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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1936)
PAGE POUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEPFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1936. MEDFORDyiUjWrRIBUNE "Bvorynne In 8oalbera Ore Rm6 thr UmU trlhane" Daily fticept ttoturtfar. Published by - UUDKOIID PBINTINO CO. il-IIMB N. Pit Bt Phon ROB ffiRl W. RO HI, BUI tor. tDRNBHT B. OM.HTRAH. nfr. Ad ImlepeniUnt Nwppr. fflnird m Moond matter at H4 foM, Oroo, undr Aol ol fcUrcfc t, HI . SUBSCRIPTION RATES Br Mali Id Arivaacet Dlj. on rer Only, m mouibi Dally, on mooth Bt Carrltr. lo Adi.nc Mcdford. Aih- land. Jackson! lis, CiDtril Pmnt. Pboflnfx. TalanL Oolt. Hill and en nifbwaya. Dally, ona year ,,,,,f.00 Dally, tls months... Dally, nt month All tar ma. oath In ad Tinea. Offlelfti l'iipr of the Olty ol Hrdrnrd Official Paper ol J a rh into Onanty Jll&SlHKH OB IIIB AHHiMllAIItU PHUb HMftlrlni rnll L fined Wlrs Sendee. Tha Aiiclatad Praat la aiclumaly an tttlad to tha om for publication of all mat dltpatehaa oradltad to It or ottisr vlaa oradltad In thla pa par, and alao to (ha local fiawa pu bill hart haralo. All rights for publlcatloo ot apaoUu llapatchai harelD ara alao raaarvad. UUUUBR OF UN 1TB D PHB88 UEMBKR OS AUDIT BIIRBAO OK CIRCULATIONS Advartlalng ReprosUMtstlvts WE8T-IIOI.MI)AY-MOUBNSRN CO. Offlcea In New York, Chicago, Da troll, 6an Franoloco, Los Amalea, Seattle. Portland. 6 MBBR Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur 1'errj. At least two months ox reputed praying by valley Xarmers for rain, atan da unanswered, yet. Speedier results might be obtained by praying tbey don't get It. ... A number of upstate areas have "anti-war amateur dramatics." More than likely some critical soul will set out to prove General Sherman was right In both Instances. , . ' Then Is considerable joyous talk about "a boom." Most everybody who lost their pants In the last one, have a pair to lose In the one now re ported en route. The weather has been such as to eauss the Older Olrls to mention Dhe woolen things they wore when a girl In Minnesota, Kext Friday Is -rrlday the lath." If any bad luck remains. It will be dis pensed upon that date. Clark Oabls, the he-man and "Great Lover" of the movies, hss been as signed to a role requiring him to wear a beard. Just wften the mania for Charlie Chaplin mustaches begins to wane, the nation Is faced with the prospect ot 19 years of Clsrk Oable whiskers. AIAKB IIP YOUR MINUS. (New York American) Abraham Cohen haa withdrawn from the partnership In Leeds Oosmetlcs snd Drug Co., 1024 Kings Highway. Brooklyn; all bills will be paid by . Irving Oold man, remaining partner. Irving Goldman has withdrawn from the partnership of Cold man A Cohen of 1171 K. 03nd St., Brooklyn; all bills will be paid by Abraham Cohen, romalnlng part ner. The Literary Digest, Its laat Issue aveals, Is now being scolded for de pleting on lu front cover a hunter "shooting with his gun upslds down." There Is alao the matter of uilng the right pitchfork to throw the straw ballota In the wrong pile. "Justice Sutherland and Justice Van Devanter have much In common . . , But there la an outstanding dif ference between the two men; Van Devanter has brains." (PYom "Nine Old Men") The court gels "nssed." The department of commerce plans to ask congress for llO.ooo.ooo to count the nation's Johleas. Postmaster Parley predicted the election 100 per cent. It would be cheaper, faster, and Just as accurate to have htm gueea the number ot the unemployed A Portland resident who attended a revival meeting, was robbed of hie noekelbook containing MO. There seems to have been a pickpocket, or a gypsy fortune teller In the congre gation. ... A new Workers-Parmer organisa tion la now In course of concoction In this state. As usual, In the last analysis, It will psn out as the Worked -Parmer orKanlaatlon. The Dubb Watson boy Journeyed to Prospect Sunday, and made the ac quaintance of Dewey Hill, Mayor. Ilrst-baaeman. and leading hillbilly of the srea. They have nothing In common, except that neither enn keep his ehlrt-Ull In, when busy. The aft section ot a shirt, uncurled to the broeu. Is also used by H. Plewher. the demon baker, as a algnal he Is a hotbed of energy. VK PAINFli, TKI TH. We note as we read, men with chins that recede Are always prognsthous In print; Men with Jaws that stick out and whose whisper's a shout Write pale stuff of pacifist tint. Men with hair on the chest seldom write of the west; If so, thev are never convincing. Men hairless and mild write words woolly and wild; Thev never could speak without wincing. Chaps psinfully shy when the ladles are hy Will skin 'em alive In the papera: Keep this Uw well In mind as you read snd you'll find It accounts for some comical cajwrs. (Exchange). a .'losing time tor 1x Late to Oles slf Ad, ik I -3U p in,. Use Mau ltlbuos rant ads. A Look Into The Future TIIKRE is only one dark cloud on the horizon, ai wo ee it. That ia war. "y7 mean war on large aoale, either in the Far Eaat or Europe. If such a war can be avoided during the next two years, probably it can be put off permanently, or at least during; the present decade. And such a consummation is not only devoutly to be wished, for the welfare of the world, but for the continued prosperity and security of this country." see BARRING such a war, we predict the second administration of President Roosevelt, will be ofie of the most successful in the entire history of this country. For in out judgment, the recent election, cleared the atmosphere for a peaceful and rela tively speedy, solution of our more perplexing domestic prob lems. . There is, of course, the balancing of the budget, and the im perative need of a material reduction in unemployment ; but if old Man Mars can just be kept on the side lines, where he be longs, natural forces already achieve the first, and reduce unemployment, to a negligible fac tor, that is to the point where tion can easily handle it. With the domestic decks cleared for aotion, so to speak, and with no large sosle war, raging, to destroy the political and eeo- nomio balance, from an international standpoint; and there would be nothing to discourage ahead, and a resulting era of prosperity and well b.;ing in this country, which would establish ALL time, not in the direction inrlivu'tml fnrf.nne. Hut. in more permanent average of material well-being throughout the country eg A whole, more permanent because built upon the solid foundation of a fairer distribution of wealth, higher paid and more contented labor, stabilized agriculture, and therefore a stimulated and more permanent purchasing power and great er security and a more abundant life for all. That is the goal President Roosevelt has set for this country, and we see its ultimate achievement, not completely during the next four years, perhaps, but such progress toward it, that the ideal of a great democracy, that and contentment, to it citizens fathers intended, will eventually be realized. . The Supreme Issue THERE ia no doubt whatever, that President Roosevelt real ixea tliiei Ha haa dpMnred a truce sa far as nartisan noli- tics is concerned, and hia first important official act promises to be his attendance at the Pan-American conference in Buenos Aires. This would be an important conference under any circum stances, but with the President in attendance, even for a day or two, it may well be history making. The administration's good neighbor policy has been tremen dously successful throughout South America, and this country enjoys a confidence and friendliness from south of the equator, which marks a new, and we believe permanent mile stone in our Latin-Amorioa relations. Out of this conference in all likelihood will come a united front on the part of North and South America against war, and an agreement, of neutrality, and determination to not be come involved, in case of another European war. GREAT oaks from little acorns grow. Such an agreement, may not appear of outstanding moment in itself, but it may well lead to something of supreme importance from an in ternational standpoint, and particularly from the standpoint of preventing war on a large scale, either in the Atlantic or far Pacific areas. Toward this end the President has, in Secretary of State Hull, one of the most far-seeing statesmen, and effective work ers toward world peace, that the Democratic party has pro duced He hasn't been much in the headlines, has gone about, his job quietly and unobtrusively, but no member of the ad ministration has been more effective in his particularly line, nor is thore any member, who at the close of Roosevelt's first term, enjoys higher prestige or more general admiration, and respect. A few days before the election Secretary Hull delivered a speech in Hagerstown, Maryland, on this general subject of both domestic and international peace, of which the following is an extract i "Prosperity and peace are not separata entitles. To promote one Is to promote the other. "The economic well-being of peoples Is the greatest single protection sgalnst elvll strife, large armaments, war. "A people employed and In a atat of reasonable comfort Is not a people among whom class struggles, dictatorships and war can thrive. "But a people driven to desperation by want and misery Is at all times a threat to pesos, an Invitation to disorder and ehsos. both Internal and external. "And the first condition essential to the banishment of want and misery Is that the economic lite of tha elvlllnd world shsll be so ordered as to ansble the mssses of the people to work and prosper. . , , "Beonomle Isolstlon snd military force go hand In hand." This is profoundly true. And there arc many American citi zens who as the election approached, deserted the Republican party, because they so thoroughly agreed with the principles of the administration's foreign policy, as opposed to the re actionary and befuddled policy of the Republican party, be lieving that during the next four years, international not do mestic problems, might well bo of supreme importance. yWKNTY.TWO years sro, the World war, brought this country unprecedented prosperity for a brief period. The United States became the supply shop for the belligerent pow ers, during (ho conflict and financed them, iiflcr it. Those who have (bus come to associate a world war! with American war profit), and believe that another larg? scale con flict would result in similar benefits, simply don't know what they are talking about. ' Fundamental conditions since 1014 he entirely chanced. Another great war would uol only produce no prosperity, even of a temporary character, but it would destroy the prosperity this country now enjoys, and plunge it back into a depression, that would unquestionably exceed in its severity and destruc at work, will as we view it, the new social security legisla the command of full stt-am a new all-time record. of the accumulation ot great the direction nf a higher and will give that peace, well-being, all its citizens, that our fore tive results the depression that boke, like a bolt from the blue, in 1929. QO never before in this nation's history, has world peace, from not only a humanitarian, but a purely selfish standpoint, been more imperative for the future security and well-being of this country, than is the case today. Certainly all politics aside, this country is INDEED FOR TUNATE that it has a government, which both in theory and practice is so passionately devoted to those principles both do mestic and foreign, which if maintained and sustained, will ad vance the cause of peace both at home and abroad. Personal Health Service By William signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease, diagnosis or treatment, wUl be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped, self-sd dressed envelope la 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 can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady, 28S El Camlno. Beverly Hills. CaUf. COMMON MISTAKES MAIIB BY AMATEURS IN THE BABY BUSINESS Every baby should be vaccinated agaairut small pox at the age of four months. At this age vaccinia la a mild disturbance compared to the upset It may pro duce In an older child. Many par ents put off too long the vaccina tion of the baby. Before the end of the first year the baby should be 1mm u nlzed against diphthe ria. It Is In the pre -school age that diphtheria Is most fatal and hence the young child most needs this protection. Too many parent take no steps to pro tect a child agnlnst the risks of diphtheria until the child Is ready to enter school If he escapes infec tion up to that time. A great many young parents make the sad mistake of having an only ' child. Perhaps In half the cases this ; is not Intentional, but one-child , sterility, a common effect of specific ! infection which flares up following ; the birth of the only child and leaves sterility after it has burned out or after It has made mutilating opera tion necessary. An only child does not get a fair break,. Parents who i are not blessed with more than one child of their own should for that child' sake, their own sake and God's sake, adopt a sister or brother or jo to make a real family. The place for a child to learn to get on with other I people Is in the home. I Too many babies are coddled to death still, although a perceptible enlightenment Is slowly percolating through. A young Infant has com paratively more heat to get rid of than has an oldet child or an adult. Excesa of clothing or of cover or of heat In the room where the baby lives Is devltsllKlng and weakening In effect on the baby. It the baby seems happy be sure the clothing bed covers or temperature of the room is sufficient. If the baby U cross and peevish, restless, moist of skin, the chances are you have the poor kid nearly killed with coddling. At any time If the baby's skin feels warm to your touch you may be sure the baby li warm enough, no matter If he Is stark naked and un covered. If the baby's hands and feet feel cold to your touch, he may still be nearly killed with coddling, for when the circulation weakens from any oause the hands and feet are likely to be rather clammy, even though the Infant be kept far too warm. Here let us shed a tear of sympathy mm O.O.Mclnlvre NFW YORK, Nor. . Diary: An autographed copy of Tdwal Jones's little Chinese brochure. And Vssh Young barged In a moment, as al ways bright with philosophic cheer. And Verne Por ter came by with gammon of lit erary folk. So to the Waldorf across the way to breakfast with Harry Sllvey. Home and found H T. Web ster had forward ed an off-the-record Mark Twain hilarity which I rish I might print. And Don Rosr over In Philadelphia asked mo to pen a little panegyric for a collection of Jay K. House's columns In book form, which, I am happy to do. he being a rare favorite. Dinner and talked to Dick Berlin, newly home from a t)iilrk das, to Europe. And back stage to see .lor Laurie, Jr.. who won critical raves in Kenyon Nicholson's rowdy hit. So across town and plumped Into Boh Hague and Mary Lewis, window shop ping, Thnce abed, a brave rain fall ing. Slugging rata ia one of the rough and ready diversions of the gamins who make their playground slonR water fronts. The aluRKcrs tie a rock to the end of a thin mpe and swing ing 11 lariat fashion are able often with deadly precision to nail cnorm cua ndent that come out of rotting dock crevice for food. There is exttn excitement, too. in the ft that a wounded wharf rat will often turn on tormrntora and fight. Matty are the s'w of a full-grown guinea pig Al Smith, aa a boy. was a neiuteye Pick smong rat Mug tiers. On the lower Kast Side is a tvpc knwn as the Delancv street Dude. Delanvpy Is the Ghetto's 5th avenue the opulnl boulevard tlie ..romenaae. Hie V. S D. is the :P3 sheik the oilj-hslied lad with laMsttJfti& Brady, M.D. for the wretched Infant In water proof napkin end shame on his guardians. One of the dumbest and most harmful notions Is that any food Is adequate for the baby's nutrition If It "agrees." Thousands of Infanta annually develop scurvy or rickets on food that "agree?" perfectly. Your own mother or grandmother has probably forgotten Just how sh? managed to save one out of three Beware of her Instruction on the care of Infants. And If your family doctor is any good at all, you will leave It to him to suggest a special ist when there is sufficient reason to hope that a specialist may bo of any use. - QUESTIONS AMI ANSWERS . Soy Mean Please tell me if soy bean bread Is fattening, as I wish to reduce. . . . (Mrs. B. B.) . Answer Practically no more or less than ordinary bread Send ten cents and three-cent s tamped envelope bearing your address, for- copy of booklet "Design for Dwindling." Orthodontia Son. four months old. Is a mouth breather. Three months ago had his tonsils snd adenoids removed, but It hss made no difference. His upper In forming a short upper curve. Is there any way to make him breathe properly through his nose? . . , (B S. H.) Answer. Has the child had the advantage of exposure to sunlight (nr ultraviolet rays from artificial source) enough to produce a complete coat of tan and promote normal calcium metabolism? Has he received an optimal ration of vitamin D? These factors have much to do with de velopment of strong , symmetrical bones, Jaws, teeth, and with preven tion of tonsil and adenoid hyper trophy Orthodonla Is usually neces sary to correct tho fundamental Ir regularity of Jaw and teeth. This means gradual strnlghtrr.lng of the teeth by suitable appliances. Any good dentist can do this. Some den tists do nothing else, specialising In such work they are known as ortho dontists. flahy Coming What Instructions would you give a young woman who Is expecting her first baby? . . . Mrs. S. L.) Answer Send ten. cent coin and three-cent stamped envelope bearing your address, for booklet, "Preparing for Maternity" (Copyright. 1038, John T. Dllle Co.) ttd Note: IViuiir wlshlni to vumiDunicate with Dr. Brad) should send tetter dirvct to Ur William Ursdy. M O. tea ttl Camlno. Hvrrl MliK Calif. Imcklety-buck clothes whose patron Brummel Is George Rsft. He spends much time and money In the barber slops to be flossed up for conquests for he Is definitely "on the make. The venerable, bewhlskered patri archs with calm-as-custard expres sions sit In hall chairs gazing upon this strange new upshoot of their race with old world astonishment, As though Intoning: "Your ways are not my ways, etc." Personal nomination for an artist who has out distanced all the lm personatora Sheila Barrett. Central- Park West from Columbus Circle to West 72d street In Its pave ment parades reveals many no tt bite who live in the are. Jack Dempeey may be pushing a pram toward the park mall for his afternoon siesta. Fannie Hurst Is one of tho strollers rvlth several dogs on a leash and per haps her milk white cat. Bugs Baer may take time from his typewriter ror a Joust at the art ambulandl and pull at a meditative pipeful. Howard Chandler Christy and his terrier are also frequently etched In the srea. And Ethel Merman, the torch singer. Graham Cootes and Billy Seeman and lovely Phyllis Haver. prophecy: Early in May, 1918 at a dinner at Roland Conklln's in West Neck. L. I., arose a discussion over coffee cups among the sixteen guests as to the duration of the World war. It was arranged for each to write on ii slip the dat of the war's finish no "on or about" but the jxact day. Fach put up a 15 bill, the one com ing nearest to take the pot. The prophesloe were then read out and cached into a safp. They ran from several months to four years all ex cept one. and It winnowed a hearty .ound of la uk titer. On his slip was: November 11th, 1918.' It was a flush that came out of nowhere as he picked up his pencil. Thingumbobs: Jlminy Walker, re turned to law. la reputed to have re ceived some ot the fattest retainers the tear . . . Duke Ellington has the matt luxuriously outfitted apart ment on Harlem's Sugar Hilt . . . Nntachs Rsmbova is returning from war-torn Mn'orra to try her luck with a New York gown shop nain , . . John Drlnxwater, English poet, has cne meal of fresh oysters every seiuon and goes to bed for 3t hours ith the nifties. And It was Gene Cravs iey who. stopping a swaggering Uttle sniggle fritz In the Sutton Place area the other mld-momlng. Inquired why the shaver wssn't In school. "Hell," wee the reply, "I ain't but four." (Copyright 1938. McNaught Syndicate 1 S I UsOfSlfK... ! (Continued from Page One.) At the same time, the substance of that presidential thought has not been dropped, and will very likely take a new form. Just as a 'hint, one eminent new deal authority says It would be en tirely practical for the president to take the treaty which la expected to develop from the pan-American con ference and lnvtts Messrs. Hitler, Sta lin, Mussolini and the others. In a friendly little note, to subscribe to It. There Is every reason to believe that some such unformed plan is be hind the pan-American conference and the unusual method In which the president and Mr. Hull are pro moting It. One thing which will grow out of the pan-American meeting la a per manent organization of the foreign ministers of American nations. It will be called a "consultative com mittee and provision will be made for It to meet at regular Intervals In much the same spirit as the Lea gue of Nations. i There are good authorities here who foresee the prospect that all the nations of the world may also be Invited to subscribe to this phase of the pan-American meeting. The success of such a move would mean tho creation of a new world peace machine, much more loosely organized than the league and found ed upon much broader principles. How effective It would e depends upon how the details are worked out, but It could not be less effective than the league. The situation now seems to be that the president and his International counselors sre feeling their way quiet ly toward some such goal. They are not elated over the pros pects of success, and have not re ceived much Inside encouragement from abroad. Consequently, they will continue for the present to speak only of, and to, the pan-American conference, while peering for hope beyond It. Everyone connected with the new deal seems to consider Mr. Roosevelt's victory as a personal one for himself. Among those thus personally vin dicated Is Prof. Tugwell, who hid his light under two or three bushels throughout the campaign. Tugwell made no speeches, but. unobserved by Republicans, he wrote signed edi torials which appeared In small coun try papers, largely In the south. Some persons, as close to Mr. Roose velt as Tugwell, have been offering even money that Tugwell will be back at Columbia university January 1. but no outsiders will believe them. One explanation behind the more lenient Lewis attitude toward peace with the A. F. of L la the fact that his organization of the steel industry has not been getting on at all well. Tho first pre-election excuse of fered on the Inside was that Mr. Roosevelt had told John Lewis to hold back until after election. That may or may not be true. Immedi ately after election, however, pay In creases were granted to steel work ers, thus making Mr. Lewis' Job much harder. There Is still talk of a strike In April when certain contracts expire between steel operators who own coal mines and Mr. Lewis 50.000 workers In their mines. That Is Mr. Lewis ace In the hole. trail am fel iiiiDis MM kf wnsunr jshk In N 6-8 proof-The straight whl.ltit. siwl ' " g I" product sre 1 5 month or aSCi-- I V more old. 251 straight whl.kies; 'jCfVSHC' I? 7'"' Krln neutral spirits. 5 W V$ "CNSilSf L j straight whiikev 4 years old. 201 1 . OiOKt I 1 straight whiskey 1 5 months old. VlllW.. flF"..V&L'S ' l j PINTx257C r V QUART U.40 host. T f ( h AVAILABLE IN OREGON f ; HTnlLMOLt IN UKttiUN WSS. Cerrrilht IOI. h. S. Finch & Co. lac. Schraln Comment of the Day s News rv PRANK JENKINS MORE about the state of Oregon: For the first time since 1925, she will have a surplus Instead of a deficit at the end of this year. The 91,043,952 deficit inherited by the Martin administration at the be ginning of 1035 has been converted into a surplus of 9210,573.78, accord ing to the secretary of state's audit. GOOD old Oregon. For more years than most of us csn remember she has talked rad ical and ACTED conservative. That's not a bad way to work It. L ON THE state ballot In the late la mented election, there were eight measures, ranging all the way from silly harmless to drastically wild and woolly. The voters of Oregon went to the polls and snowed them all un der, from top to bottom. Nothing very radical about thai BACK In the early days, say a cou ple of decades ago, the rest of the country listened to Oregon's radi cal talk and contemptuously called us the "fool of the family." What those who gave us that name failed to recognise was that In Ore gon we're extremely apt to talk one way and act another. We've done a lot of wild talklug In our time, but when it has come to ACTING, we've been about as con servative as they come. As a result, we're In mighty good shape finan cially. 4 THERE are reasona to hope that the country Is entering upon a period of prosperity. At any rate, It's far more consoling to hope that we're heading toward prosperity than to believe that the botom la getting ready to drop out from under us. It can't be denied that In the past periods of great prosperity have reg ularly followed periods of txereme depression. If It Is true that we are heading into a period of great prosperity, the people of Oregon (Including its coun ties. Its cities and Its local taxing districts of various sorts) wilt be wise If they pay off their existing debts, refrain from making NEW debts, pay their bills as they go along and In general keep themselves In good fin ancial condition. If we will all do that, we don't need to worry much about the next depression, for we will be In fine shape to meet It when It comes along. y2& Boys and Girls Roller Skate Races 10:30 A M. Parade 11:05 AM. Veterans Free Lunch (Dug Out) 12:00 Noon Football, Medford-Ashland, new High field- 2:00 P.M. Entertainment at Dug Out iu4 :30 P.M. Armistice Ball, Oriental Gardens 9 :00 P.M. Theatres and Roller Rink, afternoon and evening ... . . Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of the MuU Tribune 10 and 20 years ago. . TEN VEAKS AGO TODAY November 10, 1926 (It was Wednesday) F. Corning Kenly and Edison Mar shall return from a Klamath duck shooting Jaunt. Merchants plan Yuletlde season opening in December'. .Tauonvllle to keen ut lenl bat tle to retain courthouse, removed to tHs city, In last election. Lack of Democratic votes to be subject of probe In Philadelphia Ashland to play Medford In Armistice- Day game here tomorrow. Flans complete for parade and cele bration. Wind and rains sweep upstate TWENTY. YEA It 8 AGO TODAY November 10, 1919 (It was Friday) President Wilson carries Nen Hampshire by 93 votes. Germans forced to retreat on East tern Front; Allies launch new driv on the Somme. Tests show Medford water to bt purest In seven months. Dr. E. H. Porter and family on way home by auto after a summer spent In New England. Mrs. W. F. Blddle entertains the Thursday Bridge club. Mrs. Carl Bowman entertains the Embroidery club. Medford to play Ashland November IB, and both teams will use trick I'lays. 4 Craftsmen Head. SALEM, Nov. 10. (AP) Aldo Fon tanlnl of Salem Is the new vice-president of the future craftsmen ol America. News of his election at the national convention In Detroit wai received here today. Fontanlnl was in attendance at the session. 4 Be Correctly Corsoted In an ARTIST MODEL for $5.00. 97.75. 91000. 813.75. ETHELWYN B. HOFFMANN. Save mlddleman's'prolits, From mak er to you Klein the Tailor upstairs PORK Upset stomach Goes In Jiffy with Bell-ens . BELL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION Per 4 CELEBRATE ARMISTICE DAY IN MEDFORD WITH MTITIFORTI POST IB, AMERICAN LEGION " 5- Jtj&prW'P