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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 2, 1936)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2. 1930. MDFORDvTRIBUNE mEot7od Id loo thorn Oregon Bmdi the UaJI rrthan" - Daily Bseept (Utnrdsr. Publlihtd br MUUrORD PR1NTINO CO. M-1T-36 N. fir 8L Pfeoo) T ROBERT W. RUHU Bdltor. KWBiBT R. OIL8TRA.P. dngf. AD lndpaf1ol Nwppi-. Botortw) m Moond-olff tnattw tU Md rd, OrfOD. ood Act of Hn-ch I. itTt SUBSCRIPTION RATBS Bf Ull In Advnc: Dsvlly, oat r Duly, in month -J Dally, on month jr Carrier. In Alwic Mlfori Uod. Jaokinnvitl. Ciotril Point. Phoanlt, TaUnt, OoHI HID wd " highways. Dally, on rear II.09 Dally, alt montha Dally, ooa month 0 All tar ma. eaah In tvlvaric). OfflrlaJ I'Hpm of the City ol Mwlford Offtr-tnl Paper nl Jackawm Cnoaiy MiMtiKU OV 1MB AHHtKllA I'KU PUKSh BaceJrlni full ltaard Wire HwvU. The A Moot tart Prau '.a aiolualtaly an titlad to the on (ot publication of ail wa rilipatcho eraflltatl to It or other wise credited to thla paper, and Im to the local nwi pabllihed herein. All rlihte tot publication ! epaelki dlepatohee herein are aleo reaerveA. . MBMUIOR OF UNITED PRUIg WEUHKH Of AHDI1 BIIRBAD OF CIRHIIATIONfl Advsrtltlnc Reprenentarlvei nRST-IIOI,Ml)AY-Ul()R.NHHN CO, Office In New York, Chicago, Detroit. San Franclacf, Loa Angola. Saitt'e. Pnrtlnn-r . Ye Smudge Pot By Artnui ferry. A Final Word CAMPAIGN IIOOS AND BOO-IIOOSI It Is now all over but the- partisan squealing and fainting when the aad news stnrta rolling In tomorrow eve ning. A aurvey shows the local cam' salgn to nave been ladylike, with tea C$Ci and mrHmmn threats than has boon wont In Jackson county. Citizens, aa they have alum done before, will not have to alibi Wednesday afternoon "the rs tilt would be funny, If they were Hot tragic." The candidates all acted like they were on their way to Bun- day school, Instead of the courthouse. Thla causes harmony, and everybody keep hie shirt on. The greatest agony was caused by the Literary Digest straw vote, and Democratic disgust with It waa deep and caustic. Some Bourbon warhorses regarded the final figures of the mag salne as a personal Insult to their own arithmetic. They, however, were supplied with flguros on the outcome that suited thera better and pleased them more. By this time tomorrow, It will be known which straw vote had the most accurate adding ma- shines. Almost as many people are vitally Interested In the accuracy of the Lit. Dig's mathematics, aa keep ing termites out of the constitution The Governor urges all Oregonlana to vote "NO" on all measures pre sented to them. The advice of the ehlef executive waa timely, as the voters would do so anyway. One of the measures provides for a Blate Bank, another for getting electric lights to the masses, and a third, if approved, enables male atudents at state Institutions of learning, to get out of one hour's military drill per week. The State Bank notion has been a sublime flutls whore tried, sverybody can get out of the dark, without any trouble, and 00 minutes of marching per week la not apt to make Oregon youth flat-footed, and filled with an uncontrollable dealre to Jab a bayonet Into kin or neigh bors. All the candidates, from President to constable favor peace, mother, the flag, and flreplacoa. There Is some worrying about the "debt the coming generations will have to bear." There Is nothing to this Issue. Four, and two years ago, slstesmen headed for the legislature were hell-bent to ssve "Rogue River for our children's ohll drill.'' Juveniles are ami well sup piled with fluid to wash tlielr necks. This was In the era when the people voted gaily against receiving electric light bills tin first of the month We now coins to the fatigued voter. In this country, if past averages pre- vail, about 6000 will b too weary to etruggle to the pulls, but able to mako It to the gulf course, and the fishing hole. The election also Inter feres with duck hunting In Klamath county. Another section possesses sullk lent ambition to vote, but feels "my vote won t count." It will count one, If they cast It. The most Interesting type of voter at the earnest psrtlsan, who Is too busy working for his favorite csndl date to register. There are aevrral In Jackson county that come under this head. Tomorrow they will be In Uie sams tlx as a drill team mem ber who left his bass drum at home Not much has been heard of the "Silent Vote" this year. It haa not been as noisy, as In past years. There. fore, Its silence has been more 1m- pmwlve. Nevertheless, it has not been a heavy silence. As uiusl peo ple think there should bs more of It. There Is also the "church vote." There has been no definite wooing of It. The "sinner vote" is slao worth hav ing, the candidates reallred. Voters are urged, even If they are not mad, to vote at least once. No matter how the election goes, all will aurvive. Ths winners will wish they hadn't snd the losers can run Again In a couple of yeara. In the mean time the world will keep on rotating Join PTHRI-WVN B. HOFFMANN'S Hosiery Club. Every 13th pair free. Sound vibrations, used to sge whisky sre said to produce In seven hours the equivalent of four yesrs aging In wood. Lions and tigers frd only on muscle flesh die but If Internal organs of ; imn(,r.tiv. if the slaughtered snlmels sr. added ' '"W". " they thrive. "It la not fitting hers that a general argument should be made In favor of popular Institutions; but there la on point with Its connections not so much hackneyed as most .others to whloh I ask brief attention. "It la assumed that labor Is available only in connection with capital; that nobody labors unless somebody else owning cspltal somehow by the use of It Induces him to labor. Labor la prior to and Independent of capital. Capital la only tha fruit of labor and could not have existed If labor had not first existed . , . Z bid tha laboring people beware of surrendering tha power whloh they possess." Who said thatf Was it John Ii. Lewis, or William Green, or Miss Perkins, or was it merely a certain president of this country, who is arousing class against class to gain votes? Before answering here's another quotation, which perhaps some of our readers may regard as equally incendiary; "I see In the near future a orlnls approaching that unnerves me and causes me to trembls for tha safety of my country. As a result of war, corporations have been enthroned . . . and tha money power will endeavor to prolong Its reign by working upon tha prejudices of tha people until all th wealth la aggre gate In a few hands, and ths republic Is destroyed." Who said thatt Would the Liberty Leaguers like to call out its strong-arm squad, and chase the speaker back to Russia where khe belongs, or arrest him ag a vagrant, so he can no longer exercise his right of free speech! Or is that just some more New Deal clap trap, to arouse the have-nots against the haves, and overthrow our cherished "American way of life?" Well it none of these things. Those two quotations are from a message to congress delivered by President Abraham Lincoln about 70 years ago, on the state of the union. And here is another one: "Ths maxim of politics la that power follows property." This was the statement by John Adams who, if memory serves us, was the second president of the United States. 1TE are offering these quotations as a background-and certainly a highly respectable and authoritative back ground for what we have to say to close the presidential campaign, as far as this paper is concerned. . These statements certainly show clearly, that what we regard as the outstanding issue in this campaign, is nothing new, is nothing hare-brained or modernistic, or radical, but is a funda mental issue that has existed since the country was founded, and has been seriously considered in one form or another, by' evory great president this country has over had. The only difference today is, President Roosevelt happens to be the chief executive who is considering it, snd his method of approaching it, is embodied in a program generally termed the New Deal. That's all. Nominally it is new, actually it is as .old aa democracy. AND that fundamental issue is roughly this; Wtiath,- it, . .I.:. , X - XTTTIT JI -I .. v., a cv,tc ui mis uuuuujf wuni a icYY aeai. or want to go back to the OLD deal j whether they want in Wash ington a government that has worked and will continue to work toward removing those dangers which Presidents Lincoln and Adams, foresaw; or adopt the Hoover dictum, that, there are no such dangers, that all we have to do, to enjoy the most porfect of worlds, is to do nothing, just let Nature take its course, and everything will be as it used to be in those "good old days." That is the milk in the political cocoanut, in this campaign as we see it. For the individual voter it comes down to a matter of belief. What he does, and what he doea not believe. IT is this paper's BELIEF, that not only Presidents Adams and Lincoln were entirely right, but President Roosevelt is also entirely right. And one of President Roosevelt's two main purposes, since his election, has been, to so reform our social and cconomio structure, that the concentration of more and more wealth in the hands of the few, will be halted, that a fairer distribution of the good things in life will be secured. and thus a repetition of the disaster of 1929 will be prevented and Democracy under a competitive capitalist system, will be preserved. His other main purpose was to save the country from com plete economio collapse, that threatened in 1933, by adopting whatever emergency measures, he believed would contribute toward that end. Certainly no fair minded person denies he has succeeded in this direction succeeded beyond all expectations, and attained a degree of prosperity thBt few people believed possible, three or four yeara ago. Nor oan any fair minded person deny he has made genuine progress in the other direction, through far-reaching hanking, financial and economio reforms, but it has only been a start, and if he is defeated there will be no one to complete it. 'T'llAT is why this paper has been and is today so strongly for the re-election of President Roosevelt. We not only beljeve he has done what ha was elected to do, we believe he has done it exceedingly well, and believe from every consideration of justice and gratitude, he should he allowed to finish it. There are approximately 180,000,000 people in thia country. At least 100,000,000 don't make enough money to pay ineonio taxes. There are at least -10,0(10.000 people who enjoy iio luxur ies, few essential com forts only a bare SUBSISTENCE. These are not our figures. Nor depression figures. They are figures of the Brookings Institution, based upon careful scientific re search into conditions in this country the year before the de pression, and their accuracy has nover been questioned. Now we maintain in a country naturally aa rich aa this is, such a condition is all wrong, and unless it is corrected, as we see it, the catastrophe Lincoln feared will he at hand, DRKS1DENT ROOSEVELT sees this clearly. He is one of the few men in public life who does. And he is doing every- thin,, it, xAn- t , - j;,' , . . . " r"-i iii ctirm-i n condition, wnicn must be cor rected, if our democratic form of government as we have known it is to aurvive. (If anyone doubts this let them look at Europe and see what has happened to popular governments there which have been unable to provide the masses with a reasonable degree of security snd comfort) By a strange irony of Fate", because of his efforts in this direction the president has been called a Communist, and his program fatal to the survival of American institutions. Not only is this untrue, it is the exact REVERSE of the truth. These efforts are the best insurance this coimtrv can have against communism ; the success of this program in it, essentials. no are to protect anj preserve American What the president is trying to do, we believe should be done indeed, must be done, if this country is to avoid Com munism on one hand and Fascism on the other.- IT all goes back to Theodore Roosevelt's statement, that this country won't be a good place for any of us, unless it is made a good place for ALL of us. It is not based upon special priv ilegesor special penalties for any class, capital or labor, rich or poor; it is based on the welfare of all and a square deal to all, something that to date, has not ECONOMICALLY been secured. QO that's the fundamental issue in this campaign as we see it. A vote for President Roosevelt tomorrow means h vote to sustain his policies, and keep tho nation on the course he has charted; it means a vote for betterment and progress of all the country, which means a greater and more permanent security and prosperity, for each and every class in the country, and this includes the most powerful Big Business man at the top of the scale to the humblest worker in the land. That is why, as a final word, we urge our readers to go to the polls tomorrow and mark their ballots for the re-election of President Roosevelt I THE MAIL TRIBUNE'S Political Safety -Valve This newspaper will publish communications, limited to 400 words, expressing the political views of our O readers Regardless of party affiliations, aU Interested are invited to contribute to this pre-election depart- CJ ment. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to dlsoue. iilagnosis or treatment, wUI be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped, self-ad-dressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brier and written In Ink owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered no reply ran be made to queries not conforming to Instructions, Address l)r. William Brady, loo El Camlno, Beverly Hills, CaUf. DOES A BABV 'NEED AMUSEMENT, PLAY OR EXERCISE? A newborn baby expands the lungs and prevents collapse (atelscta&ls) of the lung, by vigorous crying. Every baby needs at least one good cry a day, and U neceuary should be spanked or dashed with little cold water after the regular bath, to Induce crying. The young In fant gets suffi cient exercise by crying and by kicking the legs ana waving the arms about at various times. See that the arms snd legs axe not re strained by clothing. It Ls normal for young baby to kick the covers off almost as fast as mother or nurse can put them on again. In warm weather or a heated room It Is as Well, perhaps better, not to keep the baby covered up so much. For a few minutes after the dally bath at 4 or 6 p. m It ls a good rule to finish off the bath (plain wter and little or no soap or only plain toilet soap If any) with a sprinkle of cold water followed at once by a brisk rubbing with warm sort dry towel, then a powdering with plain talcum, and a gentle rubbing of back and chest with the dry hand, white the baby plays. After that the nighty and dry napkin, a feed snd so to bed. At three months or older the baby begins to grasp. During the few minutes of dally play time let him grasp your fingers while you slowly lift until he lets go. Gradually he will learn to hang on until at six months he can support his weight that way for a moment. At four months he should be able to turn off from his back onto his belly and make at least an effort to crawl. This dally exercise must never last more than five mtnutts at a time. Before the sge of four mouths a baby needs no amusement or enter talnment more than he gets (from Just looking vaguely about, and after that age his requirements In the way of amusement are too simple for toys. Do not hang swinging objects over his head. Do not give the baby any toys suitable for a child. Do not use any brightly painted articles, crib, bed, toys, high chair which the baby can possibly gnaw or suck on. Never give the baby any object to suck on. After six months a suitable toy would be a plain rubber doll or horse or dog but one not with a whistle In It, or a bright colored worsted ball. Aftr six months the baby will en Joy soft music such as the singing of a bird or soft playing of a piano or vio lin or soft singing. But not loud radio music, phonograph, band. Never tickle or otherwise excit the baby to induce laughter. Never permit any one to kiss the baby. Remember that a young In fant has not acquired such natural Immunity and may contract a serious or fatal Illness which, In an older person, would be only a trifling In disposition. Remember, too. that the baby must be kept always ueyond the range, the conversational spray range, of any one who purports to nave a slight "cold." Most adults are not only Ignorant bu quite cal lous about this and the baby's guar dian need have no hesitation about protecting the defenseless Infant from the possible hazard. "Baby talk" ls to be frowned upon In all circumstances. It means noth ing to the baby and It ls bad teach ing, for the baby learns to speak by listening to speech. If the speech the bsby hears ls not normal the baby's speech will not be normal. QUESTIONS AND AN8WKK8 Wart HUM There Pour weeks ago I wrote for your warts, too: Paint corn, wart or callus I am still waiting for a reply. No doubt you have a large correspond ence. . . . (E. V.) Answer. Anyway your complaint gives proof through the pages that tho wart Is still there. It offers some evidence, too. that you foiled to In close a 3-cent-stamped envelope bear ing your address. Correspondents who nonchalantly Ignore that trifling matter may have a thousnnd warts without hearing from me. The old reliable corn euro often disposes of warts, to: Pnlnt corn, wart or callus dally with a solution of 30 grains of ssllcyllc add In one-half ounce of flexible collodion. In the course of week or ten days the corn, wart or callus softens and may be wiped away. I do not guarantee this. I merely suggest It Is harmless to try. Salts Please tell mo some of the bad ef fects of taking Epsom salts or other salts regularly. . . . (L. M. P.) Answer. There la no Justification for such use of salts, and the effect la certain to bo Injurious to health. Hair Falling I have a good deal of greasy dan druff and my hair Is falling out heavily. . . . MIas M. 8 ) Answer. Send 3c stamped envelope bearing your address, and ask for monograph on Care of the Hair and Control of Dandruff. (Copyright, 1936. John P. DUIe Co.) For Tax Limitation. To the Editor: We wonder why It ls that the county school superintendents, pro fessors of economics and other public servants on the public payroll can't tell the whole truth when they speak or write against the tax limitation bill. Thy always neglect to mention the provision In this bill whereby any county, city or school district, etc., can Increase the taxes If a majority of the voters of such divisions wish to do so. All this talk about cities and school districts having to curtail their services to a dangerous extent If this bill passes ls Just so much blah, blah. If a majority of voters of any district want to increase their taxes they can do so. If a majority of the voters of a district want to curtail their public services they can do so. What could be more fair than this? why shouldn't a majority of the voters have the right to decide Just how muoh money they want to spend for public services? We are told that the average assess ment throughout the state Is 57 per cent of the actual value of the prop erty, j Right here In Jackson county hun dreds of acres In the outlying district ' are assessed at over 106 per cent of their face value This might be ex pected in the towns or school districts where there ls a heavy bonded deoi, but there ls no excuse for this In dis tricts where there Is very little bonded Indebtedness. We will never have lower taxes if we rely on the office holders to lower them. Yours Respectfully, L. K. (Nsme on Pile) Medford, R. 3, November 1. Roose'elt Wins, So What? To the Editor: The Illegality of the custodians of law and order in Indiana, In prevent ing Earl Browder from delivering his ultra-oonservatlve message to the long suffering people hss brought out no protest from the other candidates for president, except Norman Thomas, who Immediately wired In his con demnation of the high-handed ac tion. The omission amounts to ap proval of Illegality by those gentle men running for the presidency our chief law enforcerl There la no doubt that they squirmed in real agony over their Implied approval of unlawful ness and would also have sent a wire of protest but for the interests behind such names like John Smith or Alice Jones names such as Hype Igoe. Bozeman Bulger, Palth Baldwin and Kathleen Norrls. To my notion the two most distinguished American names were Carter Harrison- and Nicholas Long worth. And who recalls the stir a few yeara ago by the appearance of Edgar Lee Master's Spoon River Anthology? The spirits of the old townsfolk "telling the truth" out there on cem etery hill I It was Interesting the other night t bivouac with a group of former Iowans. One of those rare conversa tional Interludes of the one-speaker-at-a-tlme kind. One, a painter, re marked how few outsiders pronounce "Des Moines, Iowa" as the native does. The native says "Dun Molne, I-wuh". . Others get the "esses" Into Des Moines and say "I-OH-wah" "1-O-way." - Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the riles ot the Mall Tribune 10 aod to rears ago. Personal nomination for ths crack spinner of modern fishing yarns Corey Ford. Kd Note: Pel sons wishing to communicate frith Dr. Utad) hould send letter direct to Dr William Brady, M. D. 26a El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Calif. OO.Mcl Hi ntyre NEW YORK, Nov. a Diary: Abreast ths avenus and kltty-pusslng In Dut ton'a picked up a volume of laso minstrel Jokes. And cams upon Oladya Kitchen. Karl'a widow. Then awaiting my lady at Peggy Hoyt's. valchlng the msnnlklns. So off with her for mid-day breakfsst by a Plara park window. Home and let tera from Billy Ds Back. Art. Frank and Caro- : lyn Wells and a scandalous hand painted postcard from Gilbert Whits snd Leon Oordon roystcr Ing In Normandy. Iter to Marga ret snd Brock Pemb,; ton's tea to the rredrlc Marches and ths apartment thick with Page 1 folk. Dinner with the book crltle lisle hell and his wife. And they to some i literary rlng-a-doo we back atsgs to r.e Menken a momen.. Hence wan- ' Ccrlng among ths theaters and won Cerlng why a cirque d'Hlvre never took root In America. 5o to bed. Columbus Circle hot gospelers had an Innovation ths other evening In ths appearance of an old time light ning calculator. A seedy relict of a street carnival past. He had his chalk and blackboard and called for num rera to add and subtract. But after wearing his voles to a husk with his Jummery for IS minutes snsgged only a half dozen llstenera. The biggest crowd was cupping ears to a com munist ranting how our government and Its constitution were a mess and how his party waa going to fix all that. Tauteau: America i93S! Sudden thought: How fortunate sr writers In having rather than At S o'clock In front of tho upstairs lodging houses on the Bowery they collect. Types seen nowhere else in the vast city. Rum blossom noses. odd combinations of clothing that would Inspire Bobby Clark. Expres sions ever changeless. Mostly those who carry the banner the sandwich men. They can, when employed, make from 60 cents to a 1.00 s day top. They really do not care for much more. That la enough. It buya a 20-cent lodging and a Jolt of third rail booze with free lunch on the side to keep them on oven keel In the back waters of lost hopes. The Bowery, unlike London slums, hss jto tempersnce taverns. A hope 'lul from Indiana opened one In the early turn of the century. Even the odor of liquor on tha breath was a barrier. It wangled much publicity, ctpeclally In Prank OMalley'a lighter vein, on the old Sun but lasted only a few weeks. Oddly enough, however, I am told the majority who pilot the cheap grog-shops on the Bowery sre tcc-totalers. Once they start drinking tnelr fiery llbatlona they go the way of customers. , TEN YEARS AGO TODAY November 2, 1026 (It was Tuesday) Thirty-four percent of vote in city Is cast by 2 p. m., the largest In years. Early returns from eastern statea In dicate a Republican trend. Evidence at Loa Angelea hoarlng Into Aimee Semple McPherson kid naping hoax Indicarea "deceit." Prose cution to Introduce trunk belonging to evangelist, and containing lingerie valued at S2000. Blinding sunlight blsmad for auto crash on Pacific highway. tnera wnose pawns tney are. Fo, their unfortunate plight, the sentl. mental undersigned haa shed real tears. These gentlemen are real sports and as such hate unsportsman ship, even In politics. The race for the chair ls, they feel, and rightly, outrageously unfair aa a fight be tween Shirley Temple and the Brown Bomber. However, for Roosevelt to act according to Harvard ethlca and pro test would be seized upon by Hearst & Co. and made capital of for hit puppet's benefit. For to uphold a communist's constitutional right would, Hearst would point out, msks Roosevelt a communist. And what Is more to the point, he would make those who want to believe It, think sol Hearst, as ls well known, has time and again charged Roosevelt with working to change our form of government. Roosevelt has denied It. He la trying to make ths profit sys tem profitable for all an Impossi bility. The fact that If some make a profit, othera must take a loss. Is so simple a fact as to escape notice al most everywhere. Relatively, the peo ple lose, and forover must, under our cherished Ism. Notwithstanding. Roosevelt will be given another term In which to shadow-box to hla heart', content. So what? R. HEQNBR. Oold Hill, October 30. sites Hunters his for Klsmath lakes to 1 nunt ducks. Medford high gsme with Consuls football squad excite stste Interest. plsn for spray Frultmen adopt residue, control. Four special dry agenta assisted by ' seven locsl officers arrest man with i a five gallon still on Rogue river. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY November 2, 1016 (It waa Thursday) Speech by O.O.P. Nominee Hughes turns him to Wilson, a Central Point Republican writes the editor. Re publican rally at Nat sends odds on Wilson in county to 10 to T. Ootober waa the driest October In 21 years, with unly a trace of rain. Recently completed cement plant at Gold Hill starts operations. Austrlana lose 15,000 In Italian of fensive. Bagatelles: The Duke of Kent has revived the tan vest ... Joe schenck is the crack sinochllat of the film eclony ... The Billy Osxtons are considered the stage's most devoted couple . . . Msurlce Chevalier is writ ing hla biography . . . H. O. Wells will not stay in a room where there Is a cat . . . King Borla amokes four clgarettea chain fashion upon awak ening . . . The oulld'e first play with CMfton Webb was a flop. Overheard by Roscoe" Peacock: "We don't know how many radicals sre boring from within but those ws meet ars certainly boring from wherever they happen to be." -Uoaing time lor Too Late to Clas. sift Ads Is 1:30 p. m. Use Man tribune want ads for Baby's Cold ved best by two rrations of mothers, VJcks Ml institutions. Help Kidneys If roorlr fnctlliia' KlJnws u JVsd.lt.t tnak. rou surTw from Outline 1 P Nlshts. Nrrcuan., Kh.uRi.Ua rsin.. KIilTn.M. Hirin Mn..,!.. V Itckl-t, or Artlltr try ! TOrntrj Doctor'. PrfTiinS,nCvstiiSi..t.tl I ( IS rOX tat. 0b1i srau. WE ARE NOW MAKING DELIVERIES ON Green LABITJOO Phone 7 Now TIMBER PRODUCTS COMPANY END OF NORTH CENTRAL AVENUE Porter J. Neff and K. B. Kelly will discuss the csmpalgn, and antwer the questions of the editor of the Morning Sun at the Page tonight. by Elks will get election returns special leased wire. Use Mall Tribune want ada. HEAR FRANK J. NEWMAN Republican Candidate for the office of DISTRICT ATTORNEY Answer CODDING RUHL and the MINER Over KMED 7:45 Tonight Paid Adv. Repubtlran Cou n ty Ce n t ra I Com. IsCaaKaaaaatattttsaaiUM DR. GEO. S. JENNINGS Osteopathic Physician and Sur geon and Optitmetrlc Kye Specialist announces the opening oi prutes slonal offices: 310 Mrdford Center Bldg.. Mrdford. Oregon. Tel. 843 NATIONAL riCKET For President ALF. M. LAN DON For Vice-President FRANK KNOX For U. S. Senator FOR CONGRESS 1st District-JAMES W, M0TT 2nd District -ROY W. RITNER 3rd District -WM. A. EKWALL STATE TICKET AttorneyGeneral-I.H.VANWINKLE CHARLES LMcNARY State Treasurer-RUFUS H0LMAN FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE William M. McAllister Glen 0 Taylor FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY Frank J. Newman FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER Ralph Billings FOR COUNTY CLERK George R. Carter FOR ASSESSOR J. B. Coleman FOR TREASURER A. C Walker FOR CORONER Frank Perl FOR CONSTABLE Nicholas Young raid .dt.RPpiic,n stat, rentral tommltti.. urcj'jn Ur. Bl.dlne. Secretary, iou falling Building, Portland,