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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 30, 1935)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFQKD, OREGON, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1935. MfiOFOWViWTRIBUNE "Everyone Id Boolhent Oregon Beads the Mail Tribune" Dally Kirept Katnrday. Published by MEDPORD PBINTINO CO. UST-2t N. Fir St. Phone I. ROBHRT W. BUHL, Editor. Ad Independent Nswspsper. Cniirul onnri.plmi mutter at Med fo'r'd, Oregon, under Act of March I, 18 H. 16.00 1.7 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Br Mall In Advance: qlly. one year Qaily, stx months rta'llv nni manih By Carrier. In Advance Medford. Aeb land. Jacksonville, Ceotral Poiut, Phoenix. Talent. Oold HUI and un htghwaya. . - Dally, one year M-OO Dally. months 1J Dally, one month '0 All terms, cash in advance. Official Taper of (he City or Mrdford. Offlcliti Paper at Jnckon County. URMI1EH OF TIIR A8SOCMTKD I'KK.tStl Receiving Full lnarfl Hire nervics. The Associated Press is eictusUaly en titled to the use for publication of all newe dispatches credited to It or other wiae credited In this paper, a-nd also to the local news published herein. All rlghta for publication of special dispatcher herein are alio reserved. MEMBER OF UNITED PRES8 MEMBER OK AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representatives H. C. MOOKNSKN A COMPANY Offices In New Vork. Chicago Detroit San Francisco, Los Angeles. Seattle, Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Perry. While Rome Burns An Investigation of th. Literary Dldgest straw vote by mall la threat ened by Democrats. The result, show a trend unfavorable to the New Deal, and they desire to find out whv ao many voters who can't mako It to the polla on election day, ex perience no difficulty In gettlnft to the nostofflce. Defeat of the proposed Sale. Tax to provide funda for the payment of Old Age Pensions la practically assured, observers agree. One argu ment advanced In opposition sets forth that, "as now framed the Sales Tax will produce more than enough for the Old Age Pensions." This would be horrible, upset traditions and place the state In the unheard of position of performing an act of bumanatarlanlam, without skimp ing. ... (.HAVE I'KOIM.KM TAI'KI.KII. (Columrilan (Mont.) Times) The latest la that of an under taking establishment, which will soon be In operation here. In this connection It must be borne In mind that If we are to keep these new people here we must give them all the business that this community affords. ... "SPEEDRB VIOTIM OF APRIL CRASH, WALKS DOWNTOWN" (Montague Messenger Hdllne) Short aermon for today. ... In the event of a war with Japan. which Sen. Plttman of Nevada fears all by himself, the nation can point with pride to the Insignificance or It start. vIb: A speech by Sen. Pltt man before tho notary club of Las Vegas. Nevada. It will outclass with the greatest of ease the spark-plug of the World War the slaying of an Austrian duke on the streets or Sarajevo, Serbia. ... More signs of spring are ahowing up In the Willamette Valley. The Alpine correspondent of the Corvallls Oawtte-Tlmes report, the. roadside between the school house and the Likens place is being used as a gar bage dump. (Inhabitant, of the Old Stage Ttoad district, please note). ... THE LAimnTRR. (Ben Hur Lampman. In the Oold Hill News December 32, 10181 "I do not remember when I first hesrd laughter yet I know that I loved It that day and thereafter. Why, I never have heard It but deep In my heart the plxle of pleasantry waken and start. They brighten my eyes and they lighten mv breast, till I throw back my head and I laugh with the rest. Olve me droas. give me loss, give me penance and pain but, O, give me leave Just to laugh one. agalnl "Not the laughter of Judas who counted his gold; nor the laughter that rings as the brass mlmlca gold: not the laughter that wakena to gibe at a woe: nor the laughter that sneers at the plight of a foe hut laughter that springs as a fay from the flower, all merry with mem and the msglrsl hour; laugh ter that quivers and quickens and etlngs like colors thst riot a bmter fly'a wings. "Not the laughter c.f him wh. r pale with his Jest: nor th. laughtw of him who haa failed at the tea; not ll'e laughter of eynloe wh. tar. ture the truth; nor laughter th4 lechers the white dream pf youtk but laughter that fcwnw Ilk. a a-e-aerk at ease, with )il. t.ueleetlee kiddles aetrlde mt l kaera; hMtt ter t?s w-afeevm an. wMnm mm " Hfe . pfata. aa Mr pea ear V-netUv. vr fajifemm: naxmiMed sr m4 teu?t. Tmssf u. ejwiwl. waly with e.vea. aaew SUM. hAifc aaetntstM; afloat!? vmtmrr Mnmff.t Ma- teauft: feek maw .Mat "An entertainment committee met Prank!.. Th. boy. hacked away at him with a .mall sharp &xe while telling him funny stories .nd then .tutted his body Into a, trunk which went down the freight .levator of the hotel. Th. trunk was loaded on a small truck and near th. Brooklyn bring, th. driver pushed, th. trunk off Into the street and sped away." , . , "They took him to the same hotel used for th. other conference with Frankle. They went about their work la cold blood. With . email Boy Scout ax. they beat a tatoo on his head Inflicting over a dozen cuts and watched Louis die death of torture. . , , They placed th. body in a car and near th. Brooklyn navy yard poured gasoline over th. blanketed form and Mt fire to It . . ." THE above arc extracts from an article in the current, Rend ers Digest condensed from the Nation entitled "Gang Warfare, 1935." The "entertainment committee" mentioned was paid off by Dutch Schulti. A few days later Dutch Schultz and three of his henchmen got "theirs," in a Patterson, N. J., chop house, as was duly recounted in the press, marking the close of the Amberir Schultz feud with the wiping out of the lesJers on both sides. OOD riddance of bad rubbish and if gang warfare could be confined to such internecine strife, ihrre would be no complaint the more the merrier. But unfortunately these gangster feuds are comparatively rare. The Schultz-Amberg gangs are no more, but other pangs in Greater Manhattan have taken their plat-c, and the warfare upon peaceful society is going merrily on, at the present moment, as has beei; the case for many years. This fight to the death was staged over the loan shark racket. Dutch Schultz decided to muscle in on the Ambergs' preserves in Brooklyn. Rut there was and still is, the policy game racket, the cleaners and dyers racket, the white laundry racket, the chicken racket, and as Mayor La Guardia demon strated the other day, with his dramatic sortie into the Bronx vegetable market, the million dollar artichoke racket. AND a few days later, Colonel and Mrs. Lindbergh, with their young son, fled to England, because having had one baby boy kidnapped and murdered, constant threats from the underworld, indicated that, if they remained in this coun try, their second son might, meet the same fate! And this in the United States of America in the year of our Lord, IOUj! AS EVERYONE knows, we are now preparing for a presi dential election, probably the most important presidential contest since the world war. For the first time in 20 years the two major parties will be separated by real and definite issues, the occasion no longer being merely a sham battle be tween the "ins" and the "outs," a settlement of differences between tweedlo dum and tweedle dee. Millions of dollars will be spent, tremendous efforts will be made, great, activity and excitement will prevail and intense bitterness will.be aroused for at least six months of M36 there will be little but poli tics, politics, politics. And yet granting the importance of this election and, of course, its necessity as one surveys the conditions in this country at the close of the year, in tho direction of organized crime, as brought into such sharp relief by the Lindbergh incident, doesn't all this hysteria and excitement over who shall, or shall not, sit in the 'White House for another four years, come under the heading, relatively speaking, of "fiddling while Rome bnrnst" Or to express it in another way if we could forget poli- j tics for a while, and we the people concentrate, regardless of j partisanship, npon the WELFARE OF THIS COUNTRY, j would we bv mutual consent postpone activity in this presi-, dential campaign, until we had cleaned this country of the Sclmltzes, tho Ambergs, and the other criminal termites, who regardless of which party is in power, continue to bore from within and eat away, the very foundations of our Democracy? We think so. For after all, what great difference is it going to make whether the Republicans or the Democrats direct the affairs of this country for the next four years, if conditions are to continue, which compel the American people to make a yearly tribute of hundreds of millions of dollars, to black mailers, cut-throats and murderers, for the fond they eat and the clothes they wear, and also conditions which make this country so unsafe for law abiding and self-respecting citb.ens, that a couple like Cha'rles and Anne Lindbergh can no longer make their home bere! If such a situation doesn't awaken the American people to the necessity of a criminal house cleaning from New York to San Francisco and from Tampa to Seattle, then what CANt Personal Health Service By William Brady, M O. Meteorological Report Hlgned letter. pertaJnlng to personal oeajtb and nyglene not to disease uiaguusu or treatment win d. answered oy ur. tsrarjy tr . stamped elf-.a dressed envelope Is enclosed Letlera should Oe oriel and written in ink Owing to the large Dumber ot letters received only few ran be answered No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions Address ur William Brady. 26S El Caralno. Beverly Hills. C.L PRESERVATION OF THE IHARACTEHISCICS OF YOUTH. A nutritional condition batter than average may be Induced and main tained through an extended portion of the life-cycle by the more lib eral use of what are known a "the protective foods." McCoJ" lum and 81m monds described this condition a "the preserva tion of the char acter 1 s tics of youth." E x pe rlmental animals kept upon diets ade quate m other respects but lacking vitamin 0 develop a condition which resembles pellagra In man and also suggests premature senility In man. Peoplo with plenty of, money to spend for food are usually over weight and more frequently ahow signs of arteriosclerosis than people wun little money to spend for food and the latter are often under weight and hungry, according to Dr. E. W. Klinefelter (Medical Times, July, '35). Having examined more than a thousand persons for signs of arteriosclerosis Dr. Klinefelter In ferred that too much fat In the d let Is a factor, and reported fa vorable results from a low-fat diet, especially in the stago before defi nite hardening of the arteries Is demonstrable. Shortly after a meal In which fat or oil Is Included there la normally a temporary Increase In the amount of fat In the blood. But aside from that normal variation, excess of fat in the blood Is more likely to be found In starvation or In ex treme fasting than It la In ordinary overeating. The source of moat of the body fnt of a normal person or an obese person Is not fats or oils In food, but carbohydrates starches and sugars. Most of the fats or oils In food are either naturally poor in vita mins or such foods are robbed ' any vitamins they naturally contain, by refining or other processes. It does not seem to me logical to assume that too much fat can of Itself cause hardening of the arteries, nor does It seem logical to attempt to cut down the fat In the diet as a measure of prevention or treatment of arte.rloaclerosls. Poor people may not buy so much fat In the form of fresh meats and butter and cream and eggs as the I well-to-do generally consume but they do Include fair proportions of lard or lard substitutes and oleo margarlns In their food budget. The rich man's fat ration happens to I contain more vitamins than the poor man's fat ration does, as a rule. Refined food fats or oils are poor sources of vitamins, but milk, but ter, cresm and eggs are excellent sources of vitamins, especially vita min a. Quoting from the booklet "Build Ing Vitality" (copy for ten cent coin and stamped envelope bearing your addrpss): "One of the scien tists who Isolated vitamin C known as ascorbic acid or ceblon reported recently his opinion that this vita min protects against arteriosclerosis and other manifestations of old age." In the present state of our knowl edge It seems more reasonable to conceive that arteriosclerosis Is due rather to some factor which Is lack ing in the blood, rather than to think tt Is due to too much fat or any other food. i QIESTIONH AND ANSWERS. Mud Baths. I have found considerable relief from chronic rheumatism (as I call It) by taking mud baths In (a health resort), but I suppose you will aay whatever relief I get there is due to ehang of climate, rest. - regular hotirs, proper diet, etc. . , , T. O. R. Answer Not necessarily. I think heat, dry heat or moist, is often helpful in the treatment of the ills called rheumatism. Infection via Letter. Is It possible to contract syphilis by handling a letter by one who has the disease? Or handling a book, magazine, newspaper or money which has been handled by one who has the disease? . . . R. E. Answer Such -a mode of infection is possible, I suppose, tho ao ex- ceedlngly rnre that we need not j worry about it. It Is questionable whether any Infectious (bacterial) I disease Is ever conveyed from one , person to another via letter, b'tok. paper, magazine, money or other gift or merchandise. Personal con tact is essential for the transfer of Infection from one person to an other. Fear of Dentistry. Some time ago you told of the ise of sodium amytal for fear of the dentist. I have a lot of dental work that should have been done Ion since, but I am so afraid . . . Mrs. R. J. Answer Your physician can ad minister the remedies which will make you Indifferent to that fear and enable you to have the dental work properly done before It is too late. (Copyright, 1935, John T. Dlllfl Co.) forecasts Med ford and vicinity : Occasional rain tonight and Tuesday; not much change la temperature. Oregon: Occasional rain tonight and Tuesday; snow at high eleva tions; not much change In temper ature. Local Data Temperature a year ago today: highest 46; lowest 34. Total monthly precipitation. 3.40 Inches; excess for the month, .fi3 Inches. Total precipitation since Septem ber 1, 1035, 6 89 inches; deficiency for the season, .43 inches. Relative humidity at A p. m. yes terday G2 per cent; S a. m. today, 100 per cent. Tomorrow: sunrise 7:39 a. m.; sun set, 4:49 p. m. Observations Taken at 5 A. M,, 120th Meridian Time H s? BolM 43 38 T Bain Boston 18 is .00 Cloudy Ohloago 34 13 .00 Clear Denver , 44 32 .00 Clear Eureka 84 50 .34 Rain Helena so 12 .00 Cloudy Los Angeles.... 60 48 .32 clear Medford 46 39 .03 Bain New York .. 22 14 .30 Snow Omaha 38 30 T Clear Phoenix . SB 44 .01 P Cloudy Portland 48 44 .48 Bain Reno 48 32 .04 Cloudy Boseburf- SO 48 .33 Rain Salt Lake .... 34 34 .03 Snow flan Francisco 88 30 T Cloudy Seattle 86 48 .24 Cloudy Spokane 36 33 .10 Rain Walla Walla... 80 32 .06 cloudy Wash., D. C... 18 16 .74 Snow Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County hlstoiy from the files of the .Mali Tribune 10 and 20 years neo. NATIONAL HEAD OF TEN YEARS AGO TODAY Deeemher 30. J925 . (It was Tuesday) Citizens make ready tor merry welcome to 1926. Heavy fog cause, four auto al dent, of . minor nature on the street, of the city. Just at dark tonight, a aharp blast of high explosives heralded the otherwise too busy people of Gold HUI to a sight that always Inspires aw. In the soul of all God fearing men and women the fiery crosa on Echo mountain lit up majestically. (Gold Hill News). Fifteen local people spent the week-end at Crater lake, skiing. Floods ravage western Europe. There will be noJsaue of the Mall Tribune on New Year's day. First Sunday Issue of the Mall Tribune will be published next Sun day. M. Note: Persons wishing to rnmntnnlrflte with Tlr. Brady should send I'-tter direct to nr. William Rrnrtr. M. I)., 265 F.l Camlno, Beverly llllls, Cnllf. (Continued from Pag One.) rrlendly nation, abator Kye think Ma ch Vevlois the aa Infera tln bv Mfcin MoufSM fcxfcet! TH vm a Pftswi why Fr TmrwHi'a arm a the AwsMcan nMi(MVe MScls.tl'MH in lw Tec w jwtawsHr rlto. U I syKKy; rj- & S fft -t!i; IWMM tmMmi rMlUsjtjMr w.-si !! toot;, ra aouMerly M Inn cos Irna, gales. a . rlg-4 aw flfx- t ps4e. tt"wi men apparent iv kWk f onlv a few lines sr'sm mm 4 ttww. sHrrwwsi. th wholf a.wmhls(re tf srsciow!" otliv that two news r" wsst up M him. ohvlmisly ak ina fnalie. of his sddrs They s1 w him shake his hsd The proffosnr la lesrnlng Htf o new prlc theories "vere wtvanc?d by Tun writ. The addrew o not considered of major eo- rssiir Important loosening up, becoming more natu ral. Allen haa been a help, but most of Hoover's recent remarks were his own. BalnU and angels s hlnhly re vpvl. f net adcred. In Kthfopia. but fivn m aires are forbidden. Am"np the fruit trees whim urn In Prthlnpin are the fig orarnre. lime, r-rncrfiRate, peach, apricot and banana. O marital or have Nen marvel j ! tt the so., 'nlled iipw Hwor rr- snlltT. attributing the change solely to his friend and publicity adviser. Ren Allen. The change Tales continue to arise on the Inside here and In New York about the admlnlntratlon prosecuting and persecuting it political enemies through income tax procedure. Bom new dealers laughingly admit it. bvit not in such a way as to guarantee the authenticity of current broad suspicions that an Income tax cam-' pstgn la being conducted on politi cal grounds. I-ateet taxpayer to suffer is sup pose ha a natlonallv known antl - BosrsjM-rtt TVmocrat in New Yor. Kk troubles developed about the time It became generally known that he wouM shortly make a prmicl speech. Another prominent New Torn Democrat hit been ecmplnlnlng to hts frWi thst treasury -rente, are using thren of fraud pmsecution to frighten hli Into paying addi tinnst aewment. Most of these are old ravs and the personal rec ords hsve. been lot or destroyed A third man pavs alwara what the government as merelv to avoid trouble. Tr fraud club is Id ml for black jacking tsxpsvers because it permits treasurr scents to &t bark hevond the three-year statute of limitations The tmuhle Is taxpayers do not! care to flrht It out with the rov- ermaent. They are mindful or the : stigma attache) to income ax prosecuMonjj AIno. it requires a few years anl heavv attorney fee to prove yon are right. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O.O. Mclntyre of them In an old chest the other I day. Manners, talk and characters have changed little. With slight editing the articles might run today and synchronize perfectly with the current tempo. NEW YORK, Dec. 80. Diary: Bruce Balrna father came with an autographed copy of "Old Bill Looks at Europe," new ly printed. Then breakfasting with Verne Porter, mightily dis pirited over the passing of Ivan St. John. And ran upon Bide Dudley and his daughter, Doris, now a current stage beauty. Bo puttering until Prank Har dy from Cali fornia hove In with news of Jay Price. Later with my wife to a gal lery to see a 17th century deak but too costly for our purse and stepped to see Aubrey and Pepgy Hoyt Eads. And down the avenue In a flurry of snow to Kathleen and Charles Ncrria' tea. Betty and Mary Rogera and Theda Blske to dinner, leaving early to visit Jane Cowl. And we driving to Oreenwlch to remain overnight with lucy Virginia Long and became ao nbaorbed In Oeneral de Caulaln court'a memoirs of Napoleon In Rus sia I was still reading at daybreak. in " ifsl ! The cafeterias have become crepes suzette conscious. Heretofore this famous dessert has hwn reserved for such patrons of the Colony as Lucius Becbe and Frank Crownln- shleld. The blue flame of the crepes being fashioned at a table side was Indicative of wealth and a pluto cratic palate. An order ranged from 90 cents to $t,40. Several cnfeterlna now give them a window display In the manner of Chllds butter enkes and serve them to customers for aa little as 20 cents an order. Retributive Item: Noel Coward re centty forwarded to Alfred Lunt headline from a London tabloid reading: "Bursting Hydrant Nearly Drowns 5000 Dog." Sterling "Farmers Union" proposed means of "raising price of farm produce" by Frank H. Lowden of Illinois. TO Lieut. Phllo D. Smith, adjutant of the Medford CCC district, has been appointed to the committee making arrangements for the atate-wlda gathering of reserve officers to greet Ueut.-Col. Frank C. Lowe of Wash ington. D. C, national president of the Reserve Officers association oj the United States when he makes his official visit to this state nVxt Monday. The meetings to be attended by Col. Lowe will be held in Portland and plans are being made for a large attendance of reserve officers from all parts of Oregon. A reception and banquet at the Multnomah hotel comprise part of the program prepared In honor of the national president. Col. Lowe la making a national tour of inspection. He will travel to Portland by plane from San Fran cisco and his itinerary cslls for a brief stop at Medford municipal airport. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY Deeemher 30, IfllS (It was Thursday) Snow covers the orange groves of California; Baker with- eight degrees below zero is coldest place in Ore gon. Medford haa coldest night of year, wuh 13 above. County tax levy for year fixed at 14 mills. Russians launch huge offensive on the eastern front; fierce fighting be tween French and Germans in the Vosges. Kaiser WUhelm has a boll on his neck, which Is lanced, and the war proceeds. STERLING. Dec. 30. iSpl.) The Christmas dinner guests of J, D. French were Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Dut ton and sons Gay and Albert, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Newman. Sam Randels, Mrs. Harry Randels and sons Harvey and John, and Miss Jean Randels. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Davis had the misfortune to lose their home by fire last Friday at 4 o'clock in the afternoon. F. P. Dutton has returned from flan Francisco where he haa been trans acting business. Everett Beard visited at the home of his brother Glenn recently. Mr. and Mrs. C. Shields ore spend ing a few days In Klamath Falls. Miss France and Josephine Gentt of Medford spent Christmsa day with their mother, Mrs. W. H. Davis. A large crowd attended the Christ mas dance at the community hall at Sterling. Supper was served. Harold Well was a visitor at the home of Frank Dutton Thursday. Henry Well visited his parents. Mr and Mrs. Ed Well recently. Former Medford resident assaults his wife with a butcher knife in Portland. Various entertainments are being planned to watch the passing of the old year and the coming of the new. The Hotel Medford grill will be the scene of merry-making as the dry year la ushered in. 4 Birds of Ethiopia prized for their plumage are the ostrich, marabout, crane, heron, blackbird, parrot, Jay and many sun-birds. The first use of khaki for uniforms seems to have been In 1848 by the Guides, a mixed regiment of British frontier troops in India. ." Use Mall Tribune wanfr ads. ASSURED WITH OLD $yf West Palm Beach, Fla., recently observed the 41st anniversary of its : founding. I Hohlweg's Top Shop Window Lifts Repaired Doors Tightened Bartlett at 8th Phone 687 THE GRANGE One of Peter Arno's doughty club- men was evidently paying off a bet on Madison avenue yesterday. He swirled out of an office building sprucely attired save for a brilliant Ascot tie. resurrected from Heaven knows where, and wore It un ashamedly. A classic In bold design it wss embroidered In Taming col ors with a beer bottle, champagne glass, beer mug and the salutation 'Cheerio!" New York haa taken to Bhlh I. Mailing, the Chinese playwright, and his doll-like wife. Halung la here to direct his own play for Morris Ort. ft play running 18 months in t-ondon. The plavwrlahf wife. Dy- rr.ln, or "Black Plum Blossom." is a pot or some niinctin. xne nus-1 a statuesque Dolores lady with hand sneaka English fluently but , RltMtRn wolf hound poised on the Bagatelles: Louisiana haa a bigger fur trapping output yeartv than Canada . . . Walter Durnty lists Floyd Gibbons m No, 1 war reporter . . . John D. Jr. occasionally takes breakfast on the run at an avenue Chllds . . . Clsudette Colbert la the shrewdest investor among the screen girls . . . The Duke of York can make sounds like a puppy with an Injured tall without moving his lips . . . Jimmy Walker and Billy Seemsn are friends again. his wife understands only ft few phraaes. But she trips after him de murely. Chinese fashion, to dinners, lunchecna and teas, stirring New York out of customary yawn to murmur: "V?nw cuter Jack TVmpsey in a becomlnr fath erly role, haa become a familiar nonndav sight along the Central Tark Mall. He Uvea on the west trte of the park and on account of his late restaurant hours the baby la out with a nurae fr ft sunning when he arises ffo .after hu shower tie hlkea over to Join his offspring and indulges that domes tl, feature Lotus Pobpl cll "pushing the pram." plara a reps at tea hour, looked about annoyed snd whistled shrilly through her teeth. Frcm somewhere a minc ing fop toddled toward her. And a taxi driver yelled: "Atta Fldol" (Copyright. IMS, McNaught Syndicate). Tnr Hoee that Wear buy NOt.DE HORST Ethel wyn B Hcffmann. Use Mall Tribune want ada. SHU Coughing? No matter how manv merfiei you have mrd lor your cough, chest personal nomination for the ace ! cold or bronchial lrrltntlon. you can otter tn American mvaterv fiction ' St U'llef now With Crcomillsion f. s. Van nine. j Serious trouble may be brewing and j you cannot Hflord to take a chance Helen Green ucd to turn out a with anything 1pm than CreomuU h'!i-tip ries of artr-le for th on. wnicn goes ngnt to t:ie seat Not all the tax bludgeon in is not surprising tn any who really ;heing done against anti-new deal- anow Hoover, He wan never natu- ! era. It must have been ranv as grim as miring ma White a new deal press agent received riotiv Tenure, worr and after t!iat notice ttw other d.'.r fr, the inter file intimates Knew him as a man nal revenue bureau ry7: ,i Knon nnmor ni rm airhor inbuilt all hook., and riper. to pn e ! n of ft few wtati-raeka. What arrears ea- h item rf hta income tax return i in Sundsv rd!tln of the old MrrnlrX ia,!?1; t ."5 naiUr t5 tv-aw.nK ..m th- In w,h. fhe and heal the Inflamed niem- le.egraph ca.led The All Night ; bran08 m l d , Drug Store" and Internated with u loosened and rTivlleH Hp. hut ; antra of the fan-In a Mr ftrrav ot : Fven If Other rctnodlea hnra ty-.es at Madam De Shine a theatri- ; failed, dont bo discouraged, your ! hoarding ho-ie ne evsa re- dnik'Kist ts authorized, to guarantee vm tojnv,i ra.-v aiftnas cf the Creomuision mid tr refund your ..dv hfe of t!-a' dav. th- lav. Im'1! nre not saii.sneci wun bright banter and ths lc eat m Roxy Ann Orange. The next Roxy Ann Grange dance will be held in the Orange hall on ! Spring atreet, New Year's eve. The dance will start at 0:30 p. m. j Good music will be furnished by i the Jacksonville orchestra. ! Everyone who enjoya a good clean j dance should be with the crowd at the Roxy Ann Orange hall, December I 31. I Carnival Dance AT DREAMLAND New Year's Eve, Dec. 31 RUBE and HIS ORCHESTRA! COME AND HAVE A GOOD TIME ALSO NEW YEAR'S NITE, JANUARY 1ST ANOTHER BIG DANCE AT DREAMLAND Rud TVrnge and His Rami will furnish the music! (KENTUCKY! r- 4r or i i IOUR MAIN WHISKEY results from the vrv first tvtt!i Oct Creomuision right now. (AdvJ j a quality whiskey of moderate price distilLes by experts fsr exacting taste 4 "nrs $ej.75 ' C0DI Nt C0DI N. 1I6C Quarts C0DI No. 186A HOME 1 STRAIGHT BOURBON AOIO IN OAH A JOHN A. WAT HEN PRODUCT DISTIILIRS FOR 147 YEARS w oava iujipeuoa u lat i i tinea jcau a. j, doub.e Uca. lug. 1 cuis ujou a dt