP LOG CABIN Main and Riverside Biw tuuimmum iiiiwjumnuj CttJxiA't' STRAIGHT WHISKEY You'll find Park Lane a most satis fying drink, whether you prefer highballs, cocktails, juleps or lust straight. Ask ibr No. 138C PINT N. Ill 1.70 Ot. N. I3BD 50' 'i Pt. OTHER STANDARD OIL HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTS CLEANING FLUID Koocks the spots out of every thing! so don't worry about pot. or smears. SELF-POLISHING WAX Dries bright in 20 minutes on hardwood, linoleum and other floors, without polishing. If you prefer to use a polisher, choose Standard Oil Paste Wax or Standard Oil Liquid Wax for lasting lustre. J FULL STRENGTH mosquitois - ruts roaches MOTHS - filAS - ANTS GNATS FREE j DANCE M$0T 95 i yp- p,nt HrtL & r fix hpp i mxmism