PAGE ETOHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21,' 1937
MEDFORDvTEIEUNI
"Kvarroa IB ftnutbsrn Ureses)
HmtU Ui Mall lYIhaafc"
UUUruBU PRINTINO OO.
1-IT It n m St.
KUbBBl W.KUUU Bailor.
KNES'l R UILHTRAK Manager.
Knuiwl at- unnnd-alut mttUr tYt Ud
for. UrMoo. uoiUr Ael of Mareb I, 117ft
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
DallJ, on
Dally, tlx moothi H
flail Ana moo til
Hit rrtr In Advance llt1for&. sih
l.nri I anltaAnVsilaY. flIDtfll POtBL
PhMDls. Talent. Qold BUI tad os
Dally. od rar
Dally, tlx months l ift
Dally, on month
All urma flh in advane.
Official Pmdot n1 the City of Hertford
Offtclai Pa par of lackanv Oooaty
MEM HUH (1 lUk AKHtlUIAIKll fHKW
Tha lunoiatad Frta I ioluatSlJ a
titled to th gu far publication ot all
rii-natohaa arodltatl to It Of Otbar
via oradltart to thl pa par. and also to
tba local now publUhatl naralo.
All riaht for publication of tpaetai
u.apatohta hsrtln ar alao reserve!,
kl KM BECR OF UNITED PRESS
UBMHBB OF AtlDI'l BUREAU
OF niRCULATIONI
Advartlaint RapraaabUtlToa
Offle.i Id N.w Tor. Otileaio. droll
Sxn Franet.00, Uo Anf.l II Ik
Portla.i1. 81 Lnuii. All.nla. 'nooinr.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthui perry.
A revival of the Ku Klux Kian
threaten Oregon, with the 1M1
1033 membership as a nucleus, ac
cording to the former Grand Dragon.
Similar signs of giddiness sre re
ported from various sections of the
land, so It looks like there win be
a repetition of monkeysblnea in the
moonlight, and prowling around
pastures singing "Onward, Christian
Boldterl" and "Americal" The Ore
gon movement announces It will
keep one eye on the next leglsla-,
ture, and squelch village sinners,
when and If, they become too frisky
In their cuasedness. Some Interest
ing developments could arise. For
Instance, when the Imperial Wizard j
and John L. Lewis, CIO. chieftain,
disagree on Just who 1ft running
these United States, fur should fly-
a
"Men worked those days; the sick
and wounded died or got well; the
weak ones never started." (Salmon
Bar Items). When men were men.
and Nature favored nobody. .
Political observers report Herbert
Hoover, due to internal strife among
Republican party leaders, "may
adopt a policy of neutral alienee."
No such good lucV Is apt to bless
the GOP. The Idea, however, la a
noble and Just dandy. Any kind
of silence from Mr. Hoover It a,
god-send, but to be heavenly, It
should be deep and unbreakable.
The Red Circes has broadcast ten
points, advising a hunter how to
handle a gun. The ten points boiled
down prove the long established
theory a gun haa no sense of humor.
A Jspsnese statesman and grad
uate of "Old Oregon" states Jspsn
plans to estsbltsh In China, "some
thing similar to our New Deal.' No
wonder the Chin a fight fiercely,
rran if It does look like rain.
A cl linen reports that laat night
he caught a man fixing the head
lights on his auto, and nearly had
them off, when Interrupted by bis
approach.
at
Perfect Indian weather prevails,
unmarred so far, by any poem
about It.
a t
The Governor has solved thelfegue
River mud problem. The next Job
Is to keep the mud out of speeches
by demagogues.
a a
JILTED AND JARRED
(Eugene Register-Guard)
"Rumblings here and there In
dicate a certain amount of dis
content with certain omissions
at the dinner and reception for
Hon. J am re A. Farley the other
night. A good many of the
state's moat prominent Demo
crats were not Introduced and
they were counting very much
on being Introduced."
Col. Tengwald was the first autolst
across the line at the hgwy Jolli
fication yesterday. When he and nis
4d, were both young, they always
best the fire engine to the (Ire.
The danger of a special session
of the legislature la opposed by labor
In this -tate, Feara are felt the
solons would adopt a Salea Tax, as
a means of providing fundi for Ola
Age Pensions, and, there la always
the chance, with this example, they
would quit suddenly, or pass other
sensible measures,
a
A Wyomlnj policeman arrested his
wife for an auto parking violation.
The next news on the subject, it
fellow cops are awake, wilt tell of
the hero's arrest for violation of
the speed laws. In escaping from ft
bit of domestic wrath.
Hear Admiral IMea
YONKEKS, N. Y., Oct. 31. AP)
Rear Admiral Purnell Frederick Har
rington, B3, former com
mander of the United Bute naval
acadrmy, died here Wednesday, He
waa an envlgn with Admiral Parra
gut at the battle of Mobile bay.
Candidates for Japan's nnvo avia
tion sre -elected from boys 15 to 17
914,
There A re No Siskiyous
ftOTORING up the Siskiyous over the new million dollar
grade, recalls some ancient personal history.
The present writer's first motor trip "over the hump" was
taken in 1914, en route to the San Francisco Exposition.
The conveyance was an old Ford, and there were three
passengers with the usual assortment of luggage. The actual
running time between Medford and Shasta Springs, wag 16
hours I
'T'HE chief cause of this tortoise-like progress was the old
Oollarhide toll-road near the summit. This was a dirt road
of course as was the entire route, full of rocks and chuck
holes, and with a grade that varied from ten to about 50.
Old "Model K" couldn't make it after a dozen desperate-
attempts. So the luggage had to be taken out, and while Fred
stayed at the wheel, the other two passengers shoved and
pushed, until the crest was finally reached. Packing up the
luggage, after each foray, was neither a pleasant nor a speedy
task. Nor did two tire blow-outs on the other side (which had
to be patched on the spot), help matters much.
....
'T'HIS wasn't an exceptional motor experience at that time.
Nor was an hour's wait at Hornbrook, to repair the engine,
which suddenly refused to work. In that day engines were all
the time going out of whack, and over rough roads there wasn't
a tire then made that would stand up.
The party left Medford at 4 a. m. and reached the luxurious
sanctuary of Shasta Springs hotel, in the evening at 61
A ND now with this new highway, and a new 8-cylinder car,
whnt rln wp finflf TliA trin in thp mimmit thnt. tonlr ft
hours, hard work, 23 years ago, can now be negotiated in less
than' one, with only enough physical effort required, such as
would be demanded by an elderly gentleman, reclining in a
rocking chair, and tapping a hassock lightly with one foot I
Aye verily Time marches on, and human comfort and luxury
with it.
Two great changes have occurred in motor transportation
since 1914. The smooth paved highway instead of dirt roads.
witn snarp curves and steep grades; and the pertection of a
high-powered car, that is mechanically flawless, and practically
speaking, fool-proof.
.
THE type of motor travel represented by that journey, 24
years ago, was undoubtedly better for one's muscular de
velopment and appetite. If this sort of progress continues
perhaps the time will come, when we will be virtually an arm
less and legless race through disuse. But with outdoor sports
as a substitute, such an eventuality appears decidedly remote.
Moreover if time is money, unlimber your adding machine
and figure up the cost. And if time ISN'T money, it is
oertainly the yardstick of human life life that is all too short.
And as time saved in one operation, can be devoted to some
other, to save time means to broaden and enrich one's life.
0 the dedication of that new million dolkr grade, marks
another important mile stone, in human development. And
we are glad to learn from Henry F. Cabell, chairman of the
highway commission, that as soon as funds are available, the
improvement will be continued to the California line.
When that time comes, as he declared, the Siskiyous will
still be there in all their scenio grandeur, just as they have
been all these centuries, but like the Alps for Napoleon, for
the motorist, the Siskiyous as an obstacle, will cease' to exist.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M D.
( graphed likenesses of th theatrical '
great of yesteryear. Coming Into it
from the noisy world outalde, tt dla-1
tula a feeling of peace, like aome
country meeting house without hurry .
or self-conaciouaneai.
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease
diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady If stamped self
addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink.
Owing to the large number of letters receded only a few can be answered.
No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address
Dr. William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly Calif.
From experience and observation
over many years, I can consistently
maintain that anyone who Is habit
ually constipated and, a slave to
physic, enema or
other unnatural
interference, can,
if he will, win
freedom for the
rest or his life.
Will power
strength of mind,
determination.
The secret of
the will power
necessary to en
able the victim
of the physic hab
it Is a knowledge
of physiology. Elementary physiology,
simple enough for any child to un
derstand. Yet it Is hard to teach
the averago layman this lesson be
cause he knows so many things which
ain't so." He has been a lifelong
student of almanacs, testimonials
and quack doctor bait, and hence he
is pretty thoroughly imbued with the
Idea of "autointoxication" or "poison-
Ing of the system of absorption of
toxic waste from the colon." He haai
this morbid fancy so fixed In his'
Imagination that the truth scarcely
makeB any Impression. The poor goof j
actually believes health, happiness
and life Itself depend on the dally
use of one or another artifice to
"keep the bowels open."
Very few, even of college educated
Americans, think it necessary to take
something or do something dally to
keep the respiration or the circula
tion active. The nostrum mongers
and quacks of Yankeeland have not
found it advisable to teach the gulli
ble public that such regulators are
essential.
The function of the digestive tract
including the Intestines Is as com
pletely under control of the auto
nomic or "sympathetic" (unconscious,
involuntary) nervous system as Is the
respiration and the circulation. Any
textbook oi physiology explains this,
but somehow the fact does not stand
out In testimonials, circulars, pamph
lets and other bait.
Food, medicine, massage, exercise,
constant watching or Introspection,
and various ways and means of Irri
tating or forcing action are all as
Important or unimportant In the
control or regulation of the action
of the lungs or the heart as they
are in the control or regulation of
the action of the bowel.
The taking of a laxative or cathar
tlo seems a simple, harmless pro
cedure in any circumstance to the
wiseacre; yet It is the straw that
turns the scale against recovery in
many cases of acute appendicitis, for
WILL POWER AND CONSTIPATION
example.' But the voice of the honest
Thingumbobs: Bert Fltzgibbon, the
famous daffydtll comedian of the
vaudeville days. Is recovering after ,
two years In bed with ft cracked spine j
near Boston. . . . Marcel Proust, fa- j
mous French writer, could stand no
light save that of ft single flickering :
candle. . . . Alma Claybergh is visit-j
Ing the Claude Bowerses on the j
comic strips. . . . Eddy Duchtn. de
spite his success as a baton wt elder,
still wants to be the proprietor of
docto? warning people T.bout this and fP'nUh, "d"' ' ' '"" B?Z
oth.r ii,iT. r .,... ,. Indefatigable follower of the
drowned out by the clamor or the;
nostrum .mongers and charlatans cry- j
lnr th.tr War... inri tha ffntnt. VinV
public spends e20,000 000 annually fori a corner dru 8t'
laxatives under the gleeful belief that rr0m the Locust Valley Notes in
thU shrewd trick keen aao ouoooo . t.i . n.. . u dmi 1
, , . ft UUIlg jBiniiu wwi. aim. w
out of the pocket of the rascally I , skunfs Misery road, haa gone to
doctors. j n(!r New yorlt cltjr apartment for the
jb&c nuuaraa or a Mioussou per- winter."
sons as tney come, an suDject to, p,,, u,t tn, winter? Why not
cnronic or naDituai constipation and ! farewell forever?
Behind
Washington
Headlines
By H. R. Baukhage
Copyright 1937. by The
North American News
paper Alliance, Inc.
(Continued from Page One)
addicted to this or that diet, enema
or aperient medicine. Deprive them
absolutely of their favorite "did" to
the bowel action for three months,
and I'll wager twenty-five to one In
each case that by the end of that
time the Individual will require no
such laxative.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Vitamin D
Discussion on value of calcium
lactate and vitamin D In case of
neighbor aged 58, who suffered frac
tured hip three months ago and still
has no firm union but Is confined to
bed. (Q. E. C)
Answer At least It could do no
harm, might be helpful in promoting
bony union.
Bread and Milk Club
I have been a (charter) member
of the Bread and Milk club for many
years, let's see, just when did you
start it? I believe It has brought
several years of comfort to my life.
(Q. R.)
Answer We opened the club to
voluntary membership November 7,
1914. Glad to send the by-laws of
the Bread and Milk club to any
reader who provides a stamped en-
Wtlfiriak Vioort n.r Vile -irr-rv.-r eHH roer un
dues. You merely pay 24 hours respite
io your stomacn ana metaooiism each
week.
Leucocytosts
What Is leucocytosis. What causes
It? (M. P.)
Answer Temporary increase In
number of leucocytes (phagocytes,
scavenger cells) In the blood, occur
ring In Infection, for Instance appen
dicitis, pneumonia. Normally there
are 6.000 to 8.000 of these white
blood corpuscles in each cubic milli
meter of blood. If the blood count
(Copyright 1037, McNaught Syn Inc.)
Communications
A Bouquet From Lebanon
To the Editor:
I have been a visitor In Medford
for nearly four months and am
about to leave the city for my home
in Lebanon, Ore. I thought I would
like to express to you personally the
greet pleasure your editorial writings
have been to me during my stay here.
The wife and I claim we read every
thing we think worth while, and we
both have said many times that no
editorial writings have been read
with as much keen Interest as yours.
You are fair, unbiased, and brave In
your review of any subject matter
you undertake to cover. If we could
afford It, we would subscribe for the
Medford Tribune, not for the news
items, but for the editorial writings.
It Is something in these days of poli
tics and cow-townlng to certain In
terests to read articles written in
such an Independent spirit as your
contributions.
One more comment. How can you.
confine your effort to such a limited
field of activity? This is none of the
writer's business. It is Just a query.
F. R. AUSTEN.
Route 3, Lebanon, Ore.
Ye Poets Corner
Bird Chat,
meadowlark sat on the poultry
fence,
Singing a song of Joy,
shows from 12,000 to 60,000 or more I While watching the chickens eat the
In the cublo millimeter, that indicates
Infection or acute Inflammation with
suppuration and also that the body
is fighting the Infection.
(Copyright 1037, John F. Dille Co.)
Forget It, Mr Dragon!
FRED L. GIFFORD, former grand dragon of tho Ku Klux
revived in this state.
Now isn't that just DANDY 1 ,
It is difficult to imagine anything this long suffering com
monwealth needs more than to go back to the insane hocus
poeus and lawless nonsense of the post-bellum era, and stage
a few nocturnal necktie parties, within gunshot of our village
streets 1 '
11THETHER Brother Gifford has been unduly stimulated
" by the Justice Black episode or just figures that another
sucker crop has ripened since the clean-up in 1920, (and is
waiting to be picked) we do not know.
But we do know if such an attempt is seriously made, it
won't get to first base.
KJO, Mr. Grand Dragon, you are in for a beating if you start.
- The people of Oregon may be easy marks once in a genera
tion, but not TWICE. What the Klan did to this state nearly
two decades ago, is too well remembered, to make even ont
MOVE in that direction, anything the people as a whole will
tolerate.
IIOREOVER a new generation has "come of age" since the
world war. And it is very different from the generation
that preceded it. Yes indeed, VERY.
Just try to sell a 50-eent night gown for ten dollars and
find out I The boot will bo on the other foot then, and it will
be the Grand Dragon, not "Lil" Rustus" trying to find a soft
place to light.
ring down the curtain you grand dragons and klavorn
' kleaglesl The play is played out. You HAD your grand
fling following the world war, when American youth found
itself suddenly at peace, when it wanted, (and was psychologi
cally prepared) to fight, you will never have another.
For yon can get nowhere without youth, and modern youth
is too wise, too disillusioned, too SMART.
VT0U can't delude tho boys (or the girls) of today, into he-
lieving this country is threatened by any ONE religion,
any ONE race, or anj one color of skin. Not for a minute.
Thev know better.
They also know the worst thing that could happen to this
country would be Bny revival of religious bigotry or racial in
tolerance, or even so much as a whisper that might impair the
country's charter of personal liberty, its bill of rights. As
for hate, they don't want more of it, they want less, a lot less
The post war generation was shell-shocked. The present
generation isn't. It has its eyes open and it knows its way
about.
So don't try to flim flam that bunch Mr. Grand Dragon, or
put over a fast one to line the pockets of a few insiders, with
some ready cash.
It a;oa't work.
NEW YORK, Oct. 31. Mow and
then there cling, like barnacles to
a modern liner, stores, resta-irants
and offices out of e, vanquished past.
On a rea.:h of
downtown Prince
street la a little
grocery that Is
Just aa It was
when It opened
M
food
That was brought by the farmer's
boy.
And the meadowlark laughed at the
scurrying fowls
That were being fed by man;
Laughed at their greed and eager
speed
As they followed the boy with the
pan. '
A robin lit on the fence Just then,
to have cost (20,000, and had a play- And said, "It Is pretty soft
ground that included among other To have someone feed you."
pets a baby elephant. But the meadowlark merely scoffed,
j "Ah, yes, my friend, they have some-
I am told that few window cleaners one to tend
go for more than two years without- To every one of their needs,
hair-raising escape from death. ' But they have to pay with the eggs
Ed, Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. D- 265 El
Camlno, Beverly Hills. Calif.
Despite the danger of their teeters
on high ledges, eventually they grow
careless and find themselves dangling
to one end of a strap, high In mid
air. If they have successfully passed
through the mishap they rarely meet
they lay.
Or else there will be bloody deeds." j
The moral of this. If moral there be,
Is simply the fact that nothing is
free.
law which fixed such wages on the
basis of fair value of services ren
dered. However, when the Washington
state law was tested in the court in
1937, it was upheld. Legal experts
interpreted the decision as being so
broad as not to bar any particular
method by which a state may arrive
at the minimum wage it permits.
Today, ten such state laws have
a "cost of living" determination of
a minimum wage, four name a flat
rate, seven prescribe a "fair value
of services rendered," while three
have held the fair value and cost
of living basis.
This is the seventh conference oi
federal-state minimum wage offic
ials. But it Is the first one to dis
cuss the cost of living as a basts
for setting minimum wage standards.
In other words, the growing con
cern of the state minimum wage
boards in trying to arrive at a min
imum pay rate, regardless of the
provisions of their particular laws,
appears to be how much It costs a
woman worker to live.
To aid In this discussion, the
federal bureau has worked out ft
detailed list of the Items which
should go into a woman's budget.
Including even the number of nats,
shoes, dresses and the like that
she must buy In a year. It has not.
however, set prices on these articles,
leaving that to the states. In view
of a wide variation of prices.
Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
history from the files of the
Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years
ago.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
October 21, 1D27
(It was Friday)
President Coolldge announced he la
attU opposed to the McNary-Haugen
farm aid bill.
War threatens in the Balkans.
Costs of shaves here go to 85c;
haircuts 89c: and barbers report a
drop In business.
Deer season ends, with many bucka
slain by hunters In southern Oregon.
Pheasant shooting season starts,
and autolsts report their cars have
been hit by stray shots.
Medford
Sunshine predicted for
hlgh-Prosh game tomorrow.
Attorney Ous Newbury buys 35
more sheep for his Applegate ranch.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
October 21. 1917
(It was Sunday)
American destroyer struck by TJ
boat shell makes way to port badly
damaged.
An unknown autolst crashed Into
a horse and buggy driven by Dave
Phlpps on North Central avenue last
night, right under an electric light.
Contract signed for construction of
Crater Lake park road.
French launch new offensive along
the Alsne.
Death comes to Bob Fltzslmmons
Idol of the ring, and one of the great
fighters of aU time.
Local stores will accept Liberty
bonds as legal tender.
EDITOR OF VOTER
WILL SPEAK HERE
Now that the ballots have been
counted In the Arkansas senatorial
election, three groups are busy tak
ing stock as to how the outcome
affects them. They are:
1. Those trying to organize farm
tenants Into a C.I.O. union. They
fear a set-back In their plans with
the defeat of their ally. Governor
Bailey. At the present time, they
are waiting for a reply to their
request to the department of Jus-
ticc ror protection in their organiz
ing activities In Arkansas.
2. Certain new dealers, who are , nnce.
wondering if the election is signaling Olen Arnsplger, chamber president,
a liberal-conservative cleavage In the i today appointed Raymond R. Reter
Democratic ranks across the south. . I to preside at the banquet.
3. The Republicans, who arc taking' -
the outcome as a revolt against (VI 0 OS E LEADER SEES
Rooseveltlsm.
, i VALUE OF TOURISTS
Here Is the way one new deal ad- enoTrivn 01 in,.
viser Just returned from abrosd. sums, ator Robert Reynolds of North
C. C. Chapman, editor of the Ore
gon Voter, will be the principal
speaker at a banquet to be held by
the Jackson County Chamber ot
Commerce In the. Hotel Medford
Wednesday evening November 17.
Mr. Chapman will speak on the
present labor situation. He is re
garded as an authority on labor
problems and It Is anticipated that
his talk will draw a large attend-
up the effect of the president's Chi
Cftffo speech on European ears:
"The stop.war negotiations in Eu
rope had become so Involved In tac
tics that a definite strategy was lost.
Everything was centered on the next
move. The speech put the French
British efforts back on the broad
bnMs of a general strategy aatn got
them out of the moss of tactics
Carolina, head of the Loyal Order
of Moose, urged Oregon to become
increasingly alert in attracting the
tourist trade.
He said It was the fifth largest
Industry In the nation and repre
sented five billion dollars spent by
15 million persons last year.
The senator will pay an official
visit to the Portland lodpe.
death at their work. Considering the . The birds on the fence may die of
hazards of their calling, the death
rate Is astonishingly low.
old age,
But the axe la awaiting the birds
In the cage.
pickle barrel open
at the top and
the leaning bas
ket of dried apri
cots. When the
front door opens
ft bell rings In the rear and the
stooped and bewhlskered proprietor
blinks out of the depths.
At dusk a single coal oil lamp
Illuminates the place. It Is probably
more antiquated than any Cross
Roads store at Speerces' cut. There
are two oflfoes In the Wall street
district without telephones and
notion store In the Fist bush section
of Brooklyn has package baskets ting
ing on wires,
New York's mo?t exclusive bank
the First National recently built a
new home, but It retained the roil
top desks of long ago with the presi
dent's out tn the open for all to see.
And obeying the unwritten taw that
his hat must be at all times on top
of his desk.
They have persuaded Chic Young,
creater of the comic strip featuring
the precocious child "Blondie." to
carry on. When the artist" child, the
prototype of tha strip, parsed on re
cently, the anguished parent declared
he would never draw aaln. For many
weeks he appeared stunned and could
not be aroused from his lethargy.
Finally they Induced him' to alt at
his drawing board for awhile dally,
and gradually he took up his popular
chore again.
Conversion of the famous country
home of Billle Burke. Burkley Crest,
at Hsstlngt-on-Hudon. Into a fine
suburban hotel, will remove what at
one time was the best known estate,
next to John D. Rockefeller's Pocan
tlco HlIK In Westchester. It was
ft background for aome of Flore ni 1
Zlegfeld'a most elaborate spending
splurges. Here at one time he gar
aged six Rolls Royces. built a doll
house tot his daughter. Patricia, said
My favorite of all New York "theft- And lf lven a cholce- whlch wou,d
ters la the veneerable and stately you '
Empire. In the decor of a vanished; A hen In the yrd or blrd that
for trade 40 years I pafltl it has gone down hill with an frfe?
I air. And today seems to attract the Lyman A Fritz.
On its shelves: m08t fashionable first night audi- Jacksonville. Ore.
is a Bmiy 1 ences. Katharine Cornell usually plavs :
of tinned floods. . m...
Th.re 1. th. dill ""ua We wish to express our sincere
BIIU euuii-iiuw 111 uie musty snaaows
one feels the presence of CRarles
Card of Thanks,
We wish to express our
thanks to our many friends for their
sympathy and kindness during our
, 4 -"cw 00 my recent bereavement: also for the
more of the theater when it was real mntlttil flowers.-Mr. and Mrs. Daw
theater. This season It dlsplaya the 0rlfnthit Mr. and Mrs w. j. Hes.
? Bur"MerCmth an U1 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hess. Mr. and
.,. u.oii in Hmy tifciiiigiy QUITO Mr8 j
lur wo ctinpire tno imy tu 8- Be
tween the foyer and the theater prop- i
er there is a carpeted promenade, and I Closing time foi Too Late to Clas
from the wsllg gaze down the auto-I ify Ads is 1:30 p. m.
N. Mc Col lorn. Mrs. Ida Wat-
kins.
VETCH SEED
FOR HAY OR COVER CROP
Also Gray Winter Oats, Eanota Oats, Federa
tion 'Vheat. Bluestem, Barley and other fall
seeds at right prices.
SULPHATE OF AMMONIA
$39.00 per ton
Large supply now on hand
F. E. SAMSON CO.
SEEDS-FEEDS FERTILIZER
229 North Riverside
J
Holds False Teeth
Tighten and Longer
This new delightful powder ketps
fals terth rom rocktiiB. slipping or
dropping. No nasty tste or feeling.
Otve iv.-frrt conftd'rnce ell dsv Ion.
om fA-t-th from your druggist
TEN HIGH HAS "NO ROUGH EDGES"
-AGING WINTER AND SUMMER fOR
2 YEARS DOES ITI
Try TEN HIGH ... here's why it w ill win
pur decision hands dow n : Formerly whiskey
matured far more rapidly in summer than in
winter. But it's always summer in Hiram
Walker's modern weather-controlled rack
houses and TEN HIGH mellows every minute
of every month for two long years I Get TEN
HIGH and get a really ripe w hiskey at
1 really right price.
0 PROOF Hirom Walker & Son,. Peorlo. Illinoli, WolVerv!He. Oterlot Gloijow. ScCod.