PGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1935
MEDFORDv&TRIBUNE
"Everyun IB aialbrH Orriao
BMdi ths stall Trlbos"
Daily Kswpt aatardaj.
Published br
MKUIOIRD PBINT1NO CO.
lt-IT- N. fir St. PBO '
ROBERT W. BUHU Bdltor.
Ad lDlspodsot Niwipipr.
Estsrsd McoodUM oiailsr at Had
lord. Or.on. unilsr Act of Msrob s. IS7S
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
By MallIn Advtocbl
Dally, ona "
Dally, all month !
Dally, ona montb "".y".".;l.
By Carrlar. In Advaoca Msdford.
Isi" Jackaoo.llla, C.ntral Point.
FbMQM. Tal.nl. O.ld Hill And n
bltbwayA
Dally, ona yaar.
Dally, all month
Dally, ona month
All tnrma. oaah to advauca.
Otflclal Papar ol tba Utty of Mrdford.
uilleiaj rapei w
UKS111IIK OP TUB ASHOtllATHU PHfcbH
Keeelvlni run l.fo m,..
Tha Aaaoclatad Pcaaa la aaclualvaly an.
tltlad to tha uaa for publication of all
oawa dlipatchaa oradliart to It or oln.r
laa oradliad In thl papar, and alio to
tha local nawa published haraln.
All rights for publication of apaelAi
. dispatch., haraln ara alao r. rvd.
MEMBER OF IINITBD PRESS
MEMBER Of AUDIT BURBAO
OF CIRCULATIONS
AdT.rttilns Rapraaanlatwaa
U. 0. MOOKNSF.N COMPAN
Orflcaa In Naw York. Chicago Datrolt
8an Francisco, Loa AncalaA Saattla,
Pnrtland.
MEMBER
Ye Smudge Pot
I By Arthur Perry.
Upstate opponents of the Bales
Tux, In any form, and for any rea
on, protest the Bales Tax measure
passed by the recent legislature,
upon unique grounds, viz; It was
passed at midnight. Therefore, U is
listed a "midnight skullduggery."
The Sales Tax is for the purpose
of providing funds for the payment
of Old Age Pensions. It seemi the
hour of tha enactment of the meas
ure li more vital than the years or
the beneficiaries, who by unhappy
f stress of circumstances might . be
hungry at noon.
"Brilliant, battering, bruising Bax
ter crashed, crushed and catapulted
to a, touchdown and victory.'1 (From
aocount of a football game) Where
in a scribe gushes giddily and
grandly.
Japan Is once more subjugating
China. It la all very complicated,
and In due course of time Journalists
will again, as In previous subjuga
tlons, report they are unable "to
make hoads or pigtails" of the situa
tion. It Is noted that the cltlsen who
failed to pick up a hltch-mker. mis
take a man for a deer, or get lost
in tho mountains during the first
atorm of winter, has started audit
ing his, gas-tank with lighted
match.
Last Bunday your con, reported
that J. Kort Hall, the fretting hortt
' culturlst was 88 years old. This was
an error. Mr. Hall Is 88 years old.
acts like he was 48, and feels like
he was 88.
,
'Hall, protesting vigorously, as
sumed a fighting attitude, as If he
were going to let go with his left
at the referee and swing at Cochran
with his right." (Press Dispatch)
It's a good trick, even If he can't
do It.
Eleanor Powell of the movies has
come and gone, and most of the
younger feminine set wish they had
kept up their tap dance lessons-
IlL'I.Efl FOR WB1T1NG.
"In writing I shall confine myseli
strictly to the truth except when
H Is attended with Inconvenience.
I Khali wltherlngly rebuke all forms
of crime except when committed by
the party Inhabiting my own vest.
I shall not make use of slang and
vulgarity upon any occasion or under
any circumstances and shall never
use profanity except when discussing
Hixm." (Murk Twain's Euays.)
Yeaterday was Wednesday, the 13th.
Not being Friday, nothing terrible
happened.
Tom Bradley of the Lighthouse,
who Is sojourning In the southland,
writes he will try and got home
before Del Oetchell. the hanker-poet
erark down on him with another
poem.
American aerial I at Monday ascend
ed Into the heavens 14 miles. This Is
regarded as a fair height for tht
price of anything one has to sell.
"FRIENDLY NEIOHBORB SHOOT
EACH OTHKR"- Walnut tTex.) Vt
dettej They must be.
The state capltol measure Is now
held Invalid, because a clerk failed
to read It. on final pasture. rs re
quired by the state constitution. The
defect li held to be due to extensive
legislative fiddling, and doing every
thing but what they were supposed
to do, AH the statesmen, at last re
ports, had successfully found their
way home.
t
J. Wesley Bates, the ton serial artist
Is having a busy week. He was mar
ried 33 years Tuesday, and encoun
ters another birthday Saturday.
Mrs. Bacon had asked for 9200 a
month for cosmetic and beauty
parlor treatments. (Oregonlan)
The war on wrinkles costs a pretty
penny.
TIIKIIT UK WIS ITS M TAP.
In 1P13 I bought an overcoat.
got it wet and tt shrunk to the sice
of my eldest son. He got It wet and
It shrunk to the alee of my second
eldeU son. Well. sir. he got the
coat soaking wet and It then fit
the third boy. We are now watting
for a sousing rain to pass It along
to Jimmy age P. C. N. Collins.
(Somerset (Md.) Tidings.)
Dm Mill It 1 bun. want ads.
The Coast Football Decline
WHAT the present writer doetn't know about the fine
points of modern football would no doubt fill the Grand
Cpuyon of the Colorado. '
Nevertheless, we hereby assert, with (as the political spell
binders love to say) no hope of successful contradiction, that
college football coaches on the coast, are asleep at the switch
while middle west and eastern football is passing them by.
That was indicated at the Rose Bowl last New Year's Day,
when Stanford with a marvelously powerful team, was bowled
over by little Alabama, because "Alabara" had mastered the
aerial game, and Stanford hadn't.
Illinois rated far from the top in the Mid West, did the
same thing at the start of the season against U. S. C. And last
Saturday Southern Methodist took U. 0. L. A., until very re
cently rated firs) in the far west to a cleaning by adopting
the same tactics.
What more proof is desired! Pacific Coast coaches appear
to have developed into perfect Bourbons, satisfied to rest on
their laurels of the past, unable to forget anything or learn
anything.
The universal slogan is still power, power and more power.
Power which nine times out of ten is helpless within the ten
yard line, however dazzling it may be in mid-field. Forward
and lateral passes are used of course, but only as a last resort,
not as the heart and sinew of the game.
Small wonder the coast always loses at the Hose Bowl. It
will continue to lose, we predict, until the coaches wake up
to the fact that !be forward and lateral pass offense has entirely
revolutionized the game.
Let some of the, big boys in the college league come and
look over the Midford High School team, and see what the
local boys have done with forward and lateral passes. We
believe they would -learn a very valuable lesson.
Take a Bow, Perry
"A prophet not without honor aave In his own country."
POR nearly a quarter of a century Art Perry has been bang-
ing his weather beaten typewriter in the M. T. office,
and throwing smouldering cigaret butts into the old cracker
barrel that serves as his waste basket, but whoever hereabouts
ever accused him of producing literature, or running any risk
of setting the world of letters on fire!
A. P. a member of the LITERATI! Absurd. Everyone in
Southern Oregon knows Perry, the veteran skipper of the
Smudge Pot, a column that is pretty good one day, and not so
good the next j but neither he nor his column anything to
write home about, just another happy-go-lucky newspaper
scribbler, wITose waist band has been expanding rather alarm
ingly of late and whose hair .has been getting pretty thin on
top. Ho never took himself seriously so why should anyone
else do so! '
Just shows how true that quotation above from the gospel
of Luke is, and how little we know about those we rub elbows
with, on terms of the utmost familiarity, every day in the old
home town.
POR Perry, all this time, with his wise cracks and his cracks,
not so wise; his quaint comments on human nature and
the local scene, his characterizations of this local celebrity and
that from Prospect to the Applcgate, has been contributing to
the bibliography of the great state of Oregon, and "Smudge
Pot" now has a prominent and permanent place in the "History
of Oregon Literature," a volume just off the press, the result
of many years of study and research by Professor Powers, dean
of the general extension division of the stata system of higher
education.
i
TNT1L a copy of the book has been received, we don't know
just what extracts from the Smudge Pot have been sel
ected, but we have a hunch, they deal largely with local types
ah) human interest, the more original and individual contri
butions of the skipper rather than with general run of the
columnist mill.
It is in this direction, at least,
been outstanding. Literaturo is not necessarily "fine writing"
any more than humor is necessarily manufacturing "puns"
ard sprinkling thr m liberally with wise-cracks every day.
Literature is essentially drawing a true picture of contem
porary life in words, and humor consists largely in the ability
to maintain a proper sense of proportion, as the parade of life
passes on, placing incidents and the actors in the drama of life,
in the various niches where they belong.
THIS is what Perry has done. Anyone who should wish to
RPnill-A n TT?ni?, nSfttlFD nf tha lifn manna, an A miefftmc
of Southern Oregon during the past two or three decades, would
find their material, not in this or the news columns of this
paper, hut in the Smudge Pot, where the creative and distilla
tion processes have been going on. ,
Not that Smudge Pot should be taken aa a model for lit
erature, native humor, or a MODEL for anything else. That
isn't it. The point is that in that department and that, depart
ment alone, life as it has been lived in Southern Oregon has
been amusingly and accurately observed and depicted, true,
typical ami alive. and that is why it has been, and why it
ilesorves to be, preserved in the literary archives of this state.
IN' addition, there lira been from time to time, some shrewd
observations on human nature, some effective puncturing
of stuffed shirts, and some ironical comments upon the political
seine, national, state and local, which have added materially
to the vitality ami value of the column.
So congratulations to A. P. for the recognition that has
been so long delayed but has at last been tendered. We knew
it all the time. Pcn't go prima donna on us, Arthur. Come for
ward to the footlights and take a how!
STEIWER FEARFUL OF
LUMBER DUTY SLASH
PORTLAND. Or-., Nov. 14. (API
Senator Frederick fltclwer (R., Orel
told tho Portland Shipping club tlit
th ahlpplng Induntry "hit right to
be fearful that President Roosevelt
la making an agreement with Canada
to reduce the Import duty on lum
ber." He also assailed nat be term
where Commodore Terry has
ed "theorlsia. brain truatera and ara-
demlc phtloaopqhera."
WINDOW GLASS K Mil window
glaaa and will replace four broken
windows reasonably Trowbridge Cab
inet Work.
Phont MJ We'll naul away your
reuara City Sanitary er1
GUNSMITH Keuiir, foi all make!
M iu. Sunt Brua it rl nr.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M. D.
Signed lettert pertaining to personal Health and nyglene nut to dliease
dlagnusla or treatment will be answered by tlr. Brady If a stamped eir-ad.
dreued envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brlel and written In ink
Owing to the large number of letters ret-elvrd unly few can be an.weren
No reply ran be made to quertee not conforming to Instructions. Address Ur
William Brady, tas LI camlno. Beverly Bills, cax
THE FUEL VALUES OF
In a handbook on "Food Values'
by Edwin A. Locke.. A. M M. D..
which the author prepared especially
for medical stu
dents (Appleton,
1915), we find
beer quoted at
126 calories a
Class (half pint).
The beer averag
ed 4.3 per cent
alcoholic content.
Other Ingredients
which may serve
as fuel were all
estimated
&s sugar, but the
proportion
of these extractives othei than car
bohydrate In alcoholic beverages Is
so small that the error Is negligible.
Alcohol is computed solely on the
basis of Its function as a fuel. As Dr.
Locke takes pains to point out, al
cohol consumed in more than very
moderate quantities acts as a drug
Instead, and when taken to excess
this acttlon may negative entirely Its
action as a fuel food, or even Inter
fere with the digestion and absorp
tion of other foods. Further, one
must bear In mind that the composi
tion of alcoholic beverages varies
greatly from time to time, and these
figures are merely the average of
analyses made by various authorities.
Jamaica rum contained 69.61 per
cent alcohol by weight, and a "shot"
of It (50 cc. or about 1 ounces)
yielded 245 calories. Pure French
cognac contained 55.90 per cent alco
hol and yielded 78 calories to the
cordial glass (about 20 cc. or oz.)
California brandy contained 45.80 per
cent alcohol and a cordial glass
yielded 65 calories. Oln contained 30
per cent alcohol and a "hot" (50 cc.)
yielded 116 calories.
A dry Martini cocktail contained
21.30 per cent alcohol and the 75 cc.
(3 14 ounce) glass yielded 131 calo
ries, j
A cordial glass (20 cc. or little less !
than ounce) of Benedictine con-1
talned 42.40 per cent alcohol and '
yielded 88 calories.
American whiskey contained 43.00
per cent alcohol and a whiskey glass
ful (60 cc. or about 1 ounces)
yielded 152 calorics. European whis
key contained 30.00 per cent alcohol
and! the same quantity yielded 137
calories.
California ' port wine contained
14,81 per cent alcohol and a sherry !
glassful (30 cc. or a bit over an i
ounce) yielded 38 calories. California
white wine contlned 9 per cent" al-1
cohol and a claret glassful (120 cc.
or about 4 ounces) yielded 89 calories.
European champgne sweet con
tained 6.50 per cent alcohol and a
champagne glassful (135 cc. or a bit
over 4 ounces) yielded 161 calories.
American sweet champagne contained
8.27 per cent alcohol and 135 cc.
yielded 132 calories. Dry champagne
contained 10.42 per cent alcohol and
yielded only 112 calories (most of the
sugar converted Into alcohol gas by
fermentation).
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
Ry O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK. Nov. 14. Newspaper
men are proud of the recent biog
raphy George Brltt, a newspaper man
h 1 m self, turned
oit about Frank
Munsey. Othors
had tried to briPG
a measure of
warmth to the
Job of i m mortal -lzln?
one of the
stmngrst flzures
In the publlsh
tUR business, but
gave It up.
Nowhere In his
make-up could
they find an es
sence of that di
vine fluid which, for want of better
nsme, is called printer's ink. All
they could find was ice-water. He
had no Journalistic Instincts, yet the
biography title "Forty Years Forty
Millions" capsules the story of his
astonishing success.
The best description of Munsey
came from Elinor Glynn. The pub
lisher was In Paris with Frank
Crownlnahleld. One mornrng after
several weeks of their stay, crownln
ahleld ran Into Miss Glynn on the
Champs Elyseea. Munsey was not
with him. "where, asked Miss Glynn.
"Is our weary gray wolf?'
Munsey was the loneliest and most
pathetic- of men. For a number of
yeara I lived In the am hotel where
he ao loTiig resided Many times late
at nlfrht I have seen him out.Mdr
talking to the doormen, hou, de
tective or r.eUhboiiivt night-watch.
A Fine Blend of
Kentucky
STRAIGHT
WHISKIES
nirmlrd and rtotllnl hr
H I.. VH'llfH sons. Inc.
IH.tlllrrv I miNtllle, K;.
ALCOHOLIC BF.VERAGF.il
I White Rheln wine contlned 8.12
per cent alcohol and 120 cc. (4 ozs.)
yielded 83 calories. Sherry glass (one
ounce) of Madeira containing 15.40
per cent alcohol yielded 32 calories.
An ounce of fresh Tokay containing
11.19 per cent alcohol yielded 39
calories.
A glassful (half pint, 8 ounces. 250
cc.) of American sweet elder contain
ing 1.40 per cent alcohol yielded only
109 calories, while the same quantity
of American hard cider (fermented)
contained 5.17 per cent alcohol and
yielded 130 calories.
For comparison, milk yields about
20 calorlea to the ounce or 160 to
glassful, sugar 30 calories to the lump
or cube, 25 calories to the domino, 30
calories to the level teaspoonful, one
cllse of bread 80 calories.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
When to Have Health Examination
Wilt you kindly state the circum
stances which In your good Judgment
warrant a periodic physical examina
tion, for a woman In business. I am
34 years old, and so far as I know
now In good health. (Miss P. M.)
Answer. Physical fatigue or so
called nervous exhaustion or brain
fag, any shortness of breath or mod
erate exertion, any sensation of heart
hurry, and change In body weight,
any difficulty or disturbance of di
gestion such symptoms, often Ignor
ed or ascribed to spurious causes such
as "worry," "overwork." should war
rant a medical examination In any
case. A man or woman of sound
business principles should have at
least one health Inventory annually,
best by the same physician, a private
physician, of course, not a mall or
der "Institution" or "clinic."
Exercise for Weak Heart
How about a fellow 61 years of age
who has chronic myocordlal weakness,
doing your keep fit exercise? I seem
to feel better when I take a fair
amount of exercise. (A. C. E.)
Ana. Oenerally a fair amount "of
exercise dally is beneficial In such
heart disease. You should have your
physicians advice about the amount
and kind of exercise to take. If any
Where there is decompensation and
other exercise is for the time being
not permitted. Belly Breathing Is
helpful to the heart. But the ques
ion of rest or exercise, or how much
exercise, is always an Individual one
which only the doctor familiar with
the patient's condition can Intelli
gently consider. '
Sweat
What Is the remedy you have so
often recommended for control of dis
agreable sweating In the armpits?
(N. O. L.)
Ans. Mop the clean dried skin once
over with a solution of one-half ounce
of aluminum chloride In three ounces
of water, and let dry before dressing.
(Copyright, 1935, John F. Dllle Co.)
Ed. Note: leroiina wishing to
co in in ii n tea t e u 1 1 h Dr. Brady
should tend letrer direct to Dr.
William llrady. M. I)., i65 El
Camlnn. Beverly Hills, Cal.
anybody. A millionaire starving for
friendship I
The brightly lit all-night barber
shop down the subway steps from the
Palace on West 47th, where the ma
chine (run rlfflers scotched two of
Dutch .Schultz's plug-uglies, has long
been a haven of those worldlings
whom Broadway brevet tod s B1r
Shots. The sort who clench black
cigars, sport silk monofjrammed
shirts, amell of barber lotions and
are known as Hinky. Sllppe.-y and
Moe. The shop Is In that blocA dub
bed Malaria alley, one of the tough
est fibers on the Tenderloin.
Sudden Thought: The only differ
ence between Broadway and Main
street Is that on Main street they
know each other.
From Hawaii com a sure-fire
baldness cure the root of the jlner
flower. lon used by Hawaiians so
noted for luxuriant growths. My In
formant had an onlon-sllck pace, like
Bald Jack Rose, but In six weoks
there was a tuzz all over his head,
and In three months mlrable dlctu'
he was getting regular weekly hair
cuts. The catch Is there's forever a
catch in baldnees cures the bulbs
are Indigenous to a remote island
and cannot be brought to the main
land. Gelett BurseM, who Is a clironic
discoverer of muss oddities, thinks
there should be a Guild of Fa-e Feel-
The finest of all cars ever produced by Chrysler
SEE IT! RIDE IN IT!
LANGE MOTOR CO.
38 North Riverside Chrysler and Plymouth
en. He asked me to notice In the
next restaurant I visited the number,
chiefly men dining alone, who, while
awaiting food, feel their faces. And
sure enough at a Schraffc's I counted
six. And an ear lobe tugger, too.
When H. T. Webster was In Nova
Scotia recently he stopped at way
side Inn for a bite. During the meal
a be whiskered fellow attached him
self and continued a running fire
conversation not only to the waiting
car but for a short ride on the run
ning board. Aa he hopped off, he
called out:- "Lots of people around
here criticize me for talkln' to st-ang-ere.
but I keep right on doln it."
New York's literati Is of a sudden
steamed up over the writings of Wil
liam Randolph Hearst as exorcised In
hi hard-hitting editorials. F. P. A.
in a paragraphic panegyric declared:
"I am struck with the excellence of
it." The style has a disarming naiv
ete which all writers strive for but
few achieve. X hazard a guess the
staocato simplicity la the fruitage of
years of dashing off those hurried
notations across pages of his news
papers and magazines, which form
almost his sole editorial gutdnnce.
Thingumabobs: There la an aver
age of 50 marrlagea a day at "The
Little Church Around the Comer"
. . . Rupert Hughes still writes In
long hand . . . Ohauncey Depew sent
his barber 9100 every Christmas, but
never tipped him . , . Uoyd George
has a skye terrier that only howls
when Wagnerian music comes over
the radio . 1 . Jimmy Walker's Bur
lington Arcade lounging robes are
something new in splendor . . . Bur
ton Rascoe la wealthiest of the book
critics. . . .
I was listening to one of the brief
radio sum-ups of the day's stock
market this evening which ended
"Cotton was quiet." And a lady
across the room observed : "That's
one th 1 ng about cot ton . It never
gets noisy."
(Copyright, 1935, McNaught
Syndicate.)
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
CL. Jamison, secretary of the Ore
gon Cattle and Horse Raisers
association, speaking at the annual
meeting of the Southern Oregon Live
stock association the other night, told
of the capture of Toby Skene, better
known In Oregon, perhaps, as Flint
Spragg.
Skene, horsethlef and murderer,
who had long eluded the officers of
the law, was captured recently by
Mr. Jamison and another man when,
In search of food, he entered the
house they were temporarily occupy
ing. (The name of the man, who is a bad
actor of long standing in tha Eastern
Oregon. Northern Nevada and North
ern California country. Is Toby Skene.
His career was romanticized recently
by one of the Portland papers under
the name of Flint Spragg),
IT IS a little unfortunate," Mr.
Jamison said In modestly telling
of the capture, "that this man has
been made something of a romantic
hero.
"He Is nothing of the sort. He Is
Just a plain horsethtef, who In the
end became a common and not at
all romantic murderer, shooting a
man down in cold blood. There Is
nothing whatever about him to ad
mire. "Instead, there Is everything to de
test. He Is small and mean and com
mon. The public, I think, ought to
see htm In hii true light."
OUT of these romanticized stories
of criminals, a lot of ua get the
Idea that these Individuals are some
sort of supermen. They are nothing
of the sort, Mr. Jamison says. They
ore Just common crooks who either
have something wrong with them
mentally or are too lazy to try to
earn an honest living and try to beat
the game and get something for
nothing by living a life of crime.
DO THEY get something for noth
ing? Do Ihey live fascinatingly
Interesting lives?
Neither, Mr. Jamison ssys. Skene
Now On Display
The New 1936
CHRYSLE
CHRYSLER AUTOMATIC OVERDRIVE
got nothing but the barest and
skimpiest living out of his horse
stealing and allied activities, and as
for living a fascinatingly Interesting
life his experience was exactly the
oposlte.
For months before he was captured
he had been dodging the officers, liv
ing out In the brush. In all kinds of
weather, frequently hungry and cold,
and compelled to avoid human beings
as one would avoid the plague.
Mr. Jamison thinks he was really
relieved when It waa all over and he
was finally taken Into custody.
4
"QKENE Was simply starved for hu
O man conversation," he says, "and
after we captured him he talked free
ly, even eagerly, to us, telling us at
length and in detail of his activities.
He seemed glad beyond measure to
have someone to talk to."
IT IS really a great pity that the
exploits of more or less unusual
criminals are dealt with In such a
manner that the public gets a wrong
ldeo of them, and looks upon these
men somewhat as heroes.
The newspapers, probably are more
to blame than anybody else, .because
criminal stories make good reading,
and newspapers like to print news
that people will read eagerly. The
movies, also, are at fault, and the
magazines must share the blame.
Crime Is NEVER something to .be
admired, secretly or otherwise, and
criminals DONT live Interesting lives.
Their lives are spent In dodging the
law. and they seldom know an easy
moment.
This ought to be better known than
It Is, and this writer thinks Mr.
Jamison has performed an outstand
ing service not only by his capture
of Toby Skene but by his sane, clear
headed and sensible attitude toward
such men.
FEAR EXTINCTION
PT.
PORTLAND, Ore.. Nov. 14. (AP)
The state planning board urged the
federal government to purchase and
conserve Port Orford cedar.
A forester's report showed only one
billion feet of Port Orford cedar re
mains standing In Oregon. The pres
ent consumption rate would cause
extinction If continued 25 years, It
was stated.
The board voted to urge the federal
biological survey to make Wapato
lake a bird refuge, and,' advised
against public acquisition of Macleay
estate forest lands on the Rogue river.
Expenditure of $7,000 was voted to
supplement $59,000 federal funds for
surveays of planning board activities.
Oregon's governmental machinery, the
types of persons commit teed to state
institutions, and recreational oppor
tunities In Oregon.
A DOLLAR
Is a Good Friend.
Save One.
Many are better than one.
Save Many.
Took upon each one as a Good Friend.
Then you will not part with them
foolishly.
FARMERS AND FRUTTGROW FIRS
BANK
(Community Builders.)
FAT GIRLS GET
THE GO-BY-SUM
GIRLS WIN MEN
Lm Fat Tat Eur War-Wlthnt Sumtiw Ditto,
r IUck-BrukiUa Budimf u4 RvUat EurckM.
There'! a reason 'why to many people And
dieting slow and often timet futile in re
ducing. The reason, doctors tar i often be
cause a little pland la not working right.
All the blood in your body goes through
thia tiny gland tlxtecn timet every day. Ii
it doesn't pour Into the blood it ream about
one and one-half dropa of vital fluid every
24 houri, many people take on ugly fat.
This fluid helps Ntture to "burn up" xcest
food and fatty tissue In much the same way
is a good "draft" acts In a furnace.
Now, physicians combat this rendition
by feeding thit gland the substance It lacks
and millions of pounds of excess fat has
been wiped out this way.
Marmola Prescription Tablets are based
en the same scientific method used by doe
tort. So why not lose fat the easy way r
without starvation dicta or back-breaking,
bending and rolling exercises? Start the
Marmola treatment today that millions have
used successfully to get rid of excess fat.
The formula It In every box so you know
Just what ynu are taking. Don't wait get
Marmola today from druggists.
with the famous
Flight 'o Time
Medtord and Jackson Count
omurj rroro tha rile at thr
Mall Tribune 10 and to lean
Ao.
TEN' YEARS AtiO TODAY
November 11. 1035.
(It wu Sunday.)
Wholeaale cutting of Chrtetma
trees prohibited by forest service.
Central Point wlna half of prlzea
awarded southern Oregon at Portland
Livestock ahow.
Eugene Thomaa recovers from aa
appendicitis operation.
Bootleg whiskey floods valley, po
pollce report, with no clues to th
flooders.
Merchants report brisk Christmas)
trade.
Snow falls In the hills, with rain
In the valley.
Turkey prices advance for Thanks
giving. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
November 14, WIS.
Teddy Roosevelt comes out for "ad
equate preparedness" as Republican,
c&mpaign Issue. Democrats favor
"Our boys at home" ss main plank
next year.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl C. Oaddls return
from visit to San Francls.-o fair.
Seeley Hall drives auto from Crca
sent City to Medford In 12 hours.
Rain badly needed In valley, so
farmers can start fall plowing.
English walnut crop In valley nets
high returns.
Oregon apples to be given awsy at
San Francisco fair tomorrow.
Valley turkey crop la lightest la
years.
Co.
1 ;!
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ft
ft
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to
J9r Pints
1 1
! CODE No. 1S4C
$1" Quarts
CODE No. 186A
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