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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1935)
PAGE TWELVE MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "Everyon Id Southern Oreioa Bead! ttie Mail Trtbuoc" Dally Except ttaturdoj. Published by MEDKOBD PRINTING CO. M-37-Z N. Fir SL Fbon I. ROBERT W. RUHU Editor. Ad Independent Newspaper. Entered eecond-clsin matter a,t Mtd tord, Oregon, under Act of March 1, UiB. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mali In Advance: Dally, one year IS. 00 Daily, all month 1.76 Dally, one month 0 By Carrier, In Advance Mad ford, Aan land, Jacksonville, Central Point, Phoenix, Talent. Gold Hill and oo highway. Dally, one year 18.00 Daily, six month I3 Daily, one month SO All terma, caah In advanc. Official 1'BiNir of the) City of Med ford. Offlclul Paper of JiicknoD County. UEMDEK OF THE AHSOC! ATKI t'UfcSS RvccIvIuk Full luxrd Wire Her t Ice. The Aaaoclated Preae la exclusively en ttttrd to the uie for publication of all Dewa dlapatchea credited to It or other wise credited in this paper, and also to the local news published herein. All rights for publication of specie,) dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMI1ER OP UNITED PRESS MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advert! flng Representatives U. C. MOIiKNHKN COMPANY Offices In New York. Chicago Detroit, San Francisco. I.o Angeles, Seattle, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot Hj Arthur I'errj Oregon Republican are holding conclave In Salem today. Several ol the talks will give the Democrat! something to ahoot at and mlsi. The esteemed Oregonlan edito rially apologizes for publishing picture of a farm lady milking cow from the wrong side of the ani mal. The photo caused more excite ment than a picture of a dairyman on the right side of a pump-handle. e "BREAKFAST CLUB HOLDS TWI LIGHT PICNIC" (Yreka Journal) The next thing the masses know thd Noon Luncheon will be a Mid night Supper. e e It 1a now feared In diplomatic clr elea that the threatened Ethiopian Italian dispute will develop Into "a rellgloua war." Such a contingency may give some Ethiopian hero a chance to drop a 7ft-lb. Bible on Pre mier Mussolini's bunion. NO BVD BREATHING. (Girl Rcouta Bulletin) The value of exercise was ex plained by Miss Barker, physical director, after which the girls went through a series of gym nastics. The value of having the breath expelled in long pants was shown, Instead of short ones. The English walnut crop Is coming along fine, and all are about the size of the knuckles of a hired man's hind. In early days, pioneers used the Juice of the outer covering of this nut, to dye their buckskin britches brown. The shell Is a com bination of plg-tron and the Rock of Gibraltar, and even the pioneers were never hardy enough to crack game with their back-teeth. e Ev. Brayton. the orchardlst, has recovered from being mistaken for a lightning rod. by & bolt of light ning. It landed In his proximity. It la now claimed that the Darwin theory of evolution has been con firmed by scientific research. Even If Man did spring from a monkey. It Is now too late to do anything about It. see Lester Hammer of Columbia dis trict suffered a badly sprained ankle Saturday last when a cow which he was attempting to snub fell upon his leg. (Hermlston News) Cold shoulder In the barnyard rebuffed. Len Carpenter has been named a member of the state planning board. He plana to accept. e e The lady member of the Weyer haeuser kidnaping gang arrived at a Michigan prison yesterday and an nounced she "was through with men," and most of all her husband The husband, safely Impounded, can come right back and announce he is "through with women." A man won the Seattle dlaper changlng contest. There should now be a contest to determine who can hold the greatest number of dtdle plns In their mouth without drop ping one. est The prodigal Elks cat has again returned to the fatted milk saucer. e e The UofO. now has a chancellor emeritus. What they are apt to need la a halfback-emeritus, Moochers on the relief rolls have been ordered to toll, or no pan cakes. They shunned Jobs that Inter fered with solving economic prob lems on the street-corner. In seven Mid-West states, the governmental Santa Claus got his cotton-batten whiskers too close to a pink and burning candle. e lUSISESS IS nriNF.. Contrast that with the 8 cents a pound pnld the farmer for U months' toll, gambling with the ses sons. Anywhere from eight to twelve dollars Is paid for a pound and a half of cow hide to go on your hoofs. ) Laughter.) Under modern chemical processes of tanning. In 48 hours, the hide Is ready to be used In the manufacture of shoes; and yet H tnkes the rancher on the plains oi the West three mortal years to raise a pound of hide. I Cflngreesional Record WASHINGTON, July 3fl JPi A bill proposing to extend the boundar ies of Mt. Hrod National forest in Oregon for "purposes of forest man- , agement and municipal watershed i protftlr.n" nos offered today by Sen- ' ator McNary, R , Oregon). MEMBER J A Good THE appointment of Leonard Carpenter, on the state planning board, to replace the late D. C. Hcnny, is an excellent one. Like all of Governor Martin's appointments, it is NOT politi cal. The selection was not made with a view to building up any political machine, increasing the governor's political strength in southern Oregon. It was made solely with the view of benefitting the state giving southern Oregon representation on this important commission, and filling the vacancy with a man highly qualified for the job. While Mr. Carpenter has been a resident of Medford for 23 years, and always taken a keen interest and active part in the betterment and development of this section of the state, he has never sought political office, never been closely affiliated with either party; from a purely partisan standpoint he has been as independent as a hog on ice. But there is no man in southern Oregon, more genuinely interested in this state, its greater development along construc tive and business-like lines, or better fitted to represent this section, effectively, in carrying out the state-wide development program. Intelligent, capable and absolutely disinterested, Mr. Carpen ter should develop into one of the most useful and valuable members of the state planning board. It s "Sudden Death!" f N the Inst Readers Digest, is an article entitled "And Sud- den Death" which should be read by every motorist. Unfortunately the article is too long to reprint in this paper, and any condensation would impair its effectiveness. But we understand the article is to be distributed as a pamphlet, ho we suggest to any of our readers receiving one, not to throw it into the waste basket, but read it from cover to cover and then pass it on to the next door neighbor. The author is J. C. Furnas, and he certainly has done a swell job. It is the best bit of accident prevention propaganda, we ever have read; and as just an example of unforgettable, de scriptive writing, deserves rank as a minor classic. TIIERE is no pious advice on how, and how not to drive; no rules of the machine and the road; no moralizing or preach ing it is merely a grim and realistic record of what has hap pened and is happening every day, with motor, driving what it IS. Read it if you can get a copy and if you can't we are willing to give the Readers Digest some free advertising and suggest you invest in the current number, of the magazine. It will be money well invested, no matter how skillful and pru dent a motorist you may think you are. E0R "And Sudden Death" shows so graphically what so few motorists particularly the younger ones realize; that when they get at the wheel of a modern motor car, they are responsible for the conduct of a DEATH DEALING machine a lethal weapon just as much caution, care and awareness is needed, as if they were toting an elephant gun, loaded, cocked and primed, through the crowded streets of a large city. Once let all motorists realize this realize it not now and then, but nil the time and the instinct of self preservation will do the rest. For no motorist WANTS to suffer sudden death, or a lingering, painful death or inflict torture and misery upon others. As they spin along, they just don't think anything like that can happen that's all. Certainly it can't happen to them. Motor tragedies are for the OTHER fellow I VTOU can't read this article and not get THAT sort of non- sense out of your head. And when all is said aud done, THAT Bort of nonsense is the largest contributing factor in the steadily increasing fatality lists. Read it. We did. And we know one seven year old Buick that is going to have a better "shoo-fer" from now onl $866,694,982 Collected In AAA Processing Taxes WASHINGTON. July 3fl. (API The AAA announced today that the government has collected a grand to tal of $888,004,083 In processing and related taxes from May, 1033, through May 31, 1035. Related taxes. It was explained. In clude ginning taxes on cotton under the Bankhead act, producers' sales tax under the Kerr-Smith Tobacco act, and compensatory taxes collected on paper and Jute products compet ing with cotton. California .... Idaho .. Oregon Washington California Idaho ...... Oregon Washington ntoker Blamed PORTLAND. Ore.. July 2fl. A oarelesa smoker wu blamed by the flrt marshal today for the fire which destroyed a salea stable here Tuesday nltcht, causing the death of fourteen horses, five cows, three calves and a dog. FREES OARAGE In new location 801 N. Central. Phone 1388. Dance at Bonne? 'a Qiill Saturday nlht. I HOT? Let's do something about TRY bowl of criup Kellogg'i Cora Flake with milk or cream! Refreshing. Cooling. Won't over heat your body. Innlrt on Kel logg'. Thejr keep oven-freh In the hottest weather. 4T CORN FLAKES Selection The report showed collections di vided as follows: Wheat. $334,010,363; cotton. 33fl.034.013: paper and Jute, 13.310.704; tobacco, 48.4fl9.UA; field corn. 10.860,flo0; hogs. 354.315.586; sugar. 01.500.501; peanuts. t3.307. 400; rice, 17,710; cotton ginning tax. 947.313; tobacco producers' salea tax, 3.330.343. and unclassified, 1.033, 533. A summary of processing taxes col lected by states and commodities includes: Total Wheat Cotton Tobaeco 39.394.050 10.373,334 3.784 181 860,917 093.026 558.475 54,708 4.098 6.333.971 5.339.937 171,370 13.831 ... 8,773.633 0.673.379 307,748 30,978 Meld Corn Hogs Paper-Jute Sugar 43.713 $4,033,733 1,063.388 9.096.614 1.493 350.393 19.384 3.081 3.597 693.367 49.44S 30.463 91.363 1.633.644 40.960 64.346 Snell 111 SALEM, July 30. tip) With Eirl Snell, secretary of state, confined to bed with a severe cold, the board of control meeting scheduled for today was postponed until Monday. Gover nor Martin spent the day In Port land. Dance at Bonney's Grill Saturday night. Upholstering, repairing. 969-R. Thlbeult, Personal Health Service By William Brady, MJ). signed letters pertaining to personal health and byglene not to disease diagnosis or treatment wlU be answered by Or. 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, 263 El Camlno, Beverly Bills, CaL PRACTICING MKDCINE A technician who works In a clinic says of the basal metabolism test "Taking the metabolism rate with a m a c h 1 n el Al though I am paid to do It, I still think that It la the bunk, so to speak . . . The psychological ef fect on the pa tient ... the strange looking contraption . . I still think it Is the bunk my self. But remem ber I'm just quaint old door- to-door aocior ana what I don't know about newfangled gadgets fills huge libraries. But I've cautiously or caglly approached a good many real doctors and hotcha specialists on this basal metabolism thing, and I feel It my duty to tell the world they have completely failed to sell me the test. Mind, manufacturers and agents, I am not finding fault with the mach 1 ne . The m ach lne looks swell to me, and they tell me It Is quite accurate. I am merely telling readers who atill have any confidence In my Judgment, that I can't see what earthly use a basal metabolism test Is to physician or patient. Even if a BM, reading i came with each wad of chewing gum I wouldn't bother with It If I chewed gum. The clinical technician further re ports ( I have scouts everywhere, brothers) that In a meeting of a metropolitan dental society recently there was a hot discission of the Irk some habit of a certain health column conductor, calling dentists "dentors." Still, no one holds good dentistry In higher esteem than 1 do, and I never neglect an opportu nity to warn others against monkey ing with bargain dentistry and the makeshifts of dental quacks. An eastern dental surgeon calls my attention to a filthy, unsanitary practice of many dentists, namely the Improper use of waste receivers or receptacles at the chair. Many dentists use the same receptacle for patient after patient, plunging the waste carrying Instruments Into this highly Infectious material and car rying the Instruments into the mouth again. Every patient should have and Is entitled to a sanitary or sterile receptacle, free from other patients' waste, at all times. Pub licity about this would, in this dental surgeon's opinion, do a great deal to prevent mouth Infection and the spread of numerous diseases. Patients do not have to tolerate this mal-practlce. I am ashamed to say It who shouldn't, but to save me I could not tell at this moment whether my own dentist excuse the error. I meati my dentor uses an indi vidual receptacle for each patient. ' NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK. July 26. Thoughts while strolling: The blondes will wear red hats. Railroad station clocka always a bit fast to fool the laggards. Braddock never taking a drink In despair was a fine epic of ad versity. Steve Hannagan with sideburns could almost pasa for John Bull. Grand name for that new bar: The Twitter gym 5s. v Room. A Nor mandle docking still throws the po lice force out of gear. Ray Noble ap pears to be the only left-handed orchestra leader. Gold diggers' Jar gon of their pluckings: "A fast five." "a slow twenty" or a "tnxicab ten." Look allkes: Burton Rascoe and Fred Astalre. The head that artists would like to sculp: Clara Bell Walsh s. Ward Morehouse's puckish grin. All the Juleses seem to have Just popped oil of the bandbox j i4 f Ifree 10 A. M. to 4 P. M. 2 Pairs S1.00 First Quality Hose New Summer Shades Perfect Quality French Heels $1.00 Beautiful Pearl Necklace Present thl coupon and fc and receive one $1.0n Box of F.ire ponder, one r'n,u1lte Perfume, a SI. 00 Pearl Necklace and TWO PMHs OF I AIHKS FIKST I UrV $1,041 HOSE. If you cannot come at this hour, aend someone to our store before the sate, leave !fc and jour set will be laid aside for you. YOU PAY ONLY 99c IS WITHOUT A LICENSE, and I Imagine I'd notice such things more readily than would the average patient. However, the suggestion la certainly a good one. The dental surgeon knows the Importance of asepsis, absolute cleanliness, and every physician, surgeon or dentor should take the same view. New on second thought I do recall that my own dentor uses a recep tacle of a combustible nature, so that when, he finishes work the whole business Is removed and a fresh one placed on the stand for the next patient. After all, dentors practice medi cine. Dentistry is a branch of medi cine and surgery. Just where to draw the line between the proper field for the dentor and the field for the physician or surgeon, who can say? QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Soy Beans Full of Fat. I read In a magazine about soy beans being nourishing food. Please give your opinion and tell me where I can get soy beans . . . Mrs. L. C. Answer Soy beans contain 7.5 per cent water. 33 per cent protein. 31 per cent fat, 29.6 per cent carbohy drate and fiber and 6 per cent min eral matter, yielding 193 calories per pound. Dried navy beans con tain 12.6 per cent water. 22.5 par cent protein. 1.8 per cent fat, 59.6 per cent carbohydrate Including fi ber. 3.5 per cent mineral matter, and yield 1564 calories per pound. It is the high fat content that makes them more nourishing. Large mar kets or groceriea have soy beans. What Is the Crl? In an answer to a correspondent you said A wins his bet with B. A bet that colds are from a germ, and B bet they are from drafts. Isn't the draft the germ-maker? With me It la ... O. J. M. Answer Tactlessly I undertook to argue that with another opinionated, old gentleman and he threw me out of hia newspaper. Have It your own way. But the bacteriologists would be astonished to learn that drafts can make germs. Other readers who are not so sure about It may learn something to their advantage from the booklet, "Call it Cri." Send ten cents coin and stamped addressee envelope for a copy. - Better Breathing. Have practiced your . belly breath ing exercise for several months and have been greatly relloved of cramps in legs and find my voice ts stronger. It aid-i me in getting to bleep too. - Mrs H. L A. Answer Thank you. It is rarely that readers take the trouble fr.y send a repoit of their experience, even when they have nothing else to ask. (CopyiisM, 1935, John F. Dille Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Or. Brady should send letter direct to Or. William Brady, M. D 266 El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Calif. Olaenzer, Bache, Brulatour. And Charles E. Mitchell's lapel flower la as Jaunty as ever. Newest high-salaried calling cock tall hour slngingl Such as by Dwlght Fiske and Bobby La Branche. A thousand a week and better. And be lionized by the ladles to boot. Lee Shubert In one of those detached wanders. Sees no one. Plump Anna Held, Jr. In a cherry roadster. Nobody can express that woppd faun look like Jimmy Savo. What became of Lloyd Nolan, the hit of "One Sunday Afternoon?" Didn't John Barrymore whisk off page 1 In a Jiffy? Most vivtd movie character: Charles Laughton in Henry VIII. Sudden thought: Will The Empire State building outride the storm? Bruce Barton's daughter Betsey, after a ten months convalescence in an auto crack-up that Injured her spine, had her first day at the family dinner table recently. To cele brate the occasion she presided at a dinner of her father's close men friends. In. the party were Grant land Rl ce. Frank Cro wn 1 nsh l e Id . Lou Wurzburg. Dr. Benjamin Farrell. Rex Cole and Lou Maxon. And Mlsa Bar ton was the life of the party. Janet te Hsckett haa become the last of the glamorous and vanishing vaudeville troupers. Her flash danc ing act has been playing almost con tinuously since the glory of the Pal ace days In the surrounding sub urbia Jamaica, White Plains aud the rftrviiinati SATURDAY JULY 27th FOR ALL FIVE ARTICLES LIMIT 8 SFTS TO CTSTOMER SATURDAY, JULY 27th Western Thrift Cut Rate Cor. Main and Central Medford. Phone 274 like. The astute statisticians of var iety say that In another six months this form of entertainment will be completely extinct. It bangs on now because of the big movies that sprinkle a few turns between films. The number of these lessen weekly and It Is predicted all will abandon them shortly. Bronx express Interlude. He was a neatly-dressed, middle aged J. M. Barrle-looklng man. Ensconced In the only available subway seat, he drew a folded napkin from his pocket, spreading It carefully on his lap. Next he got out a pearl-handled knife and quite oblivious of fellow passengers, fished from another pock et a partially whittled cake of scent ed soap. Then he proceeded to carve toward Its logical conclusion a duck. The chips fell dalntly on his napkin. When he reached his uptown station the only thing missing about his adventure In art was the quack. And high up in a down-town of fice building Dr. Arthur Corby gives way to his hobby of collecting penny banks. He now has more than 1600 carefully Indexed on shelves In his eight room office. He has gathered them from every corner of the world and la said to be the only collector of this sort. As a child he longed for a certain penny bank he was never able to acquire. What was once New York's Auto mobile Row, between 53rd street and Columbus Circle on Broadway, is only a shell of an opulent strip. Its windows, salons and salesmen were the most fastidiously dressed In any area. Its, pavements flush with the most stylish shoppers. Even Jandorf, the first of his kind, became a mil lionaire selling used cars. Today three of the big motor buildings are starkly empty. Sales forces are shucked to a minimum. Everything has a marked-down air. The business has moved further up-town. Such weather recalls Mark Twain's line: "I feel like taking off my skin and sitting around in my bones." George Oershwln was standing nearby when a neatly dressed white haired man bent over one of those spurt-ups along the sidewalk edge for a drink. In leaning his hat and glasses fell off. In retrieving them his fountain pen and cane clattered to the ground. "I seem to have join ed the general collapse!" he cackled. (Continued from Page One) are the inquiry by the federal com munications commission into the American Telephone and Telegraph company, the senate Inquiry into railroad financing, and the federal power commission Investigation of utility Investment trusts. There Is some inner Jockeying be tween Secretary Perkins and Senator Wagner over naming the chairman and two other members of the new national labor relations board. The President asked Wagner and Miss Perkins to submit a list of suit able candidates. Later Miss Perkins called Wagner and said she had a list, naming Lloyd K. Garrison, for mer chairman, and Harry Minis, for mer member, as being on it. These names were satisfactory to Wagner. Misa Perkins said she would get in touch with them. It developed later that these two men have not been asked Lo serve. although the otners mentioned oy Miss Perkins were approached. Wagner, as co-author of the bill. Insisted on keeping the board outside of the labor department over Miss Perkins' protests. She persuaded the house to her viewpoint with the help of Chairman Connery of the house labor committee, but Wagner won. But In the end. Miss Perkins ap pears likely to win a substantial vic tory anyway In the naming of the board members, Niles President Anti-Crime Meet SEATTLE. July 26 (API Harry X. Nlles. Portland chltt ot police was elected president of the North west Antl-Crlme conference at the annual meeting here last nlslu. Chief Nlles succeeds Luke 8. May, Seattle criminologist, pre-dem ; . -the organization of the antl-cr:me conference In 1921. He was named president-emeritus. BJBjlnd ONLY Wv il Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jack sun County History from the files of the Mail Tribune or 10 and 20 Year AR TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 26. 1925 (It was Sunday) Sen. Korrls of Nebraska calls Presi dent Coolldge "A reactionary, and rigid adherent of New England econ omy." William Jennings Bryan, "The Great Commoner." democratic lead er, and champion of old-fashioned religion, dies aa he sleeps, from apol exy, at Dayton. Tenn. World mourns his sudden passing. For a score of years he was a national figure. Local grown crab-apples ready for market. Picking of Bartlett pears starts In the Modoc orchard. State law providing for dimming of auto lights goes into effect August 1. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 26. 1915 (It was Monday) "All trimmed hats at May Co. to be sold at 98c each." (Adv). The Willow Springs hills are swept by a brush fire. Monday afternoon considerable ex citement was manifest in Gold Hill Several of the local young ladles hav ing watched the races and fancy div ing of the day before, thought it was surely easy and betook themselves to the new swimming hole. Some of the boys of the town were already there and were kindly told to move on up the river, as they, the fair ones, did not wish to be watched. The boys moved on. The girls were enjoying themselves disporting around part of the apparatus, when Letsy Hod ges wandered too far and struck a deep hole. Marguerite Wharton went to her assistance. Then followed Florence Wharton. Marguerite Walker and Lets Fllppen. But all lost their bearings and ability to swim and were soon calling for help. The boys responded, and were soon bringing the mermaids (?) to shore. They are none the worse for their experience, although some were unconscious when they reached land. (Gold Hill Nuggets). Soldiers Patrol At Terre Haute TERRE HAUTE. Ind.. July 26. (API Patrols of the National Guard maintained their military zone today about the plant of the Columbian Enameling and Stamping company. as efforts to conciliate strikers' de mands for a closed shop continued. Two United States department of labor conciliators returned to Terre Haute from a conference with Gov ernor Paul V. McNutt, and expected to meet with officials of the mill. Vetch Crop Saved From Stubble Fire ALBANY, Ore., July 28. &) Headed by State Policeman Winters, a fire fighting crew of 30 farmers to day finally halted the march of flames which swept over 20 acres of vetch stubble on the Clarence place farm near Tangent. A threshing ma chine and several tons of threshed seed were saved. The fire consumed shocked vetch on ten acres of ground, re presently 4.000 pounds of seed. Some sacked seed was lost. Caves Hotel Must Pungle Up Taxes SALEM. July 26. (Pi The Oregon Caves hotel, owned and operated by a private company on federal prop erty. Is subject to taxation the same as any other private property In the state. Attorney General I. H. Van Winkle held In an opinion handed down today. The opinion was requested by Sher man Smith, district attorney of Jose phine county. f HEATH'S DRUG STORE Oronite Auto Polish 19c Coty Powder. 69c Compacts . . .49c (All new shapes and sizes) Lifebuoy and Lux Soap 6c SMA 90c Hanson Bath Room Scales $3.69 Johnson's Baby Talcum 19c $1.00 Eaton's Stationery . . .59c 25c DePree Tooth Paste 12c DRUG STORE GALA DINNER AT THE ROGUE ELK Saturday Night, July 27th Scintillating- Music Excellent Food and Refre?hmer.ts No Cover EXPECTED TO Ai P ST (Continued from Page One.) signed only for an Investigation ot the Banks trial, and not for a pardon. The preamble of the petition th.:t the two grange officials signed, ex presses the hope that as "a resuit of the Investigation" the governor will grant a pardon. The Bellview Grange officials and members, pojnt to the wording of the petition, in Justification of tne:r resolution. R. E. Nealon of Central Point, dis trict grange master for Jackson coun ty, said thLs morning he had re ceived no information of the report , Senator Zimmerman and Slaughter, or ether upstate grange ofXlctals would " attend the Pomona session at Phoenix tomorrow. THE OLD JUDGE IN KENTUCKY SAYS: "A lot of folks don't think anything's worth havin' unless it costs a lot. But they change their opinion mighty quickly when they taste Shipping Port Ken tucky Straight Whiskey!" Kentucky Straight Bourbon THE BEST STRAIGHT WHISKEY AT SO LOW A PRICEr?fl Frankfort Distilleries wJjw PINT LoulsMle & Baltimore Code 174-C Old Wilderness RltAND Kentucky fcSI1 Straight Whiskey I PINT Made liv Frankfort lode No. IKI-f Diaimd Oak "A fine place to eat" Open Saturday 6 a.m. to SUN. 3 a.m. Stop Here After The Dance .... American and Chinese Dishes New Style Chow Mein. 127 East 6th St. fit. .v.y - a -ax : oat. Lb. l-tS nETAEO DON'T LOSE HOPE! . . Dr. Kdwnrd Kolar. M. D. said: "Ourine help ed cases I had civen iid as hopeless. A trnlv rt-mnrkible sclpntf f lc renedv." No matter how vere vour deafness or headnoises are a few drops of Ounne in arh eir are guaranteed to help vou R. P. Maxwell. Depu OS if ty Sheriff griys: "Have lust fini.-!i ed my first hottte. clad to stat1 can now hear nv watch ttck. T day was the first time I heard tli. church bell rine In two years." Stop worry-in. us Ourine. 500.000 people have enloved Prompt relief. Mcdess 1 7c Kotex 16c Quarts Imperial Hand Lotions 59c Prince Albert . 10c Velvet 10c 1 Rubber Gloves 15c i EVENT DANG Charge 1 SHIPPING PORT a f