PAOii! KTT
"NfEDFOTlT) MAT! j TRTBTTNT5!. MEDFORD, OTCEGON'. STTSTDAY. SEPTEMBER 13. 1936
MEDFORDfeTRIBUNE
"Everyone Id Hnutliem OragnD
RflHila the Mnll Trlhuno"
Oh My Except Oiiturdaj.
Published by
MbJUFOnD PRINTING CO.
N. fir St. Phon 11
BOUEHT W. HUHL, Editor
BRNBST R. QI1..8TRAP. Manager.
Ad Independent Newspaper
PlnrPAff Mnnnrt'eliii matter at Med
tord. Oregon, under Aot of March 8. 187
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Dally, one year
Dally, en montne
n-llv nn. month 40
By Carrier, la Advance Med ford, eh
i .4 f i n t r I Point
. Pboenli, Talent, Gold Hill and on
hlgnwaye.
Dally, nno year to.ow
Dally, elx moiithe.... '2&
Dally, one month
All terms, canti Id advance.
OfflrJiil Pupsr of Ihe City ol Medford.
orrirlnl laier of Jm-kann County.
HKMItEK OS TUB AH8O0I A'J'KI PKJCSH
Receiving Full I.aed Wire service.
Th Aunnlateil Prese la exclualvely en
titled to the use for publication of all
nene dispatches credited to It or other,
wlie oredlted In thle paper, and aleo to
the local new pub Untied nerem.
All right for publication of special
dlspatohes herein are also reserved.
MEMHER OF UNITED PRESS
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Representatives
M. 0. MOOENHEN A COMPANY
Office In New York, Chicago Detroit
San Francisco. Los Angeles, Seattle.
Portland
ED
Ye Smudge Pot
Uy Arthur Perry.
Kids started to school laot week,
and aro busy with their throe B'
reading', rltln' and racln' BUtos, to
and from school.
Valley "Tories" and 'Trlnccs of
privilege" have opened hclqts. and
will traduce and taunt Democrats
until Nov, 3.
Oorb Edgoll wanted an hr. Prl.
wrestling with a X-word puzzle. It
Is refreshing to note a citizen not
bragging about a fish he nearly
c-iught,
Tho Dubb Watson boy Ed Is now
equipped with spurs, and gives pro
mise of being another O. Wig Ash
pole, when It comoa to riding a
horse. His first mount Was a frac
tious broomstick.'
Oas - silos are becoming so thick,
planB are shnplng to set aside a va
cant lot so our children's children
can see what one looks like.
Tho courthouse ynrd woodpeckers
are busy aa an orohardlst, getting
ready for wtnusr. They have thotr
cupboard In a Pub. Lib. oak, about
full of county acorns.
A number of guts aro wearing what
they have been knitting for flvo
months, and look smart.
Eagle Pt. was awarded some fed
eral spondulicks last week, for a new
waterworks.
The early mornings are getting
quite chilly, causing many to give a
thought to overcoats and woodpiles.
Local lead pencils that havo boon
aimed at a rr. to Crescent city for
two months, have been put back In
their holsters.
Tom Carleton, the Flounce Rock
cowman, et ux, et boys skinned out
the 1st of the week for the Pendleton
roundup.
T. Waterman reports he cast a
straw ballot for Lemke, but docs not
want anybody In his native state of
Vermont to find It out.
H. Ncalon of Sams Valley called
Wed. and reported he was In need of
nothing but a rain for fall plowing,
and more cosh. He got the former
Sat,
Uncle John Orllfln, 88. the pioneer
beaj slayer melded 1000 aces In a
pinuckel game with two cronies
Tues. He did the dealing, he admlls.
State Assessors were here last week.
They are the first group to meet
this year that had a kind word to
say for the taxes. Wednesday eve
ning they ate filed chicken on mm
Coleman at Phoenix.
The hs. football sqund started
practising Tues. They are quite
robust, and are being drilled to hit
ell at once, like a switch engine. The
athletic cavorting this Mason will be
done on a turf field.
Jim Stovens, tho vocalist, Is getting
ready to run for the legislature on
the Democratic ticket, He may bal
ance the budget, with a couple of
bass solos, when the campaign gets
hot.
The deer season opens next Sun.
and hunters sre urged not to shoot
at a doer wearing a red hat and
yelling; "I'm a manl"
J, Kort Hall has his fall work well
In hand, and has started preliminary
worrying about what next year s pear
crop la not going to be.
SELF IMPROVEMENT
CLASSES ANNOUNCED
nebular classes for those interested
In self Improvement In character
building by the study and use of
physical, mental and spiritual . laws
will origin Monday, September 14, at
the home of Dr. end Mrs. E. W. Hoff
man on the Jacksonville highway,
Mrs. Hoffman snnounced Saturday.
She will Instruct the rfas. The Mon
day claw will start at 7:45 p m
There will slso lie a beginner's claw
on Wediieaday, September la, at 9:44
a. m. Both classes are free, with the
public Invited.
WINDOW GLASS We sell winclom
glass and will replace youi broken
wlnduws reasonably. Trowbridge Cab
inet Work.
Cditorial Correspondence
CLEVELAND, Ohio. (by mail) We had planned to catch
tho 6 p. m. boat at Buffalo for Detroit thus duplicating the
time saving qualities of the Albany night bout, being trans
ported on our way as we slept. But the fog soon cleared after
our early start, and we sped over the hills and valleys of the
Empire .state a continuous switch back through beautiful
farming country faster than we anticipated. We approached
Buffalo about two-thirty in the afternoon and didn t tancy
killing time in that city for three hours waiting for the boat to
embark, so took the loft hand fork for Cleveland, Ohio, giving
Buffalo the go-by.
In the outskirts of Eric, Pennsylvania, an open touring car
nasscd us. with waving of hands and blowing of horn, and
we were able to distinguish the party of four three young
ladies and a bald-headed, dapper young man, who occupied
the table next us, in tho dining salon of the "Jtennsaelcr" the
night before. They were a vaudeville troupe en route to the
Cleveland Exposition, so our waiter told us. Our car was the
first to leave the boat, and this was the first caravan of our
follow passengers td overtake
boat, and shoved off at ten of
the way. So we figured the
havo been an auto racer in his
tho vaudevillians had started
Thev caught a green light just
never saw them again. Hope
Cleveland, Ohio appeared strangely deserted and quiet, at
seven p. m. daylight saving,
correspondent to figure it out, until He realized tnat nis last
visit to the metropolis of the Great, Lakes was during the G. 0.
P. convention. Motoring about
before ten. to be exact had
"Francisco after the Big game,
Euclid Avenue, without interruption at do miles an hour. Uur
plan was to catch Route No. 2, for Chicago, make our way
through Cleveland before dark and find a place to sleep,
somewhere on the far western
passed directly by the Great. Lakes Exposition, and the sight
of the pennants flying from gaily colored flag poles, tho im
pressive pylons, in striking incandescent colors, and crowds
moving through the turnstiles proved too much for US' at least
one of us (yes, we have a travelling companion on this trip,
a young man, 21, in search of a publisher) so we parked the
car in a nearby parking place, bags, dust, crumpled news
papers and nll,-Mind hied to the press booth.
Hero we met the same veteran
the press at the Chicago Exposition two summers before, so it
took us no time at all to get our credentials. Wo explained wo
were only there for the evening, but our mugs had to bo shot
just tho same, pasted on' enough admission tickets, to provide
for a two weeks stop, and advised to take in the danee of the
voils, which got "pretty hot about three in the morning." We
let it go at that. Wo had no time to explain, that one of
the parly was loo smart and the
by that sort of hocus pocus, and
least eight hours sleep before
morning.
The first tiling to do was to
lunched lightly en route, seven
stato service station. Profiting
wasted no time wandering aimlessly about looking for restau
rant signs but grabbed the first exposition guard we could
find and received the lowdown. ' (Tho Cleveland guards, by tho
way, arc just as clean-cut, courteous, and collegiate as those at
Chicago.) Ho advised the Strand or the Piccadilly, wo ean't
recall which, but we know it was English and next to the Globe
Theatre Flayers, His Nibs going to the troublo of drawing a
diagram on the back of an envelope so we couldn't miss it.
Strango to relate we didn't miss it, for one newspaper man is
bad enough, but get two of them together, their missing average
where such a practical matter as directions is concerned, we
havo already discovered is high very high indeed.
Equally strango to relate tho dinner was a good one, for it
was late and good dinners at expositions aro almost as rare, as
good peanuts at a circus. So there wo sat on a beautiful, clear
summer evening, and consumed our rare roast beef and trim
ming, while in tho air above us a couple of graceful Goodyear
dirigibles sailed around, ribbons of rainbow lights playing over
the roofs of the buildings, on the right and before us, a group
of boys and girls from the Globe TJientre company executing
folk dances before a stately aetorine, made up skillfully to
represent the imperious Queen Elizabeth. It was all very nice
very and jauntily lighting a cigarette wo asked the Anne
Hathaway waitress, who she was going to vote for, for presi
dent. She hesitated, brushed an invisible crumb from the table
cloth with her napkin and finally avowed as she didn't know.
At homo she said everyone was for Coughlin, but sho hadn't
made up her mind. The young man in search of a publisher
put in his oar at this point (he has been reporting for a New
York paper for nearly a year and prides himself on "getting
his man" or girl as the case may be), and remarked Cough
lin was not a candidate was sho for Landon, Roosevelt or
liomko? "Who is liomke?" asked tho young lady. "He is the
Third party candidate. "What is the Third party?" . . , This
was too much for the young man who had been devoting his
energies to covering the Col'feo market, and has had littlo time
to dovoto to politics, but fortunately for him tho waitress was
called to another table at this point, so his confusion and failure
were not noticed.
"What Ihe devil IS the Third party?" inquired the young
man sotto voce, with one eyo on the vanishing back of the
waitress, "you know I think she's Irish; they're tough to handle
tho Irish!"
When the waitress finally returned, she had nothing more
to offer regarding politics so we decided it best not to bring
up the matter again, but gently let it drop.
We had started out with a splendiferous scheme to secure
a cross section of political opinion from coast to coast. Three
service station employes had been "contacted" during the day,
and only one of them responded. He was an elderly gentleman
in New York near the city where the Euna Jettiek shoes for
women are made we passed directly by tho factory but he
wasn't very EXXA .IETTIOK. His boy was working the rami
while he handled the service station and it took him a full hall"
hour to get us supplied with gas, oil, water and return with
the change, lie said up slate New York was going strong for
l.audon, and he was agin Tammany, but in spite of everything
he was going to vole for Hose-felt. Yep, he figured it out
Hose-felt had his faults but he was the first president since
T. H. that really had the money boys on the run, told 'em where
to head in and he was for him and against Wall Street. He also
said that this was a dairy country, when milk was up he was
up and when it was down everything was down, and Rose
volt's N'liA and AAA and sich had helped the dairy farmers,
and if the big money boys hadn't ordered the supreme court
lo throw them codes out, everything would be fine and dandy.
As it was milk was down so low there was probably going, to
be a milk strike and that would ruin his business entirely, etc.,
etc, etc.. but he was for Hose-felt, -
What oilier politirnl ideas Ihe old boy had we don't know,
but be had them for we were forced to run out on him still
us. Ave had breakfast on the
seven, not wasting any time on
bald-headed young man must
youth, for we couldn't believe
less than an hour after we did
as it was changing and we
they didn't meet a motor cop I
and it took some time for your
that time of day a few weeks
been like motoring back to ban
but this evening we sped down
outskirts of the city. But No. 2
newspaper man who handled
other too old, to be intrigued
we were determined to get at
setting out at daylight the next
get something to eat, we had
hours before, at a New York
by our Chicago experience we
talking. The two other service
technique and professed they didn't know, or as one explained
"the boss wouldn't let him talk politics, was bad for business."
So this grand plan of securing a cross section of political
opinion from coast to coast, will probably have to be abandoned,
as many other grand plans have had to be. However it may
be better going west of Chicago. In frequent trips to the
Atlantic sea board in recent "years we have discovered this
the average man and woman, east of Chicago doesn't like to
talk to strangers, the average man and woman west of the
Windy City, likes nothing better.
. How to see anything as beautiful and interesting as the
Cloveland Exposition in three or
problem. Oetting a general idea from the sightseeing bus, or
taking in some one thing well, was debated pro and eon, and
the latter course was adopted. So wo took in the Globe Players
in Julius Caesar, the young man being among other things some
thing of a Shakespearean scholar. He also is musical plays
the flute and violin 'cello. He has a flute in his bag, protected
by an expensive looking pigskin ease but he hasn't played it
yet. No doubt that will come later perhaps when he meets up
with another Irish girl!
Julius Caesar was good, Cassius,, however, not only had a
lean and hungry look, but seemed resting under the delusion,
that he was engaged in a pantomime made the. most terrible
faces, but talked in not only a mild but practically inaudible
fashion. Moreover we don't believe we like our Shakespeare
abridged and diluted and are quite certain that having the
Scotch bagpipers and the May Pole dancing, going on on the
outside, while tho barker drums up patronage for the next
performance (all quite audible within), is an obstacle to one's
thorough enjoyment of the lines. However a ticket was only
forty cents so we got our money's worth.
, ,'-. .
The combination of British roast beef (rare), Shakespeare,
condensed,, and frustrated politics, must have done somothing
to us, mentally, for no one looked at the gas gauge of the car
until tno tamiiy bus stopped dead in a dark park along
the lake front and we found the needle doing its best to get
below the zero mark. But Lady Luck was'with us for the car
had stopped one block from the only service station within a
radius of seven or eight miles and tho voung man could still
WALK! ' R. W. R.
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed lotters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease,
diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Drady if a stamped, self-addressed
envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink.
Owing to the large number of letters received only a few con be answered.
No reply can be mode to queries not conforming to Instructions: Address
Ir. Minium Hrndy, 2lfl El Camlno, Beverly Hills. CaUf.
PLEASE HAVE YOUIt
Of course If some one dropped i
you on the floor and Injured your
head when you were a baby you
can't help it
now, but you can
at least try to
behave Intelli
gently when yqu
visit the doctor.
On tho way to
his office you
might think over
your complaint,
get it in hand
and bo ready to
tell him what It
Is when he asks
you.
X don't mean
to suggest that you spring a snappy
Answer. Doctors nowadays do not lay
themselves open to that. They do not
ask you what your trouble Is or what
seems to be tho matter with you to
day. They ask you what you com
plain of. Vou had better expect that,
so you won't get rattled and flounder
about and mutter that you're sure
you don't know. That Is exasperat
ing to an earnest, busy physician.
Whatever your complaint may be
don't deny, that you havo a chief
complaint, the thing that cruises you
to sock medical advice you surely
know whether It has Just developed
this morning or whether you have
noticed It for two or threo weeks
or for tho past six years. Make up
your mind about the durntlon of
the trouble and don't try to fend off
the doctor's queries by answering
that it how been bothering you for
quite a while.
And for heaven's sako forget the
remedies or treatments you have
already tried and tho Imposing sums
you have squandered on them. For
got also tho patent Incompetence of
tho other doctors you havo already
connultod. If your present doctor Is
any good nt all ho won't care and
ho won't listen to such remarks. Con
flno your chatter to your present
complaint and try to Answer any
questions Intelligently. Then hold
your breath, or breathe In or breathe
out or say nh or ninety-nine as tho
doctor may request.
If you are serious about It. go pre
pared to strip for examination. If
you aro a woman, and the doctor
has no mirw in his office, take along
Backed
Florence
Cirt'iilntitig Heater
For a Limited Time . . . Your Old Heater
Taken In Trade At Full Market Value!
Florence Is By Far The Leading Oil Burner Today
Palmer Music & Electric Store
EAST MAIN " - PHONE 788
lads either followed the waitress'
four hours, proved a perplexing
Brady, M.D.
COMPLAINT READY
a relative or friend.
Leave at homo your own notions
as to the nature or proper manage
ment of your troublo. Tell the doc
tor your symptoms, not what you
think they signify. It Is his Job to
interpret symptoms or signs he elicits
by examination. However, if you feel
on an even footing with the doctor
or If you think you know as much
as he does about your particular
trouble i you having had so much ex
perience with it, better save tho fee,
Walt till you find a doctor who knows
more than you do.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Bursitis
What precautions to prevent neces
sity for operation for bursitis of knee
when inflammation has subsided?
Is any diathermy method useful?
. . . (W. A. W.)
, Answer Dally applications of dla
thnrmy might promote complete re
covery. If the bursitis was acute, not
of prolonged- duration, the knee
should be kept functionally at rest
for a week or more by means 01
suitable splint and crutch or cano.
D en f mutism
Orandmother boro 7 children. Two,
(boy and girl) were born deaf mutes;
the Test are normal. Tho girl, my
aunt, married a deaf mute; they had
three children, all deaf and dumb.
, . . . The boy, my uncle, married j
a normal woman from a normal fam
ily and has a son who is normal. My
cousin and I are afraid to have chil
dren. . . . (D. H.)
Answer Any offspring of yours or
your cousins would bo not unlikely
to be deaf and dumb. You should
not marry.
Goitre j
Report I have been greatly bene
fited by your todin ration. I was
advised by two physicians that todin
may be all right for young persons
but not for old people with goitre
I am 74). After two years or the
lodln ration X have no signs of
goitre and before I started it tho
doctors told me there was no hope
of a cure bv operation or otherwise
. , (C. H. W.)
Answer It is an old medical pre
judice that Individuals with "toxic"
or exophthalmic goitre should not
take lodln. Wo live and learn.
Use Mall Tribune want ads.
By 64 Years Experience
FLORENCE
Oil-Burning
e
Circulating and Radiant
HEATERS
6 Models To Choose From
$3950 to H3950
r'ilfJWVJIIHJ H ill 1
aQMclnfvr.
NEW YORK, Sept. 12. Purely per
sonal piffle: Tho first clown I ever
saw scampered up and chucked me
under the chin.
Scaring mo so
grandma took me
home with a con
gestive chill. Sug
gestlon for wrest
lers we see In the
news reels: Arm
each with a meat
cleaver. Required
reading: "Gone
With the Wind.'
For the best
play o n words
since Dean Swift:
Jeffrey Roche's "Her Majesty the
King." I warm to pipe smoking men
who stroll with dogs at sun-down.
Billy Rose can demand and get the
highest pay of any American. And five
years ago he was known as 'Tannic
Brice's husband."
High in martial mix-ups: Tommy
Manville sailing with his pretty sten
ographer, his- third and divorced wife
on the same boat and his fourth and
current wife watting for him in Eng
land. Not many enjoying life so fully
can look as glum as Damon Runyon.
My first time out at grand opera a
dowager, socked to the crown with
diamonds, clucked: "Boy, bring me a
program." And me in a dress sultl
Ask an out-of-towner where he'd like
to dine and It's usually Jack Demp
sey's. Most publicized of New York
restaurants: "No. 21."
String beans are best cold with
vinegar. A Samuel Pepys favorite.
Novla Scotia always sounds so cool
lsh. Most original of all vaudeville
singing acts Eva Tanguay's. Give me
Patsy Kelly and Gene Lockhart and
I'll promise they'll steal the show
from any stars you name. This Is so
good It must be old Silence is the
college yell of the School of Experi
ence. Corkscrew Is the most difficult
English word for a Frenchman to pro
nounce. It gets clotted up in the back
of the mouth near the tonsils where
the French "r" lives. Add consuming
hates: Scientific books with humor
ous illustrations.
When a boy, anyone who could
whistle through his teeth was my
hero. No New York theatre has the
stately glamour of the old Empire.
Swell fiction name Nero Wolfe. For
whimsey, not many writers top
Heywood Broun. And In a radical
vein, none is so boring, Myrna Loy
seems to have bequeathed her vulpine
smile to a lot of Imitators. Oldest of
newspaper names: Wamby Bald. He's
a sophisticate who has succumbed
to the movies. Goes to two or three a
day. Too much Robert Taylor on the
screen. He's not that charming.
I know a sky writer who is terror
ized by a bumblebee. No one has
touched Will Rogers' description of
Calvin Coolldge: "A close chewer and
a tight spltter." Any country that
thrills to bull fighting could easily
go the way of Spain. Sid Solomon Is
trying to sell England the hamburger
stand Idea, Kathleen Norrls is an
eager cryptographer. She is known
among the guild as Cayenne. Nobody
can beat Royal Brown writing of
wondrous boy and girl love.
Next big radio sensation: A. L. Alex
ander's Good Will Court. Loveliest of
the blond socialites: Janet Ryan. A
gripping moment In the theatre, Bar
bara Stanwyck's scene in "The
Noose." No periodical has shown such
venom for newspapermen and pub
lishers as Time. And no magazine Is
so widely Imitated as Reader's Digest.
Embarrassing moment: Being accost
ed by Fleurette, the one-legged co
cotte on white crutches, along the
Boulevard des Sopuclnes. The most
popular poem over the air, I hear, is
the one Major Bowes reads frequently
Sunday mornings: "The best things
in life are free." Wonder what those
peddled puppies think the first night
among the lights of Broadway?
For my money, Wayne King plays
the waltzlest waltz times. Eddie Guest
keeps a scrap book of roasts and reads
them when he feels a bit cocky. The
most exact likeness X havo Is a two
franc silhouette snipped by that ven
erable caped cutter along the Rue de
Rivoll, No colored entertainer hsd the
tug to my notion as did Florence
Mills. Time for a few statuesque Lil
lian Russells in musical shows. Too
many pallid, hlpless, anaemic torch
singers. For a celebrity, who expresses
the least show-offry In public: Irving
Berlin. Rattling the skeleton: Gov
Albert Chandler, of Kentucky, was a
crooner at 8. It doesn't always take a
voice to smack over a song. Billy Gax
ton, for example, who never misses
fire. Lost American Art: Carving at
the table.
(Copyright, 1918, McNaught Syndi
Flight 'oTime
nfedford and Jackson Count;
history from the files of the
Mall Tribune 10 and 20 yean
ago.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAJ
September 13, 1936
(It Was Monday)
Sixth street extension to Main
street from Oakdale avenue to be
ready .for travel In three weeks.
Rainfall In August totals .52 of an
Inch.
Senator MoNary to take stump In
east for O.O.P. cause.
Eight persons perish when auto
plunges from highway into Rogue
river near Prospect,
New high school building Is op
ened, with 500 students registered.
Annual Copco picnic la held at
Hayden Springs.
Table Rock melons on local market.
Contract let for new high school
at Eagle Point,
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
September 13, 1916
(It Waa Wednesday)
County fair opens with large crowd
and many exhibits.
City Joined in Issuing bonds for
construction of railroad to the Blue
Ledge.
Miss Leah Walther has gone to
Seattle where she will enter the
University of Washington.
Free barbecue will be held at the
county fair Thursday.
Theda Bara In "East Lynne" at the
Page.
Paving assessment compromise
payment ordinance to be considered
by city council at next meeting.
Wall Street stocks rise rapidly.
High school to play first football
game of season with alumni, Sept.
30. Jess Gentry looms as a backfleld
star, and Gene Narregan Is slated for
tackle.
. We have been awarded the
BLUMBING CONTRACT
on the
Montgomery Ward Dldg.
We are proud of our part in Ward's remod
eling. They are giving work to local labor.
. They are doing something that is different
from anything ever attempted here. Every
hit of plumbing is being taken out of the
old building. It will be replaced with extra
heavy galvanized copper bearing pipe.
MODERN PLUMBING
AND SHEET METAL CO.
410 E, Main Phono 620
for as little as
$9008
. . A Month
for a $5,000 Home
Let Us Help You
Get Started, Now!
Timber Products Company
End of North Central Avenue
Phone 7
(Continued trom page One.)
American flags on the destroyer, also
too high to be hit by three rounds
of anti-aircraft ammunition.
Now It develops the plane was low
enough and visibility was clear
enough to enable a naval officer on
the destroyer to take a movie of the
whole bombing with his personal
nUJlU UIWIW1U. AUD Itarj t,.vu v
has called for the films.
When these come, they will un
doubtedly establish the existence of
a sea phenomenon, a one-way fog afe
the scene ol conflict.
Reclamation Head Due
BEND, Sept. 13.- (JP) Robert W.
Sawyer, president of the Oregon reo.
lamatlon congress, returning here
from a meeting of director." of the
national reclamation association at
Salt Lake City, said today that John
C. Page, acting tj. S. reclamation
commissioner, will visit Oregon the
first of next week.
Jcln
ETHELWYN B, HOFFMANN'S
Hosiery club.
Every 13th pair free.
e:
Do you need Glasses?
e Dr. R.M.HOOD
OPTOMETRIST
Tel. 283-R Sparta Bids.
405 E. Main St., Medford
Skillful Service
Reasonable Prices