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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1933)
Pare Eight LA GRANDE EVENING OKSERVER. LA GRANDE. ORE. Thursday, June 29, 1933 'J ( I !:if It 1 5 2 - . i ... ri i : 1 r 5 (UmpniM)' Aa Ifraepeadent Newipapw - piMM Mata too H. W. I1UEDEBICKS . . Publisher and General Manager HlBOtJI M. FDfLAT , . Bualneai Manager . PubUahed evening, exception Bund. at 1710 6Utt KM, La Oranda, Onfon. . .- . fetered at the PoetoHIc of La Grande. Oregon, u Second Claw Mall KiNa under act of March 3, 187. . . , . , . - OWICIAI. PAPER OP UNION COUNTY AMD THB , CITY Or LA GRANDE " MZMBEB OP ASSOCIATED PRESS .. . To Aatoclated Pre it exolualvtly entitled to oh for publication of ell cm dlapetcbe credited to It or not otuervtoe credited pan. tlhed here. All rlgtrte of republication of -apeolal dUpatcne la tola paper and alao the local new Herein alao are iiw iat ' ' National AdverUilng Bepresentatlv. It O. MOOEN8EN CO, Ino. Ban Prandaco, J Angeles, Seattle, Portland, Chicago r-r v.i ' - Detroit, Hew York .-. n - i . . , eUBSCRIPnON RATES Bj Carrier Bally, on month in advance Dallr, tlx month in Dally, alngl copy 7 60 aL60 Dally, par month In advance- By Mall . Dally, par u month in advance Dally, per year In advance MM .to .00 , ........ ADVERTISWa KATES Dlplay, foreign, per column Inch i , Dupiay, local, per column Inch . . 3c . 4c Time contract price on application MM In Washington By Herbert Flummer WASHINGTON Deciiton of Sen ator Bratton, of New Mexico, red haired and scholarly, to leave the aenate for a sent on the federal bench rather reveries the usua! tiling In thle respect. Judges In the past have shown a keen liking for getting into the sen-1 ate. And Bratton- decision to leave. 1 1 when hi present term 1 not up ua-1 iu ivil is rather strange. Glance down the list of a few of . thdae now In the senate who left high places on the bench for the 1 - ! Wagner, of New York. Is an out- j standing example. He was a Justice in t.ie appellate division of the su preme court of hi state when 00- I portunlty to run for the senate pre- Knwq iiseii.. He took it and has been enthusiastic In his new Job ever since. There have been reports that an effort was made to persuade him not to run lor reelection last No vember and that he turned the sug gestion down cold. President Greets Young Farmers ; The .peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall jfep'your hearts and minds through'Christ Jesus.--Philip-pians 4:7. ' f " ' ' " UNDERCONSUMPTION The commonest way of explaining America's industrial de pression is to say that the nation is suffering from1 great overproduction. This, as a technical explanation, is quite correct. But to accept it without looking 'into the thmirs Others Too There's Logan, of Kentucky, who was chief Justice of the highest court In his state when elected to the sen ate. Logan has Intimated that be 1 not particularly happy in the senate, but he la sticking on Just the same. George, of Georgia, was sitting on the Georgia supreme bench when he resigned to run for a seat In the senate. King, of Utah, and Hastings, of Delaware, were both state supreme court Justices before they became senators. In going to the bench. However. Bratton Is returning to an old love He resigned nine years ago as Jus tice of the New Mexico supreme court to come to the senate. P 1 " r'-rfo - S .. .Mmubsi-i 1 ..Viif g , , Mtlb 2.. OSXA 7? .Jt&x2" Marie Dressier And May Robson Closest Friends HOLLYWOOD One of Holly wood's oldest mutual admiration so cieties 1 composed of Marie Dressier and May Bobson, Marie says nice things about May. and May ''Muzzle May" to hundreds of stage folks who have known her during her nearly 50 years of troup- ing say It would take day to say all tne nice things she thinks abou Mane. Just 30 year they've been close friends. The stage treated May per haps more kindly than It did Marie. In May's 50 years she has never been idle a season. There were times when Mane thought she was done for "washed up." as Hollywood put It. Buxom Marie's conquest of the talkies has made history, and the vogue she set for screen character actors has made May's path to trt umph perhaps a little easier. Three thousand members of the Futnre Farmers of America, a national organization of boys studying vocational agriculture, called on President Roosevelt when they were in Washington. The presi dent is pictured above as he addressed the group, which held a three-day convention in the capital. Incidentally, President Roosevelt's 1 MOTHS LIKE Kl'G SPOTS; selection of Bratton for a high place xo Hl.'IiE'S THE REMEDY on the federal bench again lias rc-j If lukewarm water doesn't remove vived speculation as to probable lu-1 those rug spots that the moths like . .1..., , ,u WJe unites ouiwo; so wen, dampen a cloth with carbon iup.iino cuurv during his admlnls- tetrachloride and rub them out this trBtlon- I way. Always put a thick cloth under Senator Joe Robinson, of Arkar-sas,! the part of the rug you are cleaning. Is frequently mentioned In such con- j and let the air get at It when dry vcrsatlons. ing. Coffee stains are the hardest Pour of the supreme court Justices ' of all to remove and lukewarm water that lis hnr-lr nf If. .' in mlt. on t !.! Wl V.Uf.; t !f! '..i" T: Ji " here than ... ..v. ..j ,vi,uvu jfivtuic vla tMiiufi, tr, aicKcynoias, 71; other clea the day's most pressing problem. Technically, of coui-se, we are overproduced. We can make more automobiles, electric refrigerators, steel rails, rocking chairs, electric light bulbs, shoes,' auto tires,' plows and what-not than we can possibly sell.1 In that sense; 'we ' are! up against overproduction in a very real and unpleasant way.i But there is another side to if another' rlame; for 'this1 problem. If, instead of calling it ovei-production, we call it underconsumption, that other side becomes' clear; and it also becomes evident that the traditional' method of solving the problem is very much out of date, " . " ' ' We may be making more of all of these things than we can sell but we are not making more of them than we need, and we shall not be for a long, long time. Not until every citizen has all that he needs of this multitude of goods shall we truly have overproduction. '' " During the last few years Iowa and Kansas farmers have had to burn corn and wheat while city workers have gone Hungry; and the same farmers have had to drive suneran niiated cars and wear wornout shoes while the city auto and shoe factories have been idle for want of orders. On everv hand we have had millions of 'people needing all sorts of commodities very badly ; but because they have operated at a tourth or a fifth of normal capacity. The administration's industrial control bill is designed to get around this trouble by gearing production directly to cunsumpiion. in tne long run, however, this will not do much good if it simply prevents industry from producing more than can be sold. It must increase consumption it must, that is to say, raise the 'general' purchasing: power of ine nation ir it is to got us out of our difficulty. Let the ordinary man get his hands on 'enough money to buy the things he needs and we shall have a broad and en during prosperity. We shall not have tb talk' about over production for many, many years to come. ' ' ' Sutherland. 71 and Van Devantcr. 74. ' 1 he president might have oppor tunity to exert a wide influence on the court through his power of ap pointment before his administration cornea to a close. ; With a population of about 41 per sons to the square mile, tills country would get along fine If all were as ruare as the mile. . cleaning substance. Dry with a clean cloth. ... TOWN PLANS PUBLIC WORK MONROE. Mich. W) Pour acres of marsh land along the river Raisin will be used for a sewage disposal plant by the Monroe city commission as part of a 4S5.000 project. The commission has authorized the first ptirt of the work with the expecta tion of increasing employment. AFRICAN ELDERS FORCE BOY TO KILL HIMSELF NAIROBI. Kenya Seven elders of the Maxtdi tribe have been sentenced to niton fr oounselllns and aicUng a 14-year-old boy to commit suicide. The boy was throwing a pointed stick as a spear at a tree when It glanced off and killed a playmate. Unable to pay "blood money," a council of elders decreed that he commit suicide. The boy fled but was I recaptured and taken to a forest, handed a rope and told to put It arourvd his neck and then climb a! tree and Jump. 'He obeyed "f1 hang ed himself.. 'Sold' On Movies "Isn't It wonderful?" beams Mane, praising the movies,' not her part in them. "It used to be a specter and a nightmare to all of us on the stage: what would happen to us when we got 'too old"? Now the movies have answered the question. We Just come to Hollywood. We know they can't get along without ua," she adds, eyes twinkling slijy. Marie was In costume, the rough sea-farlng outfit of "Tugboat Annie." May, at another studio, was In cos tume too. By coincidence she's "Ap ple Annie," star of "Madame La Gimp." Neither May nor Marie has any thought of quitting work. it was Marie who persuaded May to sign with M-G-M. May was hesi tating, but Mane said. "Go ahead. May; dont be a fool!" May tells that. She tells also, when an executive comes up to compliment her on her ' work, what Marie said to her, Marie said: "May. if you dont make a hit In thst part, I'm going to brain you and hang you. That's what I'm go ing to do!" "I'll tell Mane what you said." says May happily to the executive. Marie And The ftules Of an evening Mane and May of-1 ten play cards together. Double soil-. taire. nimasy and Marie's trying to teach May backgammon. May admits she hasn't as good a head for cards as Mario. And h-h-hl she has a grievance against her old friend. "I'd say It If she were sitting right here," expostulates May, "but I do believe Marie makes her own rules!" i Health I CALCIL'.M IN TUB DIET Prof. H. O. Sherman, as long ago as 1011. called attention to the fact that the average American dietary Is deficient In calcium. Twenty-two years later he again states that "probably a larger pro portion of the ordinary dietaries, both of adults and of children, can he Im proved by enrichment In calcium than in any one chemical element." In substantiation of his statement, there are the results of a study mado of the dietary histories of more than 4.000 patients In the New York !hos pltal. Only two out of the 4,000 showed an adequato Intake of cal cium. .... Professor eberman took a number of rats thriving on what Is consider ed an adequate uniform diet. He added to this diet milk and vitamin G. I He noted that in these rats there was a more rapid and efficient growth, a lower death rate, a higher vitality at all ages, and an increase of 10 per cent In the average longevl- j ty of adults. There was a greater extension of the prime of life among these ani mals. In that maturity was expedited and senility was deferred. Dr. Alice R. Bernhelm, of Cornell university, writing recently on "Cal cium Need and Calcium Utilization," suggests that the long-lived Bulgar ian of Metcbnlkoff fame, who were thought to own their longevity to tne bacillus acidophilus, may perhaps owe their long life to their diet, which, being composed of sour milk and sour cabbage, provides sufficient calcium, , under conditions promoting proper absorption. . While Sherman's experiments wen conducted with animals (rats), and while it is not possible ordinarily to apply to results of animal experimen tation directly and in full measure 13 humans, nevertheless the results gained In these experiments aro so prominent that It la safe to draw from them the general conclusion that an adequato supply of calcium Is essential to good health. Red Cross Drug Store nswjfF Curtains . j(SM$ WtjB and Drapes UM'sfi Witt Retain ODORLESS CLEANERS 1107 Washington Main 701 DROWNS OX nONEYMOON SCROON LAKE, N. Y. L. H. Ger ber, 24. lost his hold on an over turned canoe and drowned Just after begging rescuers to save his bride of a few days first. , - ICE .Clear - Solid - Cold v Natural Ice "Our Own Product Residence Deliveries Our Specialty YOUNG'S ICE CO. 1505 S Ave. . rh. Main 801 "THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE I'OIt QUALITY" PUT ONE OF THESE NEW BETTY LOU CHIFFON I3IG BILLS STILL OUT - The extent of hoarding throughout the country has been indicated by an incident in Cleveland, Ohio, recounted by Atlee Pomercne, fonner chairman of the Construction Fin ance Corporation. Mr. Pomercne says that at a single baseball game, the box office received $10,01)0 of the big old dollar bills. It is a mutter of record that no such bills have been passed out by banks in more than two years. The same thing has been observed in La Grande on a smaller scale. Every now and then a local merchant takes in one of the mammoth bank notes which has been carefully saved by some citizen. v U. S. CREDIT GOOD The dire prophecies of those who maintained that aban donment of the gold standard would destroy confidence in i,ne uniiea Mates government and ruin its credit have been amply answered by the outcome' of the recent offering 0f 51)00,000,000 in notes and certificates. The government received subscriptions of ?r,6r0,000,000. Five year notes, bearing two and seven-eights per cent in terest were oversubscribed more' than six times. The ? KH), 000,000 in three and one-fourth per cent nine-months certi ficates were over-subscribed nearly six times. ' 1 mtitlih u I 'ill 0 owl M1 ; I f kM! h'1'! jj a Voile 25 Frocks in Your Bag They Arrived Yesterday and Are Only 1.95 1 Af any rate the Japs justify their cluustisement of China on the ground that they are making the Far East safe for the Japs. . Every community has a few citizens willing to make an extra five per 'cent regardless of ethics, hard times or any thing else. ' There aro two classes of people in the world. Sonie believe anything and others believe nothing. The way to succeed is to work hard and give value received lor the money you get. ' - v J. 2 St-4 ' it af i &" isf e t s mm 5 I I .rl,-.n T.b.rc. Xt;,FJ pleasure of smoking Luckies When I first had a desire to smoke, I knew exactly where to start. You sec, for years I had heard all the men in the family saying "Luckies Pleasc".Thcy said it was "Toasting" that made Luckies so good. I've never questioned the reason because I have always found Luckies so fragrant, so mild and (perhaps a man will smile at this) so pure to my hps! I can smoke lots and lots of them and still find them refreshing to the taste. Now I'm telling my brothers "Luckies Please", and each of them says, "You're telling me?" "Qa Truly a beautiful selection short and long sleeves clever collar and sleeve details cool pastel florals, dots, stripes and plaids, They look much more ex pensive. LADIES' RIDING BREECHES $3.50 att'rrtIveatir1PCOr1 LADIES' JODPHURS $3.95 0 0 o Take Along Some Sun-Tan Pajamas $1.25 The ideal garment to loaf in in plain colors and attractive print designs. AH oitt-a vu cuuuse num. "Buy Now Prices Are Advancing-" le tomtcd. came