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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1936)
PAGE TWELVE MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEUFOKD, OREGON. FRIDAY. APRIL 10. 1936. Tribune "Eteryunf la Stiuthero Orejcna KmU the Mull Tribune" Dally Eirpt tUturdaf Pubtuhtd by MRDlMiRn PRlNTINtl CO. II-JTH N. Plr St. Phone II ROUEItT W. RUHU Brtllor. ERNEST R- GII'STRAP. UDir. Ad fndpD1oi Nwpipr. RniAFki Monri.vliii matttr at ilad ford. Oraioo, updar Act of March I, lTI SUBSCRIPTION RATES It Uail In Arivancat Dally, on yaar Dally, all months ' nliv an month ........... i-arnar. in Ad vajica MadforiL Ash- land. Jackaonviila, Central Point, Phoenix. Talent. Oold Hill Ud on hlihviVL ra llw an VaMf .............. .If -00 Dally, all moptha t.Sa Dally, on month -0 AH tarma. easn id anvanca. Official Paper of Ilia City of Hedrnrd. orrirlaJ I'mier of Jnrknoo County. UKMIIF.H OP THIS ANHO lATfcli l'Kt( Racrlvlnv full lMea wire ier.ce. Tha Aaaoclatad Praia la aiolualvaly o tit lad to tha naa for DUbllcalloo of al aawa dltDatchaa aradltad to It or othar wlaa oraditad lo thia pa par. and ajao to tha local nawa published herein. All rlghta for publication of apaclaj dlapatohaa harala ara alao raaarvad. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS U EMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advartlalng Rapraaantattvaa U. C 4IOOKNHKN COM PAN If Offlcaa Id New York. Chicago Datrolt San Pranciaco. Loa Anfeiea, Saat'-la. Portland. Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Vet!. In tha proposed re-pavlng of Med ford street, that need It, It begin to look like committee report, In stead o( good Intention would b need. - The marshal Mid the girl was tlghteen, end unhurt." (Ager Item) , The Iruplred printer I right again. ... i It turned off pretty o the chil blains of lest week re the spring fever of today. A POET FLAWS UP. (Literary Digest) Sir: I am sorry the "Current Poetry" Editor did not feel my poem "Spring" worthy of a place In the columns. I read the poems he does print and think some of them very poor Indeed. . A score of student at the Univer sity of California have been ex pelled for cheating In examination. They are among the Veteran of Future Honesty Is the Best Policy. ... It now develops the cost of In stalling "governors" on autos to curb recklessness and apeedlng would be too expensive, both for the manu facturers and the owners. Cutting about three Inches off ths foot feed ga pedal might solve the prooiem. ... The Bohnert Boy of CPt. have their rhubarb, known to old tlmere as ple-plsnt, on the mat. YB ED LOOK NATUIIAL. (Pendleton East Oregonlan) Other numbers on the program Included an Instrumental solo by Don Hougltton of Irrlgon: s dialogue by Horace Addis and Mrs. MsoFarland, "Clone With a Handsomer Man": a drama put .on by members of Willows grarwe: a solo by Mrs. N , of Irrlgon grange and a talk by Mrs. Nelson of Heppner. ... "He has the personality of an In fant that grown-up like to chuck under the chin. HI statesmanship Is of sbout the same Immaturity aa hi physiognomy." (Everybody's Busi. nets. Portland) The campaign gets rough. ... H. Selsssle. ruler of Ethiopia, and ths "Lion of Judah" ha ahaved off his whiskers. Biblical generals In etructed their wsrrlors to do the ssme thing, "lest thy beards become handlea for thine enemies." The Republican party now nounces It will hsve a "Brain Trust" of Ite own. Thla Is considerable like lightning striking twice In the same place, but the country can stand it. THE WEATHER OOE TOWNSEND. (Baker Democrat-Herald) HALFWAY, Or., April 4. Who ssld It was spring? In Pine val ley we thought It should be. the calendar said so, but we seem to be fooled. A farmer even went so fsr as to predict a short sum mer sometime sfter August. Only three deys left to register for the May 14th primary. Even though one will not be mad enough to vote, and, anyway. Intend to go fi.htnv on election day, one should register. There are no funds evall sble to give a patriot a dime, to eome to your house and beg you to register. The robins snd ths meadow-Urka art alnglng at dawn, as If their little throst would bust. A number of eltlsens awakened by their carols. wish they would. The Dlonne kids are appearing at the O. Hunt magic lantern. They think they are a cute as the new granddaihter of S. Morris, the T. Hock tlllsr. ' ... Fields In the rural area Indicate there will be a fine stand of wneal. and a better on of yellow mustsrd. where It ss extermlnsted last fall. VANCOUVER TEACHERS GIVEN SALARY RAISE VANCOUVER, Wh.. April 10.--tfll A 10 per cant salary InoreiM will ! It. the pay check of tear.ft.era here neit year. The school board voted to Increaaa lh buVt to 33J.1H, A.17. 000 orer 1935-31. much of the in crease being for salaries. Suit and Blouses for Caster at BTHELWYN B. HOFFMANN 3. MEDFORD, -MEMBER "Ml "Provincial and Selfish!" , "pilE Oregonian calls the Mail Tribune "provincial and self- ish" for asking that BEFORE $10,000,000 be spent for a second highway along the Columbia river, ten percent of that sum, a million dollars be spent to complete the improvement of the Pacifio Highway over the Siskiyous.. For, maintains the Portland paper, the Pacific Highway is not the most important highway in the state. There are two of them. The Columbia River highway is EQUALLY important. "PINIONS may differ regarding this judgment, but for the sake of argument let it be admitted that the east-west entrance to Portland, IS just as important,' to the state, as the north-south entrance to Medford. This places the two districts on an equal basis. Now, will the Oregonian kindly publish the amount of money the state highway commission, has spent, during the past four or five years, in the Portland area, and compare that with what has been spent, during the same period in the Medford area? We think those figures would throw an inter esting side light, upon the selfishness and provincialism of the Rogue River valley and southern Oregon, in asking that BEFORE the east entrance be given TWO good highways the south entrance (equally important) at least be given ONE I A S the Salem Statesman has pointed out' a highway, like, a chain, is no stronger than its weakest link. The weak link on the Pacific Highway is that corkscrew "bottle neck" over the Siskiyous to the California line. It is, and has been, a con stant barrier to the free flow of traffic, tourist and otherwise, into and out of this state. There is no such barrier and bia River highway. Jn fact the $10,000,000 water level "speedway",. were builtthe Columbia River highway would STILL BE USED, and we read: "its charm will be vastly enhanced because it will be relieved of the great volume of commercial traffic and through traffic that it carries now! Very pretty ! Portland would and beautiful Columbia River highway for tourists and vaca tionists, and a new water-level Columbia River highway RUN NING PARALLEL TO IT for devil 'speed artists. And at an What provincialism and selfishness, to' SUGGEST, that be fore this state spends ten million, for two highways along the Columbia, one million be spent -to give the' state one highway from the south, that is merely safe and serviceable, for all types of motor travel! And a highway which even the Oregonian admits, is not surpassed in its importance by any other highway in the state I ,. . uffi wad some power the gift to gie us to see oursels as -'others see us." We beliove it would profit the Oregonian, if it could realize how not only this section of the state, but every other section outside of Portland, regards its demand, that in spite of the millions spent on highways in that area, during the pnst decade, it now demands tlint before a million dollars be spent to give the state, a safe and modern entrance on the south, ten million be spent Portland t o the entrance on the east. We think the terms used would be fully ns strong, and even more descriptive, if not as parliamentary, as THOSE directed towards this newspaper. A New Way to Peace llRS. ALICE LONGWORTII is a confirmed isolationist. She " took an active, though unofficial part, in the political on slaught against President Wilson and the League of Nations, which sent the former, broken hearted to his grave. In her latest comment on the news, Mrs. Longworth answers the complaint against continued butchery in Ethiopia as fol lows : "Anyone qfho shudders st the stories of high explosive and gaa bomb that have Inatigurated a new deadly "rainy season" In that dlatreeeed province would do well to recollect that no "protected" war would have occurred If Ethiopia had not been a . member of the League of Nations." So here we have another, and rather novel, indictment against the League. If Emperor Selassie had been smart like Uncle Sam and nevor joined the League he would not be fleeing from airplane bombs and dum dum bullets, and his faithful subject would not be dying in poison gas. No, everything would be peaceful in far off Ethiopia. Selas sie would never have had to shnve ly have packed up his books and where along the Riviera. The Italian flag would now be flying over Addis Ababa, and 11 Duce's son-in-law would be using Haile's former palace as a stable for his polo ponies. WHAT and AT a sweet and easv war peace. Just quit when danger threatens, and step gracefully out when someone steps in, Of course, Mrs. Longworth tried to resist the Itnlian invasion for a little while, but if he had not been a member of the League he "would have collapsed long ago." So charge this continued carnage and daughter up against that covenant signed in Paris a The way to get peace, if you neighbor is not to ask the assi!Hii''e of those nations organised to prevent war, but go it alone, make a gesture toward resis tance and then promptly pull down vonr flng! Closing arguments in the las.ooo damage ault of William nippen. 71. of Oold Hill, Axalnat Perry Ashcrart of Medford, automobile dealer, were started this morning In circuit court. It m-as expected that the case would be In the hands of the Jury by mid-slternoon. The defense contended thst yip- no suoh condition on the Colum Oregonian admits, that if this then have the still serviceable trucks, motor busses and dare added cost of only $10,000,000! to give it TWO highways from agony from gaping wounds and off his whiskers, would mere chattels and taken a villa some to attain everlasting security bigger ami stronger than you , continues, Haille might have decade and a half ago. happen to be weaker than your pen walked Into the rear of the Aah rrsrt suto Is It stopped snd started at a atreet Intersection, and were In no wlee responsible. They offered testi mony to allow thst Plippen hsd been struck by the rear portion of the Aahcralt suto. They further held the derendanl wss guilty of contributory tvt:i?jen,,e. snd thst there was no notliltenoe on the psrt of Ashcraft. The atvldent occurred In June. I8J.V at the Fourth street snd Ps olflc h'hwsy Intersection In Oold Hill. Fltppen alleges In his complslnt. he sustained head and brain Injuries' snd was in a eeml-con.loua condition for a month, as a result of the mis-j hsp. I Personal Health Service By William signed lelUr pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease magnums or treatment Mill be answered by Dr. Brsdy If a itamped self-ad urrueo envelope Is enclosed. Letters owing to the large number of letters repiy can be made to queries not ur. VHIIJaiii Brady, MS El I'ainlno, HAVE SOME GRAPE JUICE The failure of many obese Individ - usls to stick to a fair reduction diet long enougn to accomplish anything la due to three causes: 1. The patient Is not duly l pressed with the seriousness of his condition. He re gards It as i mer defect In personal appear ance or personal comfort. He ought to know that simple nu trltlonal obesity Is a definite factor of diabetes, high blood pressure and arteriosclerosis. gradual heart muscle failure, and other diseases. 2. The patient's regimen falls to supply an optimal ration or vitamins, and one reason he gamed excess flesh Is that his ordinary diet has for years provided insufficient vitamins; when the diet Is cut down In calories It Is cut down In vitamins, too. Without adequate vitamins anyone Is bound to feel far from right, and when one does not feel at all well It Is not easy to stick to a diet. The patient's blood sugar level sometimes falls below the normal, and to resist the craving for food which manifests Itself in such cir- stances Is to court actual danger. A pound a week Is enough for any ordinary overweight Individual tc lose. A reduction regimen calculated to bring about a loss of not over a pound a week Is likely to prove most successful and most healthful In the long run. The greatest failures and the greatest tragedies occur when overweight individuals attempt to re duce several pounds a week. A practice which has enabled many fat folk to stick to a reduction diet when they would certainly have bro ken training otherwise, Is that of drinking a small glassful of grape Juice about an hour before regular meal time, two or three times a day. Each ounce of grape Juice yields ap proximately the same number of cal ories as an ounce of fresh sweet milk about 20 calories. The glucose (grape sugar) In the Juice is quickly absorb ed and serves to restore the blood sugar to Us normal level. Patients find this seems to satisfy their crav ing and they are content with little food, whereas when the blood sugar is too low there is a tendency to gorge beyond all reason. The sources of vitamins are given 1 In a practical way in the booklet. "Building Vitality." and the special application of this knowledge to the NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, April 10. Thoughts while strolling: Always a fellow with a hoarse voice around a garage, And a well-dressed, agreeable fellow to run Inglorious errands around a night club. They can have all the waltz tunes. If they will leave me "T h e Blue Danube." What became of Mack Bennett? Everybory, save 'BUI Robinson who deserved It, gets credit for the tap dance vogue. Joe cook lLaivJ Isn't much bigger than a minute off stage. No one can give a top-hat that certain tilt like Ernest Olendennlng. Or that careless wrist flap to a glove like Nelson Eddy. Add square shoulders: Bob Hope's. Ray Noble IS a ringer for Stowkowski 20 years ago. Fannie Brlce la a cinch for the caricaturists a catfish month and there she 1st Another swing of the cycle and the Oibson girl costume again. Fontaine Fox with an aye- brow mustache could pass for Clif ton webb. Every dance orchestra has a Pee- Wee. Singers greatest bugaboo laryngitis; dancers' strained tendons. The thing feared, etc. Mimic sug gestion for Sheila Barrett. Elsie Max well being coy. The name Kay some how suggests drlnkee and caper. Films' No. 1 Heart Throb: Robert Taylor. 1 Dandiest bit of writing lately: Adele Asfalre's tribute to her brother Fred In Variety. Not many know Rugeue O'Neill was a reporter on a New London, ct.. dally once. Just a newspaper guy I And Al Freuh. who draw,s those European caricatures for The New Yorker, Is a sod blister frm Lima, O. ' They were talking of the mtt realistic touches over the radio. My choice is the Inquiring, doleful and worried "aanh" hat Amos of Amos Andy Interjects in a conversational pause. It means he understand and to proceed. Everyone who has stud Ird colored folk knows what a pro nounced characteristic It I. Yet among all the white delineators of the Negro I never before heard It employed. Mclntyre had drawn out "ya-a-ais sir" In his cross patter wUn Heath that had something of the same meaning, but not quite. Now and then from my window. I e Oscar, the apple-cheeked Waldorf chef, start off on his evening stroli with hU pipe always alight. He han dles It with the awkwardne.ta of the novice, tamvimr and stopping for fre- E S RELIEF iSore, Irritated Skin r Wherever it is however broken the klurfaca-freely apply .oothing. "urfaca-freely apply toothing b Resmol Brady, M.D. should be brief and written In Ink received only a few can be answered conforming to Instructions. Address Beverly Hills, Lai. BEFORE MEALS, FATTY 1 reduction regimen Is given In the I booklet, "Design for Dwindling, either of which will be mailed by Dr. Brady if you Inclose 10 cents coin and stamped envelope bearing your address. One source of a good desl of su perilous flesh Is the bsbit of taking too much sugar In coffee, tea or with fruit or other food. Moderate excess weight may be controlled by merely substituting saccharin for sugar- quarter-grain tablet of saccharin having the sweetening effert of spoonful of sugar, and of course sac charin has no nutritive value, where as spoonful of sugar yields 30 or more calories. Any one may use up to five grains of saccharin dally with lm p unity. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Sciatica Have you any suggestions to offer for the relief of sciatica? M7 hus band Is laid up with It and suffers a great deal. (Mrs. H. C. Y.) Answer. Send stamped envelope bearing your address for a mono graph on sciatica. Vinegar What Is the caloric value of one teaspoonful of cider vinegar? Is there any kind of vinegar that has no caloric value? (H. A.) Ans. Vinegar has practically caloric value, that Is, no nutritive value. Amateur Doctoring Our family consists of mother, father, three children aged 22, 18 and 13. Whenever any one has cold mother puts first 10 per cent argyrol drops In each nostril, and then Ephedrlne drops. Is this treat ment advisable without medical su pervision? (A. L.) Ans. If the argyrol Is not too ir ritating It will probably do no harm. Whether such treatment Is helpful in scute Inflammation I doubt. Concentrated Food Tablets Can you tell me whether the con centrated vegetable tablets on the market supply the essential food properties If the diet contains too few vegetables? (Mrs. K. a. p.) Ans. in my opinion they do not, I have two booklets, "Guide to. Right Eeatlng" and "Building Vitality." which would enlighten you. Send 10 cents in coin and stamped envelope bearing your address, for copy of either. (Copyright, 1936, John P. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to com mil nl coat e with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr William Brady, M. D- !Ga 1 (amino. Beverly Hills, Calif. quent llght-ups, The seasoned smo ker such as Frank Craven on his stroll, has finesse. He keeps his pipe going with the first light, rubs his fingers over It lovingly at intervals and there Is about the proceeding en artistry. But Oscar Is a novice. . He never smoked until past 60. All his life he obeyed the chef's unwritten credo to eschew tobacco because It dulls the sensitive taste necessary In expert cuisine. v , , Bob Brlnkerhoff Is the most ac complished pipe smoker I know. His devotion brooks no curtailment. He will go no place his pipe Is not wel come, and to see him stoke up. light and fondle a pipe has something of accomplishment. The average city dweller dines at 7 or 7:30 at the earliest. Brlnkerhoff dines at 6 to hurry that after-dinner session to which every pipe lover loks forwsrd. To delay his dinner causes him to roar and pace to and fro. Oov. Lan don, by his devotion, should win the pipe -smoking vote. One of the town's famous dogs has gone for its Elyslan romp. When a whimpering puppy. It was picked up In a West 74th street gutter one dusk by Dorothy Parker and Neysa McMeln. From their car they saw a drunk cuff ing It, and stopped and took It Into car. They were on their way to the Herbert Beyard Swopes, who then liv ed In Great Neck. The Swopes adopt ed It. That was 15 years sgo snd the pooch became a favorite with the army of celebrities who have long made the Swope home & rendezvous. And It was dubbed Amy Psrker Mc Meln. Among Amy's honors was a poetic psnegyrlc to her loyalty by Miss Parker, included in one of her volumes of verse. And Amy was s regular model for Miss McMeln. One posing 'turned out so auspiciously It was elaborated Into a regular oil study, which the artist, upon hear ing of the dog's passing, ordered re i varnished and presented formally to the swopes. Amy a-as a mixture of sheep dog. collie and alredate. A line age Booth Tarkington calls miscella neous, but which haa produced the i wisest dogs, 1 (Copyright. 1039. McNaught ' Svndifate.) HOLBROOK TAKES HOLD If 4 toallu I gf, k" f 1 A ' one brings : i " I T fVj I 1' E T STRAIGHT V i! surprisingly "W K I I bkfora.er h B0URB0X , , II I J lyj CEHTUKV DISTILLING CO. PEORIA. ILL jW a. Comment on the Day s News By FKANK JKNKI.NS JO. HAMAKER, of Bonanza, came to the Klamath country In 1880. His brother, S. C. Hamaker, who died recently In Ashland, came In 1879. The Klamath country was then thinly settled, and the cattle busi ness was the only business of any considerable Importance. Agriculture, other than livestock, j hadn't got much of a start. MR;( HAMAKER lived for eight years st the Horton ranch, In Poe valley, snd remembers quite dls slnctly the stockade wlith the port holes cut In for gunfire, which was mentioned in these chronicles the other day. He remembers also the old guns which had been distributed by the government for the protection of the settlers at the time of the Modoc war. i "QMEBODY ssked me a while bsck J what kind of a country this was back in those early days," he said to this writer a few days ago. "I answered that It was a GOOD country. "In those days, you could ride in anywhere, put your horse In the barn, stay for dinner. If It was around noon, or for supper and overnight. If It waa in the evening, and If you offered to pay It was the worst in sult you could give. "Hospitality, in those times, was open-handed, hearty and sincere." "AT THE Horton ranch," Mr. Ham aker continued, "a saddle horse was always kept standing and ready is the barn. This horse was for the use of ANYONE who might have need of It. "People, going In haste for the doc tor, would ride at top speed as far as the Horton ranch, leave the spent and winded horse there, take the fresh saddle horse from the barn, and dash on. Returning, the horses would be changed again at the Hor ton ranch. "In this way, many a precious hour was saved In times of emer gency when speed meant everything." WHAT a change the telephone, the good road and the automobile have made In our lives especially In this vital matter of getting a doctor In a hurry when somebody Is sick I j We now go to the elephone, call i the doctor at his office or his home. tell him who It Is and what la want ed; he gets into awift and tireless (unwearying Is meant, no pun being Intended) car and over a good road, paved a part of the way, probably, he goes to where he Is needed. Little time Is lost. Back in those earlier days, they must first get to the doctor and then get the doctor back again. Up.' IN the Sisters country, there Is time) of a man named Marsh Awbrey who rode one horse from Sisters across the Cascades to Eugene In one night to get a doctor for his sick wife, then turned around without 0LD5PEA5 Fin Old Apple Brandy 17 MONTHS- OLD N EW LOW PRICES IB reat. food or sleep and came back with tha doctor. The distance Is 80 miles, and in those dsys the road over the McKen tie lava beds was little more than a trail. E OF today complain bitterly of the complexities of modern life, meaning that these complexities have made living a pretty hard Job for us and Intimating that In the good old days, when life was simple, people didn't have much to worry about. If we could be taken auddenty back Into the seventies and the eighties, out here In the West, we'd find we hsd PLENTY to complain about and could hardly wait to get home to our modern complexities. Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years TEN VEARS AGO TODAY April 10, 1926 -" (It was Saturday) Mild weather brings out tennis and golf enthusiasts, while farmers pray for rain. .The Snider Dairy purchases prop erty on Bartlett street, for plsnt. J. T. (Shorty) Conrad, hit In face by crsnk. while cranking Ford auto. No hope held for reoovery of Luther Bur bank, plant wizard, desperately 111 at Santa Rosa, Calif. Rich Socialists urged to give cash not talks to cause, by party lead ers. . Traffic officers launch campaign against Pacific highway speeders. Medford defeats Ashland high, 2 to 0 In first baseball game of season. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April 10. 1II6 (It was Monday) Government Investigates report that Pane ho Villa, Mexican bandit, is dead and burled, and American army in pursuit may be ordered home. Paris Supreme effort of Germany for capture of Verdun, is repulsed by French. Miss Alice Hanley is named Judge In a 'bread baking' contest. 'A million-dollar' shower, that drenched the valley with an Inch of rain, cheers farmers. Eleven feet of snow at Crater lake rim. Lady auto 1st again arrested and freed for driving on the wrong side ! or Main street. Police Judge threat ens fine. Spring seeding Is completed In the Table Rock district. Three-Legged Chick WALLA WALLA, April 10. (TP) I. D. (Chicken) Casey reported a healthy three-legged chick in hatching of this week. He said It was the first of Its HEATH'S DRUG SPECIALS Dr. West's Tooth Paste 19c Citrocarbonate (Upjohns) 79c It Williams Shaving Cream with Free Aqua Velva. 29c Super D Cod Liver Oil 89c Squibbs Milk of Magnesia 34c 10ccU40 Insulin. $1.41 Criterion Watches Prophylactic Tooth Brushes 39c ABD Capsules, Parke Davis $1.09 J. & J. Baby Powder 19c Genuine Gillette Blades 25c Fitches Dandruff Remover Shampoo 59c Ex Lax 23c 50 Agarol $1.09 The Store That Fills Prescriptions DRUG GREEN I SLAB W Big DOUBLE LOAD For Direct Mill Deliveries First come, first served! Phone 7 Now TIMBER PRODUCTS CO. END OF NORTH CENTRAL AVENUE kind in the spproxlmately 30.0O0.000 chickens be has seen hatched. SPOKANE, Wash. April 10. (AP) Northwest campus publllclty men elected Hsrold C. Elkton of Llnfleld college. McMlnvllle, Ore. district di rector of the American College Pub llcity association. He succeeds Roy Rosenthal of the University of Wash. Ington. Today was the second of round table discussions by the group. flOO I B PER .U VVEIK ttSXEWf qnjinr irrn othtt rvtrestom AUTO SUPPLY & SERVICE STORES iDFORD S. P. Railroad Track, Facing Main St. 2 DAYS ONLY MON.-TUES. 13-14 GENERAL ADMISSION IUC FOR THIS DATE Real Live Penguins Octupus Sea Monsters OPEN 10 A.M. TILL 11 P.M. SSS2aT (guaranteed) 85c 3 2 f irfsl-.i'il1il.i Acetidine 12s 21c Ladies' Rest Room in Basement STORE iaajfiM.1 iwiasj PINE t-iresrone APRIL I ft Alka Seltzer 49c 7 'J-L"' ssgygy-1 yviiy