PXGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 193
MEDFORDfTRIBUNE
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MEMBER OF nNITED PRESS
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AdvartlHni Repreeentatlree
H. C. IIOOE.N8EN At COMFANt
Offlcee in New Tor. Cblcaio Detroit
San Francisco, Lo Ansalea. Seattle.
Portland.
MEMBER.
Ye Smudge Pot
I By Arthur Perry.
prmaflnn nf A third DartT In this
state, has been formally and legally
completed. It will battle for the
tiller and the toller, and to keep
from becoming three other parties.
e e
A problem has now arisen over
what to do about pre-Hallowe'en
devilment caused by "boys being
boys." It might be handled by pol
lcement being policemen.
e e
The location of the Southern
Cross, constellstlon strange to molt
northern residents, became last
night subject to spouted contro
Terey. (Ohlco,. Osl., Enterprise).
Correct though tactless.
e
Oliver n Crow) Rooster was mis
taken for a Chinese pheasant law
yesterday, and will be eaten for one
this evening.
e a
The season Is fast approaching
when eltlrens stuck In th north,
will be forced to go south.
-,
Hog-ralsers will vote on the ques
tion of receiving government pay
for hogs they didn't raise. It Is not
anticipated that the election will, be
so close, It will be necessary, to
count the votes they didn't cast,
e e
The "Congressional Special Cora
mltfee on Un-Americen Activities"
reports. Communism "Influences
boys and gins st the age of eight."
At this tender age. a cure can be
affected by a buslnesa-llke .applica
tion of the flat side of a cspltallstle
hair-brush.
a
NEW SHIRT LOOKS NICE
(Scottish Country Life)
It was characterlstle , of the
thoroughness with which Sir
Arthur Rose is carrying out his
work as Commissioner for Dis
tressed Areas in Scotland that,
on the occasion of cutting the
first sod of the Oarnock Valley
drainage scheme at Dairy, he
took off his coat for the Job.
One of the Older Olrls has her
llrst eye-glasses. They Improve her
vision, and do not Impair her looks,
any more than her fall hat.
e e
' "Some people are cheerful losers,
and others can't act." (Brooklyn
Eagle). A great and Ignored truth.
e e e
The longshoremen again threaten
a strike. They left a conference In
high dudgeon because a oourt sten
ographer was present. The situation
will not be serious until an em
ployer shows up with his hair parted
on the wrong side.
e e e
In the Klamath county rumpus,
a county Judge Is Indicted for
atMlInc nr.rr.lnna nr a brides. It
seems the bridge was not wired for
s radio broadcast of the aliened
event, and votera could not hear the
planking squeak, when yanked
loose.
a e
INSlflNiFICANT SMITH
TV, nam, nf Rrnam anneara larse
In the headlines. Brown, we are led
to believe, won the football gams.
A five-column photograph shows us
Brown In the act of carrying the
' ball over.
' Ku. ahA ta th unidentified
youngster with the long legs who
la one step ahead or Brown in me
nhAtitannhl Itla nam la Smith, and
he Isn't a hero. He doesn't count.
Brown carried the ball over the
goal line five times, and all this
fellow Smith had to do was lope
at hie side and straight-arm tackier
wma ht noalana nn Brown. He
merely cleared the way and reduced
Brown'a duties to the simple busi
ness of trotting behind and dinging
to the ball. (Exchange).
e a
The country this week survived
the thrill of Joan Crawford, the
movie queen with the longest eye
wlnkers getting msrrled. and photo
of Clark Oable. a leading He of the
acreen. with a Peruvian soprano on
his knee,
a
The first frost appeared on valley
pumpkins and auto tops this morn
ing. Ice formed on mud puddles
end wash-basins back of Trail. Mak
ing of apple vinegar has started,
end, is apple vinegar. Instead of
something alcoholic, aa in the dry
area.
e a
"LEGISLATURE EXPECTED TO
BETTER STILL" (Lakevte Exam
iner Hdllne). There la no doubt
about It.
Cse Mall Tribune want Ids.
The Vital Issue in 1 936
ACCORDING to a dispatch from New York, Senator Borah
believe! the 1936 Republican campaign should be based
upon "a trust busting issue." 1
T. R. jr. disagrees. Colonel Roosevelt grants the evils of
monopoly, and is a firm believer in the established American
principle of competition, but he believes there will be more im
portant issues in 1936 than trust busting. t -
We agree with T. R. jr. There will be many more. In fact
some problems which are important now may not be important
then. The world Is changing rapidly, and whether or no, the
United States will be changing with it. The senior senator from
Idaho better wait about naming the paramount issue, until the
time for writing the party platform arrives.
e
AND with this changing world may come a radical change'in
the popular attitude toward so-called trusts, particularly
where trusts represent not actual monopolies, but large concen
trations of capital, engaged in mass production.
The way things are going now, an issue that hasn't been a
live one for many years may oecome of vital importance to the
people of this country as a whole, 12 months hence, i.e.: the
"high cost of living. "
Prices are going up now, with gold pouring into this country
from abroad, with business in practically all directions steadily
improving, the average person'in 1936 may be chiefly concerned
with adjusting income to outgo, to his own comfort and satis
faction. If such a situation should come to pass, the people would
take about as much interest in a trust busting campaign, as in a
campaign to restore the Smoot-Hawley tariff.
IN fact as far as trusts represent mass production as opposed
to piece-meal production, they also represent reduction of
costs to the consumer. There would be less than mild interest,
on the part of the rank and file, in an effort to break up all
large units of production, and replace them with innumerable
small ones, if this were to result in increasing rather than de
creasing, what the average man
had to have.' '
Trust busting was a live and
of the original T. R. " In this dizzily revolving world, with such
vast and far reaching changes,
only a secondary issue, and promises soon to become no issue
at all.
How to provide profitable work for those who want it, how
to maintain a decent standard of living for those who deserve
it; and while doing these things, how to maintain a democratic
and solvent government, in this field as we see it, lie the issues
for the next presidential campaign, and in no other.
: War News Is
AT the present rate war news
r-AincArArl t.ft An innirlfl rmffA.
For it is becomng more and
news from the seat of war at least none that can be relied upon.
Haile Selassie controls the
controls the news from the two chief army headquarters. Natur
ally these two sources conflict and naturally also, neither side
sonds out anything of importance or that would tend to give
encouragement to the enemy.
So about all we know.about
know NOTHING, and will know nothing, until some of tho
correspondents now in that country, are able to get out of it.
When this happens there will
that when it does happen, a European war will not be on, and
the dispatches sent will not have to be relayed through censor
ships at Rome, Paris or London,
In which case of course, this country will only get the nous,
the various governments wish them to have.
It's the same old story. As far as war news is concerned,
history is repeating itself.
The TRUE history of the world war was not written until it
had ended. The historv of this war won't be.
Who Is Looney Now?
A N American journalist writing in tho Nation from Florence,
Italy, claims Mussolini doesn't fear war with Great Britain
but welcomes it.
In fact knocking John Bull out of the European picture and
puttirlg II Duce in, is a part of the present Fascist program.
Italian Fascists it appears, believe as the former Kaiser be
lieved, that England has not only seen its best days, but is deca
dent. "Mussolini" as this writer expresses it, "plans to plant
the imperial Roman lion, on the cadaver of the British empire,"
am) so forth and so on.
XTTELL, we admit an American journalist living in Italy
should know considerably more about Mussolini's pur
poses than one living five or six thousnnd miles away in Med
ford, Oregon.
Nevertheless aforesaid Mcdford editor can't see it or believe
it, and we fear is so plain dumb he will just have to be shown.
For how in the name of common sense can Mussolini expect
to knock out John Bull, with the British and French fleets
against him? How in fact can he wage war in Ethiopia or keep
his people at home from destitution and starvation, until he
wipes the combined British and French fleets from the seas?
And what does he intend to do this with?
Italy not only can't wage a
at home, without imports of coal,
We fail to see why the combined British and French fleets
couldn't bottle up Italy, completely in 24 hours, if war should
be declared.
In fact if this is Mussolini's program, wo can only conclude
II Uuce is as mad as a March hare. Perhaps that's the answer.
He is.
State Ag. Director
Able Walk Again
ftAlJCM, Oct. 17. OP) Solon T.
White, state director of apiculture,
was able to slk about ith a rn
yesterday for the first time since he
would have to pay for what he
burning issue, back in the days
economio and social, it is at best
No News
from Ethiopia will soon be
V
more apparent, there is no real
news from Addis Ababa; Italy
this war in Ethiopia is that wc
be a story, assuming of course
foreign war, she can't keep going
oil, foodstuffs, iron and steel
fell from a rock and dialooated both
knees at Suplee in Crok county near
ly three weeks ago.
The accident happened the dfcf be
fore the dw huntlrtg season opened,
as the sgrtculturat director wa con
tempt tine a hunting trip wt'.h
friend.
1 Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M. D. .
signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene Dot to disease
diagnosis or trealment will bt answered By Dr. Brady If a stamped self-addressed
envelope Is enclosed.-- Letters should be brief end written In Ink
Owing to the large number of letters received only e few can be answered
No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or.
William Brsdy. lies El Camlno, Beverly Hills, tat
COLITIS CRASHES
Under title "No Colitis In This Col
umn" not long ago X said here:
It is not Just out of the meanness
of my heart that
dodge considera
tion o t colitis
here. It la because
I do not know
anything about it
and the subject
does not seem to
me to fit in a
health column. I
hope readers
who Imagine they
have colitis will
not quit. Just as
soon aa anything
turns up that seemb worthy I'll pass
It along."
Something has turned up. Contri
bution from a colleague whose prac
tice la limited to proctology:
Etymologlcaliy "colitis" means in
flammation of the colon . . . rarely
shows real Inflammation, hence the
colitis seldom seen.
Hypersecretion and hy'permottltty
flth no inflammation Is very com
mon. Its real cause Is ordinarily not
recognized and consequently treat
ment Is seldom satisfactory. '
A better name for It Is colu-muco-
sls meaning excessive mucus in the
colon.
Some authorities consider this af
fliction a pure neurosis, but they stop
short right there.
(And let us stop briefly to explain
right here that mumus is the correct
spelling for the noun, mucous, for
the adjective. Neurosis is a func
tional disorder, presumably of the
nervous system, for which no- cause
Is known or no lesion is found on ex
amination for Instance epilepsy, mi
graine, hysteria, writer's cramp, spas
tic constipation).
My experience, continues the proc
tologist, has cdhvtnced 'me one will
generally find a definite source of Ir
ritation If one makes a careful rectal
examination. The ano-rectal region is
supplied with filaments from the au
tonomic ("sympathetic") nervous sys
tem which governs all the vital func
tions. Perfect function here means
perfect balance between the oppos
ing controlling forces or reins, viz.,
the activator or vagus and the In
hibitor of 'checker or sympathetic.
Persistent Irritation of terminal
ano-rectal nerve filaments reflex. y
overstlmulates the colon to increased
function, hypersecretion of mucus
and hyper motility or excessive pers-
talsls colic or cramp, and the effect
Is coll-mucosls.
In my earlier days in this field I
was frequently astonished at the com
plete and permanent relief of long
standing cases of so-called colitis
following proper treatment of some
such condition as anal fissure, a
troublesome hemorrhoid or pruritus.
Then X began to be on the alert for
such sources of Irritation which were
not at the time complained of. . . .
It Is curious how these patients dwell
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
Ry O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK. Oct. 17. The depres
sion's aftermath colled many queer
mental kinks along Its destructlve.path.
There is the mid-
die aged man-about-town
with
a flourishing bus
iness of his own
who lost every
thing In 34 hours,
Fortunately, he
has several grown
children a m p ly
fixed.
They provide
for all the need
ed comforts, in
cluding the fresh
lapel flower he
has worn since early manhood. Yet
poverty's mark of terror Is still upon
him. Rational about moat things, he
believes he Is penniless and in danger
of starvation.
So when he meet acquaintances
on the street he panhandles for as
little as as cents, But continues to
lunch at the best places, charge ac
counts having been arranged for him.
Even after a filling meal he will often
ask the waiter for loan of a small
amount.
Then the Wall Street broker, once
a delight to the gleaners along the
way that is white. He, too, was un
tnissed over night. The shock gave
htm a delusion of grandeur. With
his spare nlckles he phones for table
reservations at expensive cafes and
eats In one-armed lunches.
With a hew three-year starring
contract. Irvln S. Cobb Is likely lost
to New York permanently. He has
put his co-operative Park avenue
apartment and East ha mp ton home on
the market. And some time ago
bought a former Oarbo mansion at
Santa Monica. Cobb's advent In the
movies was not a sudden whim or
freak of circumstance. He has al
ways had n secret longing to be an
actor. He expresses It in a limited
way by his country-wide swing of
the Chautauqua and on various lee
ture junkets. When In the full flush
of his writing career, he worked from
B a. m. until 1 p. m. dally and his
afternoons were usually spent at The
l.ambs or The Players in company
with actors. His cronies Included
Itfun
COMPACT TWO-STORY COLONIAL
x See BIO PINES LUMBER CO.
tTiNlNa t' " " 0
THE COLUMN
on. and apparently exaggerate, thtr
mucosls symptoms and yet Ignore or
minimize the symptoms of an under
lying rectal condition, so that tho real
cause of their troubles escapes at
tention unless the physician is mind
ed to look for it. (End of colleague's
remarks).
We all know a great many people
use alleged pile remedies when In
fact they have no such trouble. I
wonder whether there are not as
many people taking treatment, medi
cine, funny diets or unnatural "in
ternal baths" for what purports to
be mucous colitis, when the actual
source of the trouble Is some such
simple ano-rectal lesion as the proc
tologist describes. It beats alt how
prudish and silly and difficult peo
ple of limited Intelligence can be
about a proper examination In such
circumstances.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Premature Baldness
Twenty years old. Have been los
ing my hair for four years. Not 'in
spots, but over the whole scalp. Dr.
.. gives me a shot of antui-
trim once a week. Do you. think this
Is any good? Also, X massage my
scalp every night for 10 minutes. (C.
A.)
Answer. Your doctor is a good one.
I think I'd stick with the treatment
for a reasonable trial period, say three
months, tf I were you. Send a stamp
ed envelope bearing your address and
ask for monograph on Care of the
Hair and Control of Dandruff.
Hunchback
What are the consequences if a
woman marries a hunchback? I think
it Is from tubercular spine. (C. P. M.)
Ans, Nothing hereditary of com
municable about it. If the man has
not tuberculosis, now, he may be fit
for marlage. In any case, why not
ask the prospective bridegroom to
present his health certificate from a
physician you know of standing?
Every man should do that as a mat
ter of course, before contracting an
engagement to marry.
Iodin Ration
T have been on your iodin ration
now for the second month. It cer
tainly has put new pep in me. I am
70 years old and have more pep now
than I had at SO. (W. T. B.)
Ans. In two words that's what It
does. Adults who are stale, getting
turely gray, slowing down, getting
old before their time, generally need
lodln. Directions for taking the tod In
will be mailed If you ask for it and
Inclose stamped envelope bearing your
address. If you want the booklet,
"Regeneration Regimen," which In
cludes also advice about diet, inclose
10 cents In coin.
(Copyright, 1036, John P. Dllle Co.)
Ed. Note: persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to nr.
IVIIIInm Hrailj. M l).. 269 1
Camlno. Beverly Hills. Cat.
Hoi brook Blinn, Maclyn Arbuckle,
Frank Craven, Wilton Lackeye, Sam
Bernard end lw Fields.
Up until a few years ago, there
were four grand old men of the palmy
days of opera bouffe. They were De
Wolf Hopper. Francis Wilson, Jeffer
son DeAngelis and Frank Daniels.
They were all past 70 and seemed des
tined to reach the century mark. But
time changed the picture and only
Wilson remains. Of the Illustrious
four, three came out of that mar
velous incubator of talent, the Mc
Caull Opera Company, Daniels being
the exception. Francis Wilson, the
survtvior. Is lively as a cricket. His
notes now and then have the Jubi
lant spirit of a very young man.
A jobless telegraph operator In
Reading, Pa., writes: "I am grateful
to the depression for an acquaint
ance with Dickens. Employed. I
would not have visited the public li
brary and spent hours with the au
thor who top-notches In making the
trivial tremendous. Dickens can take
a speck of dust and make' it furl,
twirl, whirl and swirl through a half
dozen pages. So that a wisp becomes
a whirlwind.
, -
They toll of a Saturday night fisti
cuff in Leavenworth, Kas., in which
Bide Dudley was one of the partici
pants In his younger days. His op
ponent was twice his size and husky
Before any actual blows were struck,
three lookers-on grabbed Dudley while
one man grabbed hla enemy. After
a little scuffling Bide said to his
trio: "Two of you fellows go over and
help hold htm. One man can hold
me."
Bagatelles: Alf Land on. the "horse
and buggy governor of Kansas, bal
ances hta budget and lets no man go
hungry. . . . Harry Ktlnger, president
of a large auto company, addresses
every one of his hundreds of sales
men by their first names. . . . W.
R Hearst takes his coffee half hot
milk and half coffee. . . . Virginia
Faulkner Is being hailed as another
Dorothy Parker, . . , Jack Frye, once
an airmail pilot, now an atrline pres
ident, flies his own plane over his
company's entire route once a month
. . . Dean Cromwell. Tom Webb, John
La Gatta and Reynaldo Lura. all
mazarine illustrators, are also camera
addicts. . , , Stanley Dollar. Jr., son
of the shipping mngnate. Is an avid
racing boat fan. . . . Enthusiastic
deep sea angles: Caleb Bracg and
Dick Berlin. . . . Marlcn E. Pew is on
a trip around the world.
No modern novelist has a name so
FOR TOTAL COSTS
damascened in courtly splendor as
Conlngsby Dawson. It even surpasses
Sir Hall Calne. He makes one think
in terms of gold plate service, of
lackeys in silver-buckled k a
breeches, of the pampered heir, the
son of the old Ear) who calls his
father "Governor."
(Copyright, 303S, McNaught
Syndicate)
Qomment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
NOTE these headlines; '
"Genera! European conflict
Foreseen by Italian Leader: Mussolini :
Abandons Last Hope of Avoiding War
Great Britain."
HOPEFUL, or otherwise?
Well, that's a hard question to
answer. Sometimes, you know, when
you're sitting in a poker game and
get a hand that doesn't look so good,
you RUN A BLUFF.
Mussolini may be doing that.
YOU never can tell what diplomats
mean by what they say. If di
plomacy, which means the contact of
nation with nation, were a little more
honest and straightforward and a lit
tle less diplomatic, it might be better
for the world. '
THIS dispatch-from Paris interests
Americans :
".Officials disclosed today that
France and Great Britain are asking
Washington If the United States is
willing to restrict Its imports from
Italy In case such a sanction against
Premier Mussolini's nation Is applied
by the league of nations."
THIS writer, as one quite unimpor
tant American, would answer:
"No. We're going to run our own
business, this ,ttme, and let you run
yours. We weren't smart enough to
do that in the World war, but we
ARE smart enough to learn by hard
experience."
THIS dispatch from Trenton. New
Jersey, is significant, if not par
ticularly reassuring:
"The footsteps of men marching
past his cell to the electric chair is
apparently getting to be an old story
to Bruno Richard Hauptmann."
FIVE condemned criminals have
walked past the door of Hauptmann's
cell, on their way to the hot seat,
since the kidnaper and murderer of
the Lindbergh baby entered the prison
death house.
UHY?
FT The answer is plain. These five
lacked the money, or the influence,
or the backing of sa-headed, mushy
sentlmentallsm to enable them to in
voke legal delay after legal delay to
keep them out of the death chair.
A situation like that doesn't help to
build confidence In law and order and
constituted authority.
J ET'S remember that the next time
a lynching occurs outside the
South, where race fear dominant
Weather.
Northern California: Fair tonight
and Friday; normal temperature; gen
tle north to east wind off the coast;
Saturday fair.
Oregon: Fair tonight and Friday.
except unsettled northwest portion
and rain north coast; local fogs in
west portion; freezing temperature
east portion tonight; moderate to
fresh southerly wind off the coast.
IT TAKES A
GOOD WHISKEY TO
MAKE SO MANY
FRIENDS
Folks are justlike in the old
days a real quality whis
key at a friendly price is
just as welcome as ever!
Taste this flavorful richness
that is making a barrel of
new friends every day.
You'll find as others have
that you don't have to be
rich to enjoy rich whiskey!
7533
NT
TH. OLD QUAKER CO.. J . ' 5 J f
DISTILLERS jf fjt1?iffai 1
Flight fo Time
Medrord and Jackson Counlx
history from the (lies or the
Mall Trtbone 10 and to fear,
ago).
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
Oetober 1J, 1925
(It was Saturday)
Rain predicted for next week.
T. M. C. A. drive In Ashland given
strong support.
Tom Murray, atate prison convict,
who slew two guards In prison break,
la sentenced to hang by Salem Judge.
Secretary of Treasury Mellon urges
a heavy cut In Income taxes.
Portland bootlegger nabbed at Cen
tra) Point.
Seventh Day Adventlats to erect a
new church here. -
Hear East drive in county close to
quota after second day's effort.
Medford high defeats Klamath Falls
23 to 0 on gridiron. "The team loaf
ed," said Coach Callison.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
v October 17. 1915
- (It was Sunday)
Millinery course to be offered stu
dents of the high schools. .
Germans report progress along the
Serbian front: British cabinet faces
crisis over affairs in Balkans; admin- j
isirauon'B plan to spend S400.000.000
for national defense viewed with
alarm. .
Walter Bowne and Leonard Carpen
ter returned from a trip via Dead
Indian to Lake of the Woods and
claim to have been first to make the
trip by auto. The road is a fright.
Hob Deuel ta named second lieu
tensnt of Company 7.
Council takes steps to stop surplus
whistling by Espee engines. Assist
ant Superintendent Fred Hansen of
the rstlroad had to stop twice while
making a apeech . on account of two
trains whistling long and loud.
Governor Withycombe to attend :
dedication of Armory here October 27 I
Last State Fair
Netted $16,000
SALEM, Oct. 17. (&) The 1933
state fair resulted in a financial
profit to the state. Solon T. White, j
ww BegTicunurat airector, reporteo
today.
The report which waa filed with
the state agricultural board, listed a
profit of approximately $.16,000. The
board Immediately began making
plana for a larger fair next year
THE HEfOHT OF ABM.'RDITY
Chippewa Indian chief
Says painting of toe-nails
All right for some,
No good for squaws.
Tnjun stand for war-paint,
4ut not for painted toes. ,
Some things too absurd
Even for Injun.
Don't bury money;
Too ridiculous.
Even for White Man;
Put money where L
It will be safe.
FARMERS AND FRUITGROWERS
BANK
(Community Builders.)
iVly last
request: fyy
flavor me -with
Schilling
Poultry
Seasoning
$1 Ak Qart
35
x
Portland Seeds
Huge Road Fund
PORTLAND. Oct. J7. (P) The city
of Portland made application yester
day for S998.938 Works Progress ad
ministration funds to launch the)
first units of a new waterfront htiih
way route northward from the Pa
cific highway at Ross islaud in South
Portland, and for a foothills route
to the northwest from the same point.
The city proposes to contribute)
$205,000 for materials and rltjh of
way.-
BOISE, Idaho. Oct. 17. (Pi A
marriage license was issued here Wed
nesday to Elijah A. Stinson. Khmetn
Falls, Ore., and Ruby Lewis, Cascade,
Idaho. '
Knights of Columbus benefit card
party will be given Thursday. Oct. IT,
st the Catholic Parish hall. Prizes
for high score.
Stops
Present
Leaks
In your roof and
prevents new ones
81 e per ga
In 5 gal. lots
Timber Products
Company
Medford End No. Centra! Are.
Phone 7
..H'
PIANO
TUNING
W. P. BROOKS
Tel. 1451-E
1514 W. Main
On, Job Again Oct. 25
Helps Hearing
It la estimtaed that 10 per cent of
our population suffer in some degree
from deafness. But a Chicago chemist
estimates that 75 of eer trouble
are preventable. "Most of us would
be surprised." says Milton Folds, "if
we knew how much foreign matter,
such as dust and dirt, hardened wax.
etc., becomes congested and prevents
proper hearing." OURINE, originated
by a world-famous European ear spe
cialist, la prepared for deafness, head
noises, earache, ringing and buzzing
in ears. If you suffer or worry, get
OURINE today. Relief is quick costa
only a few cents a day. Money back
If not satisfied. Woods Drug Co., Mala
and Central. Adv.
NOW AVAILABLE
IN OREGON
1