Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 13, 1938, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX
MEDFORD MATT; TRIBUNE, HfEPFOKP, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 19.18.
MDFORD)KTRIBUNE
"Everyoaw la (Soother Orea
RMdi Ik Hal! Trlbcae,"
Dally Bicept Saturday,
Published by
UKDruRD PRINTING CO.
M-tTO N. Fir L Phona ft
ROBERT W. RUHU (III or. -ERNEST
R. OILflTRAK Manager.
Ad InripoUai Nippr.
Eatrd aa second 'Class matUr at Med
ford, Oregon, undei kot of March I, U7l
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MRMIIKH (It THE AHHOCl ATE1 PKEMfl
Receiving roll l.eaaa wire serrira.
Tha Aaaociatad Praa is txclualvaly an
titled to tha uae for publication of all
aew dlepatehae credited to It or other
wise credited to thte paper, and i)po to
the local news publlahed herein.
Ad rlfhta for publication of apeelal
dispatches herein ara alao reaervd.
MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS
MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
Advertinni. itepreaentatlvea
Drriew IB N.w fork. Cblotiu. Dttrolt.
Bib Francisco, Los Ansolos. Sosttlo.
rortlsad, at. Lotus, Atlanta, TaaoouTor,
B. C.
vdAssociaboi
If
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
A deputy elate reel eatate com.
mlssloner In a speech at Albany
Monday predicted the Willamette
Valley, now with a population ol
800.000 "will be occupied by more
tban a million people In the next
few year.." Survivor, of .the local
boom In 1010, can recall plain real
etate aaents. who could look six
months Into the future, and envision
three Rogue River towns, where they
had offices, each with a million
population.
Government ownership of railroads
la now hinted as the cure for the
financial Ills of the railroads. Hate.
' ful partisans allege If this comes
to pass the Roosevelt boy with a yen
for speeding, wlu be appointed as
slstant engineer of the "Twentieth
Century Limited" on the Chicago.
New York run.
Joan Crawford of the films landed
In the east last week chewing gum
She reported the Jaw action was to
top cigarette smoking. It won't
work, your oorr. tried It several year.
ago, and emerged with both habit..
It Is vigorously denied there Is any
oahootery between the state Orange
chief, and Portland labor osara, ap
pearance, to the contrary, notwith
standing. No picket, are around the
farm not even on the front yard
fence. .
.
HRl.F-APPRAISAI,
(Klamath Falls New)
"Klamath Pall.. Ore. (To the
Editor) The peak of my huge,
but shapely, form being full of
everything else but brains, I
have a few problems In mind
that are difficult for me to
solve and It see ma to me there
should be an answer and I would
appreciate It If some good mathe
matician would help me In my
quandary."
Moat of the candidates are "on
the lam." Several have nailed their
piccurea on phone poles to be shot
at and missed.
A number of upstate co-eds visited
niese parts over th week-end. The
iesoer reported they had "to get
wj eAigrne or Durst!"
BEVERLY HILLS, California, April 11. This country can
be saved, only by a return of prosperity, genuine and general
prosperity.
Prosperity can be returned only if confidence, that is
BUSINESS confidence, is restored.
Business confidence can 'be restored, only if all attempts to
reform business practice is abandoned..
Therefore President Roosevelt must abandon hi program
of reform, if the country is to be saved from disaster.
Tho above is what is called a syllogism.
Perhaps there is a fluw in it somewhere, we hope there is
but the nearer Uncle Sam approaches the precipice, the stronger
our fears, there ISN'T 1
And if there isn't, then whatt
Merely this: ,
Our second" Roosevelt, like our first, makes his political exit,
as a flereated ana disillusioned uon Quixote.
Many people have forgotten T. R. the Bull Moose, but this
column hasn t. And as a Bull Moose, Theodore the 1st, ran
for President on the most enlightened and progressive platform,
a major party in this country has ever adopted. But while
T. R. received a large popnlnr vote he only carried two or three
states. And his defeat ended the Progressive party and the
progressive movement.
T. R. was a trreat liberal and a great fighter, but he was
also a very practical man ano knew when he had had enough.
That defeat of 1012 convinced him he had been fighting wind
mills, and he had no stomach for the role of Don Quixote. So
he ouit. threw. down his lance of social and economic reform.
and REjoincd the G. O. P. That lance lay there where it had
fallen until two decades Inter, Franklin D. Roosevelt picked
it up.
And now where are we!
Prettv much where we started from. Theodore Roosevelt
believed in tho capitalistic system, (everyone did in his day)
but he also believed it needed reform. And his idea of reform
came as truly under the general heading of "a fairer distribu
tion of wealth," as his distant kinsman's New Ileal program
did, and does.
Only T. R, called it the SQUARE deal." What he wanted
was less power financial and political for the FEW, more for
the MANY, and tho platlorm on which he ran against, 'lair
and Wilson, was a clear cut ai d militant demand for just THAT.
. .
But business in this country, particularly Big Business, had
no more use for T. R. and his program THEN, than it has for
F. D. R. and his program NOW. Had T. R. won in 1912, busi
ness confidence would have, been so shattered, that with the
oneniniz of the world war, undoubtedly one of tho worst depres
sions in American history, would have been the result.
Whyt Because T. R, was wrong? No he wasn t wrong, he
was right. Just ns F. D, R todny, is ESSENTIALLY right.
But this country is a business, man s country, and reform any
reform worthy of the nnme, means at least a temporary
reduction of profits, during the period of readjustment. And
business refuses to submit to that. At least without a knock
down and drag out fight. And such a fight means war, and
such a war means the destruction of business confidence.
Q. E. D.l
So whatl
It's too early to say with any finality.
But thisVis a blue Monday. for the first time in two weeks
the sun is on a strike, and we never should have eaten that
second piece of strawheiry shortcake, anyway.
So our guess is Big Business is going to win tins second bout
with a Roosevelt, just as it did tho first.
There can be no enduring prosperity without business conn
dence.
And anv reform program which threatens to materially
reduce profits, eliminate the gambling chance of EXCESSIVE
profits destroys business confidence.
So when business confidence goes, and prosperity with it,
the popular demand for a return of both is so insistent and
overwhelming that no individual or pnrty can stand against it
In short unless business becomes wise enough to see th-
need of its own reform, from the standpoint of its OWN sell
interest, there is apt to be no reform.
For business therefore it is a race between enlightenment
and destruction, which to express it mildly, is extremely un
fortunate! R. W. K.
Editorial Correspondence j Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M D.
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygten.. not to disease
diagnosis or treatment will be answered by lr. Brady If a stamied self
addressed envelope u enclosed Letters should be brief and written In Ink.
Owing to the large number ol letters receUed only a few can be answered
No repli can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address
Dr. William Brady, ten El Camtno, Beverly Hills. Calif.
WHAT IS NERVOUSNESS?
Fifteen or twenty years ago Class
B neurotics, who were more numerous
and much bolder about It than they
are today, regu
larly took re
venge on me by
forwarding clip-
pings from
alleged health
column conduct
ed by an eminent
spec 1 a 11 t In a
great metropoli
tan paper. It
seemed this big
shot fairly oozed
sympathy and
kindness and
nothing much else, but how his
readers admired him and loved him
for ltl By contrast my mean little
wisecracks and hard-boiled attitude
stood out painfully. Honestly, I
blushed many a secret blush, but
I reckon I was born that way. Well,
the great metropolitan health column
specialist didn't last long I dunno
whether his supply of sympathy be
came exhausted or whether the cus
tomers grew tired of It; in fact the
great metropolitan paper that carried
his column has passed into history
too. Just natural deaths, both of 'em.
When I get mine it'll probably be
murder. Ha. and there's a title for a
murder mystery The Pasteurized
Milk Puzzle.
Aa I have asseverated so often It
gets on some people's nerves, there's
no such state aa "neurasthenia" rec
ognized in pnthology find no such
thing aa nerve or nervous energy
recognized In physiology, hence all
bla about nerve strain, .nervous ex
haustion, weak nerves or nervous I
breakdown la sheer bla, whether it is
uttered casually by Mrs. Surasey or
"scientifically" by the great Pooh
Bah of the A M A.
What ails all the misguided folk
who believe they have weak nerves,
neurasthenia or nervous exhaustion?
Well, a good many things. You may
as well rsk what ails all the valetu
dinarians who are not 111 enough to
require medical or hospital care.
Haldane and Prist ley, in their book
i "Respiration," Yale University
Press. 1935. suggest that many neu
rasthenics have a moderate state of
asphyxia, anoxia, deficient oxygen
ation of blood and tissues, and they
think the complaint of many such
patient that they cannot expand the
chest and breathe or cannot get
enough air la quite rational and not
Just a notion or an Imaginary symptom.
pltal she closed her eye for a mo
ment, and then opened them. "Real
ly," she said, "I've never been so hap
py In my life.
X told you this was a story with a
happy ending.
The New York world's fair crowd
la aiming at 60,000,000 admissions aa
the first year's gate. Bounds silly un
til you recall that the movies have
85,000,000 admissions every week.
In my crude, plodding fashion I
have long believed and occasionally
set forth In my column that there
la a relation between natural or belly
breathing and steady nerves If 1 may
uae ito Leriii iui wit; jiiuiirciii,, n gwu i
many of my pupils, what, welt read- '
era then If you will, have assured me
that the regular practice of belly
breathing on getting Into bed en
ables them to drop off to sleep.
Further I believe there la a similar
relation between anoxia (under-oxy-genation
of the body tissues) and
anhedonla. Incapacity for happiness,
inability to enjoy life. These observa
tions are in harmony with the well
recognized fact that exercise Is the
antidote for the peculiar kind of
"nervous fatigue" commonly called
brain fag" for instance nothing Is
moro refreshing for one weary or
worn from many hours of concentra
tion on study or "brain work" than.
say, a brisk two miles of oxygen on
the hoof or any othei exercise, mus
cular work or play equivalent In ex
penditure of calories.
Comment
on the
Days News
QIESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Starch Fever, Eh?
I think perhaps we have been mis
taken about the main principle of
hay fever. I call if starch fever, where
the different pollens take effect over
when one has taken an excess of
I starchy food. Maybe you can figure
j w. ,v uv. v..a.. a. fu.u.f
Answer It Is an Interesting sugges
tion and there may be considerable
In It, In some cases. Certainly many
Individuals suffer reactions similar to
hay fever when they eat too much
carbohydrated food (starch or sugar
In any form) or when they eat 8uch
food too fast and greedily or thought
lessly wash It down unmnsticated.
with one beverage or another. Prom
reports received from readers through
out the United States and Canada it
Is my belief that the best bet against
hay fever In most cases Is tho cal-clum-vltamln
D treatment. Send 3
cent, stnmped envelope bearing your
address and ask for Instructions. No
attention will be paid to clippings
sent In lieu of, written requests.
Sure
la tho Injection method of treating
nemorrholds a sure cure? (H. O. D.l
Answer Son, nothing In the world
Is sure but death and taxes.
Copyright 1838, John P. Dllle Co.
By FRANK JENKINS
CON8IDEB Prance.
She built a line of mighty under
ground forts (the Maginot line)
along the German frontier. These
great fortifications, modern in every
respect, costing staggering sums of
money, would protect her front door
against any possible assault, she be
lieved. Behind them, she felt secure.
Ed Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Ur. Brady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. D.. 265 El
Camlno. Beverly Hills, Calif.
The esteemed Salem Caoltal-Jour
nal editorially Inquires: "Should the
ninnies Be Funny?" The editor ans
wers, no: witn the argument they
.re cnieny continuity storlra of kiss
ing and killing, felonies, and first
oegree misdemeanors. It's a battle
in many homes between parents and
progeny to see who gets to the comic
section first. In the better regu
lated households domestic peace Is
mslntalned by the clarion cry: "Ptrst
on the funnies, when Dad gets
through I" Biscuits have been known
to bum while the bride checks up
on Orphan Annie. The Funnies may
not be artistic and humorous, but
they are popular and profitable. Try
and laugh thnse two virtues off.
The Elks have Installed a public
address system. Jn preliminary testa.
It woke up everybody. Including the
temple tomcat, while the brother
wanta. i the phone snooted on.
...
Word from Toklo fpenks of "the
North China puppet." This Is the
first time the word "puppet" has
been used In this state to describe
anything except a power company
iswyer.
...
"In their rsgernesa to have the
budget bslsnced. people are willing
lo do almost anything except take
their leet out of the trough."
(Orand Rapids (Mich.) Press)
OUCH!
'
The C. Wig Ashpole boy has no
tions to be both a cowboy and a
sailor, and haa duds suitable lor
both callings. Monday he showed up
In the pants of the navy, and the
hat of the range. "I got to go aft
before he ropea me." observed Mr
Afhpole. the old cow-hand.
The
Capital
Parade
(Continued from Had Onai
HOOD RIVER, April IS. (API
Crushed to death seal nut rocks when
a Jsfk slipped from under his truck,
the body of Ororpe Kametnai!. Bar
rett fnm erorar, was found yesterday
statea and cities, the government will
aAk them to borrow money from the
public. And, instead of being non
Interest bearing, tho proposed bonds
will carry a reasonable rate of Inter
est guaranteed by the federal treas
ury. Then the president plans to
sweeten the public works pot for the
states and cities, not by lotting them
borrow money without interest, but
by promising to pay the Interest on
all money they borrow.
Thus will be created the new class
of securities etate and municipal
bonds whose holders will receive fed
eral dollars in Interest, and state and
municipal dollars in principal pay
ments, so far as is known, no such
division of responsibility for the car
rying charges on public debt has ever
before been tried out.
The period of the proposed bonds
la limited to fifty years under the
terms of tho draft bill. And while
the Intention Is to sell the bond
finally to the public. It is expected
that during the time of emergency,
when the projects are getting under
way and the pump t Just being
primed, the bonds will be taken up
by the reconstruction finance cor
poration. As in the past, the RPC'8
avtute chairman, Jesse H. Jones, will
be permitted to resell the bonds,
which he should have little trouble
in doing in view of the federal In
terest guarantee.
bureau statisticians have figured out
that the new scheme. In effect, offers
the borrowers no more than a 46 per
cent grant would offer.
The most Interesting feature of the
scheme, from tho point of view of the
history of these last months, is this
rather deceptive twist It has, by
which open grants and thus open In
creases in federal debt aro carefully
avoided. From the start, a major fac
tor in holding the president's hand
from pump-priming was the desire
to avoid a still higher national In
debtedness. Some measure of his anx
iety about tho business situation may
be gained from the fact that, in the
end. he hastily accepted the new
scheme, which la the same aa an In
crease in the debt, but, presumably
smells the sweeter lust because it
dors have another name.
Man About
Manhattan
By (iKOItCK TUCKER
In effect, what Is contemplated Is
not an Increase in the federal debt,
but Its equivalent, an increase In the
annual fixed chatyes of the govern
ment. Just how tar the increase will
go la difficult tti predict.
In the first place, a great many
states and municipalities hare reach
ed their borrowing limit. Interest
guarantee or no Interest guarantee.
And. in the se-ond, boiled down to
Its rwent'slB. the nw scheme does
not offer the state and cities much
better terms than the old rWA loan
aad grant pira. ludead, budget
In the draft bill, although the states
and cities will have the responsibility
of raising the money for the new
public works, there la no provision to
enlarge their freedom in tvpending It.
The same old clause la retained, un
der which the president and Secretary
of the Interior Harold I. Ickea have
the power to approve the proposed
project, and set up conditions gov
erning their construction.
In this fashion, apparently, the re
doubtable Mr. Ickes' power Is to be
added to once moro. Curiously enough,
he is understood to have known
nothing of the new pump-priming
scheme. Secretary of Agriculture Hen
ry A. Wallace, Works rrogreas Admin
istrator Harry I.. Hopkins and Chair
man Marrtner S. Eccles of the federal
reserve board were the chief pres
idential advisers on pump-priming.
Iir once, the kitchen cabinet ot
left-winger was left rather out in
the cold. and. while the actual origin
of the Interest-guaranteed loan Idea
Is still cloaked In mystery, the ben
authorities are unanimous in sug
gesting that the president thought tt
up himself.
Certr.nly, the whole business was
hurried and purzllng. Tha brilliant
government lawyers who prepared the
two-pane draft already mentioned re
ceived their orders only acren days
wo. and there Js still talk that the
orders may be countermanded. As has
been remarked above, this Is merely a
report on the measure as drafted at
the president's command. The pres
ident may change his mind before the
measure sees the light. And then, of
eoure, there is alusvy. the p -?f-'. ' . t
that, when and If the measure d?
m Um light, cougreM Ul not lo ll. i
NEW YORK This la a. story with
a happy ending.
It concerns Lucia, who Uvea on
L011& Inland nnd will be IS on her
next birthday. I
can show you her
house, and per
haps even ar
range an intro
duction, if you
are Interested.
Lucia wanted
to become a
dancer. Always
she dreamed of
swirling grace
fully to soft mu
sic in a circle of
flam e-colored
llrSht.
GfcQRGE TUCKER
But when she was it she was cut
down by Infantile paralysis. . . . The
doctors said It was one of those
things. . . . Maybe she would grow out
of it in lime. . . . Meanwhile, there
must be care and attention and long,
long years of rest. . . . You know,
wheel chairs, and nurses, etc.
thus and so," she would say .
"When I get well, I shall do this and
that and tho other." . . . Most of the
conversation and all of her plans
were predicated on that simple little
qualifying statement: When I get
well. ...
And she believed It, though the
doctors were careful not to be over
cnthuslastlc. Among the callers who came to sit
by her side in the sun, on cheerful
days, was an old Italian who served
as a handy-man around one of New
York's big pet shops.
And one day he brought her a kit
ten, with a bow of ribbon around its
neck. . , . "It's easy for mo to get
kittens ... we have them at my store
. . . I hope you like It?" ... He didn't
tell her that he had saved a few pen
nies from his earnings every week
over a period of months to buy tho
kitten for her. . . She crowed with
pleasure.
NOW, with Spain practically In the
hands of Italy, which is Ger
many's ally, Franco faces the pos
sibility of Invasion by way of her
unprotected BACK DOOR.
CONSIDER France again.
A dozen years ago, she was all
powerful In Europe. Her people were
united. Her armies were the mightiest
on earth. Her finances were sound.
Security seemed within her grasp.
THE armies of France are mighty
still. But her government Is weak.
Ministries rise, stagger along for a
few weeks and FALL. Her people are
torn with discord. Hef finances are
shaky.
When France apeaks, her voice is
no longer the voice of command. It
la the voice of entreaty,
WHY this change?
Us ten:
For years, in France, the sound
doctrine that if you spend more than
you take In you will go broke has
been ignored, and France has gone
merrily on spending more than her
inccme.
In France, the demagogue poli
ticians have taught class to hate
class.
Why was the law passed? It gave
lobbyist another opportunity to
steal WITHIN the Jaw. SOME one
did not want the people to have
milk with from four to five and a
half per cent cream In It, when the
cows had been bred up to that
standard. The cows wouldn't listen,
but the people could be MADE to
Three per cent milk was good enough
for them. Injustices? A third or more
of the cream removed, BY LAW, from
the natural milk; the 8 per cent
milk sold to the consumer at from
two to three times what the pro
ducer gets, for the same milk with
ALL the cream In It; being forced
to pay extra for the cream that
should be In the milk; undernour
ished children crying for milk the
producer Is not allowed to OIVE
him. even if It la skimmed blue.
Whenever the "common" people
bombard their representatives In the
legislature for the repeal of the
hated milk law. their voice will be
heeded. Let THEM do a little lobby
ing. "S'irely tho churning of milk
bringeth forth butter, and the wring
ing of the nose bringeth forth blood:
the forcing of wrath bringeth
forth strife.'
MRS. ELLA H. LEONARD,
Rt. 2, Medford. Ore.
April 11, 1938.
union to reach its Liberty Loan bond
quota. 1
.,-.-. .- 1
German drive halted in Flanders,
with American troops assisting.
Herbert AL'ord arrives on a fur
lough from Fort Columbia for a visit
with hi parents.
J3 inches of rain fell last night
over city and valley.
Burglars who attempted to enter
the home of Dr. E. H. Porter on
South Oak dale are frightened away
by screams of the womenfolks.
Ulrica's store In Jacksonville Is broken
Into.
Card of Thanks
We wish to thank our many frlenda
for their kind expressions of sym
pathy during our recent bereavement.
Mrs. Sadie Applegate.
Mrs. Bertha Guches.
Mrs. Marie Larson.
Phone 265. Ode lie Osborne rtest or
Rosalie Leslie for a spring permanent.
Hadley's Salon of Beauty. -
Flight o Time
Medfnrd and Jackson County
history from the riles ol the
Mall Tribune 10 and 20 year '
ago.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
April l.'l, lir'H.
(It was Friday)
Stranded tourists beseech county
court for gasoline to get to Wash
ington, and aro advised to go to
work in the orchards and get own
funds.
Vivian Cosa and Nina Hoehne win
scholastic honors for high school
graduates
Citizens warned to look out for
poisoned rum.
Local men buy Holcomb Springs
and develop them.
Grange formed at Talent.
Depot at Seven Oaks is torn down
by the Espee.
Oregon Democrats atage family
fuss over Ai Smith for president. ,
, TWENTY YEARS AGO TOl'AY
April 13. 1918.
(It was Saturday)
Oregon Is the first state in the
Chevrolet
JINGLES
You know successful men
are usually known,
By the make and age of the
oar they own.
The poor social climber buys
out of his class,
Euns into trouble keeping
out of the mass.
Now isn't it better and more
worth while,
To buy a car priced within
YOUR pile?
Keep within your means,
then when you pay,
Your good judgment ' will
dictate a new Chevrolet!
Chevy M. Hurd
Rogue River Chevrolet
Main and Riverside
Service Dept. 33 No. Riverside
lsed Car Lot Rlrerslde at 4tb
f ISTEN again:
France haa sought something for j
nothing, by the simple and pleasant
process of passing a law, ignoring
the plain truth that wealth arises,1
only out of production and prcduc- .
tlon arises only out of work. I
Germany, realistic, haa WORKED
and SAVED and DENIED HERSELF i
to the end that she might become j
strong. Germany, rising like a dark ;
thundercloud, again menaces France J
from across the Rhine.
The doctrine of something . for
nothing HASN'T HELPED FRANCE.
Communications
It wasn't so bad after she got used
to it. People were kind and she had
friends who told her stories about
little girls who became famous danc
ers. They came to sit with her in the
sunshine and they brought her flow
ers, and after a while three years
went by and she was 14, almost
is. ...
"When I get well. I'm going to do
She kept it with her when she
wheeled herself in the sun, and she
carried it with her on those infre
quent occasions when some one came
by and took her for long rides In an
automobile. . . . And so she had it
with her that slippery day when they
were riding out through Long Island
and tho car crashed into another car
with such violence that the wind
shield was. broken and she was
thrown clear.
Two hours later, doctors were am
putating her left leg just below the
knee. , . . And when she came out of
the ether the first thing she asked
for was her kitten. . . . Miraculously,
it waa all right, that it was unhurt
"Oh." she cried, "and he's all right?
You're sure? You're sure!"
And when they assured her ngaln
and promised to bring It to the hoa-
The Stotc Milk Law.
To tho Editor:
It looks as if people ore beginning
to regard the state milk law as asi
nine as the government's potato
law. This much-ado about sanitation
and "safe milk Tor babies" was the
smoke scrern behind which lobbyists
again worked to steal from the
people.
For years beforo the milk law was
passed, the many small dairies I
know, of from two to eight or ten
cows had a bacteria count month
after month for raw milk of 1 s
than 1000 CC. Tho large dai: a ..
strongly urging the public to cuy
their highly advertised PASTEUR
IZED milk for safety's sake, had
thousands. One, with Its ads bla
zoned all over the daily page, had
a count of 22.000 CC. (The dea:i
ones weren't counted, nor removed.)
If the dairy ran short, it bought
milk wherever it could get It, re
gardless of dirt. Bui the old man and
his wife, or the man with children
scattered through the schools, were
either forced out of business or
forrcd In debt to fix their barns,
according to the idea of someone
we question ever sat tinder a heifer,
shoveled manure, or sterilized milk
utensils.
Just a Reminder o
the Easter Specials
at the
Dresses as low as $1.98
Topper Coats as low as $2.98
Hats as low as $1.00
Shoes as low as. $1.95
Little Girls' Dresses, Hats and Shoes
for Easter!
MEDFORD LIONS CLUB
Present A MIETHQUAKE OF FUN
"HIT IT UP"
250
Prominent Medford People in the
Cast. Proceeds Go To Charity!
?.50
High School Auditorium
TUES.-WED., APRIL 19-20
Don't Miss This John B. Rogers Production . . . Seats
reserved beginning 10 a. m. Monday. April 18th at the
Chamber of Commerce!
Wkm there is LITE, there's