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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1938)
PAGE TEN rEDFORT MAIL TRIBUNE, MEPFORP, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5. 1938. MDFORDvl&TRIBUNE "fcvrryttn 10 (Mialhrrn Or IUmiU the blMll rrihuom" Daily Cirrpl Sat oritur. Puhliin4 tf UUUruftO PR1NTINO CO. Itlt I N frit 8L PhoM tl HOHKR'I W KUHU SMUiir KNBA1 B OII-HTRAK Ung,r. An lnfUpn-1nt Nwpapr. Boir4l Monod-oiaa cnattai at U4 fort. Oragoo. unUi Aot of March I, UTS SIlfW'RIHl ION RATES tvll In AdvtnMl Dtllj. on roar 1....H 0O ' Dally, alt mnniha IT Dally od month Id By Carrlar. to Advance Uv1fort Aah larnt Jaokannvllla. Central Point, phoaolt. TaUnt, Oold Hill and or hlahwarar Pally, ona raar st.oe Dally, all monihi I.ll Dally, on month All tarma oaah In ulvsiMe. Official Papn of the City of Mm! ford Official Pa par of JarkwiB County M KM It KU Of I'Hft IAIKD I'BKHK Urralvlni mil Lmaad wire sarvir. Th Aaaooialad Pr.w aolu1ly b tltlatt to th oaa for publication of all aaw dtapaiehaa cra1iirt to it or othar wla ort1ltt to thi paper. n1 alao to th loeal nwa nuhllthn haraln. All right for publication of pelai 41a pa Lo hat haraln ara raaarvad. MDMBBR OF UNITED I'RBHS , afBMBIOR or AUDI I HURBAIJ OP 'MRCIII.ATIDNR AlTrtli1oir rta prawn tatlTae ... Offloaa In Naw York, Ohloago, Datrott, San Pranolaco, Lna Angalaa. ftaattla, Portland. SL Louis. Atlanta, VanoouTar. 1 " 1-1 OWq.6rtwspape?,ubi(Ki W9 0 OAsOCition Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. The gay loglo that holds the presi dent can make a political speech that la not a political speech, as fee did In the Kentucky primary campaign,' does not stretch far enough to permit a rubber-stamp congressman to be a winner, though loser. New York gossip columns reveal the new flame of the 8 & 10c store I heiress recently unhooked from a Danish count, la "the second son of a British lord." The rumor It was the middle boy of an American sec tion crew boss was unfounded. . The rodeo season Is coming on apace In Oregon, and citizens In many towns are raising whiskers and wearing cowboy hats. It will be In full swing when the Monday after noon wan tads demand the Immediate return of the roundup hat, taken by mistake from the church vestibule Sunday morning. a Mr. Douglas Corrlgan, wbo headed for Los Angeles by plane, and landed In Ireland, after an Atlantic flight "possesses business sense," according to a ayndlcate writer, who Inter viewed him over a shdrt-to-shlp tele phone. However, aviation Interests shy at offering him a Job until tested. They might start htm In a "butchershop, and If It doesn't turn out to be a sawmill, give him work. "REVOLT OF YOUTH" (Oakland (Calif.) Tribune) To Editor Tribune: If the person who stole my bicycle dn the night of Friday. July 39, has nerve enough to come to 137 13th street and fight like s man, I will give htm the bicycle, and on top of that, X will give him an Insurance pol icy that will protect the bike against rats of this type I Re member, all of this free If he can lick me. No questions asked, i Eugene 'Santa Claus' Johnson." a a a The wild blackberries of the Ap plegate are ripening. No finer handi work of Nature ever adorned a pie or dish, If somebody else picks them. Here It Is August, and It has Just been discovered drover Cleve land Corum whacked off hta so called mustache last March. It was that Insignificant. 'a Oregon lan s spent (8,030,901.43 for hard liquor the past year, the state liquor board reports. This ts record breaking whistle-wetting. a "Running against the wind Is the way caribou free themselves of mo qultoes. But who wants to get out of bed In the middle of the night and run against the wind?" (St. Thomas (Mich.) Journal) It seems the only way. A Great Achievement IN nearly all educational institutions they have what are called compulsory courses. All who wish to get a degree must take them. In the realm of entertainment in Southern Oregon, the Ash land Shakespearean Festival which starts ita fourth season tonight, should bo accepted as a compulsory course. Everyone should attend, at least one evening, during the ten day session. For these performances offer an educational and cultural opportunity that should not be missed, the greatest dramas of all time, presented, as they were written to be presented, in a natural setting, restful and charming, and almost identical with the theatre-setting in Elizabethan times. -1 -nAT no compulsion however is needed, the continued growth of this festival, the increased interest and popular support, pot only here in Southern Oregon, but throughout the state, clearly attest. It is really an extraordinary record, in three short years, this festival has developed, from a purely local experiment, in the dramatic department of the Ashland Normal School, to a permanent INSTITUTION, in this section of the state. Not only do students of Shakespeare from all over the coast attend, but the performers come from practically all sections of the United States. rHS is not a "plug" for the box office. It's too late for that, moreover advance ticket sales indicate no plug is needed. It is rather, a 6alute to Professor Bowmer and Dr. Redford of the Ashland Normal who are chiefly responsible for launch ing this effort, to them and their scores of loyal and devoted helpers who have put over such a successful and worth while achievement. To them this paper's hearty congratulations 1 The Tennessee Results NO doubt the partisan dopesters will find great comfort in thn Tennessee nrimarv results, hut we can find nothing of significance except as far as one can judge from this dis tance, The BEST men won. Q. L. Berry has not graced the U. S. Senate very long, but long enough to convince this column, that his retirement to private life will be no loss to the people of his state, or the country at large. Berry was a kind of political "walking delegate" for organ ized labor; was or tried to be a big-shot promoter on the side, his efforts to capitalize on the T.V.A. to his own financial benefit, being pretty crude if not actually dishonest. We know nothing about the other defeated aspirant, Gover nor Browning, but if the campaign he waged was typical of the man, then his retirement can be no great loss. He certainly played the role of a loud-mouthed, table-thumping rabble rouser, who can be comfortably spared. JOHN D. M. HAMILTON will, no doubt, find another G.O.P. frinmnh in the Tennessee election, and Charlev Michelson will probably point with pride to another 100 Roosevelt triumph. These party professionals are .certainly .tops when it comes to wishful figuring. But to the man up a tree, the results only show what practi cally all the other primaries to date have shown, a tendency on the part of the rank and file to shun the radical and spectacular, and exhibit some discrimination and common sense. Which inoidentally as far as the country as a whole is concerned is a good omen very good indeed. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M P. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only s few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 2 80 El Camlno. ueverly Hills, Calif. ICE 19 COLD BUT IS IT PURE? A reader, noting a reply In thta 1 In a few epidemics of typhoid fever column which Implied that Ice made I the Infection has been ascribed to the in the household refrigerator la as use of polluted Ice, but It Is now He's on the Spot HYMN OF TATIOI'B "I'm tired of the New Deal, lt' been inch a flop. I'm tired of the failure, we're placed at the top. I'm tired of experiments which amell of the 'hop.' I'm so tired. I'm tired of policies that are never the same, I'm tired of a man who la never to blame. Tm tired of unbalance that make. Ui aahamed. I'm ao tired. rm tired of wrong people in th. wroni place, I'm tired of all business slapped In ' the face. And I'm tired of the debt that Is growing apace. I'm so tired. I'm tired of the debt Into which we've been eold. I'm tired of a Congress that has to be told. I'm tired of promises thst hsve grown so old. I'm so tired. (Cxchsnge) 4 Closing time for Too Late to Clas sify Ads I, 1 :30 p. m. ""PHE great thing about Oharlcs Augustus Lindbergh, was not " his solo flight across the Atlantic, but the way he took the world acclaim. AFTER it. Lindy demonstrated that his head was set firmly and squarely on his shoulders, anchored in the solid substance of CHARACTER. Young as he was, it couldn't be turned. Paris, New York, the entire western world did its best to spoil the young man, but they just couldn't DO it. Now this young Irishman Corrigan is on the spot. Yesterday he was given a "Lindy" welcome when his boat landed in New York and today the ticker tape treatment is being applied, as he rides in triumph up lower Broadway. Corrigan is older than Liudy was, and instead of being of German descent, is Irish. The renl test, of course, will not only be today and tomorrow, as far as he is concerned, but when the tumult and the shouting has died away, and he is just another aviator who once upon a time flew the Atlantic. We have a hunch Corrigan, however, will also demonstrate he has the real stuff in him. Maybe not. But his reactions to date have been promising, and he has one helpful quality that Lindy lacked, a sense of humeri pure as Ice made elsewhere, advises me to mix some drink with both kinds of Ice and sgrees to pay for the drini If I f&U to detect an appreciable dif ference In favor of the ice made in a factory. Oh. well. If that's the way the test must be made I'd rather leave it as It la. My drink would be only water any way, and I hate to think of anyone paying for water. The reader aika an impertinent rhetorical question. Have ycu ever taken a bacterial count on lee made i recognized that Ice purifies Itself In the process of freezing, end the evl dence that Ice can actually contain germs capable of causing disease la not convincing. A alngle glassful of ice water Is perfectly healthful to drink when one Is thirsty, but larger quantities, es peclally when one la tired, may not be so good. Pleasantly cooled water Is always better than tee cold water or other beverage to relieve thirst and refresh, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Gas and Gallstones I Buffer frequently from gas at tacks and one doctor said I may have gallstones. . , . Please advise about diet, etc., for such trouble (Mrs. H. H. A.) Answer -Send ten cents coin and a three-cent stamped envelope beer- in . household refrigerator and com-, OIrDooklet pared It with th bacterial count on Qa Ha, .eatton?" It con- Ice made In a factory? In reply I blush to say I haven't. But If I were to try It the results might be startling. No, I am content to go along as I do now. The tap water we use In our home Is aa pure as anyone can desire, for drinking. Frozen In the refrigerator It la still pure. The mixed drink business makes me pretty tired In any circumstance. If a person can't use water or some wholesome food or beverage to test Ice with, then I'd rather hear no more about It. Of course, If water Is polluted or Impure, Ice made from It may be Impure. Typhoid bacilli, for ex ample, may survive freezing. But It doesn't matter whether the ice Is tains Information and advice about gas, acid, heartburn, non-surgical drainage of gall-bladder, peptic ulce: diet, etc. No Joking Please tell me If garlic Is good for the nerves and If It purifies the blood. Can It be eaten like onion? If It la not good for the nerves, please tell me what Is good for the nerves, I mean what food? (M. T.) Answer Garlic has no particular remedial value. It ts aa wholesome or healthful aa onion. I suppose one may eat it as one would eat onion. Best food I know for the nerves Is milk, cheese and other dairy pro ducts. , Two Hundred I weigh 200 pounds. Have your book on dwindling. Should I go on made by nature out in the lake, by DooK on swindling. Should I go on the man In the factory or by your the iodln rtttlon at the ame Ume? own household refrigerator. If the water Is fit to drink the Ice made from It Is aa safe In every way. If the water Is of questionable purity It should be boiled to sterilize It before It Is frozen. Water for drinking Is better cooled by keeping It In a suitable con tainer In the refrigerator. Any re- I have no pep, feel so tired, would like to sit all the time. (Mrs. R, J. W.) Answer Yes. Perhaps you have t pituitary gland deficiency which Is responsible for the overweight and for Increased carbohydrate tolerance and for the languor. You should read and heed the chapter In the book let "How to Reduce on Pour Square frigerator which keeps food from 1 . r. annlllnff will : J ' J B' 1 u "4ttI torlly. Rosenau (Preventive Medicine and Hygiene, Appleton, 1935) savs that natural ice la purer than the water from which It Is taken, but he found that manufactured Ice may contain more bacteria thsn the water from which it was made, due to unclean methods. i ket can't sunnlv the bread and cak J substitutes suggested, never mind. Just follow the suggestions as well as you can. Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M I)., 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. Man About Manhattan By OEORGB TUCKER STATE FOREST SERVICE HOPES FOR RADIO NET &ALEM (UP) A state forest serv ice short wave radio communication system is now a distinct possibility. State Forester J. W. Ferguson be lieves. Ferguson, who from Aalem haa di rected a state-wide oat tie- on fires through a period when weather on dlUona were worse than ever before In the 38 -year history of the ferv.ee. recently returned from a conference of force ters and members of the fed eral communication commission In Washington, O. C. A revision of the commission's reg ulations concerning p plications (or equipment will facilitate Installation by states of two-way radios with broadcasting equipment of not mow than 50 watts, he eaK. made. With Its approval the commis sion specifies the type of equipment to be used. Previously a complete plan of all equipment had to be sub mitted and, although several stales have applied, no plan has ever re ceived the required approva. The necessity of studying the geo graphical locations ot proposed state units to prevent interference end the reallocation ot short wave channels already In use may further deiay In stallation of state forest systems, Fer guson Indicated. Improved communi cation would mean mors efficient fire fighting, he aald. NEW YORK Honey, the old let down's got me. I dunno why it is, but I can't come home from vaca tions like other people, full of pep and r'arlng to go. I gotta be gloomy. I got ta sit around with my chin In my hand, feeling like the drag end of Gloomy Sunday and won dering what Blue Mondays gonna be like. Nobody has better time thsn wcvkwc 'u-m i do. but next day there's a lily In my hand. And that's utsnay. If you ask me. Here I am back from as pleasant a stay as I was ever on. In Connecticut it was. and instead of feeling keenly reminiscent and alive, Instead of bubbling over with suppressed energy and excitement, I am lost In apathy, kindred to a whipped noun' dog. Peace College L'rged. PASADENA. Cal. (OP) Warren D. Mullln. labor secretary of the National CouncU for the Prevention of War. told local audiencea that as the war depsrtment Is equipped with a wsr college, the state aepsrtment should be equipped with peace college. He declared that taoo.OOO would permit the organization of labor Into the backbone of the peace movement In th United Statee. t:perta Marked Down SAN FRANCISCO (UPI Lunacy examlnationa aren't rated aa high here aa formerly. Th cllv a lune.-y communion composed of four phv- Under the relied regulations, onlj nouns hsve had their salirlra slash' application for a channel must be , ed from 91S month to 300. The rambler rose may be beauti ful to Robert Burns, but It la only a blossom to me, and a thorny one at that. Thla metropolla may be a magic city to others, replete with romance and glamor, but It doesn't thrill me. Not today It doesn't. To morrow that's something else sgaln. But today It's only a big dull town. There'a no savor to the ghoulash. All the blush haa gone from the peach. There's something else, too, thst makes me feel pretty bsd. I passed a ghost on the street just now. the ghost of the old White Horse Tav. ern. Coming across 45th street I Just happen! to look up and caught lght of a sign. It said, simply: "For Rent. And It csme to me with some thing of start that here Indeed was the scene of many a gay old time. Almost everybody remembers the Tavern In prohibition daya. It was picturesque and It wss well man aged. You had to hare credential to get past the door, snd the attendants looked like foi hunters In scarlet coata. There waa an ancient darkle inside nsmed Chester who banged a little two-by-four piano and sang any song you wanted to hear. They tried him out one night and he sang 167 requests without repestlng himself. Thst's coming through the rye. other plsces that thrived during the dry years. It faded with repeal. It Is a memory now, a ad ghost drift ing through the dry summer days. I have often thought about Ches ter and wondered if I would walk Into some place some night and see him perched at the little piano, grin ning delightedly at his white folks, banging those tunes they like to hear. But I never have. You'd think In all the places you go to (through the years there must have been 500 of them) you'd run Into a fellow like Chester. You couldn't be mis taken. There never was anybody even a little bit like him. But I never have, and I suppose now I never will. Chester was old, and repeal hap pened a long time ago. FIVE JEWS'KILLED BY LAND MINE EXPLOSION JERUSALEM. Aug. 6. (UP) Five Jewish laborers were killed and eight others were critically Injured today when a land mine exploded under a bus carrying them to the Kfarsarw Jewish settlement near Tet-Avtv. The Jewish driver of a government lorry was ambushed and killed late this afternoon on the Hatfa-Tel-Aviv highway neex Athllt. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS QEENATOR Bennett Clark, son of Champ Clark, wins his Demo cratic senatorial renomlnatlon in Mis souri by a landslide, getting more than three times as many votes as his three opponents combined. CENATOR CLARK not -Only voted against but bitterly fought Roose velt's scheme to pack the supreme court. He fought other Roosevelt schemes. Including the reorganiza tion bill. He was marked for slaughter by the New Dealers until It became ap parent that he was going to win decisively In spite of their opposition; whereupon they dropped their fight against him. QENATOR CLARK'S renomlnatlon proves this: A member of congress can oppose Roosevelt In a matter In which he believes himself to be right and Roosevelt to be wrong and can still be renominated and re-elected for In Missouri the Democratic nomina tion Is practically equivalent to election. In other words, It ISN'T NECES SARY to be a rubber-stamp in order to remain In congress. TpHAT Is a tremendously Important leson. If enough congressmen will heed It, there will be less rubber-stamp legislation in the future which will be good for the country. N Kansas, McGill, the New Dealer. wins the Democratic senatorial nomination easily. Kansas Repub licans; however, turn down Wlnrod, the blatherskite, and nominate former Governor Clyde Reed. The last word In Kansas will be said In November. IN West Virginia, three Roosevelt i-nfl t t I ljr H n & Tlam nnea . I A nominations for congress with little trouble. In Virginia, where the Democratic nomination Is the same as election, two coat-tallers are DEFEATED again proving that the Roosevelt blessing Isn't absolutely necessary in order to remain in congrees. (That, of course. Is the big issue in all the congressional primaries this year.) pEXT comes the much-advertised In which it will be demonstrated whether Senator "Dear Alben" Bark- ley, passing out the swag from the federal government's sack, can buy more votes than "Happy" Chandler, who Is dishing It out from the state of Kentucky's sack. From this distance, It looks as If that Is about all that will ba proved by the Kentucky primary. The Capital Parade (Continued from Page One.) Flight o Time Medford and Jackson County history from ti e files of the SUI1 Tribune 10 snd 20 years fo. been different, If It had not been for an unfortunate little Incident. Mayor Jackson Is running for the Democratic gubernatorial nomlnar tlon, against State Senator Lansdale O. Sasscer, and State Attorney Gen eral Herbert R. O'Conor. From the first, everyone had expected Tydlngs to support Jackson, his old-time crony. Sadly enough, however, Tyd lngs had a brief moment of unutter able happiness, when he expected not to be opposed for the senator ship And In this moment, he was caught by former Senator Howard Bruce, who had put O'Conor In the race. Bruce cheerfully told Tydlngs that his re-election would give pleasure to all rlght-thlnklng Marylanders. He said that he would be glad to prom ise Tydlngs his own support. If It weren't for one thing. Tydlngs was epxected to side with Jackson In the governorship fight, and, If Tydlngs sided with Jackson, the friends of O'Conor would have to offer an entl Ty dings senatorial candidate, there fore, why not stay neutral? Tydlngs anxiously promised com plete neutrality, and subsequently announced his surprising btand. And then, only a few days after Tydlngs had spoken, Davy Lewis, tiie self-ed ucated coal-miner's son. a darling of the new deal and a dangerous, forth right fighter, came out as a candi date against Tydlngs. Mayor Jackson was asked whether he would back Tydlngs or Lewis. His laconic answer was: I'mra neutral, too. The enterprising Welles made good use of his situation. Of the two other gubernatorial candidates. O' Conor remained an outsider; Sasscer was the real threat to Mayor Jack son. By unknown inducements. Wel les i-.as persuaded Sasscer to promise withdrawal from the race. If Welles' combination does not fall through. Sasscer will soon retire. And tuen the grateful Jackson, already es tranged from Tydlngs, will go down the line for Lewis. However, the important aspect of this little story Is not the local poli tics Involved. Such petty trading could be duplicated In any one of a dozen prlmsrles. The important thing Is the lesson the story teaches. in the other purge primaries. White House candidates have been chosen hastily, pushed Into the ling with out much preparation, and left with no real aids but the president's name and the WPA. Nowhere, except In Maryland, has a deputy of the White House personally attempted to line up for the White House favorites. Everywhere, the primaries have been managed by remote control and pray er. Thus far, the results have been unhappy, in Maryland, on the other hand, the situation has been handled ' with unblinking realism. And Millard Tydlngs Is not resting well, these nights. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY August 5. 1938. (It was Sunday.) Al Smith la cause of fist fights m Texas. Mid-west farm organisations back Hoover. Nineteen cara of pears first o season shipped east. Still short age of help. Tourist travel through valley now at height. Public schools to open Monday, September 4. Greater Medford club decides on lot for proposed clubhouse. Park avenue residents ask street be paved. - State prohibition chief states he Is surprised at lack of moonshine In city during state Legion convention. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY August 5, 1918. (It was Monday.) The picking of peara was commenc ed in the Wilcox and Carlton or chards this week, most of tne work being done by our patriotic young ladles. (Table Rock Tablets.) Military experts now predict World war will end before Christmas. Espee agrees to furnish more cars for pear shipments. Secretary McAdoo urges people to hold their Liberty bonds. Allied forces cross Vesle river, aa Germans continue retreat.- 4 KNOBMOtia RfmnCTTONS Dresses. Coats. Hats, Blouses Etbelwyn B Hoffmann Nudists Gather. ESTACADA. Ore.. Aue. 5. fan The vanguard of some 200 nature cultlsts, the American Sun Bathlne asoclatlon, reached Camp Hesperla near here yesterday for the west coast conference of the association. The nudist conclave opens Saturday. Chevrolet JINGLES Copjrlghd You want a truck that will bold the road ... Up hill and down, will carry the load! -Get there . and back in the shortest time, In the frozen North or in tropical clime. That's CHEVROLET wheth- er you know it or not! The truck that NEVER puts YOU on the spot! It outsells any other make, every new. season And when it does THAT there MUST be a reason 1 Chevy M. Hurd Rogue River Chevrolet Main and Riverside Service Dept. 82 No Rlterslde Ufted Car Lot Riverside at 4tb Streamlined Potatoes Popular. MERRILL (UP) H. L. Martin Is sure now that the country has gone streamline conscious. He packed po tatoes in an attractive net sack snd labeled them "Streamlined Potatoes." conducted a campaign relative to the use of streamlined potatoes In the diet, and his product marketed throughout the season without suf fering sny of the price fluctuations that befell the spuds that failed of streamlining. Chester was a book dtrkle. I'm sure he came out of a book. I never saw one like him before, or fclnce Looking st the place now it makes you feel a little ad The rains and sleets of the years of repeal have washed sway the Bright front of the Tavern. Today the mlndows. little diamond -shaped iisres of t itned glass, like those In cathedrals, are dusty and dim. Spiders make their homes In the cracks of the door, and cob-weba are the only lacy curtains there. What happened to the Tavern I Allen Passes 9th Test MARTINEZ, Cal. (UP) When Oraslo A bono finally succeeded in passing . his ninth examination for citizenship, he was so elated that he leaped from his chair in the court room and ran and kissed the American flag. The court declared that his persistence In taking nine examinations was enough to entitle him to citizenship, even if he did not get all of the answers correct. ELMO GRIMES, Owner Not Extinct. HOB ART. Australia (UP) The Tasmanlan marlsuplal tiger, a rare animal of the 'llvlng fossil" class, and which waa believed to have be come extinct, has been found again, according to the Hob art animal and bird protection board. A sanctuary will be established for the few ani mals that have been found In an effort to prevent extinction. OPENS TOMORROW MEDFORD'S NEW MODERN PEEVE-EES FEATURING all LEADING BRANDS OF FINE FOODS SEVERAL BASKETS of GROCERIES will be Given FREE Free Ladino Cheese SANDWICHES at the Ladino Demonstration Booth Saturday FREE PEANUTS Eat all you want while you are in the store Saturday. Free Kraft Cheese SANDWICHES at the Kraft Demonstration Booth Saturday Steam Roller Jot Ride WILMINGTON. Del. (UP) Several small boys fulfilled a lifetime am bitlon when worker at a housing development left a steam roller with, the "steam up." Their ride ended against an embankment at the end of a long field, but when a police ra dio car arrived at tt:e scene the boys were gone. FEES BALLOONS for the Kiddies! SPECIAL BORENE SOAP DEMONSTRATION Saturday Drive Up To Our Open Front and Shop From Your Car 1, Save Time Save Trouble or Phone 602 For Free Delivery llf Is Miplwharr TRY1NGHAM. Mass. (UPI Ward McCarthy, local farmer, says h t a pig which can clear a foxir-fool f.nca wltli all the aplomb of vet- can onljr guess. But Uk ao man, I ersn steeplechase Jumper. SOUTH RIVERSIDE AT EARHART STREET