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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1938)
PXGE ETOITT rEDFOTtP MATT, TRTBTTN'E, MEDFOTTO.' OT?EGOy. STTyPAT. OCTOBER 23. 1938. MEDFORDJt$JTRIBUNE "ETorrone la Another Orfm Bidi tba Mall TrlbaM.'r DmUj Bleep Saturday. Pubiuhad by UBDKURD PRINTINO CO. Sl-11Z No- Fir SL phone ft ROBERT W. RUHU Editor. SRNBST R OlbSTRAP. Manager. Ao ndpai)Dt Ntwtpapor. Infant aa aacanrialaaa mttltr it Vd ford. Oregon, undor Act of March t, lift. SUBSCRIPTION RATES fe Mall Tn Artnnei: nail anrt Sunday on fur It. 00 Dally and Sunday all montha. . . 1.10 Daily ana uunaar inr monini. Daily and Sunday on month.... -T By Carrier la Adanco Medford, Aeh land. Central Point. Jaokionvllle, Gold Him Rorua River, paoenls. Talent and oo motor routeat Pally and Sunday on year II.M Sal It and Sunday one month W All terme eaeh Id advance. Official Paper of the City of Bedford Official Paper of Jarltaon Coiraty. URMI1KH OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Receiving Full Lened wire service. The Aaeociated PreM eiolualvely en titled to the ua for publication of all newi dlipatchee credited to It or other vrlae credited to thle paper, and aleo to the local newe publlebed herein. All right for publication of aseolAl dlepatche herein are aleo reserved. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OP AUDIT HTJREAU OP CIRCULATIONS National Adfirtlflni Reprtwtrtatlwi WEST-HOLUDAT COMPANY. INC. Office In New lark, Chloago, Detroit. Sin Francisco, Loa Angelee, Seattle. Portland, BU Louis, Atlanta, Vanoouvor. n. r.. Mtfnbct, Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Perry. Politics hereabout continue to quiet, voters can hear a candidate drop a promise. e Agriculturist are praying rain. No answer have been received as yet. It 1 still too warm for the dreaaler sex to shop for a head of lettuce, In a $700 fur coat. e A football game kept many citizens awake the past week. It was s change from fretting about what Runts fuehrer Hitler would do to Europe. Many will run out to the Orlffln Crk. Grange Hall Thura. eve to eat country sausage. BUI Allen has a hand In It. Signs of Hallowe'en are showing up, and Indicate Hallowe'en dances will be as plentiful a ga stations. Oob Una and gnomes are stirring, but so far have been little ladles and gents. e The bowling enthusiasts are at It again. Bowling la good exercise, and by adding up their score, brushes up the players' arithmetic, v The 'Coronet' Mag. reports the Swede are payday paupers. "They spend their money freely, when they have It, and then go broke," the ar ticle states. Americans ars not like that. e e e Valley Democrat welcomed two leading evangelist of the "more abun dant life the past week, and regis tered sincerity In their behalf at the polls, Nov. 8. ' Neetly plied leaves on residential street, are being neatly missed by the street sweeper on It nightly rounds. e The F. Perl boy caused his Paw some awe, one day last week. e Another large congregation of so pranoa 1 expected to see the grap piers grapple Mon. night, as they get In free, If they bring somebody with them. see The Chinese Pheasant hunting sea ton Is going full blast, and many pumpkins, woodpeckers, and trespass signs have been casualties. It la still unmfe to visit 8. Morris at hi Table Rk. melon-patch, and escape without a load of them. Len Carpenter of the ranch set. who was in Europe all summer, has disap peared as completely, a If ht had gone bscK. , v Aspirant for public office are mov ing around, and a more pleasant lot would be hard to find. a W. W. Truax la back from I. Ore. He was writing poetry, before Del Getchell.. the banker-poet had a key to a bank. ' a LAAt week was 'Be Kind to People' week. Nobody was killed with kind ness. After much' tumult and shouting and betting of coonsklns. the hi school gridiron crew yanked the tall feathers from the Klamath Pelican, before a vast herd of people. Ptl. eve. It wsa no pink tea. Moral: Pinning bark th football ears of Sagebrush Center, doesn't count when big boys tackle too hard. e The Elks tom-cat now sport a bum optic, This feline can get every thing out of the road In combat, but his phis, ess Many rural barns, the past eek have been hit oftener than a French cathedral during the World war, and are standing up well under the bombardment. Pressman Suicides By Leap Off Bridge REATTl.K, Oct, 33. ( AP) Charles Rnymonrt Sttiok, a pressman, plunged 100 fret to hta death from the south e.ipinnrh to the Aurora bridge today Hi hody a recovered In Newell nil ret Deputy Coroners John P. Brill. Jr., and Clarence Thompson said they found a note in Sturk's apartment, reading : "Dear Mm: It ttA rrat hSTing kuottu you. Take It easy, The Anti-picketing Bill UNLESS the people of the ttate wake up, and investigate for themselves, a measure important to, the welfare of this state, is going to be beaten on November 8th, and beaten badly. This is the so-called anti-picketing bill. For many weeks now, the report has been continuously and persistently circulated, that this measure is not only grossly unfair to labor but if passed will practically destroy organized labor in this state. This is simply NOT true 1 And any fair minded person who will take the trouble to read the bill, will grant it isn't true. The measure is extreme, yes, we wish it were less so. But the people of Oregon should not forget, it is designed to correct an extreme situation. In other words while it is never pleasant, it is sometimes necessary to fight fire with fire, And after the reign of terror carried on by labor leaders in this state, particularly in the Portland area, including the commission of practically every crime in the calendar, the sponsors of this measure decided, that it was time to tell the labor goons and racketeers in the state, where to get off, and tell them explicitly and emphati cally so there could be no misunderstanding. That is what this bill does, and all that it does. We advise those who have been told otherwise, to read the text of the measure in their voters pamphlet, and decide for themselves what the bill is, and what it ISN'T. Don't take someone else's word for it. We live in a free democracy, let the individual voter decide. He (or she) isn't as dumb perhaps as some of the table thumpers think. Needless to say this paper believes in organized labor and its right of collective bargaining. It also believes thoroughly in the right of peaceful picketing, and the right, when other methods of adjustment fail, to STRIKE. Ever since this paper was founded, it has conducted a union shop,-and expects always to do so. And if this measure really threatened the legitimate rights of labor, we would be fighting it with every gun in the editorial turret. But, as we see it, it doesn't. And we have the opinion of one of the most eminent jurists in the state, to sustain thj judgment. FOR as this veteran lawyer states, this measure will be inter-ni-otar! hv avow itnnrf in the statu frnm fl rAflsnnllhlp nnm- r...u j v mon sense angle, not from the special pleader, who reads all sorts of far fetched alarums and threats, into certain particular clauses, in an effort to alarm all friends of labor and thus defeHt it. In other words the interpretation that will prevail will be a REASONABLE interpretation, an interpretation in harmony with the purposes and spirit of and not some isolated portion of And the obviois purpose of single legitimate right of organized labor, but merely to prevent certain obvious abuses, and abuses which if not corrected, will injure organized labor,, as much business of this state. WE don't refer to the crimes PROVED BgainRt organized labor leaders in this state, arson, assaults, bombings and what not, all decent citizens oppose lawlessness and our present statutes are adequate to punish such infractions, apd protect the public. VTe do refer to tho SPIRIT behind such excesses, and the exciting cause of thorn, the spirit of rule or ruin, the public be damned; the spirit, that organized labor, because of its growth, its resources and particularly its POLITICAL power, has the world by the tail, with a down-hill pull, and it's going to have its way, OR ELSE I .... 1 It is this spirit, that this measure is designed particularly to resist, and it is a resistance which we believe every informed person in the state, will grant is due,-if not overdue. FOR example. This bill establishes majority rule in the labor union; isn't that the basic principle of all democracy? It doesn't prohibit a minority from walking out, calling a strike of its own members, whatever their number, It DOES prohibit such a minority from picketing. That is, boycotting, trying to close up the place in which they work, when a majority of their fellow workers, ARE ENTIRELY SATISFIED WITH CONDITIONS AS THEY EXIST. It doesn't prevent sympathetic strikes, but it prevents picket ing in tho CASE of sympathetic strikes, that is by unions having, no grievance of their own, but wish only to aid some other uuion. It doesn't prevent ' jurisdictional disputes, no law could force C.I.O. and A.F.L. to smoke the pipe of everlasting peace, but it does refuse to classify them as legitimate labor disputes. That is the measure would outlaw the present practice, of C.I.O. and A.F.L. causing a walkout, tieing up and paralyzing a legitimate business like shipping or mercantile wholesaling; not because they have suffered any wrongs, not because of dissatisfaction with wages, living conditions or what not; but MERELY BECAUSE one labor faction insists upon absolute control and the other refuses to grant it. So the people, the innocent bystander, suffer, not only the businesses involved but all businesses, the entire community suffer because two rival labor cliques can't get along with each other. IF this measure did this alone, outlawed the jurisdictional labor dispute, we would be disposed to favor its passage, For as we see It, this is an abuse that must be eliminated, if there is to be any real peace, not only between business and labor, but within the ranks of labor itself, and without such peace anything approaching security and permanent prosperity an impossible. But there are other provisions which if reasonably inter preted are equally desirable, from the. standpoint of the public welfare, and those who doubt it have only to read the measure to become convinced of it. In short the essence of the bill is to place the PlllLlC welfare in this democracy above the SELF interest of any minority faetion,m this ease organized labor, and if that isn't a principle which it is time for the people of this state to uphold, then what ist VOTE 3 10, YES I - - standpoint of some agitated the measure AS A WHOLE. it. the measure, is not to deny a or more than, they will the Personal Health Service By William sinned letter, pertaining to pertoniU Health and hjilene. not to dlMaM dlaenns or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a lumped aelf addressed envelope li enclosed. Letter, should be Drier and written In Ink.' Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can ba answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady, 265 El Cam I no, Beverly Hills, Calif. STOUT WOMAN LOST FORTY AND AT The mother of three cdlldren, eld est aged 35 years, is 40 years old, 64 Inches tall and weight aa much as two mothers should weigh. She never has been skinny, she tells me. and she has dieted and diet ed with hardly any results. On ly by "leaving meats, fats, aug are and starches entirely alone" can she reduce appreciably and on such a regl men she cats soma reUef from aches or palna In the muscles and Joints, wnich she blithely ascribes to acidosis as sug gested by some doctor or near doctor she consulted when you and I were young, Maggie. Reminds me of my grandma, seems that when grandma, was a young girl she was examined by the famous Dr. Shattuck of Boston. And sure enough when I came home from medical school parading my stethoscope X tested grandma's lungs, failed to hear the breathing and won her admiration and) confidence from then on. "That boy knows as much ns he'll ever know," she assured mother, "Dr. 6hattuck of Boston told me 50 yeais ago that one of my lungs was gone." What puzzles me Is how the lady Uvea at all without "meats, fats, starches or sugars." Or doesn't she count the materials of that sort one gets In milk, vegetables, fruits, eggs, fish? You never know what a mis guided layman means when he talks about avoiding starches. As likely as not he merely ex cludes Yorkshire pudding and fried potatoes, as these seemed to bring on his doctor's uncle's attacks of colic. Picture this unhappy woman, as she describes it "rushing around doing all my own work, baking for others, doing club, church and Sun day school work, dieting faithfully and still not losing any weight. although the aching was not so bad "and receiving a letter from an old friend In another state, who tells about her phenomenal experi Communications Favors Transaction Tax BUI To the Editor: As the Citizens Retirement An nuity BUI Is an issue of considerable debate among the voters of the state of Oregon, and many of the read- era of your valued paper are inter ested either for or against the meas ure, I am offering you the following letter in favor of it. It la agreed by most business men that the soldiers bonus created a wave of prosperity while it lasted. The Citizen Retirement Annuity Bill X-314 wll put In circulation in Ore gon, each and every month, year in and year out, as much or more money than the soldiers bonus did. creating new buying power that will make a lasting wave of prosperity. If that is whnt the people of Oregon want, they will have the chance to expre-e their will at the polls In November. People who have made a study of the trantactiona tax with an open mind, aay that It is the fairest and most humane tax that we could have, aa every one pays according to th volume of business he does. u,a man sells a new car for $1000, he would pay 20 tax, and If another man old an old car for 20 he would pay 40 cents tax. which would be each one's share according to the volume of busi ness. This State Pension Bill X-314 Is a self supporting bill and able to stand on Its own feet, and Is so well thought out In detail that every loophole la closed to failure, a pay-as-you-go measure, if you ploiw. ft will give Jobs to those who want work at better pay, (pay checks are exempt from the tax) and at the same time provide a higher standard of living for all. It would create more buying power for EVERYBODY In Orecon, not Just a privileged few. Thus would paraperlty return to Oregon If the government maintains a Civil Sen-Ice Retirement Fund to provide for the Civil Service em ployees when they retire from active service, and no one disputes the wis dom of this plan, why not the peo ple of . Oregon in November simply extend this plan to all the people In our fair state that reach the age of 65? FVr the average cltlren of Oregon under the age of to a two per cent transaction tax is a very small prem ium to pay on an Insurance policy that pays such a large annuity at the age of 65 as the Cttlrent Re tirement Annuity BUI X-314 on your ballot. VOTE YES. L. F. ttOZTER, pet. aa, Medford Oreg-m Kd, Note: Aj this paper has point ed out even Dr. Townsend himself le. opposed lo the noove measure anl has urged his followers to vote agalntt It. The measure If passed will threaten the atate with . bankruptcy However, the Matt-Tribune in print ing the above follows out Its long established policy of giving all sides in a political campaign the right to be heard. Who ! I.noitej Noi? To the Editor: Of all the asinine editorial that have appeared m the Mall Tribune In the pa.u year, the one entitled AVhv Incrrase Expense?" ut the most asinine. H Is not only devoid of logic but the premises upon which the orgunif nt Is baed lend them vIvm to conclusion tn direct op position M thoe which the author of th- Aiiu-te hoped to convey to h;s rvadns. Lib Brady, M P. ence. Believe it or not, this friend wrote to Dr. Brady. got a copy of his booklet "New Design for Dwin dling, followed the simple, moder ate regimen described In detail therein, and from May 1 to Sep tember 1 reduced a cool 40 pounds, seemingly In the . easiest way our heroine has ever heard of. NoW all the heroine want to know Is whether there will be any serious after affects when -one loses aa fast as that, such after affects aa acidosis, which, she understands, la so commonly the case. I forget whether I mention aci dosis at all in the booklet but If I do It la probably only to suggest how certain features of the reduc tion regimen oppose or prevent it. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Granulated Eve lids What causes . and what can - be done to relieve granulated eyelids? Miss H. E. A. Answer Chronic red sore eyas and granular eyelids commonly spell trachoma in the south. That is a contagious eye Inflammation, which leads to blindness If not diag nosed and properly treated. Some times simple chronic Inflammation of lid linings gives a velvety appear ance which may be called "granu lated." This latter condition, how ever, Is annoying but not dangerous and has little influence on the sight. Whatever the trouble with the eyes, give yourself the benefit of the eye doctor's care. Migraine - . , Please explain migraine headache and symptoms? Mrs. O. B. R. Answer Send stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for monograph on Migraine Periodic Sick Headache. Twins Both Fertile Have heard only one twin can bear children. Mrs. D B. Answer Symposium on that pop ular myth here several years ago brought numerous letters from twin slaters both of whom had borne children. (Copyright 1938, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should tend letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 265 EI Cam I no. Beverly Hills, Calif. Wltnesseth The pavement on Med ford streets, laid within the past eight or ten years- which are losing their surfaces In chunks and for the repair of which a recent bond Issue waa voted upon. The Insinuation Is evident but the question arises as to whether or not an adequate salary would not have been more economical thai a program of resur facing. Altruism is no longer a qual ity of the mine-run of potty poli ticians but when compensation Is somewhere nearly equal to the effort, temptation becomes much leaa virile. The old axiom, "The laborer la worthy of his hire" is as true today as when it waa first spoken and good old common sense tells anyone that a wage of 30 cents an hour Is pro ductive only of ditch digging or PWA service. Why begrudge sincere men the wage somewhere near the compensation of their time and hon est endeavor? R. T. WILLIAMS. Medford, October 31. Man About Manhattan By GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK The five hour surge of "Hamlet" which asks the custom ers to be in their seats at 0:3 p. m. and remain there until u has a 30 mtnute intermis sion around 8:30 so that folk can rush out and grab off a snack. However, with so many to be cared for In the nearby cafes you are apt to miss your pie or the first scene of the' first post. dinner act, de pending on which direction your sympathies lie, The waiters Just oan't take that many orders. Therefore this hungry philosopher suggests: Have "your dinner before six-thirty and at intermission morely 1 WILLIS MAHONEY . ' ' DEMOCRATIC NOMINEE FOR U. S. SENATOR Speaks at a Meeting in the Hall over Baldwin Piano Shoppe 8:30 P. M. MONDAY KM ED 6:45 (Paid adr. Jaekton County refresh yourself with a soda or a cup of coffee. Then there's no hurry, no worry, no Impatient delay, no gulping food, no snarling at harassed wait resses, no sudden and violent cases of Indigestion, no anything but a pleasant Interlude and a breath at fresh air. Incidentally, this fl30 curtain call with a dinner Intermission Isn't ex actly a novelty o n Broadway. "Strange Interlude" began at 4:30 in the afternoon, with an hour's In termission for dinner and lasted It complete acts. Remember? There Is ft heart-tug in the sight of that blind musician who strolls past the theatres at night, playing his accordion. His name la Phil Gold farb, and for awhile last season he enjoyed a brief hour of fame. Various nightclub operators gave him spots in their shows, but the opulent daya, for him are gone, and he la back at hie old trade of serenading the passers by.. ; The late' George Gershwin was ft schoolmate of his back In adolescent daya on the Bast -side, and Goldfarb It was who Introduced Gershwin to the teacher who gave hlra his first music lesson. Gershwin never -forgot and always contributed gener ously while he lived. Other, who know , and have a fondness for the accordionist Include Irving Berlin, Bill Robinson, Cab Calloway, Walter Donaldson, Ted Friend and Zortna, All contribute half-dollars to the lit tle tin cup Golfarb carries. Visiting Callfornlans find New York little different from Hollywood these chlsp October daya, with so many film satellites In town. Roam ing mldtown you are apt to encoun ter Miriam Hopkins, Blng Crosby. Douglas Fairbanks, pare, Frank Capra, Robert Montgomery, Basil Rathbone, Glenda F a r r e 11, Sam Goldwyn, Groucho and Harpo Marx, Pat O'Brien George Raft and George Jessel. Crosby and his wife, the former Dixie Lee, have Just returned from Bermuda; Rathbone Is conducting Shakespearean classes at Columbia university; blond Miriam Hopkins la looking for a suitable play with which to make a Broadway comeback; Bob Montgomery la enroute to his up state farm; Groucho and Harpo are Just kibitzing-around; Raft Is vaca tioning, and so la Pat O'Brien. Oh, yea, Oarbo la here, or was. Outside of a surprise visit to the Rainbow Room, which so excited everybody that - the headwalter la still wide- eyed, nobody knows what Oarbo did. j except one person. This Is Bob Reud, ; and he alnt telling.. Stokowakl or no Stokowskl. Reud la Garbo'a only Intimate In New York. It's been that way ever since Maurice Stiller brought her over here a decade ago. Flight o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the (Ilea of the Mall Tribune 10 and 30 jean a eo. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY October 23, 1928 (It Waa Tuesday) Frosts kill gardens In the Sams Valley district. Three arrests believed to have broken up Ashland bootleg ring. Hoover lnvadea New York state. and la confident of victory over Al Smith, aa campaign waxes hot. Valley has shipped 4 cars of apples ao far this season. Democrats Install radio at head quarters to hear Al Smith's speeches. Vlrt ty coi tor Bursell, candidate for eoun- mmlssloner, will make a radio talk. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 28, 1018 (It Waa Wednesday) New British drive launched on the western front; new salient drive into Belgian; Allied advance has gained 38 miles In the last 07 days; British announces no colonies will be returned to Germany "under any circumstances when peace comes"; President Wilson delays reply to German peace offer until Allies are heard from; Allies plan all-winter drive egatnst Germans, and no peace until Berlin la reached. Another large mall Is received from France today, gladdening the friends and kin of soldiers overseas. Newa has been received In the city of the birth of an eight-pound daughter to Mr. and Mrs John Wilkinson at Portland last Sunday. They are former well known resi dents in Medford. Mayor Gates orders quarantine of all flu sufferers. SYDNEY (UP) This clty'a world famous harbor bridge which coat 50.000.000. showed an earning sur plus of 8387,973 last year after meet ing interest on the original cost, sinking fund' on the loan, depreci ation costs and all others. P. M. TUESDAY Democratic Central Committee) Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS ON the Oregon ballot at the No vember election, there will be two measures relating to old-age pensions. One of them (314-31) proposes ft two per cent transaction tax (what ever that la) the proceeds of which would be prorated among persons over 66 who have lived In Oregon at least, seven years. That Is to say, the proceeds of tht tax would be divided equally among ail persons qualified to receive pensions under the act, with payments limited to 9100 per jnonth. This bill has teeth in it. If adopt ed, It will apply to OREGON ONLY ft modification of the Townsend plan. What that would mean to Oregou was discussed In this column a few days ago. THE other measure (813-318) Is merely ft gesture. If adopted, It will direct the legislature to me morialize congress to call a conven tion to propose ft Townsend plan amendment to the United States con stitution. It la meaningless so far as direct results are concerned. THE Townsend plan, is applied- to tha nation as a whole, would be j Just another disappointing episode in ; the long series of promises of some- ! thing for nothing. It WOULDNT create prosperity. Prosperity is created only by PRO DUCING THINGS for hnman use. There Is no other way. Short cuts to prosperity are ALWAYS disappoint ing. The Townsend plan would merely take money from one population group and give It to another popu lation group to spend. The disadvan tages to ' those from whom It was taken would offset (so far as pros perity Is concerned) the advantages accruing to those to whom It was given. BUT, no matter whet might be the result of adoption of the Town send plan by the nation as e, whole. Its adoption (or some modification of It) by OREGON ALONE would be Immediately disastrous. The pyramiding cost of a transac tions tax (the process of pyramiding l was explained In this column recent ly) would drive buying OUT OF OREGON by raising prices drastically here and at the same time would handicap the sale of Oregon products In competitive markets. Oregon business, caught between these two millstones, would be crushed. ' WHATEVER the merits or the de merits of the Townsend plan on a NATIONAL SCALE may be, Its adaption by Oregon alone could not fall to be followed by ruinous re sults. Even Townsend himself admits that no state can go It alone. Call Mill Strike. ALBUQUERQUE. N. M.. Oct. 23. p) Approximately 4.000 workers In New Mexico's lumber manufacturing Industry have been ordered on strike Monday by the Sawmill and Lumber Workers union, an A. P. of L. affill rate. Union Representative John Mur ray announced today, f Son of a Policeman. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 23. V Federal Judge A. F. St. Sure granted Charles Wesley Black. 32. a week's continuance In which to obtain em ployment and poslble probation on a charge of counterfeiting nickels. Black said his father was a Seattle policeman. Q. f TOPAY 3 DAYS! I a Out of a Mighty Age (, --A Mighty Drama! S tUifrvii When the West was young XXZ&jfEST I .. and the Rule of Might JPw!aj was the ruthless law of O'Brien Presented By Music Club In Opening Concert The first of ft aeries of concert sponsored by the Medford Musjo club was given October 10 at th home of Mrs. Olen Fabrics:. Th organisation presented Tom O'Brien In an hour of piano music Young O'Brien has much to build upon. It la rare to find ft student who can bring out the organ-like tones of a Bach Chorale aa well &4 give a highly Intelligible perform ance of the technically difficult moderns Moussorgsky's "City Gate and de Falla's "Fire Dance." Too, his orchestral effects in the Sonata Tragic a of Mac Do we 11 gave an excellent display of thorough musicianship, and the left hand work In the Liszt Etude waa done with the ease and grace of ft veteran. Mr. O'Brien, now of Ashland, ta a pupil of Marie Elchenlamb of Portland, and Alton Jones of the Jul Hard school. Closing time for Too Late to Clas sify Ada la 1:30 p. m. Use Mall Tribune Want Ada. .. oiieviuici v, JINGLES 5 Copyrigbted Lotta work, putting on a Chevrolet show And, incidentally, it costs a lot of dough ! But when ALL our friends came in yesterday, And praised and praised our new Chevrolet, We felt it was worth all the time and cost, For we made MANY friends no old ones lost ! It just proves what we al ways have known That a Chevrolet is the ONLY car to own! Chevy M. Hurd Rogue River Chevrolet Main and Riverside Service Uept. 32 North Riverside Used Car Lot Riverside at 4th HEHTHmnn V. Cenvanlanf te lhaatrai, hopping and financial dit tritH . in th caMar of tha city' bwinaii d fecial activity, R.tat wHi bath. Iron $250 Htrry L Haathma Maaagai v 52(0 "TU ROSE CUTS'" jjSP A X,mttaar natt f4 naH helatt . . . L-Jf li K lota'axi tit Ida moH daliftbla f, (action f Portland. vj( I