4-
rOUH MEDfOHD MAIL THIBTJrT Mender, Oe. If. 1944
MDFORIvSWrEIBUNE
j lveryon In Southern Oreioa
Beads the Mtll Trtune'r
Dally Inapt Saturday
Published by
MEDrOHD PRINTING CO.
7.J9 North fir St. Phoiw 1141,
ROBERT W. RUHU Editor.
FINEST B. GILS TRAP. ManaeT.
An Independent Newspaper.
Entered u second elaee matte at
Aledlord, Oregon, under Act Of
Mori-h 3. 1878.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mall In Advance:
Daily end Sunday one year ,...; -J5
Dally end Sunday ilx monthi 4 00
Daily and Sunday three, moe. 110
Dally and Sunday one month.. .75
fcy Carrier In Advance Hertford,
Arhland, Central Point, Jackson;
villa, Gold Hill, Phoenix, Talent, and
on motor routes:
Dally and Sunday on year . 4 00
Daily and Sunday one month .70
All terms cash In advance.
Official Paper of the City ! Medfor4
oliiUal Paper of Jackson County
United Press Full Leased Wire
, MEMBER Or AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Representative
'EST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY, INC
fcrtlces In New York, Chlcalo, Da
f. lt, San Francisco. U Angeles. So
Ml Portland, St. Louis, Atlanta.
Vn nrotivcr. p. s..
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Ferry
The Vice President, who de
spite what happened to him it
the Hannegan shenannlgan in
Chicago, continues to be glut
ton for political punishment,,
and gay and seml-ldlotic notions.
Ke has seen the Fourth Term
candidate play poker "for small
ertqkes", and therefore, well
qualified to deal with the other
allied chiefs. There is nothing in
the record to indicate that Pre
miers Churchill or Stalin, or any
body else, in the presence of
Gov. Dewey, will kick any aces
off the bottom of the diplomatic
deck with their little finger,
e
"One local family has found a
Way to induce daughter to hang
up her clothes instead of step
ping out of them and leaving
them lying on the floor. The fam
ily bought a pup." (Great Bend
(Kan) Tribune) Tip for
mothers.
.
It must have been a sight for
the sore eyes of the peoples of
conquered lands to behold the
German civilians of Aachen,
come squawking In terror to
American lines no longer arro
gant and bullheaded and "Hell
In E' Hitler. As one war corres
pondent noted: They must have
ben the same people who cheer
ed when they saw the movies of
refugees fleeing before the con
entering Wermacht in Poland,
France and Greece."
e e
The bird hunting season open
ed with the traditional bang, in
the pleasant autumn meadows,
and the nent and modern kitch
ens of the Older Girls who balk
ed at their men cleaning C.
Pheasants and quail In their
kitchen sinks.
Gov. Brlcker of Ohio made a
treat Impression In his brief stop
here. He bears a slight resem
blance to Bill Brown of the E.
It. Browns, and has tha same
Colored hair.
e
"LOST One subscriber. Rea
lon: This paper Isn't supporting
FDR." (Siskiyou (Cal) News)
a The campaign gets routh.
e a
A 16-year-old boy won the
fctate Four-H club cooking con
test from seven girl finalists. The
press associations In their re
ports, for all their boasts of hell
faring efficiency In covering
the news, failed to reveal who
Wnshrd the dishes afterwards,
a a e
DON'T BELIEVE IT
(Household Hint)
"The sire of a handbag and
how it Is carried has some
thing to do with camouflage,
very often cutting the figure
and detracting from plump
curves. This has been one of
the reasons for the popularity
of the shoulder strap bag,
which has a tendency to add
height "
Berlin now admits tha death
ef Field Marshal Edwin Rommel.
He was listed as one of tho 'good'
Ccrmnns, and Is now a better
pne. He did not belong to the
Prussian mllltnry set, and often
disgusted that clique by a ten
dency to forget hlmselw and act
nd look human
e e e
YE ED. PUTS FOOT DOWN
"We do not know how often
" shall have to state that we
Y iU not give space to obituary
poetry. Nearly every death that
occurs In this neighborhood stirs
in some one the divine efflatus
tid forthwith they Insult clean,
white paper with the veriest rot.
devoid of sense devoid of meas
ure, and Imperfect of rhyme. We
will not willingly be a party to
taking advantage of tha dead.
Once more we reiterate we will
pot publish obituary poetry. We
do not want It, and respectfully
request that It be not sent to this
c'fice." (The Dalles Chronicle,
60 Yrs. Agj Col.)
LIKES BABIES
Boston (U.PJ When Seaman
Frank Cocchl heard baby cry
ing in a locked automobile, ha
mashed tha car's window, sal
vaged a milk bottle from the
back seat, and played nurse
tnnid for an hour until the in
fant's mother returned.
TheN. Y. Times Decision
After considering the matter pro and con for many
weeks the New York limes has finally come out for
the re-election of President Roosevelt.
We realize what rejoicing this will cause in Demo
cratic headquarters in New
-11 J il.. ti t
win spread over me nepuuncan neauquariera in me
same metropolis.
DUT following up the comments in this department
of yesterday, we doubt if this 11th hour decision
by the Times, influential
the result in New York state very materially, one way
or the other.
In the same way we would doubt if the Oregon
Journal had delayed its decision for F. D. R. until
four weeks before election, that decision would have
changed the result materially in this state.
In fact there are many
New York Times decision
decision to-wit:
"THROUGH the years both papers have been pre-
dominately Democratic. So other things being
equal Democratic support should be expected. Both
papers, four years ago, however, opposed a third term
and supported Wendell Willkie. Both papers now re
turn to their true love the Democratic fold, but with
many reservations.
The Journal was particularly critical of Roosevelt's
domestic policies, even advocating the election of a
Republican congress to nullify his 1944-1948 pro
gram, in case F. D. R. should win.
The Times, naturally, refuses to stultify itself to
that extent, but it does make the war and the Roose
velt foreign policy, its sole justification for advocat
ing a 4th term when it opposed a third one. And it
withdraws none of its criticisms of Roosevelt's domes
tic policies, which have continued in its columns for
nearly 8 consecutive years!
NOT only do we believe a vast majority of voters
in Maw Vnrlr ofofa hatm alrAQflu m o r. a nn ViA?r
minds as to the ticket they
switch can not effect them,
and no endorsement such
will with a great many of the voters, tend more to con
fuse than to convince. This will be especially true with
the war so nearly over in Europe and progressing so
favorably in the Far East. Why, many will ask, should
the Times favor 4 more years for Roosevelt when in
all likihood a majority of those years will be devoted
to policies and practices which the Times dislikes and
condemns?
MEVERTHELESS, from the standpoint of public
opinion and partly morale, and "talking points" for
New Deal broadcasters, this switch of the New York
Times will be very beneficial, giving the administra
tion table thumpers a considerable boost and discour
aging Republican campaigners considerably, espe
cially those of New York
board.
Four years ago, however,
the same boost to Mr. Willkie and the Republican
party and where did the
November?
The Times' support may
effective this year.
How About Newspapers?
There are two schools of thought regarding news
papers and politics.
One greatly overestimates their intluence, the
other, largely confined to radical left-wingers, greatly
underestimates it.
The truth, as so often remarked, lies about midway
between.
AS pointed out yesterday, as far as newspaper edi
torials are concerned, their influence has declined
greatly in the past 50 years. The chief reason is edi
torial readers have become more independent, more
enlightened, more discriminating.
The American people as
newspapers for their opinions, readymade, as was
tine in the days of Greeley and Dana, but for informa
tion upon which to base their own opinions.
f"N the other hand, because candidates for public
office, like William Randolph Hearst in New
York City with overwhelming newspaper support, has
never been able to get to first base politically, while
candidates like Franklin Delano Roosevelt always op
posed by a majority of the press, has broken all Amer
ican records for political success, it has become fash
ionable especially in the ultra-liberal ranks to pooh-
pooh newspaper support, and maintain they are all
controlled by Wall Street and the money interests any
way, and in this enlightened age, their support nine
times out of ten, is a liability rather than an asset.
This view, needless to say,
whangdoodle, composed largely of wishful thinking
and silly prejudice.
TTHE American press may
thing, but where there
may be influenced by the so-called big-money inter
ests; there are literally thousands, large, medium and
small, which are not influenced by anything, but their
honest, independent and public-spirited judgment.
IF that were not true, new..'pers would have been
thrown out of the American economy, years ago, for
as the wise Mr. Abraham Lincoln once remarked,
"you can fool all the people some of tho time, and
some of the people all the time, but not All the people
ALL the time.
And practically speaking all Americans today
iread newspapers 1
York City and what gloom
- i: l .1 . i. . . xT
as that paper is, will effect
similarities between this
and the Oregon Journal
will support, and the Times
but we also believe a "yes
as the paper now gives,
state and the Atlantic sea
the New York Times gave
latter get the following
well prove to be no more
a whole no longer go to
is a lot of unadulterated
be this, that or the other
is one newspaper which
News Behind
The News
By Paul Mallon
Washington, Oct. 18 labor's
anguish at falling to get another
wage increase out of the war
labor board
wui .lii. u' wai has been de
scrmea as ou
ter
It was an or
dinary, regula
tion bitterness
and re
strained. Labor
Leaders Green
and Murray
fulminated In
dignation. No
one got shot
and no general
strike was called.
Things are not always as they
seem. With a presidential elec-
tion day three weeks away they
are apt to become less and less
what they seem. I
a '
FOB some weeks prior to the
WLB report pleading insuffi
cient data to enable wage ac
tion, the best labor reporters
were able to write from Wash
ington ' that the Roosevelt co
terie thought another wage in
crease granted Just before elec
tion would be too raw. Indeed,
what could be gained by it, in
the way of votes, and even
wages is a secondary considera
tion to thiS-most vital electoral
matter here now.
The C. I. O. is already in Mr.
R.'s vest pocket, at least the
leaders are. The A. F. of L.
is fairly well split, but labor, as
such, is counted definitely for
Roosevelt. This is not enough
to win.
The votes of white - collar
workers, business people, farm
ers and others are those for
which he must campaign, the
ones he must lure. What better
appeal could be made than the
decision of WLB?
a
MY studied and Informed im
pression is that the wage in
crease now denied will be grant
ed after the coming election. I,
furthermore, have, sound and
full reason for believing the in
crease will not be 17 cents an
hour in the steel industry (labor
never really expected that), but
will be around half probably
7 or 8 cents.
I think the labor leaders deal
ing with Mr. Roosevelt on the
matter have for some weeks ex
pected this delayed conclusion
to their plea, whether they ob
tained their knowledge from a
wink and a nod, or a promise,
a a
pNE superficial phase of the
development betrayed some
genuine bitterness, but this was
possibly a personal rather than
a labor matter. The caustic pro-
est of labor's four members on
WLB was written by A. F. of
L.'s George Meany and signed
by the others.
What Mr. Meany thinks of
the majority decision against
him is only half what he thinks
of the board chairman, William
H. Davis.
Away back in the John L.
Lewis captive mine dispute with
the board, Mr. Meany was out
of town. An ardent supporter
of Lewis, he wanted to vote by
telephone, a customary consid
eration these boards privately
grant ordinarily. Davis refused
to let Meany record himself and.
although the story never got out
to the public, Mr. Meany has
overlooked no opportunity since
then to let his indignation run
concerning anything Davis docs,
a a
THE political fakery surfacing
the whole affair Is, in my
opinion, conclusively penetrated
and exposed by the failure of the
T
labor members of tho board to,'" su down; top feu atcera sis.is.
reslgn and blow up the whole
setup. If they do not get their
general wage Increase after elec
tion, you may be sure this is ex
actly what they will do. They
will mean their indignation then.
So also with the Petrlllo dem
onstration, refusing to accept
Mr. Roosevelt's request to allow
the two big recording com
panies to make musical records.
Why, Jim Petrlllo Is one of the
closest labor friends Mr. R. has.
He enjoys the run of the White
House as few do.
For Mr. Roosevelt's re-elec
tion he would do anything
even to rejecting a request. Also
he would even change his mind
Just before election, and in-
glorlously accede if that action
could make Mr. Roosevelt any
more votes.
This is politics, my friends,
not marbles.
NO SIDELINES FOR HIM
Rogers, Ark. UR K e 1 1 1 s
Frost served more than 31 vears1
In tha Rogers post office and re-1
tired recently. But today he was,
oacK at worn this time as a
railroad telegrapher. "There are
Just too many Jobs that need
filling," he said.
SENDS BACK PRISON OARB
Columbia. S. C U.P. Colum
bia city police were seeking a
man who might be dubbed "Most
Considerate Jail Breaker of
1944" an escapee from the cOy
chnln Buns' who snant 3H rents
to rxpress his prison g.irb back .
to the proper authorities. i
BRICKER
r.n.mnf John W. Brldter
Stales, Is greeted by Governor Earl Snell of Oregon at the Dewey-Brlcker '50.001 Club" In Port
land on October 12. Pictured with them is Mary Margaret Godfrey, director of the club's pub.
llcity. The organliaJion with 36 clubs throughout Oregon derives Us name from the number of "write
In" votes given Governor Thomas E. Dowey, now the Republican presidential nominee, in the Oregon
preferential primary last spring. Governor Bricker. bringing his campaign for the Republican ticket
to the Pacific eoaat, spoke in eight Oregon cities and towns on October 12 and 13. He made
addresses In Portland. Oregon City, Salem, Albany, Eugene, Roseburg. Grants Pass and Medford.
5,556 GIFT CANS
SEALED HERE FOR
Judging from the number of
tin cans sealed by the O.S.C.
extension office the men and
women overseas with our arm
ed forces will be well remem
bered at Christmas time. Miss
Marian Farrell, Jackson county
home demonstration agent, re
ports that 5,556 tin cans have
been distributed and sealed since
September 5. Of this number
1612 cans contained fruit cakes
baked by the Gates Groceteria.
Fruit cakes and candy were
the usual gifts, but many took
advantage of this opportunity to
send special delicacies and home
made favorites to friends and
relatives overseas.
According to Miss Farrell,
many requests have been made
to Continue this service so that
food sent in answer to requests
may be scaled. At the present
time no decision has been made
as to whether this will be pos
sible. Further announcement
will be made If such a service
Is to be offered in the future.
Persons now having cans may
bring them in for sealing, it was
stated.
It was only through the coop
eration of the Bagley Canning
company of Ashland in making
available extra tin cans that the
Extension Service was able to
rrteet the demand.
Livestock
Portland, Ore.. Oct. 18 (UP'
Livestock: Cattle. 3000: oalvea. 650;
alow, steady but many cows carrying
lower bids. Few hay fed ateera S13.-5
13 30: common-medium sraaaera
S12J0: hellers $8 4 11; eanner-cutter
cows S4 SO 8. Tat dairy type S7S7 30.
Good beef rons to SI. 30. Medium-Rood
hulls S8'!23. 30-lb. urass calves
S13; heavier wclehts down to Sll.
Good-choice vealcrs salable S13 1 14.
Hogs, ll-ion Active, steady. Ciood
choice iro.240 lbs. SIS 73: heavier
wctchts $13 down. Msht Hunts $14"
14 50 Good sows $13 30 3 13.73. Feeder
pies SI 3 50 14.
Sheep. 2000. Slow, steady. Good
choice wof.lod lambs $11.50. Shorn
Limbs $10 23 Til; common-medium
$u 10 Medium ewes $2 75. Good ewes
salable $3 3 25.
Chlcaro,
Oct. 18 (UP) (WFA)
Livestock
Hobs P. 000. Complete clearance
earlv; good and choice 130-240 lbs.
$14.75; heavier hoga and good and
choice sows $14.
Cattle. 20.000: calves. 1500. Grass
hulls 7"5.1 9 30 mostly; choice venl-
era tn $13 50: 4.000 western grassers
In crop, stockers and feeders. mosUy
$12 t 1.1.
Sheep. 8000. No early action on
western ranee lambs or ewes; few
C:ood and choice native slaughter
amba $14; some hald slijhUy higher.
Portland Produce
Portland. Oct. 18 (UP) Wholesale
m.irket list- .
Live poultry Buvlng prices rrom
producers: Leghorn hens 3'sc.
stnes 13c Ih.
Cabbage $3 crate.
Cauliflower No. 1 local $1 50 crate.
r..nls,.l I oca i at 50 flat
Lelluce Local 3 a No. 1 $3 33 3 SO
cra'e.
Potatoes Deschutes No t $3 20;
Yakima $3 20: Klamath Falls $3 42
cental No 2 $1 30 per 30-lh. bae
Squash Local Zucchinini 75 3 90c
box.
Tomatoes California $3 73 83 35
lu
Turnips Local $1 351140 doien
bunches.
Apples Crab apples 3e Ih.
Cranberries M. f arlane $7 35 7 80
Grapes California Tokay $3 40;
Mslacas $.1: Concord $1 15 1 25
Meats Hogs best butchers 19-30C:
vealcrs 31,c.
Chicago Wheat
rvc ..! $1
Oct 18 IT Wheat:
3'i $1 84 $1 S.l'i $1 t.Va
f'" - J ?; '!
sept. . it;, i.47ii i.4sa i 4fr.
S. r. DAIRY PRICES
San Francisco, Oct. 16 .UP
Dairy market:
Butter 93 score 43, 92 score!
4:v, PO score 42' 4, 89 score
. I
Cheese Wholesale prices.;
loaf 27.9, triplets 27.2. j
Eggs Large grade A J4Vj T
JJ5t medium trade A 46';
47s. small grade A :2 J23'3,
large grade B 37Vjd38la.
VISITS "50,001 CLUB''
minima ! imm ! ' "'
";. ;": t . WW
of Ohio, Republican nomine for
The Crossley Poll
Civilian Vote in Pivotal States
50 Roosevelt 50 Dewey
By Archibald M. Crossley
Results of the sample of ci
vilian voters in the 23 shlftable
states showed the two candi
dates evenly divided. These piv
otal states account for 295 elec
toral votes out of the 531 for
all states, 266 or one more
than half being necessary to
elect. In the 25 states unlikely
to shift, Roosevelt has 176 elec
toral votes and Dewey 60.
The Armed Services
These figures do not Include
the armed services vote, which
would make the ratio in pivotal
states approximately 51 per
cent Roosevelt to 49 per cent
Dewey. Estimates based upon
data now available Indicate that
the total United States vote of
the armed services will not ex
ceed 4,450,000, for which a
United States figure of 62 per
cent to 63 per cent Roosevelt
appears reasonable in the light
of preferences of civilians of
similar ages. It is unlikely that
the armed services vote will de
termine the winner in any state
which would otherwise go for
Roosevelt or for Dewey by a
margin of definitely over 51
per cent. The effect of that vote,
therefore, Is apt to be felt only
in a few states where the civil
Ian preference is for Dewey by
approximately 50 per cent to ap
proximately 51 per cent. Such
states may ultimately include
New York. New Jersey, Penn
sylvania, Illinois, Minnesota and
Oklahoma.
If the returns on election
night Indicate that Dewey's
civilian figure is running de
finitely less than 51 per cent
in any of these states, he is apt
to lose the state. If he is run
ning between 50.5 per cent and
51.5 per cent, it is possible that
the winner may not be known
until the full armed services
vote Is counted perhaps sev
eral weeks after election day,
depending on the Individual
state. The electoral votes of the
state of Pennsylvania, for ex
ample, might conceivably deter
mine the next president. In this
Wall Street
New York, Oct,. 16 (U.
Utilities shares extended last
week's advance to a further new
high since early 1940 but the rest
of the stock market today work
ed moderately lower. Trading
was slow.
The power and light section
has responded In recent sessions
to renewed Wall Street belief
that the Industry faces a bright
I li ,,!, ,H,t K ih.
' , .., ... . ,,
iru)iivri?iiii iiit'innns iiihi win
have to be solved by American
industry generally.
Spurring Interest In utility
shares generally has been the an
nouncement of a number of re
financing; programs by Indivi
dual companies headed by Com
monwealth Edison of Chicago
which next week will sell pub
licly a new $155,000,000 bond
Issue.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American Tel. tc Tel
Anaconda
Chrysler
Curtiss Wright
163H
27i
93
sn
38's
63 a
52
29".
44
loan
10s
30'n
36U
34i
94
3014
49
58
General Electric
General Mot rs
Montgomery Ward
Penn. R. R
Phillips Petroleum
J. C. Tenney
Radio
Southern Pacific
Standard Oil of Cal.
. ToxaJ G.,lf Su;pnur
Transanienca
United Aircrafts
U. S. Rubber
v. S. St el
lo c
ai
Cl.-...fi tlu.a tor eundsr too Lat
aaai: 3 30 SaturdAi aJwrDdOO i
asa mxemc-r.
vice-president of the United
state, final count of the armed
services vote takes place on
November 22. If Dewey should
win the civilian vote of this
state by 51 per cent, and if the
election hinges upon this state,
he might not know whether he
was elected or defeated until
November 22.
Sexes and Age Groups
Roosevelt's hold on the
younger voters in the pivotal
states seems secure. Those un
der 30 in the sample are for
him by 58 per cent, those 30 or
over are for Dewey by 53 per
cent. The younger voters not in
uniform, of course, are prepon
derantly women. For all age
groups, the women in the pivo
tal states appear to be very
slightly more for Roosevelt than
for Dewey.
Living-Standard Levels
The higher living-standard
levels in the pivotal states
sample are for Dewey by 67
per cent, the middle level also
for Dewey by 55 per cent, but
the lower groups are for Roose
velt by 57 per cent.
Special Groups
Sixty-one per cent of the
Negro votes in these states is
given to Roosevelt. In the so
called metropolitan areas of all
pivotal-state cities over 50,000
population (which include sub
urbs, nearby towns and some
sections not -thickly settled),
Roosevelt leads by 54 per cent.
In the smaller places and rural
areas Dewey leads by 59 per
cent.
These analyses are predicat
ed upon what the voters now
tell interviewers. What will
happen on November ,7 depends
upon the relative willingness of
these groups to go to their vot
ing places on election day.
Roosevelt should win if the
turnout is light among small
towns, rural sections, white-collar
and upper living-standard
levels and voters over 29, but
heavy among large cities, work
ers and labor organizations
particularly the C. I. O. and
younger voters.
S SOUGHT BY KIN
The parents of T'Sgt. Gerald
A. Devlin, formerly stationed at
Camp White and who was killed
In action in Italy last month, are
making an attempt to locate a
friend of tha sergeant who lived
in Medford when he was station
ed at the ramp here according
to the local Red Cross chpter.
In a letter to the Red Cross
Mr. and Mrs Bernard F. Devlin
stated that they would like to
contact the girl, known only to
them as "Virginia" The only
other clue given was the fact
that she had worked in a cafe.
Anyone knowing the young
woman Is asked to call Miss Lil
lian Roberts at 5919 during of
fice hours or at 2691 after 3 p. m.
The Devi Ins reside In Laird,
Colo.
Csa Mail Tribune Want Ada
WANTED
50 USED CARS
Medtord'j Larqcrt 8uyer
Pays Hiqhe$t Cash Price!
No Delayt.
"Ask the man who told one"
HUMPHREY MOTORS
USED CAR EXCHANGE
33 S. Riverside Dial 4980
Flight o Time
Medford and Jackson Co. His
tory from tha files of the Mall
Tribune 10. 20. and 34 jtfn
ago.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
October 16, 1934
0t Was Tuesday)
Typhoon hits Manila and
leaves thousands homeless.
First snow of year appears on
high hills.
Col. Lindbergh predicts trans
oceanic plane flights to come in
near future.
Early liberation of Alice Stoll,
kidnaped Kentucky woman, pre
dicted. Ransom money amount
ing to $50,000 paid last week.
Fair and frosty. High 60, low
28 degrees. Coldest night of fall
season.
Democrats tn esanty registra
tion gain 421 vo'avrs.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
October 18, 1924
(It Was Thursday)
The Shenadoah sails for S
attle from San Diego, and is us
ing the sea route, and will not
fly over this city as expected.
Chinese Reds lay waste to
Canton.
President Coolidge In address
advises foreign-born citizens to
be "true to America."
Cloudy, probable rain. High
50, low 45 degrees, precip. .58
of an inch.
Flocks of geese from the north
pass over city during the night,
and one honker is lost in lights
over business district.
Mrs. T. E. Daniels home from
a ten days visit i-i Portland.
Dangers of state workmen's
compensation act is told merch
ants. Divorce epidemic at Jackson
ville continues, with new filings.
THIRTY-FOUR YEARS AGO
October 18, 1910
at Was Sunday)
Day and night work on Espee
to have it ready for dedication
next Saturday.
S. Vilas Beckwith elected
president of new University
club.
Stanley Ketchel, middleweight
champion shot and killed by
Missouri farmer.
Walter Wellman starts flight
across Atlantic in balloon.
MUSIC SOOTHES PATIENTS
Chicago flJ.R) Dr. Mitchell
S. Corbett, a physician, Is a firm
believer in the soothing effects
of music. He and his assistants
treat from 300 to 400 patients a
day, many of them industrial
cases. Long waits in a doctor's
office, he claims, increase the
nervous tension of the patient,
so he ordered music piped to his
office from a service which sup
plies restaurants and night spots.
GOAT CHEWS CAR
Butler, Pa. (U.R) An irate
owner of a convertible coupe
sought municipal action against
hungry goats. While his car was
parked on the street, a goat ate
a hole In his canvas roof. Inves
tigating city officials found that
local ordinances do prohibit
goats on the street.
Comforts
As It Relieves Miseries of
CHILD
REN'S
Here's the modem treatment mat
young mothers now use to help relieve
muscular soreness, congestion and ir
ritation in upper bronchial tubes, and
cougning irom colas: you ti
ilst ruh
Vicks VaroRub on throat, chest and
tack at bedtime, and right awav.
VapoRub.
pgfieTMres
rniinnOTkmn,M.l
f tubes with Its special
medicinal vapors,
chest and back
V surfaces like
warming poultice.
For hours VapoRub keeps on working
and invites restful sleep. Often by
morning most of the misery of the
cold is gone. Remember this, Mother . ..
ONLY VAPORUB Gives You this
5pocu.l perrctratinfl-stirnulating action.
edy for relieving i I C K S
IMHIWIIIIUIirCIUir
miseries of colds.
VAaORUI
LOW
urciri v
iA llt.baM.1
1 RATES
fl AT
CRATER
HOTEL
Across From Craterian
Theatre Phone 4174
SINGLE. $4 50 to $6.
OOUBLE $7.S0 to $U
.iew Si n d osi Innar
'prlne Mattrei'ta Pre
SSow.r Clean Roomtl
aflaflfcl LTfeaft