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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 20, 1937)
PAGE STT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, fEDFORD, OBEflQy. TUESDAY. APRIL 20. 1937, MZDFORDw&JTlUBUirE "Sverroae tat Southern OraiN bad. Ihf Mall Trlbaiie" Dally Ktrapl Haliir4a Publish br ui-ntrnnn PRINTING CO. l-ll.J N. Fir 8t. Psoas II ROBERT W. RIIHL, Editor ERNEST R. OILSTRAP. M.msar Aa Indapanrfanc Nawapapar tori. Otnoo. under Act of March 1. II" SUBSCRIPTION RATES Br Hall in '" n g. . IailT. aia mv....,- - 0 uaiir. on. ..h , JiOtnil. iai.ui. lfhwa. U.,0 Dallr. ona .... HI Pally! ona month........ " All tarma, caah IB adanca. Official Pa par of th. Oil, ' 'd'"ro Official l-auar 01 - Rrlrlnr roll laaaJ Wlra Scntlca ThTSToclatad Pro., la ..oluslMlF as- Tt7,d to .. ' " ' " S dllpatcbaa cr.dlt.1 to II or oth.r cradltad IP this r' ' ' n,a local ntwa pub labad barala. ""ill r'.b. to? pabllc.tloo of jp.el.1 41tpates narain r MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS UMBER Or AUDIT BUREAO OF CIRCULATIONS AdvartlalDE tlapraMntatlvaa yflea. lb Na. Tor.. Chlcsio. Datrolt. fl Francineo, Los Ansel". ,f,"JL ! Loul., Atls.ts. Va.c.ut.r. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Th ohlef Justice of th. U. 8- nam court psssea tarn lost lest wee.' H li mentslly alert ind phystcsily fit, despite hi. yea", nd his Republicanism, thus refuting ssrtlssn olilm. younger men should C added to the high court. The hef justice can thin, a fast, and more sround ably s. . young to 65) attorney. starry-eyed In n Mew Deal fslth. Young (eoialled) Attorneys have s slight advantage an, sgs on the bench. They can pack a bigger armload of law books Into court, and drink more water, while addressing a Jury. Ths UAW. threatena to Vile charges sgalnst Henry Ford befors ths na tional labor board, as aide Issue of th auto king's dlaagreement with the forces of John L. Lwli. No for mal chargee have yet been Hied. In formally, Henry stand accused of success, and great riches. D. 8chBl showed up ysrdsy wearing th first straw hat of the season on ths shsdy aids .of th It Is not such s bad world, after sill In ths fsmlly troubles of Alms tempi McPheraon. -evangelist, her mother, Msw Kennedy, showed up st h trial of a I. 080,000 slsnder suit In Los Angeles, with a mysteriously acquired black-eye. There Is no In formation relative to whos flit caused It. a TROUBI-M MULTIPLY. (Red Book Msg.) "Iverythlng seemed to go wrong that morning. Csrlotts s melon was hard and green: sh overcooked her egg and burned h toast. After site had washed the dishes snd tidied up ths apartment and went to tak a bath, ths water was only luks wsrm. It relieved her mind some whst to give the Janitor a dressing-gown and threaten to report him. but that did not mike the water any hotter." Owing to the change In th wea ther, famlnln "hanks last week sup ped by flspplng galoshes, sre now bsr. a "Expressing hops thst there win b Bo more tsxes Is s pleasant way of preparing ths pstlsnt for th opers tlon." (Troy (NY.) Record) It's sn old trlrk. a A Prohibition lesder chsrges guts st Whit House psrtlea return home In "s befuddled condition." snd la promptly refuted by the rirst Lsdy of ths Land with ths furthsr denial guest get swacked, and seml-lwsck. 4. Ther Is considerable befuddle- mnt sround th Whit Hous. not du to rum. Salem plans a Rain Festival next June 1, 3 At 3 Confidence Is nign th guest element will be plentiful, s It Is ths season of ths first cut ting of hsy. snd ths last picking of strswberrle. The (Ik est, chased by the Cspt. Orsrmeyer dog Sunday, cam out out from under ths John Oorhrsn woodshed, shortly sfter noon todsy. a, HEOAROINfl I AH NMOUKRJI. "To do so you need a lawn t ower .which Is a sort of domesticated har vesting mschine with sn unfortu aat habit of staying out In wet was. f ?r. For this reason ths Iswn mowsr you bought Isu yesr Is no longer mobile snd musical machinery; it has coagulated and ossified. Its Joints r stiff with rheumatism, Its bolts sr shot, Its transmission Is Jsmmed Its bsck tth sre sll gone. You msy bath It In oil If you please: you msy attack It with wrench and SfPSwtlrlver; but you cannot restore Its youth. You r sy vn try to buy spsr psrts for It, but you will not succeed, for the twin to Isst year's lawn mower wss mver born or fash ioned. You will therefor buy a new en snd If your know your wsy about you will buy a smsll on womsn's er ohllfren's sire for reasons too obvious t- mention '(Exchange.) LAWN MOWtrta sharpened W can led del. 81ms Bros., Tel. 391. ai n. Fit The Right Course NO doubt President Roosevelt's budget message will not sat isfy the Rooseveltphobiaci. Nothing could. But we believe it will satisfy the American people as a whole, and convince the country at large, that as far as federal finances ana concerned, the President has taken the bull by the horns, and is determined to balance the budget, before half of his four year term is completed, if that is humanly possible. It can't be done in 1937. Unexpected decreases in estimated revenues and increases in appropriations, make that impossible. But it can be done in 1938, if congress, and strong pressure groups in the country at large, will allow bim to do it. There is the rub, and the President extracts the milk from the fiscal coconut when he declares: "Special groups exert strong pressure to bring sbout In cresses In government xpndlturee. They psy llttl attention to the fact th budget represents a coordinated fiscal program, and that material departures therefrom destroy the whole purpose of ths program. If deficits are to be avoided we must resist thss Importunities, or provide thenecesssry revenues to meet Incresslng costs." In other words, new demands will have to be resisted, or new taxes imposed, to meet those granted, if the government outgo is ever to be balanced by government income. WK think the President might emnhflefs nnon this fsflturs our mind it represents, the most serious single problem th country faces. Merely pointing out the danger does not remove it. There arc two extremely strong forces in the country today. One is the demand for government money, to relieve and assist, states, and cities and districts within states. The other is the strong popular opposition to any IN the opinion of this column, not only one, but both must be resisted. As we see it, the budget will never be put in actual balance, until this "give-me" mania is definitely thrown for a loss, on one hand ; and higher taxes are imposed, on the other. - To do this will not only require the greatest courage, and determination on the part of the government, but the strongest support of an aronsed public opinion. IN this message President Roosevelt starts the ball rolling in the right direction. He correctly charts the course that must be followed. But there seems to be a certain lack of power in the attack, an absence one might say, of fire and enthusiasm. The answer may lie in the fact that the President's closest associates, are so interested in the Supreme Court proposal, they can't get up much 'enthusiasm about anything as sordid or common place as money. For the sake of the country and it future welfare, we wish Messrs Farley, Ickes, Wallace, et ai, would drop their Supreme Court electioneering and start arousing the country to the need of economy, retrenchment, and at the earliest possible moment, the putting of the federal financial house in order. They would then be attacking the MOST, rather than the LEAST important, objective ofthe second Roosevelt administration. Consistent but Not Convincing CONSISTENCY may be the hobgoblin of little minds, but it is a commendable virtue nevertheless. So we herewith pin a bouquet of merit upon the coat lapel of the Pendleton East Oregonian, which approved President Roose velt's Supreme Court proposal at the outset and has been hew ing to the line ever since. As far as we can determine this places the Fendleton daily in a class by itself. There are one or two other Oregon papers now supporting the plan, but unlike the P. E. O. they had to take two or three weeks, to get in the intellectual and moral condition, to "take it." The Pendleton paper never hesitated. It. swallowed the pill when it was first offered, and never since our knowledge has made a wry face over it. WHILE we heartily admire the East Oregonian's, consist ency, and forthrightness, we can't however say much for its logic, in sustaining its stand. In a recent issue, for example, it bases the soundness and propriety of the court packing proposal, upon two main con tentions: First: "The President wants the Supreme Court to be a court, and congress the law-making body." Second, "the rule everywhere is, those charged with respon sibility must be held accountable for results, and this means they must have power to act." The President ia responsible, and accountable for results, therefore he should have power to act. and presumably the Supreme Court shold have no power to re strict that action. WEMi, the truth of the first contention, no one would die pute. namely thst the Supreme Court should be a court and congress the law-making body. That is what the framers of the constitution intended and that is the situstion today. The congress passes the laws, the supreme court, as Justice Stone declared is concerned "only with the power to enact statutes, not with their wisdom." But the court, as wss the case in the N R A, declared the congress did not have the power to enact such a statute. This certainly wasn't assuming the legislative powers of congress, it was merely exercising the judicial powers granted the court, to declare what was in accord with the organic law of the country and what wasn't. k S to "power going with responsibility," this is all very well in selling of motor cars, as the Pendleton paper points out; but after all this government wasn't founded on the prin ciples. of super salesmanship or merchandising. It was founded upon divided responsibility, a system of checks and balances. That's the whole point in the present con troversy, Io wf wish to destroy that form of government or re tain and sustain it. If we want a virtual executive dictatorship the packing of the Supreme Court is perfectly proper, if we den 't. it isnt. The East Oregonian will have to scare upsome better argu ments, to keep this paper from continuing to admire its coumM ucy, while it deplores its logic. have placed even GRKATER of ths. fiacnl sitllntinn for rn increase in taxes. Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease, diagnosis or treatment, will be snswered by Dr. Brady U 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 can be answered No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. Wllllsm Brsdy. 263 El Camlno. Beverly, Calif. WHAT EVERYONE SHOULD KNOW ABOl'T SYPHILIS. Article Number Two. Lit yetr New Tork itat health authorities announced that the health department would no longer accept reports of laboratory test (Wiii)Tm ann etc.) aa case re port?; of syphilis The health de- fvf "V.Vs I partment recog ;.LJ1; nlwwl that nosl- ttve Wauermann V gj' J oratory or blood f X ... -VJ test Is not In it- E ViV'V lf a diagnosis I fVI ot ayphilla. If mii Jk 4 As ln other sections, new Tork state strives to take official no tice of every cae of syphilis. Syphilis la a reportable disease, like typhoid fever or tuberculosis. If the physic- tan does not wish to reveal the pa tient's name he may report only the Initials and date of birth. This re- . oort Is made, not to the local health t department, but to the district state health officer, as a safeguard for the confidential nature of auch records. Of course, the purpose of all this la the control and prevention of syphi lis. Open discussion and recognition of tuberculosis was the most power ful weapon In the campaign against the "great white plague." Tucercu losla la no longer a plague. It 1 steadily losing ground before the ad vance of popular education. Syphilis la likewise a preventable disease, cur able when Intelligently treated from the beginning. But It la not enough, In the effort to stamp out and and rid humanity of this curse, for those who have syphilis to know about It; It Is necessary also that those who are not victims of the disease should know about It. The morals of a patient are of no special concern to the physician. Religious or spiritual advisers or in structors and the patient's relative. friends, or those who depend on or are dependent on him may look after i his morals or be concerned about them. The medical adviser's proper Interest In confined to the patient's physical well being, whether the pa tient be an angl or a devil. There Is no such thing as heredi tary syphllla. What waa formerly so regarded Is now known to be con genital only. That la to say, the child of the syphilitic 'parent may have syphilis at birth, but if not born with it may escape it altogether. The old Idea that an inherited taint might manifest itself only after many years was founded on failure to recognize the manifestations or the disease In the first weeks of life. It wou1 do more harm than good to attempt to describe the manifes tations of syphilis In the newborn Infant or the young child. Every physician knows the signs. OrOMclntyre NEW VOHK. April 20. Both the stage and screen seem to have been token over this season by the Won der Kiddies the Shirley Temples, the Spanky Mac Fa r I a n d a, the Bobby Breens, the Jane Withers and the Deanna Durbans. To say nothing of the Major Bowea Amateur units on tour.. Indeed there haa recently been orgnnlred In New York the Broadway Ewe Club. It is a sort of offspring of the Lambs and waa proposed by Sidney Lumet. the 13-year old who plavs such an im portant role in "The Eternal Road." They will have a plsy room and men tor. Lumet has collected alt the cur rent child actors appearing this win ter, and the list includes Tommy Oairn. 13. of White Horse Inn. Jam?s McCalllon. 16. or But For the Orsce of Ooti, Billy Hsliop. 16. of Dead End, Claire Howard. 7, In Wtnrgiflsn Victory and Thaurlta Bauer, of The Women. To be eligible for the Ewes mem bership an actor or actress must have made a Broadway debut before 16, Never In the history of American theatre has the young Thespian hid such a boi office appeal. Two school of youth drama have already opened. Edgar Bergen Is solely responsible for the amazing revival of ventrtlo qulim, an entertslnment so dead that Rudy Vatlee in presenting the Incomparable Bergen had to explain what a ventriloquist did. A younger generation hadn't the slightest idea. But today the agencies have more calls than they can fill, especially among the night ehiha, Marahail Montgomery, once top In the pro fession . Is now book ed for eight months straight, after several years I of having only a split week or a stnifte night now and then. And the magaalnes are fvatuYing those ads: "Be a Ventriloquist Fool Your Friends I" Remember I Nt-w York has a Flen Mark.-, on Second avent.e, in the .SO, pattern ed somewhat atfer the Mrvhe dr Puces in Tans, save prhteiy owned. The Paris Flea Market is a motley , collection of hawkers who sell every thing from discarded ho5e to louts XIV furniture In New York the Fa Market la conducted or a southern Interior decorator who does many of the Guild settings. His place is s I delight to the antique prowlers who I like to poke about the Jinkle jumble and prfp$ flush out a trea.-n.re. Thrw excillnp window di?'t V r around town thee day not only mm Brady, M P. Many persona who have syphilis never show any noticeable raah. breaking out or eruption on the face. It la a common and cruel pop ular error to assume that a young person with ordinary pimples has syphilis. In fact, syphilitic skin le sions never resemble . acne (black heads and pimple). Eczema and peo rslasls are other common skin trou bles too often regarded by Ignorant folk aa syphilis. Because of the secrecy and the ef fort to conceal the facta it Is diffi cult to ascertain what proportion of all known syphilis cases are of Inno cent origin. But a large number ot cases certainly are of Innocent origin, that la, the disease t contracted without nny sexual Immorality being concerned. Syphilis ln the primary or secondary stage la highly con tagious and may readily -spread through casual contact. Beauty ope rators, barbers, nurses, dentists, phy sicians, surgeons, masseurs, chiropo dists are not rarely Infected ln the course of their work. Conscientious soap and water clean 11 new (soap or lather is a dependable destroyer of the germ of syphilis) protects these workers themselves and protect their patrons against the risk of inocula tion from infected articles. Then. too. every one should Immediately disin fect any scratch with lodln. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Iodln Ration. Would It be harmful to keep on taking the dally lodln ration for several months or the year around? It has seemed to do me so much good I'd like to take It regularly. h. h, D. Answer I advise taking it dally for one month in each of the four seasons of the year. I advise this for everybody not under medical care. Ask your doctor whether you should exreed this. Yours is a medi cal question. Bed Wetting. What advice can you give about a child nine years olU that wets the bed nea:': every night? F. 8. Answer Send stamped envelope bearing your audress and ask for in structions for correction of bed wet ting habit. Be Kind to Your Dors. I'd like to have some information about foot troubles and proper foot wear. Mrs. M. P. Answer Send ten cent coin and stamped envelope bearing your ad dress for cop.- of booklet "Care of the Feet." Tdmorrow The Hazard of Syphilis. (Copyright. 1937, John F. Dille Co.) Ed. Note; rersuns wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. WIMIam Brady, AI. D.. 265 El Camlnu. Beverly Hills, Calif. astonishing In their simplicity but make the path of the aaunterer a gay adventure. Such as a Jeweler's window whose exhibit has been fo cused to the size of a ships port hole, revealing against a black plush background a single gleaming white pearl. Or a crystal bottle of rare per fume cradled ln the thin crescent OS a moon with a wisp of coral pink cloud floating by. The artistry is largely the handiwork of the young. One of the most noted pieat:dlglt teura Is the youthful William Bayard Oakic. jr. In the strive to attract the passer-by the grent emporiums will pay enormous sums. Norman Bel Oeddea is reputed to be drawing $1,000 a week for his suggestions In a large department store' window display. And those windows of invis ible .jlaiw ore as much fun aa the trick mirrors in the old Penny Ar cades. It's difficult when nobody's around not to try to reach in. The all-night Coffee Pot places are not entirely patronized by pool room loafers, pickpocket, plck-thanka And sundry ruffians of the night. Many are getting what la known by the countermen as "the fashionable stay out" trade. That Is the top-hatted and ermlned swells who remain at the night clubs and private parties until the first pink of dawn. There Is something larklsh about mounting the stools or as they say in Texas "riding the pony" and drinking good (and it is good) coffee out of thick cups and listening to the ban ter of the countermen. There la art In their ability to slide an order of bacon and engs from one end of the counter to the customer's plate side. Two of them have as a result of Im promptu wit become masters of cere mony in Greenwich village night clubs. And a play being readied for Broadway has most of Ita action In a brightly lit Coffee Pot. pbHy rec VAWTER APARTMENTS CORNER MAIN AND HOLLY 8TREET8 NOW READY FOR OCCUPANCY New ultra-modern 4 and 5 rooms., hardwood floori, lot of built-ins, steam heat. Apartments are unfurnished except for kitchen. New Modern Kitchens Flectric Ranges. Electric Refrigerators, New Modern All-Steel Kitchen Cabinets. SEE THEM AT ONCE ognised as an of the 7th avenue favorites. The best of the night aubwap drunk atortee I think remains that rather venerable one Wilton Lackeye used to tell of the stew who got on at Times Square, looked at a pas senger, and bleated: "You are the ugliest person I ever saw." The In sulted gentleman replied, "And you are the most disgustingly Impolite person I ever saw." The stew weaved a few seconds and then beamed: "Yeah, but I'll be sober In the morning." Comment on the Day s News By FRANK JENKINS THE Pettlngill bill, now before congress, proposes to permit the railroads to charge more for a short haul than for a long haul. This practice is now forbidden, ex cept In certain cases where exceptions have been granted by the Interstate commerce commission. PERMISSION to charge more for 1 a short haul than for a long haul means that the railroads can charge more, for example, for hauling freight from Chicago to Salt Lake City than for hauling the same freight from Chicago to San Francisco. 4 THE railroads want to charge more for a short haul than for a long haul so as to be able to compete with the coastwise boats for long dis tance traffic. In order to make up for the loss of revenue Involved In making rates that will be competitive with the boats, they wsnt permission to CHARGE MORE for freight destined for Interior points, where boat com pttitlon is not available. In practice, under such a system, interior cities (such as Medford) are taxed ln order to build up BIOOER CITIES at tidewater. THE long and short haul contro versy ta a long story too lontt to be gone into here. But It can be summed up briefly by the statement that it Is a sec tional issue. Generally speaking, cities at tidewater are benefited by per mitting the railroads to charge more for a short haul than for a long one, whereas the Interior is HANDICAP PED. Southern Oregon Is an Interior re gion. It cannot possibly be helped by permitting the railroads to chsrge more for hauling freight to the in terior than for hauling the same freight to San Francisco or Port land. It can easily be HURT. SOUTHERN Oregon has no quarrel with the railroads. It was the coming of the railroads that made possible the building of Industries. No boats run to the southern Oregon country. We have to depend on the railroads and we sre thankful for what they have done for us. But when the railroads, pursuing their LARGER OBJECTIVES and seeking to take traffic from the boata, propose to charge us more for a shorter haul than they charge the tidewater cities for a LONGER haul, we OUGHT TO OBJECT. We will be falling to stand up for our own rights If we DONT object. Editorial Comment Oregon's New Millions. Jackson county soil end clunste. with the management of s man of science, have done wonders ln pro duction In Oregon. For Instance, during 1936 marvels In crop yields have been brought about at the Southern Oregon experiment station by Professor F. C. Relmer, the super intendent. He has, for example, made special selection of tomato seed, snd from thst seed. Instead of using commer cial seed, has enormously Increased the tomato yield per acre. Thus, dur inc 1036. when the growers of the MODERN W0 ME IS Ntte" Net SvHt monthly palo sad delsy do to cold, nervous iltun, tpoame or svimilsr oauaw. C hi-hfl-tert Diamond Brmod Pills sre eflseUrt. roliBblofiDdiiveQMkliRclltl. Boldbv m. uldnixaitfcrovMoyeari. Awfer AaOaaBB. 1 "TNI ptAMOND 4HD- Rogua River valley planted the m leeted experiment station seed for the first time, the yield ln the area waa 60 per cent greater than the record crop previously obtained from com mercial seed. As a result of this choice and devel opment of special seed by piofessor Relmer, tomato plants on the exper iment station farm yielded as h:gh aa 70 pounds of fine, ripe tomatoes. From the seed of one of these 70 pound plants the station will grow a whole acre of tomatoes the current season. And on this one acre suffi cient seed will be produced for the entire valley for 1936. If, as seems possible, the seed can be still further Improved so that ev ery plant on an acre can be made to yield 70 pounds, it will mean a yield of 60 tons per acre, a reault un dreamed of until the Southern Ore gon experiment station began Its amasing development of Improved seed strains. The result la example to Oregon people of what scientific agriculture, put to work at Oregon State college. Including the research at branch experiment stations by such men as Professor Relmer Is do ing In enriching the state. The seed development at the South ern Oregon station has been a factor tn the great success ln the tomato canning Industry, with lta manufac ture of tomato Juice, ln the famed Rogue River valley, now becoming an industry known around the world. These facts as to accomplishments at the experiment stations, which often mean an addition of a new million dollars a year to Oregon in come, ought to be kept ln mind by some Oregon legislators who go to Salem and try to make reputations aa economist by opposing experi ment station appropriations, or, as they have done, divert experiment station funds by legislative act to other and far less beneficial uses. Oregon Journal. PROTECT YOURSELF AGAINST PNEUMONIA, SINUS TROUBLE AND COLDS When jour rsslstsnce Is low your system msy pick up Infectious dis ss such s pneumonis. sinus trouble snd colds. If you sre weak, alwsys tired and rundown, your re sistance Is low and you are apt to catch a cold which may lead Into pneumonia or sinus trouble, causing you to b laid up from work Every day you lose means a loss of dol lars to yourself, your family, or your employer. Then why take unnecessary chances against such treacherous risk? Take Vlteme Concentrsted Vitamin Tab We Have A Complete Line of CROWN Also a complete line of CASE Farm Machinery and . Hay Equipment GET OUR PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY Finley Implement Co CENTRAL YOUR DOCTOR ADVISES YOU ON HEALTH MATTERS Tou go to him bsfsui you knnw h esn help ymi arold serious conditions. And If you will resrd Timber Products Compsnv ss your "dortir" of building proslems. you will learn the value of con sulting us before you mtke hasty steps that msy lead to financial Hiiro! Ajk for Mr. McKay, sn espert ln planning snd flnsnclng Listen to "Famous Program, Tuesday's 6:45 P. M. Timber PQofrs Company MOST. Flight 'oTime Medford end Jackson County history from the files of the Mail Tribune 10 and 20 years ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY April 20. 1927 (It was Wednesday) Harry Rosenberg is elected presi dent of new fruitgrowers organisa tion. City moves to tear up tracks of Jacksonville railroad. Heaviest smudging of sesson last night, overcasting the sky and dis coloring chickens and cats. The Owen-Oregon mill will open tomorrow when visitors will be shown through the plant. Whistle will signal start. John O. Owen, Jr., will press an electric button that will start the mill machinery. Life and property loss In Missis sippi river floods continue to mount Portland opens war on criminals, with orders "to shoot to kill. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April 20. 1917 (It was Friday) President a.sks power to fix prices of all foodstuffs. Traveling salesman Is arrested on charge of intoxication. Gives clue to blind pig says police. Food hoarding to be prosecuted by federal authorities. French continue gains on Western front. Sprague Reigel of Gold Hill has gone to San Francisco to meet Jack Morrill on his way from Honolulu. lets. Vltemex contains 3846 Vitamin Units (A : D) per dose Vltemex contains Iron Peptonate snd Copper Protclnate which sre blood build ing elements Vltemex Is a tonic and a nerve stnblllzer It contains cal cium and phosphorus (ss trl-calclum phosphate) bone building elements. Start using Vltemex today. You will notice a difference In how you feel Immedlntely. Vltemox la sold only through Vltemex agents throughout the United States: the Medford ex clusive agents for this product Is Heath's Drug store. Adv. FEEDS Myers Pumps Attractive Prices on Tractor and Walking PLOWS POINT American Homes" K M ED Fridays :15 P. M. r.nd of N. Central