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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 27, 1937)
PAGE ETGHT ftfEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON'. TUESDAY. APRIL 27.' 1937. Medford&Tribune "Everyon Ib oulhrro Or egos Beads the Hall rrlhun" Dally Birapt Baturdap Pubtlahad by MBDKURD PRINT. NO CO. 1S-1T-3& N. Kir St. Phont T ROBERT W. RUHU Editor ERNEST R. OILSTRAP. Minagar Ad (ndapaodant Nawapapar Bntrd aa Mcoadelai matter at Mad ford, Oregon, under Aol of March I, 1871 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Bv Mali In Advanea: Dally, en yaar I 00 Dally. alz month Dally, ona mooib 0 Rv f!irrlr. In Ad va nea Mad ford. Ath land, JackaonvilU. Cantral Point. Phoanls, Talant, Gold Hill and on htrhwiVL Dally, ona yaar H.00 Dally, all montna i Dally, ona month 60 All tarma, caah iq advanea. Official Paper of tha City of Bedford Official rapor or arnaoD wiomj HEM II KB OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rrrelt.tig run leaaaj wire arrvtrv Th Auociatad Praaa la 'iciualvaly an titled to tha uaa for publication of all rflanafrhaa eradltad to It Of Othar wlaa credited ! tha paper, and alao to tha local newa yuMlanei nerein. All rlchta for publication of special dtapatehea herein are elao reaered. MEMBBR OP UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertlalng ttepreaantatlvei Ill 15tf f m Offlcea in New Vork. Chicago. Detroit. San Franclaco, Loa Angelea. Seattle, Portland, St. Louta, Atlanta, Vancouver. to Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur I'errjr. Editorial Correspondence CORVALLIS, Ore., April 25. The wild life is more notice able between Medford and Roscburc this snrinc than usual Near Wolf Creek motored past a band of at least ten deer, and spied orown Dear at three diiterent places along the highway. The deer were fenced in and the bear were in caees. as serv ice station exhibits, but to a true lover of animals, one can real ly get better acquainted with deer, and bear. particularly the laucr wuen tney are contined than where thev are loose to roam as they will. Something really should be done about the liirWav over oexton mountain and the Lmpqua divide. It s as out of date, as grandma's hoop skirt. We all thought it a marvelous thor- oughlare when the olficial speed limit, was 35 miles an hour and only a few economic royalists could afford motor cars, but today with cars as thick as flics, and fast as chain lightening, this section of the Pacific highway, is as tirine as it is dancer- ous. It can't he a speed way and shouldn't be but a few fills and cuts, utilizing a large part of the present roadbed, would make all the difference in the world, in touring pleasure and safety. Any part of the northern hemisphere is attractive this time of the year, but Oregon is particularly so. All the orchards or almost all of them are in full bloom, the fields and meadows are green as a billiard tnble, the creeks and rivers are full to the banks, hiding any of the unsightly debris or bare spots, nd the Shane trees are just starting to leaf out. Can t sav as much for the houses and barns along the right-of-way. If we ad as much money as Henry l'ord we would donate a million to buy paint, for the householders of Oregon, on condition they use it. Passed up at least a dozen hitch-hikers along the way, none f them looked sufficiently harmless, but finally took pity on youngster, in his shirt sleeves packing a large weather beaten suit case, and trudging north. If the revolution or some equal ly undesirable circumstance should force your correspondent, to take up hitch-hiking, we would never sit down by the side f the road and indulge in this thumb-jerking business, nor oukl we adopt the aggressive give nic a lift or to hell witl ou i r.uii.MUijJv ,o, we would do as this lad did, give as convincing an imitation as possible, of a self-respecting human being, down on his luck, making an honest effort to get to the ext station on foot, and asking favors from no one. Oh, one might look buck as a car approaches and smile or raise the. eye brows, in mule inquiry, give the impression a ride would not Personal Health Service By William Brady, M P. Sltned letter, pertalnlrj to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will he answered by Dr. Brady II a (tamped tell- auurcuea envelope u encloned. Letter, mould he brief and written In ink Owlni to the large number ol letter, received only a few can be aruwered No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions, address ur. miliars Brady. 268 El Camlno. Beverly. Calif. calcium, rnosr nom a and light 9 1 , gia iTy 'My ZMh clistastcful.-but none of this "too-lazy-to-livc", or the world office, In protest against lac of state or federal aid to tnem, presenv aorry picture and a aad aermon on the trend of the times. They afford a complete and successful contradic tion of tha 1930 boast: "Americans are too proud to accept a dole." The cynics who then said "01 Yeah I" were right. la I, a far cry from the aplrlt of tho pioneers, to the splrlr of Qlmme now rampant and flour ishing among the unworthy pool- at the expense of the worthy. History will read: The 1037 pioneer was per sistent and insistent. He crossed the plalna five tlmee before he was placed on the relief rolls, and able to remain In the atat long enough to run for something In the spring prlmsry. Elaine hu finally been granted a divorce from John Barrymore, the "Great Lover" of the film,. It was the outstanding "Who Carea?" event of the year, and all the planet re mained In their orbits. I THE GREAT DECISION. (Chicago Dally New,) "So the Senator kept his mind and hla hand open. Into the one there buKed a awarm of arguments and considerations which served only to Increase tha contusion usually prevailing there. But Into the other there fell a nice, fat, ulcy plum federal Judgeship. And now, hav ing olosed his mind on the argu ments and hla hand on the plum the Senator has opened hla mouth. He haa spoken. He has fearlessly gono on record. Vigor ously Independent, as alwaya, he will vote whether Pranklln D. Roosevelt llkea It or not to pack the court." . The 30th Infantry on lta return trip may present another band con cert here. If they do the mllltla should be mobilised to keep the kids out of the trees. ... 8trawberrlee are now on the mkt. They are too high-priced to appear In strawberry ehortcake. except In the spirit, and by proxy. Nothing herein ahould be taken aa a reflec tion upon the original good Inten tlona of the ehefa. Oregon now haa a new political or ganisation, whoae objectives are a general reorganisation of government and mankind, and tha nnlltug of the political hide of the governor on the barn-door of Democracy. Tha farmen are urged to unite with the work era, and be worked. If alt goes ac cording to plan,, the state will no longer be afflicted with an A-l gov ernor, and all will hav electricity to burn. "Oakland streets are beginning to look like Los Angelea. after a long, hard winter In the east ha, driven the frost-bitten tourist, out to the sun-baked tide lands south of the Trhachapl." (Oakland (Calif.) Trib une) Ye odloua comparison. A CITIZEN MARKS IT. (I.Hdriinde observer) "Your .Illy senate passed a bill yesterday putting a closed sea son on skunks In my county. Last night a skunk got at my coops and killed eight pheasants and three chickens. 1 killed him this morning. And the next time a skunk gets any of my phess anta I'm going to kill him and bring him down and toe, him In the middle of the damn senate." ... A woman writer of New York City links births and women's hat,, argu- Ing the latter has ermtt..tng to do wuh the former. The birth rate start ed to decline with the appearance of the Rugenle hat. and last year's pancake variety helped not one whit Until the babies start looking like the women'e hata there la no grounds for worry. ... The attorney-general of California haa ruled It Is unconstitutional for a relief patron to get drunk on re lief funds. Things have come to a pretty pass when the "fuller life"! cannot be accomplished by getting full. 1 owes me transportation stuff, that's poison in our judgment, with public opinion what it is regarding the hitch-hiker AVell, anyway this chap proved to be a nice kid an assistant to CC0 camp dentists. We use the plural because he travels from camp to camp, spending about two weeks at each one, and it takes him six months to cover the Oregon and California dis triets. The, dental service it seems is entirely free as far as the CCO boys are concerned, regular army reserve dentists do the work, and the schedule is terrific. The lad said he often had to work li'om eight in the morning until at night, with half an hour for lunch, there being someone in the dental chair all that time. This service is comparatively new and the CCC boys or at least many of them have never had any dental work done in their lives, so the congestion is not surprising. Me does not have to hitch-hike from camp to camp of course. He had a week off and was going to visit tnends, before return ing to work. He joined in the particularly universal commen dation of this feature of the New Deal. Said his family living in Portland is on relief and ho sends them his $25 every month "What I like about it," said he, "is I am learning something all the tune, and when I get out, can become a regular dentist with about half as much work and time, as if I had to start out without, this practical training and knowing what it's all about. And it 8 a healthy life too, and while I am terribly busy, have a good time in camp, and get n chance to travel about." Spent tho night in Roscburg, and it wag a lively place. Won der if Tioseburg is an unusually strong iegion center, there were many Legionnaires about, feeling very gay, and wc have a dim idea, that, in the past this lias often been the case. Wan dered over to one of 0. Hunt's movie palaces and saw Irving Berlin's "On the Avenue," which some way wc had missed. Dick Powell is one of our pet aversions, but wc have to admit ho docs his stuff well in this very tuneful and amusing opus. But we are still from Missouri where tho Ritz Brothers are con cerned. They arc painfully energetic and cataleptic, but leave your correspondent as cold and unsmiling, as a dead fish. Xot so with the audience, we must in frankness, admit. Beautiful weather until wo reached this place, where the clouds soon rolled in from the west, and now it's raining in earnest. Met Dr. Kerr in the hotel dining room, former ehan- ellor and the "father" of 0. S. C. He is intensely interested in the effort to dispose of the panned pear surplus and is gath ering data on the subject, lie plans to go abroad this summer on sabbatical leave, and study marketing problems on the other side of the Atlantic, lie regards educating the people of Ore gon, to the desirability of buving Oregon products, not as a mutter of local pride, but a mutter of plain SELK'INTKRUST of outstanding importance. R.W.R. in M ar W5 m iv mJim K, WM H lOiMitiiiuPo mm iatit one up the neutrality compromise, but It Familiar sayings: "A man 1 a old as hli arteries." "One la as old aa one's heart." 'A man la as old as he's feeling, a woman as old as she looks." Age Is a matter of feeling, not of years." "Longevity is a vascular ques tion." All would live lone, but none would be old." There are many more epigrams or wisecracks, if you pleace, that con vey similar Ideas about age. All of these pithy re marks have some truth In them. But not the whole truth. To believe that a man's physio logical age is de termined by the condition of his arteries, that the length of his life depends on the quality of the material used In the making of his blood vessels may have been consist ent with the medical knowledge of the times when these sayings were coined. Today we have to consider what Is causing excessive wear ar.d tear on the vascular structures and do what may be necessary to correct It. As we acquire greater knowledge of physiology, pathology, hygiene and medicine, our view of this question becomes less fatalistic, more optimis tic. We give 1cm thought to the pa tient's progenitors and more to the patient's progeny. With proper blushes I quote this hit from the red book "Building VI tality" (of the Little Lessons in the Ways of Health series): "Grandfather's doctor granted a liberal amount of stimulants' and In due time mounted grandfather's pickled kidney in a Jar. Your doctor warns you to cut out the highballs or else.'' That will give you the general Idea in case you want to save the dime and stamped addressed envelope the red book costs. Many philosophers and poets, as well as physicians, who were both or , neither, have harped on the theme 1 of digging one's grave with one's teeth. Sir Wm. Osier, who got off the one about longevity being a vas j cular question, was much impressed by the part played by overeating in including arteriosclerosis, and com mended the aphorism of old George Cheyne, who at 30 weighed 448 pounds, but by diet and exercise re duced to 160 pounds and lived to be 73 years old and left the world an essay on health and long life. This was Cheyne's thirteenth aphorism: 'Every wise man. -after Fifty, ought to begin to lessen at least the quantity of his Ailment, and If he would continue free of great and dan gerous Distempers and preserve his Senses and Faculties clear to the last he ought every seven years go on abetelng gradually and sensibly, and at last descend out of Life aa he as cended into it, even unto the Child's Diet." Never mind the seven-year obsea slon old George lived from 1671 to I 1743 and In those days everybody had the seven-year Itch and everything eise m seven-year terms. What all this bes to do with cal cium, pnospnorous and light may not do apparent at once, but It will all come out in the next chapter. Here there la room to say that youth and longevity depend largely on the state of the teeth. down. Their devotion made them re marked as "the Ideal match." Bathroom decor takes on the ud den style change almost of Milady? frock. There was a period when the all-white bath waa the thing. Then came coral pink affairs, robin's egg blue and color combinations of yel low and green. Today the smartest bathrooms are black and Beige tne tub and waahstand of the darker shade. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS L'ndulant Fever Would you advise employing a school nurse who has undulant fever? Reasons for or against. (B. C.) Answer. No. The germs of the disease may be given off for eight or ten months after the onset of the illness. Heart Block Mother afflicted with what Is called "heart block." I believe this was caused originally by emotional disturbance over a long period, worrv about trivial matters, daily indiges tion, sne is ea. (G. R. G.) Answer. Due to various causes the Impulse that controls contraction of heart is blocked so that perhaps there is but one contraction of ventricle fpulse beat) to two or more contrac tions of auricle. Only the physician who studies and observes patient can Interpret heart block and gtve good advice. Mouth Wash Can you suggest anything better than diluted , peroxide and alkaline antiseptic solution to use aa a mouth wash where the tongue Is dry and heavily coated in fever, etc? (E. e W.) Answer. Use equal parts of gly cerin, lime Juice or lemon Juice and water, (Copyright, 1937, John F. Dille Co.) Most Metropolitan dramatic critics have a hobby that relieves the rlgorg and tedium of Incessant first flight ing. Brooks Atkinson of the Times is an ornithologist and haa authored several volumes on bird lore. OUbert Gabriel, who is also an art critic, turns out a novel or a motion pic ture between seasons. Hla wife Is also! a painter. John Anderson of the Journal, la a bibliophile and his wile la an art critic. John Mason Brown, of the Evening Post, is a lecturer on the drama. Toung Richard Watts ta a student of Russian literature and ideology and haa made several trips to Russia. Richard Lock ridge of the Sun writes those amusing vignettes in tne New Yorker and Burns Mantle la Interested in horticulture at hla Long Island place. sented FAR LESS than a majority of the workers, and that those not rep. reseated by the C.I.O. wanted to o on working, but were AFRAID to. The same story comes from Stock ton. In one form or another. It haa come from nearly every place theic has been labor trouble. The list of ten best dressed men in New York prepared by a tailor's association had a second list of those who Just missed. I was on the latter list. It must have been the red edge on the cuffs of those black mittens. Comment on the Day s News Kd. Note: persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Ur. IVllllaro Brady. M O.. 26S El Camlno. Beverly Hills. Callt. QO-Wclrlyre NEW YORK, April 27. James Montgomery Flagg continues the Ponce de Leon among artists. Some where ho seems to havo tapped youth's eternal fountain. At an ago when many limners have put away their drawing boards, he Is doing more work than ever before, and with a zip. Not that he Is a M e t h uselah. but he Is cer tainly no spring chicken. Yet he hasn't a gray hair or a suspicion of thinning in his tousle of wavy locks. And his mind haa the speed of a roulette ball. He dresses as be comingly as any juvenile on the tnce or screen. Indeed, he sets many stylos. He nnd his fellow artist, Arthur William Brow n , were f i rst in ex ploiting the colored collar to match he shirt fancy. He Is a lively part ner at tennis and the "life of the party" on those annual Jaunts ol New York artists for two weeks ot caper at Palm Beach. A tireless worker, he will sit at his tnftkA all day. dance the ntgtit !y. When a senate conferee I nd be a willing fourth at one Mr. Plttman abandons a senate bill revision provisions It has already pre pared. It might even add some new tuxes if congress passes any extra budgetary appropriations in the meantime. A neat Job of hiding the flood control hut ton is being played on congress by downtown authorities. T:e flood states congressmen do not like it, but they may have to. The report of the army engineers took weeks. Then It went to the White Hon?, then to the national resources board. Latest dope la that it has recently been on It leisurely way bark lo the White House. The Idea, they my. was to hold It a way from contrctyi until the current econ omy move could be started. There will be n fight about It, but probably not a bill. Note. Similarly sensational timing Is notlcenble on the national defense bills, particularly the navy bill. The Presidents budget warning arrived after the big navy hill had pawed both houses and the army bill was ready to go through. A tremendous peraonal scrap be tween Ch'Hrm..., Plttman and Mc Reynolds u supposed to be holding in favor of a house bill, he generally llnda It necessary to have a big fight with someone about something in ! order to prove that he died for dear i old senate. The fighting thia time will be loud, but not necessarily fa tal. The bill will be passed In Just about its present form, which la what the president wanted In the first place. The railroad retirement bill will go through easily, , . . The antl- lynch ing bill la being laid aalde In the senate for trading purposes. (Lead ers may buy a few supreme court packing votes by agreeing to drop it.. For this and other reasons Its pass age is more doubtful. ... A new price plan, NR A, minimum wnges and hours. Is supposed to be nearly ripe, but the President haa been very se cretive about It and congress knows nothing. Messrs. Corcoran and Co hen are supposed to have devoted much of their personal time to this subject lately. . . . Tiie 100.000.000 Harrison education bill is definitely among the unburled dead. It will not pass, and, if passed, will be ve toed. . . . Senator Wagner Is ohensg ling around to preserve the principle of hla billion dollar housing bill, i but. If he saves anything, it will be j only the principle. , , , The rongrea- j slonal leaders are going et their pur- j pose of holding to the budget with great earnestness. An inside working arrangement has been made among house leaders to gang up against any and alt amendments offered from the floor. The house also Is being pledged to hold to any economies ef fected in appropriation bills by the senate. However, the budget is all or thoae suddenly congenled quar tettes at sun up. Or he may go up the gang plank at hour'a notice to see Parts again or fly to Hollywood to act and paint a picture of Dietrich. Visitors to Manhattan are now paying 150.000 a year to go on the hourly walking tour of Radio City with uniformed guides. It has be come a greater sight-seeing magnet than the statue of Liberty, the Aquarium. Central Park. Bronx 2oo and the Empire State building A little known but Instructive trip la the d liar boat excursion arouna the I sis. d in summer. It gives the geographical outlay that notning else dors. Otto Kahn used to take his Furofvsn visitors on (hla circle of the town before he introduced them to Fifth Avenue dinners, the atres and opera. Jacob Ruppert, the brewer and ball magnate, la regarded by .many as the best d ressed middle -aged New Yorker. He goes in for sombre shades, blue serge, dark browns and ashy gray ensembles and hla ties are of dignified sedateness. but he is alwaya so meticulously groomed people turn as he passes along. An other middle-aged dresser of notable sartorial distinction ta Josenh K Wldener. To my mind the world's best dressed man was the late Jean Patou, Paris dreasmaker. His surtouts ",B BLUy n coior and blending. I used to stand outside his establish ment in the rue Florentin to watch his arrival and his srmnhnnv t day. it was never disappointing and he never repeated. Harlem is in the throes of a bright ening up as result of the World's Pair in 1939. The long, shabby 125th street and Its approach to the Trl boro bridge will be the main artery to the Fair. And already the thor oughfare Is being made over. Cheap John tores are making way for sound ZL expfT8lvc nnrie, and real estate values In the area are de- nrXr , Up ftt "r a long period of stand stilt. pflM'"R"n Marcosaon ?.r inWh,ng bIW to her ""'band, aac Marcosson. traveler and writer Rd haired, beautiful m . mated conversationalist, she ore- bles vh PArt, to nota bles. When she became ill a year ago he gave up all writing i.. "r ny at her bedsiSe. save to T a "alk around th .i . . r men sun- By FRANK JENKINS AS everyone knows who has fol- fully, the labor troubles that have swept the country in recent months arise chiefly out of demands or union recognition. That raises this question : What of the unions? TT'Hia writer doesn't know whether or not this story Is true, but it persists. And where there is a lot of smoke, there Is apt to be some firs What thla writer DOES know that when tbe union unquestionably represents a decisive majority of tbe workers, so that there la no queatlon of Jurisdiction (ss In the publishing business) there is much less liability of trouble. Trouble is reduced to a minimum, if not banished entirely, when the union has a tradition of responsi bility and fair dealing and careful regard for the validity of contracts (as the case of the typographical union). "HE Wagner labor law, aa written gives to the unions tremendous powers, practically putting the gov ernment unqualifiedly on the union side and against the employer. It DOES NOT Impose corresponding re sponslbllltles. There has been comparatively little labor trouble in the publishing in dustry because responsible publish era on one side, are dealing with a responsible union on the other. In cases where the unions do not voluntarily assume responsibility, as the typographical union has in the past, the government Is sooner or later going to have to COMPEL re sponslbillty. That, at least, is this writer's con- vlclon. 1""HIS writer, who Is a publisher, haa dealt for years with the In ternational Typographical Union. "Collective bargaining," of which we have been hearing so much, is ati old story in the publishing business. In these years, this writer has made many contracts with the typograph ical union. Because of the fact that business conditions change from month to month and from year to year, some of these contracts have worked out to the benefit of the unt"n while otbers have worked out to the benefit of the publisher. The typographical union has lived up INVARIABLY to Its contracts; taking the bad aiong with the good as partlea to contracts are expected to do. So far as this publisher is concerned, the ' record of the typo graphical union is an honorabe record. As a result, this writer has had NO labor troubles during hla busi ness experience, and labor troubles In the whole publishing industry have been few and far between. IN the meantime, some way ought to be found to determine Impar tially and without pressure JusU who WANTS to belong to a particular union and who doesn't. The right to work is Just as Important as the right to strike and ought to be pro tected with equal care. A lot of trouble has arisen In t. cent months out of unsupported claims regarding majority representa tion of the workers. Slips that Pit by KICKERNICK 1.95 Panne. Crepe. Satin 3.95 Ethelwyn B. Hoffmann. Flight 'o Time Medfurd and Jsrksoo Count) blstury from tbe riles ol the Mall Tribune lu and 20 rears agu. TEN YEARS AOO TODAY April 11. 1827 (It waa Wednesday) Epidemic of fighting breaks out in atate prison at Salem. 809.50 to Red City subscribes Cross relief fund. Six women are on Jury Hat for trial of Hugh DeAutremont, charged with Siskiyou tunnel murdera, to start May 2. Judd Gray, charged with Ruth Sny der wltb murder of her huaband, puta all blame on the woman and confesses crime. Hot spell is broken by a shower and cloudy weather. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April 11. 191J (It was Friday) Maxwell cars to Incresse price aja Msy 1. Fruit outlook for coming year op timistic. George Gates returned from Uni versity of Oregon to Join Co. 7. He waa Initiated Into ft prominent se cret order last nht. Portland C. of C. backs Crater Lake highway. Special tralna bearing Infantry pass through city en route south. Rum debate flares in senate. Use Mall Tribune want ads. Don't Sleep on Left Side, Crowds Heart GAS PRESSURE MAY CAUSE DISCOMFORT. RIGHT SIDE IEST. If VDIl fra. In hH mrtA - -I rlOht alda. PV Arila.llr. .1.... nuE dose relieves stomach OAS pressing on heart ao you aleep soundly. MiariKa acta on both upper and lower bowela and hrlnn. Vim. matter you would never bollava waa In your system. This old matter may haVe DO SOnfld Vail f AC Mnn.U. .-J caused OAS, aour stomach, headache I M..S. A-m, rk, lf " cUmi.,, A&lk. Mrs. Jaa. Fi 1 1 w i "n . !r!!pi JfYJ" my.hart seemed to hurt. and never felt b.t .i.""- wKh,A-?-'iri.bow,!f REAL c'aanalno with Adlarika and see how good you .;'..ip.,!,r.NE do- s J.UI.MIVS DRUG STORE JJERE Is an Important point: .i. ium uargmning nego tiations with which this writer has had personal experience, the union has represented UNQUESTIONABLY" a majority, and usually ALL, of the I workers Involved. There has never been any ques tion, therefore, as to the right of tho union to negotiate for the workers. In the automobile strikes, and again In the trouble . at Stockton there IS a real question as to whether the union represents even a majority of the workers. That question has caused & lot of trouble. CROWDS ATTEND Apostolic Faith Revival Campaign 42 N. Front St. Medford, Oregon Evangelists, Musicians and Singers from the headquarters at Portland, Oregon are conducting these meetings. Organ Recital Each Evening at 7:30 Marvelous Testimonies Dynamic Messages on Fundamental and Prophetic Truths Male and Mixed Choruses SERVICES: 7:30 every evening (except Saturday) 10:30, 2:30, 7:30 Sunday A collection is never taken. "You will enjoy every minute." IN the General Motors strike. It wss asserted, and never convincingly denied, that the C.I.O. union repre- SANTISEPTIC LOTION is guaranteed to quickly eliminate Poison Oak ormone) back. Absolutely non-messy, nongreasy. Stops itching immediately. Be wise ac cept no substitute. At your druggistSOc REGAIN YOUR PEP MAKE LIFE WORTH LIVING If you arc wak, alwavs tired. nrv- ou. and rundown, it La cav to r . rui vitality and tvp with Concrr.- ' trat?d vltflliltn Tablets. V i t r yi x, comvntratrd Vitamin rahltfa. rr t.o fortified and conee:.. t rated that one dope cvntalrm sn-tfl Vitamin I'nli (A am Pt, Iron Pep tonate and .'oper profeinat (Mot, building element.)) . Nut Vomica (tonic). Calr mm and Phosphorus I minerals (in for nervousness ana bone structure . . Start using Vltemox today, and voti 111 notice your body build t ha up. When vou build tip your body resist enoe you retrain that iot neb Vttemes is sold all over the United In the fop of he cods, and poMI- i ,fV r,.r . ntwlir.. c&l gods at liu.1. btot). auv'. SENIOR CLASS OF MEDFORD HIGH SCHOOL Will Present "The LEAVENWORTH CASE" A 4-Act Mystery Drama High School Auditorium Tonight-Wednesday APRIL 27 -28 -8 p.m. Reserved Seats 45c. General Admission 30c Phone 1204 Iff The Time Has Arrived when you should protect yourself against RENT RAISERS ! Owning your home is a sound investment now. Mr. McKay, an expert in planning and financing is here to assist yon Listen to "Famous American Homes" Program, K M E D Tuesdays 6:46 P.M. Fridays 7:15 P.M. DFO PHONE 7 .vl jv. MB UHrnnat 4End of N. Central