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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1935)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUSTE, MEDFOHD. OREGOX, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1935. Medford$sI&Tribune "Kveryone to Hootberti Orefn. Ben (La tb Mail Tribune" Daily Bicapt Satordaa. Published by HClirURD PBINTINil CO. N. nt at. pbone ROBERT W. RUUU editor. AO Independent Newapaper. Entered aa eecond-cleae metier at lord. Oregon, uoder clol Marcb I, Uad llll annsnRIPTION RATES Br Mall 10 Advance: Dally, oaa yaar II. ao I.Ta Dally! oca raontb wli",;;;"..'!: By Carrlar. In Advance Medtora. Aan land. Jackeonvllle. ClDlrll Point. Pboenli. Tai.nt. Oelo Hill and on hlibiraya. . Dally, ona yaar !? Dally, all montha Dally, ona month All t.rma. caah In advance. Official l-aper o tlia City ol Medferd. Official Taper ui MKMIIKB ttf THIS ASSOCIATED CHUUg Hecelvlns mil i.e"a Tba Aaaoeintad Praaa la aiclu.lvel, an titled to tba naa lor publication of all nawa dl.p.tchee credited to It or other wlia credited In tbla paper, and aleo to tba local newa publlahad bereln. All ruble for publication of epectal dlapatcbee herein are alao reearved. MEMBER OF UNITED PRE8B MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Adaartlalns ""'""I'ilJiV B. C. MOOENSEN at COMPANI Offlcea In New York. Chicago Detroit . Ban Frenelaco. I.oa Angelea. Seattle. Portland. Ye Smudge Pot I Br Arthur Perry. Torrential rain have transformed ..1.1 i.., rn.da and battlefields Into nhl. rAivtltlon. It Is feared, will cause the 'civilized war to sink to the uncivilized meanness of an American political campaign, a e a National Doughnut week Is sched uled for January. Now Is the time to start movement for the abolish ment of the hole in the old-fasn-loned. horse as buggy doughnut. . ' The crimpy weather of the Paat week has caused Civic Humdingers to get up In the middle of the night to hunt for the blanket they tell tourists they sleep under every night In the year. j "A flak was found beside the In jured man. and the police .picked up his hat 40 feet away." (Press Dispatch) It look like he took a nip from a bottle of Cream of the Wnshboller brand, 1931 rintage. A measure haa been introduced in the special session of the legislature for the licensing of lot-machines, and kindred nickel-snatch In g con trivances. The bill provides one ftlot machlne for every 400 people, and one marble board for every 100 peo ple. No provision wa Included in the bill, prohibiting the line waiting for a chance to play the contrap tions extending beyond the city limits. 'BEST MAN DID NOT WIN QUEEN CONTEST. (Sandra (Kan.) Economist) It i time for the lady contestants to rise aa one man. A autfesman report that while traveling, on the Crater lake high way late last night, he passed an auto with both headlights glaring. State, county, and city authorities are Investigating. c Conditions are now Ideal for wna tgur woodsmen to take walks In the vjjriW and be lost In a thorough manner. Italian planes, war reporta say. flew Igw Monday afternoon, and "killed 300 cows." The cows were contented as could be. and not hotherlnc Mussolini. The unreliabil ity of war news is well known. It may develop that ro all-day battle resulted In the death of ft- mule. "This little community la full or Forda and atitomobllee." (Humbug Creek News) A country correspond ent revives an ancient slur. The favorite pastime of many politicians Just now. according to varied editorial comment "is look ing ahead and picturing what will happen when the Old Age Pensions of $200 are paid." In the best think ing circle, there Is conMderable looking ahead and picturing what will happen when the Old Folks dis cover they have been fooled by the pollttclnna, The state senate yesterday de fested the bill prohibiting military drill at the University of Oregon. The general public feels that as Jong as atudenta are able to march In Communistic parades, It will do them no harm to do some march ing for the government thtit la pay ing for their education. There was a genial feeling here hat & blunder by .Umpire Howard Scheffel of Mfdford gave the unde feated Medford team a last-minute Victory over the undrrdog Pelicans. (Portland Journal) "denial" like a morgue. Multnomah county Juries have adopted the policy of squelching the practice of shooting clttrena In non- vital parts for views contrary 10 those of labor leaders on labor ques tlons. There Is also a strong aentl ment that the custom of doing as one pleases, and then He out of It on the witness stand, has gone far enough. KINO OF I,rOHTKR. (To Tom Wradley) Tom B, has gone a-tourlng. ' And I am lonely now. And so are many comrades. But to hla will we bow. There never was ft comrade. Like Tom. th-a Laughing King, Who give his treat approval Concerning tales we bring. So hurry bacli, Tom Bradley, And bring your laugh along. X need you s ft neighbor. And need you tn my song. (Banker -Poet) Bring Them to Bookl WHEN the Oregonian and the Portland Journnl apree upon something it must have merit. ' Jn this case it certainly ha. Both Portland papers heartily approve o the recent convic tions in the Billingham union labor shooting case, and both demand the Oregon Bar Association bring the defense attorneys to book, for their unethical methods in attempting to free their clients and defeat the ends of justice. Established evidence clearly indicates that: The Billingham brothers confessed their guilt and wanted to plead guilty. But their lawyers persuaded them not to do so. They also persuaded them to repudiate their confessions, claim they had been secured by third degree methods and intimidation on the part of the police, and perjure their way to acquittal. Such methods are frequently adopted by certain types of criminal lawyers, are frequently suspected by the public; but any real evidence to support the suspicion, is so often impossible to get. Where there IS evidence, as is true in this case, according to the sworn testimony of the defendants themselves, what POSSIBLE excuse can there be for the Oregon Bar Association to ignore such disclosures T AS we see it none whatever, unless the State Bar association's frequently announced policy of favoring thorough going legal reform, has just been so much window dressing, and has not. been advanced in good faith. . Nothing has done more to increase crime in this country, and make the United States a happy hunting ground for criminals, than such unethical and really criminal tactics, as apparently were adopted by the lawyers in this case. Nothing has done more than such cases as these, to place the entire legal profession under a cloud as far as public opinion is concerned. The Mail Tribune is glad to join with the Journal and Ore gonian, in demanding that the Oregon Bar Association take cognizance of this case, and pr6ceed at once to have the lawyers involved, come before the proper they should not be disbarred. Motorcars A THE motorcar Jan who is impatiently wailing for rear-mounted engines, true tear-drop bodies in which streamlining is carried to its extreme, such innovations as Diesel motors, and what not, is going to be disappointed in the 1936 ears. But the conservatives are in for an inning, with the 3936 lino. The cars, most of them, will month. They have added beauty and refinements throughout that will make for the comfort and convenience of the driver and passenger. - But the changes are not radical. The fact is that the manufacturers, by complying with the president's request to bring their new models out earlier in order to prevent a lapse of employment, have had little time for retool ing, and changes incident to radically changed models. The industry no doubt welcomes the pause and will be in a position to reap the maximum "profit from what is confidently expected to ht another big year for the industry. The publio must now look to 1937 for another forward step toward the "automobile of the future" which long has been promised. Chief trends in the 1936 cars longer and wider bodies, built-in steel tops. The number of cars using independent front wheel springing is no more and no less than for the past' year. The trend also seems to be toward somewhat lower prices, made pos sible by larger production schedules and inexpensive changes. Competition between the lower keenest in history. In beating its way back to prosperity, the motorcar industry has set an example that is the envy of all others. It still is king an.l apparently not yet in danger industry alone cannot bring a Housing, air conditioning, electrical appliances stand as poten tial boom makers. Their day is (Continued Prom Page One.) getting about the Income tax case. Tney scent s deal which will krep Jimmy out of the political limelight. That ta piobably not correct, be wie such a deal win not necessary. There Is ft more Important underly ing situation which will Insure the same result. The bald truth U that Walker la ft marked man politically. A Isrge group of his political supporters has turned against him for reasons other than politic!. They still like him personally. The demonstration staged upon his return was authentic. Jim my will undoubtedly get a lot of lew bustness from his friends But voting for him for public of fice la another thing and apparently ft permnnnt thine. No worthwhile authority here believes the si; nation win change as long as certain middle aged men now living are still alive. Silver boys here believe thst Japan U on the rt?ht arent In suspecting British Influence behind the recent abandonment of the silver aMnrUrd nv China. All they really know about It Is that the recent British mission to China was supposed to have been active sloiifl that line. Local ailverltea are counting on Chinese nationalization of the metal to cloee part of the treasury stiver market. They do not appreciate what Chinese smiwxlers can do, Fven the death penalty has tailed to st.-p them thus far. The best quick uv lier that the effects of China's .v,nv ao-.M v mors political tiiea ewuomio. ln f tribunal and show cause why La 1936 and will have few complaints appear in the display rooms this are somewhat more weight, trunks, better upholstery and priced lines promises to be the of being dethroned. But the return of general prosperity. coining. R. T. far eastern situation Is working up to the point when It may push tne Ethiopian engineering problem off (he front page. Al Smith will deny it, but he may be the next mayor of New York. Everyone who knows anything about politics here concedes that Msyor La OuATdla Is through. No fusion may or ever lasted more than one term. Tammany esn be defeated only when there is ft whooping Insurrection on. Everything now is getting back to normal. At the same time ths wigwam chiefs are talking about the advis ability of putting forward an out standing candidate. The city gov ernment organization Is upset with newcomers and Innovations. Tam many wants someone who can fix things up. Smith Is about the only one In sight who can do It. The plan of the Tammany chiefs Is to get on the right side of him some morning and make It ft duty for him to accept. ' He probably will this time. Whatever you may hare heard that Al Smith la supposed to have said privately about President Roosevelt Is undoubtedly true. It appears Mr. Smith has said nearly everything. And In case he forgets on occasions, there are members of hla family who will refresh hla memory. Al s friends are now sadly refer- rlntt to him again aa "the man who lived ahead, of his time" He was wet before it was popular. He struck the first blow at the new deal, when It wasn't cricket. If he were edit ing that magazine now. he would be riding a surfboard. But then he would not be Al Smith. Note Al probably will not apeak for or against anyone In the coming presidential campaign. UPRE S RELIEF 1 1 "oiSore, Irritated Skin Wherver it is however broken the ejaeaavsurf ace freely apply toothing am Resinol Personal Health Service By William Brady, M D. Signed letter., pertaining to personal Health and byglene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Or. Brady tf a stamped self-ad-dressed envelope t enclosed Letters should be brief and written In ink Uwlng to the large numhei ol letters received only a few can be antwered No reply ran be made to queries not conforming to instruction! Address Or William Brady. 65 El Camlnu. Beverly Hills. Cat. BRIEF BIOGRAPHY A mother cites my opinion that condensed milk is adequate food for a baby and relates her experience: "I had to start my baby on the bottle at six weeks. From then until he was five months old I tried many foods on the advice of my physician, giving eac'i a fair trial. Nothing would stay down. Meantime I heard of one bxby after another that had had the same difficulty and had bevn settled by the use or a. brand of) condensed milk. " I fought Its use, and my doctor would not hear of It. But finally, about ten weeks ago, I suc cumbed. He started to gain Im mediately and the vomiting stop ped. He also started to sleep.. By the age of six months he weighed 17 pounds. Just double his birth weight. A week Ago I stopped the condensed milk and started on cow's mlik- He has no trouble whatever to digest this now. Bach feeding Is five ounces of milk with . two ounces of barley water, with a teaspoonful of lime water in It, and a teaspoonful of corn syrup. Of course all the while we were giving the baby condensed milk we gave him also a teaspoonful of cod liver oil three times dally with the Juice of an orange and two slices of banana mashed. At seven months he weighed 19 pounds but he is not flabby fat. He is very sound. My physician recently examined and passed htm as o. k. Now lam still uncertain whether condensed milk la adequate diet Jn spite of my experience. But I wished to tell you of my experience with the sugary concoction (for that la all it Is). (Mrs. W. H. MoK.) I would not and never did o so far as to pay that condensed milk, with dally rations of orange Juice, cod liver oil and ripe banana. Is not adequate food for a baby. Mrs. McK s experi ence would Indicate that it Is entirely adequate. Nor would I Infer from this brief biography of a bottle baby that such a diet is adequate were It not for the fact that Mrs. McK's physician has found the Infant's nu tritional condition normal. The condensed milk I considered Inadequate food for ft baby was not quite the same as the condercted milk of today. Condensed or evaporated milk today la equivalent to fresh milk In vitamin values, perhaps superior In vitamin D. Sweetened condensed milk or evaporated milk keeps well, does not freeze readily, and Is always Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS IN 1936, beginning early In the spring, probably, an advertising campaign designed to bring tourists here from other states will be carried on by the state of Oregon. The highway commission will be In charge of this campaign, and the money to finance it some 440.000 to $50,000 will be taken out of gaso line tax money. It la NOT a diversion of gasoline tax money from highway purposes, as It Is expected to bring into Oregon enough people from outside our bor ders, who will buy gasoline while here and so pay gas taxes, .to repay the entire expenditure Rnd leave a profit besides. . (Making a profit fur Us user, you know, is the purpose of advertising, which Is merely multiplied and ex tended salesmanship, carrying sales messages to more people than could be reached In any other way at a cost that anybody could afford). THE highway commission hss nam ed an advisory committee made up of people fa milt at with advertising problems, and this committee met lor the first time In Portland last week to lay plans for next year's campaign. The committee recommends that the bulk of the money be spent for paid advertising apace, in states Im mediately adjacent to Oregon, with California receiving principal atten tion as more than half of all our tourist travel cornea from California. IN OTHER years, if the plan proves profitable that is. If It brings In considerably more money than It costs it Is planned to extend the advertising to the Middle West and the East, with probable use of maga rlnes of national circulation, but for the present the wise course of shoot BUILD AND MODERNIZE WITH BIG PINES LUMBER CO. PHONE 1 OF A BOTTLE BABY safe where there Is any doubt about the character of the fresh milk avail able, t. Evaporated milk Is fresh pure sweet whole cows' milk concentrated by re moving half of the water and steril ized. Condensed milk Is concentrat ed In the same way, but has 40 per cent of sugar added as a preservative. For Infant feeding or any other purpose, so far as I can learn (and frankly I was formerly . prejudiced cgalnst condensed milk), condensed or evaporated milk, sweetened or un sweetened. Is no less wholesome nor desirable then fresh milk. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Cataract. I am 67. Cataract has formed on my right eye. At my age would you advise removal of cataract? Is there a better way to remove cataract than by operation? (Mrs. N. L. E.) Answer Cataract does not form on the eye. It Is rather an opacity, a clouding In the crystalline lens with in the eye. There is no other way to remove or cure cataract. I believe most successful cataract operatlpns are done on patients of your age or a few years older. Your oculist and your family physician should decide whether you ohvuld have the oper ation now. Carrots. Craving for carrots. Eat saveral pounds of them a week. My skin Is very sallow . . . (Mrs. G. B.) Answer Eating raw carrot is a healthful habit. Where a great quan tity of carrots, raw or cooked, is eat en, the yellow pigment in them may give the skin a sallow hue, especially the palms, but this clears up soon after the excessive eating of carrots is stopped. Ijist Symphony. Please suggest some good daily ex ercise to keep a person fit . . . (R. S. A.) Answer Send dime and stamped envelope bearing your address, for booklet "Last Brady Symphony." Serondhnnd Books. Have about 50 chlldren'3 books. Would like to get In touch with the correspondent who flaked you about the safety of buying th?m to dis tribute to poor children. (L. P. T.) Answer I do not keep memoranda of names or addresses of correspond ents. My recollection is that the or ganization collected such books as people donated for the purpose. The use of secondhand books or maga zines is perfectly safe, so far as the chance of carrying disease Is con cerned. (Copyright, 1935, John P. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Or. Brad; should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 263 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cal. ing where the ducks are thickest is to be followed. Every duck hunter knows that this is sound policy, especially when one's ammunition Is limited and $50,000 isn't much ammunition for a na tional advertising campaign. But it Is enough for a start, and If we can get started off wisely we ought to be able to keep going until our campaign of selling Oregon reaches really impressive proportions. OREOON has a fine system of state highways one of the best In the country. It has cost a lot of money. If our fine system of highways Is used aa extensively as it should be, It will prove the wisest investment we ever made. If it ISNT used to anywhere like Its capacity, the wis dom of the investment will be doubt ful. Primarily this advertising campaign la intended to bring about use of Oregon's, fine highways by people from other states who will not only buy gasoline and so pay taxes to the state but who will buy many other things from our people and so help to make business better and employ ment more plentiful. This writer thinks the whole idea Is an excellent one. The StoiTS- Schaefei representative. Mr. C. A. Wabbe wilt be at Qua the Tailors Nov. 15 and 7 with a full line of suitings and top coats. It F PORT OP CONDITION OF THE Farmers & Fruitgrowers Bank At Medford. County of Jackson, Oregon, at close of business November 1, 1935 ItESOfRCFS Loans and discounts . Overdrafts - Bonds, securities, etc . Banking house none, furniture and fixtures 3.0O0.00 Real estate owned other than banking house Cash, due from banks and cash items Claims and Judgments ... Other resources Deposit with T. D. I. Corporation ... Total resources Deposits: Demand deposits ...... Time deposits LIABILITIES Trttal deposit Bll: payable and rediscounts ...- ....... "... ........... Othtr nubilities Capital account: Capital 80.000.00 Surplus : - 3.500 00 Undivided proMta net: 3.0M.63 TOtAl capital account (Includes 2S.0O0.0O capltsj debenutres andlor borrowings) . Total Liabilities State of Oregon, County of Jackson as: 1, F. E. Wahl. cashier of the above. na-med ban, do solemnly awear that the sbov, statement la true to the be.t of my knowledge and belief. T. R. WAHU Csalller. Subscribed and axorn to before me this Sth day of November. 1935. FA YE BHF.NNEH. Notary Public for Oreson. My ron-.n. i.'on .pi ca o-toher IS. 19.17. Cotreot Attest. C. K Oases, Qua Ne6urj. De'noy Oetchell. Directors. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By.O.O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Nov. 7. Every large city has them but nowhere are they so plentiful as In New York the hotel lobby cad gers. Sauve, easy going, well dress ed, they never cross the line that separates the polite pick ings of their trade from harsher f Urn flam lng. Severa 1 hun dred are able to live comfortably through the sheer cordiality of their contacts with the lonely stranger to town and wltliout facing the danger of arrest. They are adroit in striking up an acquaintance. that leads to an Invitation to drink. And once this progress li made they have little difficulty in so in gratiating themselves that ft small loan is seldom refused. Sometimes a fiver or tenner and never more than a twenty. Some have percentage ar rangements with bars and cabarets to which they pilot visitors. The truth is that many are agree able fellows who really know the city. House detectives tolerate them. Us ually the approach is to ask for a light. I am told they are mostly without police records, often married and with 'families. O. Henry's gentle grafters. . Baldness is an affliction that has cut short a number of stage ambi tions. At least It has sent Juveniles into other roles. The proximity of the audience permits no hirsute decep tions. But the screen has abolished this terror. Some of the appealing portrayers of Romeo as well as swash buckling roles are pretty near bald ness. Such as Pat O'Brien, Fred As taire. Bing Crosby. Sidney Blackmer, Edmond Breeze, Tom Mix and Con rad Nagle. All wear toupees on duty. I love this. I'm on the edge of being in the market for a "marmoset" my self. I have wondered if graclousness to ward the public is an actual box-office asset. Certainly no one Is more diffident to the proletariat than Gar bo. Yet she's the most highly paid. Constance Bennett is certainly not dripping sweetness and light for her public. And Richard Mansfield was insufferable in contacts with every body. Mn.u"d Adams was also a shun ner. even with interviewers most players court. Chaplin is gracious enough, but thoroughly Independent. It would seem if one has enormous histrionic talent, there Is little need for obesiance toward playing custom ers, x The horse is having at least a slight vogue again. On seasonable and crisp afternoons in Central Park there are often a dozen fancy vehicular turn outs drawn by smartly cobbed and harnessed steppers sometimes spank ing bays, a Stanhope pulled tandem, the single trotters and pacers hitched to spindly pneumatic tired carts and two seaters. Owners, ftttlngly attired, drive while uniformed coachmen sit, statue-like, beside them. One turn out with a matronly Mary-Boland-looklng driver was an arrangement in black and white. Black trotter, white lines and bridle, black run about with white wheel spokes and a snow-white rug. This is a topic for a triple-Jointed essay by Emily Post. Lucius Beebe and Cholly Knickerbocker. That is the spread of gum-chewing among the ermine-wrapped ladies in public especially at first nights. It was particularly stressed at the notable premiere of "Jubilee." high spot of such goings on to date. Four women whose names grace the Social Regis trar were unashamedly among the Jaw- wnggers. Some say the indulgence Is to stifle a cigaret craving. It's diffi cult these days for ladles to sit through sn entire act without ft few Inhales. At the Colony recently i saw gum passed around as casually as toothpicks in ft country noiei. Thingumabobs: Joan Crawford' and Franchot Tone had the privilege of a private elevator 'when autograph packs got too close at the Waldorr . , , Dashlel Hammett gets much of his dialogue material around owl lunch wagons . . . Drover Whalen is k e ft- m. riser . . . Morton Downey, on evenings off. sings Irish songs for friends . . . Tad. the cartoonist, ad mired Ring Lardnera writing more than that of any other contempor ary. $167,798.74 283.68 83.453.78 3.000.00 .. 9.313.72 102.328.13 ... 1.157.50 524.94 ,.366 863.58 ....317,905.(18 92.272.10 . 1310.36-.98 None . aeo 8BS 58 She stepped out of a tricky little bar in the East 40 s before dusk, smartly clad, slightly dizzy and seem ingly bemused by youth 'a eternal query "Where now?" As I approached she opened her vanity, frowned and halloed "Cigaret me, big boy?" I had to confess I did not cany them. She gave a disdainful flirt of her head and after steadying a few steps call ed out: "I'll bet you'd be fun on a hay ride!" (Copyright, 1935." McNaught Syndicate) Flight fo Time Medford and Jackson Count history from the tiles of the Mail Tribune 10 and 20 ear Ago). TEN YEARS AGO TODAY November 7, 1935 (It was Saturday) Turkey crop in Oregon light this year. Armistice Day parade next Wednes day will start promptly at 11 o'clock. Coach Calllson of the high school football team glum over prospects in game with Ashland high Armistice Day. Confusion reigned at Main and Central when a Suncrest orchard fruit truck became entangled with a string of cluster, lights overhead. Traffic was tied up and the police nabbed the driver of & Ford who raced through the crowd. Clothes lines are robbed, and bad checks passed in a local crime wave. One thousand seven hundred and sixty-five cars of pears shipped from valley so far this year. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY November 7, 1915 (It was Sunday) Chicken prices go up on local mar ket, with short supply. Eggs 45 to 50 cents per dozen. . Mrs. Ous Newbury Itaves on short visit to Portland. W. J. Warner, deputy postmaster. Is confined to his home with la grippe. Rogue River Spitz win first prize at Portland land show. Excitement at fever pitch over Me dynski rebonding plan election. Charge made "the Medford gang Is choking the home owners." . Paved highway to Blue Ledge mine urged to develop mineral wealth. German "pincers'' closing In on em battled Serbia; Lord Kitchener leaves England to quiet Egypt and calm India; spirited battling on the west ern front. . Communications Sales Tax Holds Solution To the Editor: Today at the county budget meet ing I was panned for. objecting to trivial things, the sum of which was stated "would not amount to a pos tage stamp difference In my taxes. Now I did not like that; the pro cedure at these budget hearings is that you csn object to only items contained in the budget and each of them, by themselves, are very small items, so there you are. There are , no large items to objet to. General objection to the whole bud get would not get the hearing any where, and there is no real objection to the whole budget as such. The very nature of ft is such that the in dividual Items must be taken up by themselves. In discussing Items it becomes pos sible to digress and get over some ideas on taxation that may lead to some good. My idea is that the whole system of property taxation Is wrong; it is crudn and an injustice and, in fact, we call It vicious. The system divides up the cost of government and places It upon the owner of property regardless of whether he Is able to pay or not, and he has to pay or the property can be confiscated. Just now a heavy tax item is the relief and pension bud get; now the burden that is placed upon the poor property owner, who may, himself, be In far worse shape. ENCLOSE IT.' LIVE ON YOUR PORCH IN WINTER . . HAVE AN EXTRA ROOM One- of ths easiest and quickst ways to gain mors pace lor tiring in your home is to ENCLOSE THE PORCH . thus you hars a nsw sewing room, play loom, or a much ftnlargsd liring room. , , . md romamber , , , properly done th enclosing of th porch will not hinder lis use in tne summer, bul make it an even more desirable lounging and work place. Porch enclosures come under the terms of our new easy inproremeni loans ask about them. TIMBER PRODUCTS COMPANY Phone 7 and more in need of relief than those that actually get relief. The property owners canot get a dime of relief; they have tried It. I have talked to men who had tears in their eyes telling me that they had tried to get relief work and were denied because they owned a piece of property, and still had to dig up to help the other fellow. My Idea is that the burden of gov. ernment should be placed on a man's earning power and on his spending power.. No matter how small a man's earnings were during the year, he should pay. if it was only a dollar or two (lots of the property taxes are very small items): also, the same man should pay on what he spends; if he does not spend much, he does not pay much. If a man should earn. say. ten thousand a year, he should be able to pay a good bit of it on :h earn ing power; now if this same man wants to save most of It and spends only a thousand dollars, his spending tax would not be much. Another example: A man may be able to earn only, let us say. four hundred dollars: his earning tax would be very small indeed, possibly only one dollar; and he would be able to spend all of It for only bare necessities, which would be taxed very light. The idea that property has earning power has been exploded high, wide and handsome. Most property now is coming out far in the red and can not stand a tax burden and the property owner's earning power la quite often lowered by having to spend his time taking care of this same property. Respectfully. GEO. IVERSON. Nov. 6, 1935. One of the most Important literary products of Babylon la the Epic ol GiLsamesh. STOP THAT DANGEROUS BRONCHITIS Cough Tonight All coughs look alike to Buckley's Mixture (triple acting! one sip of this grand medicine usually stops an ordinary cough the tough old deep seated cough and the persistent bron chial cough are under control after Just a few doses no more torment ing, sleepless nights. Buckley's is different it's suprema it "acts like a flash." Get a bottle today at Jarmln's Drug Store or any good drug store on the money back If dissatisfied plan. Finds Relief Safe, AH- VegetableWay She had given up hops of anything but partial relief until she learned of famous all-vegetable NR Tahlt Vitt.' Remedy). But now after years of chronic consti pation and biliousness whatachange! New pep new color and vitality freedom from bowel sluggishness and intestinal poisons. This all vegetable laxative gently stimulates the entire piete. tnorougn elimination. Get , a 25c box. All druggists. ttluISColor 193&-1038CaienrtarTh. momfter with the purchase of & 2hc box of NRor a 10c roll of Tumi tor Acid IndlRcatlon.) NO MORE SLAVERY CONSTIPATION Not a word to say about your fav orite laxative or -cathartic that your business. All we ask you to do la to get one 40 -cent Jar of Kruschen Salts and take as much as will He on a dime In your morning cup of tra or coffee. The six precious salts in Kruschen help to cause stomach, liver, gall blad der and bowels to function naturally and healthfully you Mear the sys tem of poisonous waste and acid and. regular blissful bowel action wilt glad den your heart. Before the Jor Is empty you'll feel fine keener mind actively alive more ambition. No more laxatives no more cathar tics and no constipation when you take your little daily pinch of Kru schen. At Jarmln Drus and drug gists everywhere. Medford End N. Central Ave