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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1938)
PAGE RTX MEDFORD MAIL TT?TBTTNT!. MTDFORD. ORFiON, WEDNESDAY. DEPEMBER 7. 1338. RIBUNE "Everyone to Bnnt hem Oregon HmiIi lh. Mall Tribune." Dally Rvrrpt Hntnrdar. Publliihi by MEOFORD PBINTINfl CO. fl-IT-Sft No. Plr St. Phoo Tl ROBERT W. RIII1L. Editor. BRNE8T R. OILfiTIlAP, Uanir. Ad traeponrtint Newipapsr. Bntrd teon1-elaM matter at Md ford, Oregon, under Act of March I, 1S79. 8UHSCKI PTION RATES By Mall !n Advance: Dally and Sunday one year 18.00 i Pelt end Sunday eli month... 1.60 Daily and Sunday three monthe. 1.00 Daltv and Sunday one month 78 By Carrier In Advance Med ford, Ah. lend. Centre) Point. Jeckeonrllle. Gold HI II. Rogue River. Phoenlt. Talent, end on motor routee: Dally and Sunday one year If.oo Dally and Sunday one month 76 All terma canh In advance. OfHr-tttl I'nnfr of lh Tlly of Medford Orttrlnl I'anrr of Jnrkano County ftJKMIIKH OF TUB ANSOCIATKD I'ltKHH Krrrlvlrw Pull tnil Wire Hrrvlre. The Aaauctatrd Pren ( eicluelvaly en titled to the uee tor publication of H a awe dlenatchea eri-dltfd to It or other wise credited to thin pnpor, and aleo to the local neti puMlxhod herein. All rlghte for publication of epeolil dlapatnhNii herein ere alen raaarved. MRMIlKlf OK (INITKD PP.BSB fctRMHRFt mF AUDIT HURBAU OP CIRCULATIONS Ad wer tiling hepreventatlvee WEST HOUIDAY CMlTANY INC. Office In New York. Chicago. Detroit. Pan Pranclaco. Loa Ana-Hot, Seattle. Portland, St. Louie. A (lent a. Vancouver AA AHtkl Or0gewspaperbfj I 0 Association Ye Smudge Pot nv Arthur Perry James Roosevelt, son of the Presi dent, has been named vice -president of a movie concern at a reported alary of 150,000 per year, previously, the young man, at the ripe age of 81 years, dabbled In the Insurance business with magical and financial success, was a White Houso secre tary at a modest aio.ooa per annum, and without any previous military experience, was appointed a lieutenant-colonel in the marines. He seems to have the ability to land, and got nituatlons well in hand. When young Mr. Roosevelt starts going places, It i Is like a skyrocket. He Is living proof nf the wisdom of being around when Opportunity knocks. If his luck holds out, end he ever runs for President, he will land In the Whit House, without the formality of an election. . e e European observers predict Prance e-and Italy will be at war by spring. All e7ree it will take something more than "spring fever" to halt the ag gression. e Today is the 60th anniversary of Hank Bpllvers In the ding business. He works for Leon Hasklns, a boy who has only spent 38 years looking for liver pills, and finding the safety raror blades. e It's been more than a week since an expert proclaimed women are bet ter auto drivers than men. Aa yet no member of the fair so late to a bridge party, has run over a man, acreamed. and In the excitement barked up and broke his other leg. e e The state of Nebraska proposes to legalise alot-machlnes, and use the revenue to pay Old Age pensions. It would be better to give every person over 60. a slot machine, and let them operate their own gold mines, By the time the politicians get through Jabbing the contraptions with a screwdriver, the residue will hardly pay for the counting. e . A number of upstate sport scrib blers have started telling what their favorite hlfih school football team will do to opponents, In their march next fall to the mythical state title. They better be good when they play Eugene high. (Salem prognontlcators, please paste In your hut, for future reference.) e e e One of the hate styles for ladles la called the "Critique." Wearers think they are allque. e e e "Morals In this country are said to be imptovlng. Well, that's about the only thing left for them to do." (Rldgway Journal) Pert observa tion. e e e HHK WAS A III: KOINE (Pendleton East Oregmilnn) 'But the story Is that Mrs. .Stanford wns no quitter. She did without a cook, she sold her car riage and her horses, she rustled money by every device she could think of short of taking in wnh ing and Indicated a readiness to do that If nectMsnry. The lamp of learning at Palo Alto was kept burning and If Mrs, Stanford was not a hero, why not?" e e e A defeated Oregon candidate at the last election Is reported to have couriiKeomly declined a federal ap pointment. This la admirable re straint, and an outstanding display of will-power, for which editorial praise has been bestowed. The public should he given a pat on the back for rhoklng off the natural Impulse to shout: Ol Yrahl Now We'll tell one I e e e UpAtnte cHlwriB are now picking pussywillows in bloom, A valley resi dent reports he found a 1P39 rnlen dar yctterdny. Numrxukea (let Tinther OMAHA. Neb. (IIP) Marian Jean ne ttnrty. Omaha, saw Marian Jean ette "nrrte'e (Sewaul. Neb.) picture In the paper and a "-n pal" cor respondence bean. They have a mutual friend, Marian Jeitn Itarrie of Ravi Or., la. Prisoner ( on uprre SYDNEY, N-8 W. (UP) A wrong lab") enable prison is In a Brisbone gnnl to have a spree. A four-gallon tin labe'.ed "bftl.d I indeed oil" turned out to bo Apliits MEDFORDvsl Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining la personal heuliri and hrrjene. nut to disease diagnosis or treatment, will M answered bj Dr. Brad; U a stamped Kit addressed en t elope li enclosed Lettert ihould be brief and written In Ink uwlii to the larie number ol lettera received onlj a lew can be aniwered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 269 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. PEOPLE AR At present in this country any one who has a license to practice medicine may hold himself out as a surgeon or a specialist In any field h chooses, and unfortunately for the credulous public a great many doctors do just so. Various groups or societies of medical practi tioners have made faint h ear ted efforts to establish some sort of minimum requirements for physicians who seek lecognltton as specialists, but since there Is no force of law behind such arbitrary stan- dards they fall to bring about any appreciable Improvement In the situ atlon. Whatever I say about the practice of medicine, doctors, physicians, hcal- ers,appltes. I wish to emphasize, not to any particular "school" system or pathy but to all who hold themselves out as being able to diagnose, treat, operate or prescribe for any human ailment, Injury, deformity or phyalcnl condition. After all any one who Is not an utter Idiot knows that hcnlcr (of unidentified affiliation If nny) requires as great knowledge and skill to prescribe a change of diet or to administer antitoxin or to reduce a partial dislocation as he does to extirpate tonsils with diathermy or to treat diabetic coma. The "specialist" abuse, I fear, will grow worse and worse In almighty dollarland aa long as the chaotic and half-baked state and provincial hodge-podge of statutes "reguaUlng" practice remain In force. It la absurd that In these days of free and unlimited Intercourse and commerce between the states or prov inces' a henler qualified by training. experience and license to practice In this or Unit' state or province must go hat In hand and submit to a schoolboy examination at the hands of the politicians who control the graft when he elects to practice in srmn other state or province. The grnftera are the only Individuals who benefit from this quaint custom, so rar aa I can determine. Certainly the people at large can derive no benefit from it. For many years a national board of examiners with headquarters in Wash ington, D. C, has conducted exam inations and candidates who pass the national board examination are I Man About Manhattan By OKOROR TUCKER NEW YORK Quotations: "I fear I am an Inveterate ham and shall never be the conscientious Interpreter of Shakespeare that I should like to be." John Ololgud. "It Is always pretty difficult to make out what the critics want of Hamlet, even when they ex press lucidly what views they have on the sub ject . . . One actor d o e a n t satisfy them be ,vv cause, though they aaree he handles the role with sure Intel ligence, he ne glects to sacrifice h 1 a intellectual conception of the role of some other actor's cmoMonal conception. Another actor displeases them because he does the opposite And still another gets their bad notices because he dovetails the two. As my old editorial partner used to iwy, no wonder Hamlet Is crar.y." George Jean Nathan. "The greatest and most successful of Chinatown's tong chieftains was Fung Jlng Toy. better known as Little Pte He possessed many dia mond rtnRS. a doren handsomely en graved watches, and half a score of gold and platinum match-boxia set with diamonds and other precious atones. He changed hie Jewelry sev eral times daily and never wore the same ault. though he owned 40. two days In succession." Herbert Asbury. "I was once at a luncheon where the table napkins were double-Hided yellow satin damask about twelve Inches square, almost as thick as they were large, with the rwcult that the butlers spent most of their time picking them up from he floor to which they fell like lead. The Idea of wiping eg off one's mouth with satin la rather like scraping a flower pot with a lump of sugar which I believe la the standard wav of setting treth on edge " Mrs. Charles IaUKh ton. "He reached In. surrounded the pack (of clgnretteal with his hand slapped two fiiwers of his left hand on top of the pack (noisily and much harder than necessary until two dKarettea popped up. He extracted one nnd put It Into his mouth, He scratched a match and held It to the clcnrette and cocked his head far over to one side and took a deep Inhale. Enough smoke- to fill a bicycle tire came out nf his mouth and he nlew out the match. Whenever you see a man no throuch all this rou are looking at a man who has plentv of time on his hands "John O'Hura "If you study an animal carefully It will he cln to look like someone you know. That Is whv pets should never he named tntil after you be come thotmi.hIv fnmlltar lih their personam lea." Duke Street, Brady, M P. K CHII.DHEN now thereby qualified for license In more than forty states. If such a teat Is satisfactory for the fitness of heal ers to serve 05 of the population of the country, the army, the public health service and numerous others. why can't this or any equally thorough teat be set up for any and all healers to practice anywhere In America? QI ESTIONH A ANSWERS Rupture In Roy Grandson suffered from a rupture while at play. Last spring an excel lent physician saw him, advised In jection treatment. This was done, with absolutely perfect results. The boy, now 13, Is as strong and active as any youngster. (Mrs. E. L. M.) Answer Thank you. In the hands of a physician skilled In the tech nique the ambulant (Injection) treatment should be as successful in children as It Is In adults. Rutterutllk Has buttermtlk the same amount of calcium and phosphorus as grade B fresh milk? Has milk the tendency to lncrcaae a person's weight? (Mrs. R. O.) Answer Yes. practically the same. Each glass of whole fresh milk has about the same nutritive value as six small stewed prunes, or two thin slices of bread, or four teaspoons of sugar, or a medium size potato. Drops In Nose Please give your opinion of the as serted danger of using oil-base medi caments In the form of drops, in halants or sprays In the nasal pass ages, for treatment or relief of sinus trouble, catarrhal conditions, colds, etc. (BS.W.) Answer There Is some reason to doubt the safety of using such med icaments especially If the oil base Is mineral oil. Less reason to doubt it If the oil base Is a vegetable oil and hence, absorbable. Such med icaments should be used only under medical supervision In the case of a young Infant. Older children or adults may safely use oil -base drops. sprays. Inhalants, etc.. If tlie oil Is vegetable oil, not mineral oil. Min eral oil may collect In a mnss or lump which remains like any foreign body embedded or fixed in the tis sues. Copyright 1038: John P. Dllle Co. 3d. Note: Persons wishing to comnmnli-ate with Dr. Brady fhoiild tend letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D., 265 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Calif. "Ballet la neither Russian nor Eng lish nor Itallnn nor American nor anything It Is International. And the time will come when Its appeal will be as widespread aa the love for base ball, Its appeal as general as the corner movie" Catherine Llttle fleld. The sound effects accompanying Shep Field's rippling rhythms are achieved by blowing through a straw into a glass of water. sociatistis DENVER Swing and fancy dance have moved right up front in class rooms of western schools. At Denver and In several other eltle the Lambeth walk, the Big Apple and even some of the ultra fancy Jitterbug JIrs are taught as part of physical education courses. "They teach a student rhythm and the social graces and give him exer- tftes." saya Miss Ruth Johnson. Den- 1 ver high achool physical edueitlon i teacher. In Tulsa. Okla., even the grade schools have taken up the Latniieth walk. Miss Miriam Oray, teacher, says, "It's Just the thing." "The youngsters like It In tact, they love It." ahe aavs. "A few ooys called It "sissy stuff at first, but they soon got over that." The Denver high school physical education classes have all the ap pearance of a social hour. The classes are held In the school gymnasium and both boys and girls participate. The students, Lambeth walking to the music or a phonograph, toss In all tho sound effects and come down extra heavy on the "Ol " But Miss RUraheth Waterman of the Wlnnetka, 111., puMtc schools, who la teaching a special couise In rhythm. Is not In sympathy with the swing movement. "American like swing because they are lary," save Mlaa Waterman, au thor of several textbooks on rhythm. "It take leas efrort to react to a steady rhythm which beat Its way monotonously through a popular tune than It doea to follow the chancing rhythm of a concerto or symphony." . . WPI Force (toe FMilnR CANYON LAKE. Arl (UP r Add to WPA Jobs: A r Iron a Work Progress Administration employe have caught A3 tons of earn In aneeliit trim. iM thv hftv hMn Hi.td..4 recipient bv the Federal Surplus 1 commortlly corporation. Hunters bellf ve soma ot the mcun. tnln hears In vmldrn Nnrih o.rnMn. I v.me (trlrrlv etcvk was Imported Into the section 35 years ago. Not a tingle wolf remain In th pike national forent. on the slopes of Tike's peak, where they oik abounded, an animal ceiy tu reveals. NAVY USES TOYS' TO CHECK SPEED OF NEW VESSELS Tests With Models Accu rately Reveal Perform ance of Finished Craft Ship Designing Involved Br Alexander B. Oeorta AP Feature Writer. WASHINGTON Uttla boaU that loon Ilka toys ara playing tha first Important rola In the development ol Unci Sam's bigger tnd better fleet. Thesa boats are tiny modela of the Bupcr-dreadnaughts, the speedy cruisers and the giant airplane car riers which are to be built under the bllllon-dollar naval expansion program. Naval engineers at Washington's historic navy yard are making scien tific tests of the water "behavior" of these models In order to determine the performance possibilities of vari ous types of warship hulls, particu larly their frlctlonal and wave-making resistance. The undcr-watcr bodies of the model boats are exact small-scale representations of the proposed hulls for war vessels, their resistance to propulsion being relatively Identical with the resistance of the big ships. Hhow Power Needed The amount of pull required to move the little boats through the water at different speeds Is recorded by special Instruments. With these measurements, the engineers can de termine how much engine power a battleship with a similar hull will need to travel at varloue desired speeds. The tests, engineers say, have proved to be 99 per cent accurate as Indicators of actual performance. So, no naval vessel of consequence is constructed without testa at the experimental basin. A 40-ton carriage, a sort of travel ing crano which runs from one end to the other and tows a ship model at any speed desired up to 16 knots, has a dynamometer which registers the amount of pull required to pro pel the model at various speeds. Some modela are fitted with small propellers rotated by electric motors. Propeller performance Is studied with a view to developing the maximum I ship-driving efficiency. Speed Increases Resistance Friction between the skin ol a ship and the water Is the cause of nearly all the resistance to propulsion at low apoeds, The waves made by a ship traveling at low speeds set up practically no resistance but when tho speed Is Increased the resistance Increases rapidly. For example, the Leviathan had no wave-making re sistance at eight knots but at 38 knots that resistance was 85 per cent. In testing projected bnttleshlp hulls, naval engineers try out 30 or more different shaped bows, usually sev eral years ahead of actual designing. Some modela now being tested msy not be Incorporated In ship design for 10 years. Meanwhile, a new 3.50O.0OO model testing station for the navy la being built at Cardarock. Md., a few miles up the Potomac from Washington. Expected to be the finest plant of Its kind In the world. It will have four basins of varying dimensions. Just Nmall Drop Model boat testing is only a amall drop In the big bucket of naval planning. Building a 35,000-ton, 70, 000.000 battleship, crammed with In tricate machinery and bearing pon derous turrets and gigantic guns, calls for 70 separate preliminary de sign studies and requires from four to six years time. A drafting force of some 800 men Is necessary to develop and Issue about 8000 plans on detail designs. In addition. 8.000 more plans are developed by agencies outside the building yard. Pear Markets Yesterday NEW YORK. Dec. 8 (fi-(V 8. Dept. Agr.) Pears: 10 arrived. 8 Oregon unloaded, 63 on track, no auction. CHICAGO. Dec. 6 JV(U8 Dept. Agr.) Pears: No report. SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. StlpyVB Dept. Agr.) Potatoes: a California. 9 Ore (ton arrtved, 15 unbroken. 7 broken on track, by boat IS Califor nia, steady, prices unchanged. Cspt. John A. Sutter, on whose land gold was first discovered In California, died a poor man. Th United states has more miles of railroad than all European coun tries combined. CHILDREN'S COUGHS (due to colds) IVin't let distress of rheet colds or spas modic croupy couiths due to colds go untreated) Rub Children Musteroleon child's throat chest and hack at once. This milder form of regular Muaterole penetrate the surface skin, warms and stimulates local circulation. Floods the bronchial tube with Its aoothina. reliev ing vapors. Muaterole bring suehnpeedy relief because It's MORE thun 'just a ""J"" Kmmendec by many doctor fh.Mr-n'. m,IH, .H V, "7 Ti' " 1 ' ,OJr "oou "ou"IMlun ' Th Capital I ssV MA b I (Continued from rage One ) reproof to Oermany would have been greatly watered down. And the United States would have lost comparatively little face. The state department frankly admits that Wilson's reten tion In this country signifies a deter mination to back up the reproving gesture to the limit. That being so, there are only four ways out of the situation. (1) . After watting awhile, we can ignomlnously abandon our gesture, taking everything back, and return Wilson to Berlin without receiving any concessions from Germany. (2) . Germany can make some sort of concession or promise to be good, which would Justify the state depart ment In claiming a diplomatic victory and restoring Wilson to his post In triumph. (3) . Wilson can stay on indefinitely at the department, leaving the Berlin embassy without a directing head. (4) . We can follow our gesture up with another, perhaps threatening trade reprisals against Germany, or even a break In diplomatic relations. A study of these four ways out reveals the exceeding dellcaoy of our relations with the relch. Within the state department, it Is openly said that number one, or lgnomlnous sur render, can be ruled out. Apparently the president and the department arc determined not to submit to such a humiliation. That leaves numbers two. three and four. Number four, a worsening of German-American relations, cannot be Ignored as a possibility. The presi dent and his state department aides are anxious to awaken American public opinion to the seriousness of the German problem. They may be relied on to take as strong a line as they dare. But clearly the purpose of Wilson's recall was not to provoke German-American friction. Clearly, also, it was not to deprive the Berlin embassy of its chief figure. Thus, the search for the long-run Intention behind Wilson's recall narrows down to number a, the hope of German concessions. It's all but Inconceivable that the Nazis, suddenly accepting the rule of reason, will abandon their policy of racial savagery. It's equally incon ceivable that they will end their com mercial warfare against the United States, for they are prosecuting It more vigorously every day. They might, however, promise to facilitate Jewish Immigration, although even this seems very doubtful. And per haps the strong American gesture may strengthen the hands of the moderate element in the Nazi party. The choice Is not wide. The last possibility is the most interesting, in view of tho fact that Wilson Is known to have been questioned very closely, both by the president and state de partment officials, on the present predominance of Nazi extremists, it seems a pretty forlorn hope, but cer tainly this country and the world will gain time if the Nazi extremists are weakened by outside pressure. Mean while, the main thing to understand la that Wilson's recall can't help but be only the first event In a vastly significant sequence. MERRY CHRISTMAS FOR 365 A GIFT THAT IS BROUGHT TO THE FAMILY EVERY DAY FOR A WHOLE YEAR...! AND every member of the family will enjoy a particular section of your gift of the MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE! Qive iter the funnie., brother the port sheet, Dad the world news, and mother our information filled Woman's page! Yon can't give a more usable gift because a MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE subscription is many gifts in one, and it keeps on givine every day of the year. ' ' MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS ItTOTE this Italian talk of grabbing A v French colonies In Africa. It Is Interesting, T Indicates, for one thing, that 1 Mussolini has been watching his fellow gangster's methods, and la Impressed. Hitler has been running tall bluffs and raking In pots, and Mussolini la obviously wondering why he can't get away with It. NOTE, however, the French reac tion to the Italian scheme. A Paris dispatch says: "The French ambassador. In a three-quarter-hour talk with Italian Foreign Minister Geleazzo Clano, was understood to have aald In more or leas direct terms that French withdrawal in the Czechoslovak crisis last Septem ber was one thing but withdrawal from territory ruled by France was an entirely different matter." THAT la to say, France (along with Britain) Is ready to sacrifice EVERY CZECHOSLOVAK, if neces sary, in order to preserve the peace of the world, but isn't ready to sacrifice a SINOIJ: FRENCH ACRE. (Or do they call it hectare over there?) WHATEVER you do, DONT make the mistake of thinking that European diplomacy is ruled by con siderations of decency, such aa govern private business transactions. IT ISNT. It is utterly cold-blooded and selfish. This dispatch from Washington Is Interesting. "Representative Treadway (R. Massachusetts) aald today that Republicans In congress, not the Republican .national committee, will chart the party's course be tween now and the 1940 election. He added 'that course will have to be a liberal one'." ITtTHAT does he mean by "liberal?" W If he means equality before the law. so that EVERYBODY, big and little alike, will have as nearly equal opportunities for making a living aa It is possible to provide In this Im perfect world, this writer la for him heart and soul in the carrying out of his program. But If he means merely being liberal with other people's money, and spending this nation nearer to the edce of bankruptcy than It al ready Is, this writer wtll be AGAINST him. A maltreated word In our language. When politicians use It, they ought to be compelled to define it accu rately, i r: DAYS Flight o rime Med ford and Jackson County history from the files of (he Mall Tribune to and to yean TEN YEARS AGO. TODAY December 7, 192S (It Was Sunday) AJ Mlttelstadt Is elected master of the Eagle Point grange. Meeting held at Crescent Olty. to boost establishment of port there. County budget la adopted without a protest, and calls for the raising of 9673.735.33, an Increase of 163,735 over last year. High school athletes start basket ball practice. Med ford stores to close hereafter at :30 Saturdays. Navigation of Rogue river as far as O rants Pass planned. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY December 7, 1918 (It Was Sunday) Allied army of occupation reaches Rhine in march Into Germany. All citizens of city are ordered to wear masks to prevent spread of flu epidemic, and all public places of gathering are again ordered closed by Mayor Gates. Mrs. Ralph Woodord returns from an extended visit In Oakland, Calif. Boys warned to cease shooting air guns within city limits. Larger American navy to be sought as a means to enforce world peace. President Wilson to visit Rome dur ing his stay in Europe. 1 Sally Rand's Clothes Heavy SAN FRANXISCO (UP) Whatever Sally Rand may not wear on the stage she apparently makes up for by what she wears off the atage. Her clothes weighed 50 pounds over the maximum allowed on planes when she flew here for an engagement. 1 Okra 14 Feet Tall HAMMOND, La. (UP.) Joseph Boyd, farmer, grows okra that rivals the tall corn of Kansas In height. Boyd exhibited a stalk, of okra 14 feet long. He said he had to buy a special step ladder 16 feet high to clip the stalk of Its pods. . To I-eave 23-Year Job WOOSTER. O. (UP) L. C. Boles, who has held his Job longer thsn any other college coach In Ohio having piloted Wooster college's football teams for 23 years will resign after the 1939 season. His successor will be Johnny Swlgart, backfield coach. DR. A. J. LOEFFLER Physician and Sureeon 206 Fluhrer Bldg.. Medford. Office nours: 10-13. 2-5. Tel. Office 606 Res. 1787. REAL BARGAINS IN LUMBER while they last at BIG PINES LUMBER CO. PHONE 1. JU5T WHAT WE WANTED i Each gallon of sea water contains about one-fourth pound of salt. e Chevrolet JINGLES OopyngbtM I suppose the Ladies have their shopping done, Of course the men haven't even begun Christmas would be a flop If left to men When it comes to shopping, they haven't the yen! If it wasn't for 'suggestions' from the wives, Most men couldn't pick right to save their lives! But fellows, if you want ALL eyes to shine Buy the family one of those Chevrolets, of mine! Chevy M. Hard Rogue River Chevrolet Main and Riverside Service Dept. 33 North Riverside I'sed Car Lot Riverside at 4th ARTHRITIS Dear Sir: For fourteen years I auf fered from Arthritis. I took treat ments and medicines of all kinds, but they did not relieve my case in the least. At last the druggist recom mended Casey's Compound. I still had hopes of some day finding some thing that woxild cure me, after eight bottles. I was completely well. Sincerely. MRS. A. A. CURTHS. 333 North Ivy. Portland. Ore. At Western Thrift Store. 6TH AND FIR 5 'f T V