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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1936)
PSttE TCTGHT MEDFORD MATL TRTBWE, MEDFOTID, QBEGOK SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 193(5 MEDFORDTSIBUN "EvorjoDa Is Hoathem Orasa Bead tba UaU rHbra" Dally Except tetania?. Pubtl-b.Nl by MBDHXJKD PRINTING CO. M.IT-39 N. rtr tit. Pbcm f RUHBRT W. RUUU Brtltor. BRNE3RT R. OILTRAK UanaT. An Idi1do1oI Nawapapar. Batartx) aa aacooil-claaa mat tar af Utd ford, Oracno. ua1r Act nt Uareb I, 111 SUBriKlPTiON RATE By Mail In A.(1tnc Duly, ona Max Dally, lis month Dally, ont month y By Carrier, in Advance Meflford. Ab land. JaokeonvHie, Oeotral Point. Phoenix. Talent Gold Bill and en h li h way a Dally, one year lt-00 Dally. ! tnODtbi I.U Dally, one month All tarma, eaah In advance. orilrial Paper at the Olry ol Medfnrd OfrtrlaJ Paper nt Jirkwo Oonntf aUSftlllEH Of I'HB AHUOUIATBO HHJUM Hoc el ring mil LeanMl Wire Kerrlcw. The Aaeoclatad Praw le exolneively an tttlad to the uae Cor publication of all Dtwi dlipetcbee credltad to It or other wlie oredltad id thle paper, and aJeo to the local owi pobllahed herein. All rlfhu for pah Ileal l oo of apaotaj dlepetchat heroin are alao reeerved. MBUnBR UP IINITBD PRBftS UBUHBR OK AUDIT DURE) AD OP" QIRCUUAT1UNS Advartlilng Rapraaantatlfit WE8T-IIOI,r.lDAY-MOOBN8KN CO. OHIeei In New York, Chlctgo. DetrolU San Franclico. Lot Angelei. Seattle, PnrMantl. ED rf$$Jte Ye Smudge Pot By A rtli lit Perry. Voter are urged to VOTE EARLY, a week from Tues. and baror they 0 to the flahlng hole, golf ooutm, or bridge party. Every voter It urged to vote at least onoe, and help save the nation. The 0. Wig Aahpole boy we down town Thure. dremed up In his beat bib Ac tucker. Rain Is badly needed to remove the fire hazard, expedite fall seeding, and Improve bird shooting. V. Brophy, the Lske ork. cowman, Is back from a trip to Nevada, which was enlivened by a quadruple mur der at Elko. 1937 model autoes are now on dis play, and make owners of cars over five years old feel more stintless than last yesr. A partisan pair has Hgreod to raise a benrd, If their favorite loses in the flection. This will serve the loser ritfht, but tt Is terrific punishment for the non-combatants. The pear crop that was ruined oy the front last April, only amounted to 1.043.435 boxes, late statistics re veal, , e e . Donny Wilkinson Is Inside s new pr of overalls, snd a sweater, for hU winter's campaign against the In datns, In his neighborhood A movement is on foot upstate to light the hlghwsys. Many night driv ers allow they are too well lighted now. e H. Flewher's honest watchdog pun ished last week for the flaying of one of P. Scheffel'a roosters, went hunting Thurs., and has been cured of chasing both chickens and Chinese pheaaants. Moat of the gas silos now have equipment, that pumps the gas, and adds up the cost, leaving the smiling attendant nothing to do hut smile snd take the money. e e Plana have about materialised for Weed Control In this county. Man1 hope the weeds mind better than tne liquor has. e e The Literary Digest, and the Vern Canon straw vote polls, s re farther apart than heretofore supposed two different theories could get.. Tns Canon poll admits there Ir a Repub lican party, see Dork Robinson, the J'vUle sheik is still reading blood-As-thunder litera ture, full of kissing and killing, and vllllans who smoke opium. see Hissing presidential candidates was quite llvrly the past week In all the movie. Young and old do It. snd r a algn of god sportemsnshlp. e e e The wrestling matches at the Arm ory tomorrow night will be boxing, e e e S. Mortis, the T-Hock tiller poked his chest out farther recently, wh?n the PrcMdent announced, he too. llku Mr. Morris was being chased by Wall St. The local resident was pursuod by predatory wealth In the last Sales Tax campaign. Both out -ran Wall St. e e Quite a number of rural resident have been putting up sauerkraut, and getting ready for hogkllllng. e e e John Puller of Ashland towned Tuesday. He doubts the accuracy of the straw vote polls, otherwise every thing Is Oksy. FKAtt "NOT"" Newspapers make politicians; yet newspapers fesr government con trol. Government said good tanks weco ssfe; yet some bankers fear gov ernment. I fvar Not. Publish the news; tell the truth j Lend money to worthy men, snd j cure unemployment. Truth and credit bring good time. 'PARMERS AND FRUITOROWERS BANK. (Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.) Myrna toy's Christmas gift are al ready in the making. 8he knius quilt, nd sweaters for bar friends. J Those "Broken Promises Alfred s. Smith says that. It he hod known what President Roosevelt was going to do In the White House, he would have voted for Hoover In !933. The Implication In this, and In the speeches of Republicans dealing with the "broken promises" Issue, la that Mr. Roosevelt won the presidency under false pretenses. Mr. Roosevelt baa broken some of his promises.. For Instance he pro mised to cut expenses. He also pro mised that If needs of the unemploy ed required appropriations wblch would keep the budget out of. balance be would not hesitate to spend what ever was necessary. Prolonged unemployment forced Mr. Roosevelt to the point where he bad to break one promise or the other. After making a brief stab at economy, prlnclpslly througb reduc ing veterans' payments, he broke his economy promise and embarked on the spending program, taking his chance on being able to Justify his choice between these conflicting pledges. However, - the broken-promise charge takes on the broader and more sinister Implication that Mi. Roose velt tricked the democrstlo party and the country arid that, after he was elected, he pulled the New Deal out of the hat, sneaking hts own program across and betraying conservative democrats. That la the core of Mr. 6mlth'a Indictment of Roosevelt. Mr. Smith, who left the Chicago convention In 1033 before It was over his feet already were beginning to Itch missed hearing Roosevelt's ac ceptance speech to the convention. That la too bad. Otherwise Mr. Smith could have aaved time and begun walking the other way right then, because Mr. Roosevelt warned the country that domocrata like Mr. Smith would find themsolves out of step with htm. That notice, and Mr. Roosevelt's opinion of the Tory philosophy, were given to the convention In this pas sage of his 1032 acceptance speech. . "There are two ways of viewing the government's duty In matters af fecting economic and social life. The flrat aeos to It that a favored few are helped and hopes that aomr or their prosperity will leak through, sift through, to labor, to the farmer, to the small business man. That theory belongs to the party of Tory lam, and I had hoped that moat of the Tories left this country In 1778. (Applause and oheerlng). "But It la not and never will be the theory of the democratlo party. qqMclrWyre NEW YORK. Oct. 23. - Thought' while strolling. Not sll newspaper men had to come to New York to he famous. Ed Howe and William Al len White, for Instance. Ace of the style broad casters: Carmel Snow. J n aepar ablea: Osgood perklna and trench coat. Lo. Another pom pa -dourut: Hugh Bmt, the u. P chief. Flfl Dorsay la the sort of French type one always expects to see In the Parla music halls but new does. Not many In the theater accomplish so much and say so little aa Brock Pemberton." The song. writers rash of "awnetle-pte" r. vlves an old Civil war endearment. No boulovardlor ever gave New York the go-by like Sailing Baruch. Most continental looking of the flrat nlght- ers: Jules Bache. The elk-bound Rex Cole's favorite pooch Is gaining favor with dog fanciers. The town lost a real social rendeivoua when snide politics closed the Csilno In the Park. Orchestra leaders oome and go. but Armnnd Vecsey Is still fiddling at the Rita. John McClaln social oheruo with the Long Island set and long shoreman with ship news reporters. Robert Taylor reaohea the peak of that Rudy Vallee rage of five years ago. And Rudy la still there, heigh. hoi , What'a become of Frandne Larrl- morej A frisky Scottle puppy having time for himself in a 47th atreet window blocks traffic. Overheard: "As muoh chsnce as 1 hsve to waltz with dinger Rogers." Won t be long until we know who'a who at the Whits House. Then what? Among enthuslsstlc rlngsldera at baseball, hockey, football and prtee rights are those smartly habited fel lows who run the haberdashery shops In and around Bradway. In most In stances they are native New Yorkers alerts who have saved up In clerk ships and alerted on their own. They are celebrity worshippers snd noth ing plesses them more than an auto graphed picture for their window. Such as: "To Milt from your pal Jack Dempsey." They are hefty spendera In the cafes plump, dia mond ring wearers with hslr on brosw and seem to favor those dark-timbered chop houses to which they nqulre ravishing blondes who stress the srtirices of cosmetics and call them "Daddy." New York la the mo "bath-con- sclous city" anywhere. A morning and evening tub are a rite with thou Hands. And this zeal It likely respon slble for the "Pour Le Bsln" shoos on the upper East Side eatlny salons that deal solely with bath-loom nick nacks. Soap with Initialed mono grams In all colors. Bath raits rsng Ing rrom 1 to ,35 a bottle. Rubber ized headrests tor those who like to read In the tub. Terra cotta robe that match the towels, otc. etc. Sign of the times In the Positions Wanted ads: "Valet five jeara at lib erty. Is now willing to v?Ui, wait un lablc. drive the car, air the dog and run errands." r-1 t mr -wr i r.yr if This Is no time for fesr, for reaction or for tlmldty. And here and now I Invite those nominal republicans who find that their conscience cannot be squared with the groping and the failure of their party leaders to Join hands with us; here and now. in equal measure. I warn these nominal democrats who squint at the future with their faces turned toward the past, and who feel no responsibility to the demands of the new time, tnat they are out of atep with their party." (Applause and cheering). Then Mr. Roosevelt mentioned briefly some of the things In his mind. He wanted to break "foolish traditions." He was concerned about "enormous corporate surpluses." They were going into Wall street specula tion and Into over-expanded plants Instead of being used to reduce prices, or to Increase wages. He also remarked significantly that an inade quate share of those profits was dis tributed to stockholders and that very little was taken by taxation. Al most four years later his undistribut ed profits tax plan went to congress. Mr. Roosevelt also spoke of the need of cheaper credit, regulation of security Issues, publlo works, shorter hours, withdrawals of millions of seres of sub-marginal farm land, soli erosion control, reforestation and conservation work aa an unemploy ment aid, reduction of crop surpluses through planned production with "Immediate emergency measures" to be followed by a permanent volun tary reduction program, aid for mort gaged home owners, reciprocal tariffs, "work and aecurlty" for labor and bold leadership in distress lellef." Speaking of the republicans, he ssld: "While they prat of econom ic laws, men and women are atarvlng. We must lay hold of the fact that economic laws are not made by na ture. They are made by human be ings." Forgotten men and women, he said, "look to us here for guidance and for more equitable opportunity to share In the distribution of na tional wealth." (Applause and cheer. Ing). Finally: "I pledge you I pledge myself to a new deal for the Ameri can people. (Applause and cheering.) Let us all here assembled constltuto ourselves prophets of a new order of competence and courage . , Give me your help, not to win votes alone, but to win thla crusade to reston America to Its own people." (Ap plause and cheering, ending In an ovation.) You can't say he didn't warn us. Raymond Clapper In San Francisco News. When I was a copy serf on the van quished Evening Mall, a ahawled Ap ple Mary visited the editorial room each noon with a spacious basket of apples, oranges, banana3, chocolate bara, candy, clgarettca and chewing gum. The Park Row saga was she owned a row of all-alike apartment houses In New Jersey. Anyway fluo tlonal, a kindly soul. Indulgent wltn credits snd Interested In our affairs. Recently I recalled her In this col umn and today a letter from Apple Mary's only granddaughter, who writes a boarding school hand and saya she was not only educated at Apple Mary's expense but was left $14,000 by her She added: "Grandma worked to the last, coming home In a snow storm In which ahe caught a cold that end ed In pneumonia." Probably many self-sacrlllclng Apple Marys On the Evening Mall copy desk wss an odd semicircle of newspaper non entities. The atroblllous Simon Le gree In the slot had a rierce black VanDyke and was In constant Jit ters. He waa sub rosa to the start "Black Mike" There was an honor graduate of Yale, now a trembling antique In skull cap. whe brought the same lunch the year around a thin cheese sandwich. A former cable editor of the Herald, whlte-mustach-ed and loaded with disdainful gar rumpba. An Apollo who spent even ings pulpiteering at John Callahan's Bowery mission. Mostly Journalistic derelicts, cot through drink. but beached by the cruelty of years In what la a young man's gsme. I was the only youngster, stranded on Its shoal because In despair I would work for a pittance. I never pass that Fulton street corner without a shud der. So depressing I cannot help but ring down the oolumn curtain on a down beat. The News Room Blueal (Copyright. 103. M.'Naught Syndicate.) . 4 Comment of the Day s News By FRANK JKNK1NS IN CAMP; Btrawberry Flats Weather still distressingly beautiful. Hunt- tore pretending to crave rain, hall, snow and high winds. Pretense none too convincing. Any good pokor player could see It's 00 per cent bluff. Ctnp darned comfortable. CLEAR, dry. warm, altogether mar velous weather, which makes the woods noisy, Isn't so hot for the deer hunters, but does no hsrm to the campflre sessions. A little noise never hurt a campllre gabfest yet. Joe Sherk. whose father waa a big rancher In the Steins mountaltn country ' In the early days, la the camp historian. Whenever he pauses somebody prods him with a question. snd he goes on. Joe rode - the ranges through sll his enrly years, and Is a mine of In formation. SOUTHEASTERN Oregon (Joe esys) was a hectic country in It youth. with all tha faulta and all the vir tues of a hectic, frontier land. There were three waves of bud :n,-n tbo who cunt la when tha ootut- Personal Health Service By WilUam signed letters pertaining to personal health and Hygiene, not to disease, diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped, self-ad-ilicssed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In ink. owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 263 El Camlno, Beverly HIUs, Calif. WHAT! NO OA From tha - sanitary viewpoint the most satisfactory garbage disposal for municipalities Is the following: All garbage must be wrapped In paper and placed In a receptacle having a tightly fitting cover. The rsceptaole Is placed In the alley early enough tn the morning to be collected by trucks which traverse only the alleys and not the streets. The trucks when loaded axe covered over and driven directly to a disposal plant where the garbage Is dumped Into burners and Immediately burn ed. Thla system, when properly car ried out, approaches the Ideal. It la difficult to conceive a bettor method of garbage disposal which would be practicable for village or city. But the Individual householder may use a better method. There Is now available a practical gsdget, powered with electricity, which not only disposes of all kitchen refuse or garbage as fast ss It accumulates but also does away with the gar bage can, which has always been an unpleasant encumbrance upon good housekeeping. In doing away with the garbage can the new kitchen waste unit does away also with t real menace to health, the housefly. For even under the most nearly per fect conditions described, the gar bage receptacle as well as Its con tents undeniably attracted and en couraged the breeding of files. With such a kitchen waste unit Installed, all the waste or garbage of an average household may be completely shredded or pulped and discharged through the sewer out let In a few momenta dally. After all, why not use the sewer for dis posal of kitchen waste Just as we do for human waste? In prsctlce It has been found that this method of garbage- disposal does not tend to clog the sink drain. The shredded or pulped garbage rather serves to keep the drain scoured out, much as docs coffee grounds which experienced house keepers empty down the sink drain for that purpose. I am not prepared to pass on the economical question but I can and do recommend the installation of such a unit for disposing of kitchen waste through the sewer as one more step In home sanitation. In small communities disposal of gnrbape by feeding to hog Is as try was opened up by the white men, those who were run out of Texas when law snd order hit the Lone Star state and a third crew that came in when the notorious Hole-ln-the Wall country In Montana waa swept out and cleaned up. Each wave of bad men had to be tamed by the better element, and the bulk of the taming, as Joe tells It, was done with a six gun. It Is a thrilling saga, fit subject for campflrcs In the wide open spaces. v THESE bad men lived hard and One of them (Olalze by name) walked one day Into a saloon in Burns. The Ingrained caution of the outlaw sat hard upon him, and he entered furtively, turning his bsck to no open doors and carefully avoid Ing windows. He walked up to the bsr snd ordered a drink, and when It wss poured he raised the glass to hla Hps. It wss then thst retribu tion overtook him. Two doors opened, one to the right of him and one to the rear, and from each a six gm roared as he whirled at the sound. Still holding the glass In his left hand, he reached for his own gun with his right, brought It Into, sction, firing twice from the hip, each shot dropping an assallsnt. Then he sank to the floor. Each of the shots fired at him hsd pierced his heart, but tha hot life within him refused to be stilled until he hsd struck back. TWO cowboys quarreled over a catf. The ouarrel wss settled thus: They took a handkerchief, knotted Its corners to form a ring and with their left hsnds each grasped the knotted bit of cloth, tn their free right hand they held their knives. Bunding thus, toe to toe, they fought It out. When It ended, both were dead. A MONO the big cattle outfits, there was a flnmtng loyalty. It you worked for a msn. you were his man. fl he quarreled, you backed his qusr rel with your life if need be. If he called upon you to 'side" him, you sided him, winning with him or dj'lng with h:lm. Unless, that is, he chose to settle his qusrrel alone. In that event, you stood by to see that nobody Interfered. Such was the code of the country. - ONE by one, the bsd men died "practically sll of them with their boots on. In Southeastern Ore gon, as elsewhere throughout the West, the solid better element, slow at first to wrath, seeking only to be left alone to build a future lor them selves by hard work and careful planning, took the situation inLo their capable hands vlwn . became unbearable. TAs bad rpn Brady, M.D. BBAGF. CANT unobjectionable ss buying or plow ing under. Hogs fed largely or en tirely on garbage make quite as good meat, from the sanitary view point, as do hogs fed with grains. Pork, by the way. Is as wholesome aa any other meat, and compares favorably with any other meat In flavor, nutritive value and digesti bility. The American people know what's what when they consume more pork than any other meat, The best way to dispose of gar bage In camp, or In a country or small village place. Is by dally burial in the garden. Each day's accumulation must be spread In a trench and well covered with earth to guard against attraction of and breeding of flies. The burled gar bage makes the best soli for ferti lizer for any garden. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS So That Is Toxemia? My boy 13 years old has toxemia so that IX he has a sore or skin broken It does not heal and gets in fected easily. Does ha need doctor's care or can we take care of It our selves? . . . (Mrs. F. D.) Answer. The "toxemia" notion is silly. If Immediate application of tincture of lodln to scratch or other break of skin, and then simple pro tection against contact with unclean or infected surfaces does not bring about prompt healing, the boy needs medical attention, and there Is noth ing you can do yourself. Vicarious Sweat Once a week I take a steam bath, perspiring for about twenty minutes In hot room, then a shower, gradu ally cooler, then go home all in about an hour. Some people say this Is dangerous end will send up blood pressure. ... (W. A.) Ans, Unless you are In bad con dltion It Is not dangerous. I believe an honest sweat, obtained by working or playing or exercising briskly, would do much more good. lodln I have tried your llodln ration and find It O. K. Have discovered a method of preparing a water solu tion of 4 per cent strength which Is stable have kept some for over four years. Glad to send you a sample If you wish. . . . (M. H. O.) Ans. The ordinary tincture la en tirely satisfactory, I think One drop or no harm If two or three drops, In a glass of water, once or twice a week everybody's lodln ration. (Copyright, 1938, John F. Dille Co.) Ed. Note: Peisoru wishing to communicate with Or. Brady ihould send letter direct to Or. William Brsdy, M. D. 265 CI Camlno. tteverly Hhli, Calif. were bad and tough, but when they gbt their dander up the good men wore TOUGHER. It la thus that civilizations are built. IT IS a fascinating tale, this saga of the Southeastern Oregon coun try, and If you would hear It at Its best get Joe started some nig.-it out tn the sagebrush country, with mahogany wood fire glowing and the stsrs looking down out of a cloudless sky and the coyotes howling out on the rim rocks. It will be worth your while. (Continued from Psge One livery before election day. Red tape, that's what tt wss, he said. For amusement, he and his sympa thetic friends turned on the rsdlo to hear Mr. Roosevelt's address of the evening. They were startled s few minutes later when the dejecta ghost writer leaped three feet in the air, shouting, "that's mine." .The White House had held up the bureaucrat's speeches for a good rea son. The president had decided to use the best parts of them himself. The ghost went to bed whistling. Tune tn KSL every evening. Mon day thru Friday 6 p.m. M 0 hX? KEEP CHILD WELL AND STRONG THROUGH WINTER. WINDS AND WINTER SNOW, OUR B.1CH C ROW. WPS PrIOHE 1289-1 ORTEIL THE. DRIVf CONG. MQn JOINS ROSEBURG FIGHT ON VET HOSPITAL ROSEBURO, Ore., Oct. 34. (AP) Congressman James W. Mots has Joined Senator Charles L. McNary and Governor Charles H. Martin In urg ing modification of the veterans' ad ministration order of conversion of the veterans' facility here Into an N.-P. hospital, according to a mes sage received here this morning. Mr. Mott advises the Roseburg chamber of commerce that he has wired General' Prank T. Hlnea urging that neuro-psychlatrlc facilities be provided In addition to the existing hospital and domiciliary facilities rather than bv conversion. nnint.inn out the need for continuation of present facilities. He wsa not In Salem yesterday when a Roseburg delegation conferred with Senator McNary and Governor Mar tin, but Information was left at his office and, acting upon the report given by the Roseburg group. Mr. Mott reports that he has wired Gen eral Hlnea as follows: "Order converting Roseburg facil ity to mental hospital la aerlounly ob jected to by many peple of Oregon. We feel that all existing services to veterans now offered at this faculty are needed and urge modification if order to Include mental hospital as an addition to present Roseburg fa cility and not aa a substitute for It." join BTHELWYN B HOFFMANN'S Hosiery Club. Every 13tb pair free. ARLISS DONS TURBAN AND SWORD . IN THE KIND OF A Tnn AY ROLE HE MAKES FAMOUS! For 3 Days I 1 His most colorful characterization since "Green Goddess" ... as the fascinating, woman - hating ST s-x r. Rajah . . . who made women and u-TljkAX tkns fall under his magic spelll 1 M. eorg'e "EAST JkBfr MEETS I IIIOv WEST" III J WE j M. COMEDY-DRAMA! 1 ' He married M a fMJ' ill Hi IT T "busineM" proposi- . Ag$f ITn H Ur tion-but he found ft ?J . that business began jT J ': pv '- I f y ff jag sg to improve rapidly I (jjj' I mmmm NEIL HAMILTON J MARION NIXON ' i "One to Every tUymond Hatton Alleen V 1 I I ll Bachelor at Pringle 1 1 Fl:2ht.'oTime Medford and Jackson Count) history from tbe flies ol the Mall Tribune 10 and 40 Tear, ago. TEN YEARS AGO TOUAX October 25, 1926 (It waa Monday) Campaign in Oregon faces quia, upon charges fUed by George Put nam, editor, of Salem. Supreme court rules President Cool ldge hsd right to remove Portland postmaster without consent of sen ate. James Neff, truck driver, la held up at Third street crossing by lone bandit and relieved of 15. Pear shipments to date total 1205 cars, and 291 cars of apples bave been shipped. Medford high grid squad to play Klamath Falls here Saturday. Play ers vow they will score more than 50 polnta. They are Irked by Pelican boasts. Seven collisions occur Sunday eve ning at street Intersections, result ing In nothing more serious than bent fenders. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 25i 1916 (It wss Wednesday) Great ovation given President Wil son on visit to Cincinnati. New crisis arises In Mexico. In the person of Mrs. Laura J. Ai ming, who resides on a farm nearby. Phoenix has furnished the oratorical surprise of the campaign. Without fireworks or hysteria, with quiet ease. Mrs. Aiming wins the confidence and sympathy of her audience and sways them with a aubtle and effective eloquence. For an hour at Phoenix Tuesday evening she held her larg audience snellbound aa ahe enumer ated the reaona why every woman, i should support wood row wuson. Cost of living lncresaea In dt, 'duo to conditions abroad.11 Rumanians offer stubborn resist ance to German Invasion; anothat lull rests over the western front. Be Correctly Corseted In an ARTIST MODEL tor $5.00, e7.T5, 10.00. 813.75. ETHELWYN B. HOFFMANN. Closing time for Too Late to Olatw Ml Ads Is 1:30 p. m. J. B. COLEMAN Republican Candidate for COUNTY ASSESSOR JACKSON COUNTY. OREGON Paid adv. ...v. if. JACKSONVILLE CLUB IN JACKSONVILLE Dance Tonight Good Music. Good Food