Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1933)
Page Four LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER. LA GRANDE. ORE. Friday, August 18, 1933 Incorporated) Independent Nmpapar Fnooa Mala 60 B. W. nUEDERICKS . . Publisher and Oeneral lluirw . BABOLO M. mUT . , Buauuss Manager Published eTenlnga, exception Sunday, at 1710 Sixth treat. La Orande, Oregon. ntered at tne PortoKle of La Orande, Oregon, ai Beoond Claae Uall Matter under act of March 2. 187S. (WFICIAL PAPER OP ONION OOUNTT AMD TEX CITY OP LA ORANDB imram OP ASSOCIATED PRESS Tba Associated Preae la exclualrel; entitled to use for publication of all new dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited If pub Uahed here. All right of republication of i pedal dltpatchet In tblt paper and alao the local nem herein also are resorted. national Advertising Bepreaentatlre M. a MOOENSEN CO. Inc. .. Ban Francisco, Los Angeles. Seattle, Portland, Chicago Detroit, Hew Tork . , SUBSCRIPTION BATES By Carrier Dally, one month In t""M Dairy, six months In advance Dally, single copy- 60 Dally, par month tn adrance By Man Dally, per sut months In advance Dally, per year la advance -to-00 The Weather OREGON FOKECAST Oregon: Purcl cloudy Umijlit uiid Saturday; showers war (lie. cuut cooler In EaAtrnt Oregon; iiiodrral chung ruble nimbi offshore. IMVAL WtAIIiKK TIiurMlay: mail mu in 9s, minimum 68 above, fartly cloudy.. Today: minimum 70, 7 tu m. ' above. Cloudy. In Washington orcii to RECOVERY'S BASIS One after another the industrial codes Washington and slipped into place; and as the framework of a new society is thus being erected, piece by piece, we who stand on the sidelines can only pray that the thing is going to work smoothly when it is finished. " ' Back of all the negotiations, arguments and nianeuverings which are producing these codes there looms one great fact Our economic system can survive in recognizable form only if the whole population of the country is kept pretty steadily at work at a living wage. It is recognition of this fact that has led an essentially conservative community to embark on an experiment which would have seemed, to most people, the height of radical folly as recently as a year ago. And it is only by keeping this fact constantly before our eyes that we shall be able to make a go of the program now being attempted. All of our fine t;dk about economics, co-operation, price levels and all the rest comes down to that, in the end. People have got to have jobs, and the jobs have got to pay them enough so that they can buy the things that they produce. Unless we find some way of accomplishing that, our eventual collapse seems certain. , ; r: 3 .l- i; i. n , vieweu in . uib ugni, ine administration s program - is. clearly the very essence of 'conservatism. Nothing less than what is "now being tried could have been attempted. The old system must le modified at least as greatly as the "flew deal" modifies it if it is to survive at all. A good many years ago Abraham Lincoln warned that the nation could not continue to exist half slave and half free. Both the compromisers and the die-hards tried to find a way of getting around that unpleasant truth, and the dis aster of the Civil War was the result. Today we are facing the fact that the nation cannot con tinue to exist half prosperous and half destitue. There! is one way out and only one; to provide jobs at decent wages,' to keep purchasing power level with production. j If we let ourselves get frightened by the experiment jve are making, or if we let rising prices fool us into the belief that times are going to correct themselves without rjur help, we shall be riding for a fall just as cataclysmic as the nation took in 1S61. Every day or two a new stoiy comes over the A. P. wires of another victory in the government's battle against kid napers, gangsters and like criminals. Uncle Sam is a persis tent cuss, at that, and so far his "shock troops" haven't been thrown for much of a loss. Bv Herbert Pluinmer . WASHINGTON Whatever others may say or think about A. V. Dalrym pie and his conduct as director of the nation's prohibition forces, the big major carries away with him documentary proof of loyal ooopenv tlon from the chief. Just before the prohibition bureau was merged with the bureau of In resttgaUon, Attorney General dim ming wrote him: "In certain quarters. I understand, It is aald there has been constant friction between us from the time of your appointment, and that I have been lrrttated by the manner in which you have discharged your du ties. "Nothing, of course, could be fur ther from the truth." Perhaps re cthrr -rT the new administration was the storm center as that of Ma)or Dal- rympK. His career as prohibition di rector here was brief but vivid. He had been In office only three weeis before he was the center of a controversy. Storm Center When It became noised about that brewing permits had been issued to eastern gangsters, the hurricane broke around his head. Things were compu cated further when it became known that he had shifted a Pacific coast administrator without foreknowledge of the attorney-general. Dalrymple became Irritated at what ha termed "silent madams" of his office. In a turbulent press confer. ence he dictated a statement thai fairly bristled. Then, flatly declining to answer any question about his ac tions since he had been director, he pounded his desk, and refused to say anything further. Immediately rumors that Dalrym- Die's days as prohibition director were numbered began to spread. It was also hinted mat he and Senator MoAdoo of California, who had advocated his appointment, had come to a parting of the ways. Speculation as to how long he would remain In office was increased by his appearance before the ways and means committee of the house in support of a bul that would legalise 11 per cent wine, while at this same time he expressed his opposition to the repeal of tiie eighteenth amend ment. , There have been many 'cas, o! prohibition crossing the Washington 5toe. Cramer, of Ohio, was the first. In the closing days of the Wilson ad ministration. Rot Harries, of Ohio was next. Then foUowed General An drews. Dr. Doran. Seymour Lowman. Mabel Walker Wlllebrandt and finally Col. Amos w. W. Woodcock, who went out when the new administration came In March 4. Carveth Wells, explorer, says there are fish in the Malay jungle swamps that can wink an eye. Possibly signifying "Tell us another." Tom Marshall wished for a good five-cent cigar. They must have had a good five-cent glass of beer in his dav. Before we start hanging kidnapers let's catch more. New Arrivals in Fall Coats We Bought Them Early and Saved You Monev $6.90 To $16.50 nne new all wool txxlies reflecting style, yet moderate in price. Luxurious fur tri'ms. Blacks and browns. C. J. BREIER CO. WILD HOUSES AKE WALKED INTO WLWKtNE-iS SAX AXGELO, Tex. 0F Forty bead of wild horses, on erf the last herds roaming Texas, are being 'walked down" on a ranch near For; McKavett. Relieved from Ume to time by co -hands, a boy walks continually after the animals, never permitting them to rest. The process, often a Ions one. continues until the wild horses are tired out and willing to submit to the halter. HE STILL HAS I'IKST SHIRT INGLEWOOD. Cal. oP Nicholas Trlvess, more than 60 years old. claims he still ha the first shirt he ever wore. It has been put on exhibit in the public library. Triress says it was made by his mother in London. KnclantV bacx in the sixties. You re In The A rmv Wt rmmm 6F awr". u tl fir TODAY INBRIEF,INAND AROUND OREGO AS CHBOSICLED BY TUB DAII.V LEASED W1BB OP IUE ASSOCIATED I'KESS BRIDGES GIVES Al'FHOVAI. SALEM. Aug. 18 Ifl - X M. Devers, state btKhwar commission attorney. will confer with C. C. Hockley, ol the Oregon public works committee, In Portland today on linanclng the five proposed Oregon coast highway brieves. Plans for -the Sluslaw river bridge were approved by the secretary of war today. SALMON" OITEB JLU1E ASTORIA, Aug. 18 t An offer to extend the current 4-cent a pound price for salmon until Aug. 21, and to continue that price to Aug. 25 If the quality of the catch does not drop, was made by packers here Thursday. Fishermen had demanded four cents until the end of the sea son. They said they would reier tne offer to a mass meeting iaaturaay night. ESCAPE FROM FLAMES SALEM, Aug. 18 P) The warn ing cries of a neighbor lady awakened Mrs. Margaret J. Martin and her son. Ralph, barely In time for them to escape from their burning home here last night. EUGENE MAX ARRESTED SALEM, Aug. 18 W) C. B. Had- ley. of Eugene, posted S100 ball here last night when charged with reckless driving. His car collided with a sedan driven by L. C. Denlson. of Salem, north of here. Mrs. Denlson suffered undeter mined Injuries to her side. guilty to a charge of falling to s and render assistance after an au mobile accident. On the night of July 17, y Hong, aged Chinese, was struck do and killed by a oai driven by Batt He was apprehended after a search local police. i Health disease conditions. In these disease Is. In a series of layers. conditions germs may play a role: Sometimes onlv one ston. k i so, also, may certain types of meta- j found in the gall-bladder, while In colic disturbances. (one case reported In medical litera ti Th nmh!fm nt lu fivm.tfnn tUTe. aS manV OX ldfWt email crm 'TVV' eallstones Is complicated by the fact j were recovered from one bladder. GALLSTONES - !'hal not all the stones are similar The disease eocdiuon In which I""" m Dr appear- stones form In the gall-bladder1 and ,cc' elsewhere In the bile-secreting svs-: KKM stones cave a large content em Is sAM to hare been first te- io1 calclum satta. SliU olnera contain scribed In the middle of the , four- mie P'sments and a TOrtety erf other ieenth century bT the ItalUn ohrsi- substances In combination. The clan. Gentile de Fohcno. t stones may be of a crystalline struc- j ates In However, gallstones h. ' l'urf 'ammatea form - that - 00C 000. ound in Eeyptiaa mummies, and no Fewer Illiterates In Argentina BUZXOS AIRES CP) On the fif tieth, anniversary of free public edu cation the minister of instruction re ported -to congress that -Argentimr now has fewer than 800,000 illiter- population exceeding 11,- BOX MAyrFAC-TfRERS MEET BAKER, Aug. 18 OP) Box manu facturers of the district comprising Eastern Oregon and Southern Idaho organized at a meeting here Thurs day for the purpose of more readily complying- - with the government's pogram under the National Recovery Act. The meeting was sponsored by the Inland Empire Box Manufac turers' association. A policing system will be set up by the local district headed by Gov ernor Webb Nock, of Baiter, to check compliance with the NRA code among lumbermen. HAS GOOD CHANCE TO LIVE PENDLETON. Ore.. Aug. 18 W Physicians said today that Mrs. James Doane, wounded in the right lung by a bullet allegedly fired by her husband, has an excellent chance of recovery. She was resting well at the hospital here. Police said Doane wounded his wife and then ended his own life by a bullet through the head. SENTENCED TO JAIL SALESt Aug.18 ti Everett Bat tles, local cigar store clerk, was sent enced to a year in Jail by Judge Mc . R. A. TEETH TO BE USED IF NECESSAK (Continued Prom Page One) automobile manufacturing code w a statement apparently directed least In part at Henry Ford that exceptions would be made in Its i ministration whether the manuf turers not concurring are small large. Without mentioning Ford by nai but with nls meaning pointed Ford's declination thus far to si scribe to the code presented by oth of the Industry, Johnson said: "It is a matter of regret that 1 Industry as represented here does i include 100 per cent of automob manufacturers; because, certain It that in the administration of this 1 and the distribution of the b eagle, no exception can be made favor of any manufacturer whetl his output be great or smalL "We shall execute this law as find it, without fear and without 1 vor." In addition to the absence of Ft from the list of manufacturers su porting the code, interest in the hea lng centered upon Ita labor provtslo declaring in favor of the open shop The code provides wages of 40 43 cents per hour for factory worke depending upon the population of t city in which they work. Maxlmu hours are stipulated as 48 in any o week with the average not to exce 35. Donald Richberg, counsel of the r covery administration, urged t; elimination of the "open shop" re erence from the code, saying It "mi be easily construed as the deolar tion of a policy of refusing to camp with the law." He said the explanation by t manufacturers gave assurance tit such was not the case, but he felt might not be so interpreted general He said Johnson thought it qui "proper" for the manufacturers assert a policy of retaining and tu rancing employes on a basis of ind vidual merit regardless of union a filiation, but that the "open sho clause should go out. He explained the national recovei law stipulates all codes must contal provision for collective bargalnir without interference by the employi and said that "no power is given I approve a code with, any attempt Mahan here today after pleading modification of the law. doubt the ancient physicians were I acquainted with the clinical picture j presented by this condition. I Gallstones are not confined to man. ' They are also found in animals, both domesticated and wild. They are rare the meat-eating species, but are fairly common in the large vegetable consuming animals. What causes the formation of gall stones is an old and still incomplete ly solved problem. One theory, which was advanced some 40 years ago. accounts for the formation of stones on the basis of bile stasis. By bile stasis is meant any condition which interferes with ;he movement in:o the intestinal tract of the bile secreted by the liver and passed through the gall-bladder and the bile-ducti. ThU theory has been somewhat modified in recent years. Gallstones, is believed, are formed when the btle-secreting system and bile-conveying channels are subjected to in flammatory and non-inflammatorv '"THUS new Pathfinder is a - bier value than the old Pathfinder. 1 1 has the bigger . safety margin of FI LL CEX ; TER TRACTION" bifiser mileage from the 2 PER ! CENT THICKER TREAD ; stouter body of hcat-reiisv-; Ing Superoilst Cord and I other tmproteroent that nuke It a atiU better buy than the 17,0,&O0 Path j finders that went before. Look at the All-Weather ralues, also! This great thor j oughbred the finest tire , that money can buy urates j an alluring price tag. Whlcherer you want : Pathfinder or AU-Weather remember this: More peo ple are taring money with Goodyearj than with any other kind. ' '(oy P a t S ft n (3 e'Fni Goodyear AILWealher SufXftit Cord Tim 4.40-21 S7.20 4.50-30 4.50-21 4.75-19 4.75-20 4.00-17 Otfctr titti trir4 7.60 7.90 S.40 $.65 $.55 FATLAND-SIMS CO. rhone 1C5 Ojxn 6 a. m. to 10 p. m. Ct wnwxl & Car Washing - Lubrication - Tire nepairingr )0 ij 3 t 1 c !0 Klj Jl Ti 1X1 n I m . i Adams ! v 0 1 ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY I 4.10-21 $55 4.50-20 6.1 4.50-21 6.: 4.75-19 6.70 rA vilVi, ...... Lr.. 1 ' All rH 0rrfr r X. ft When you, in your car, can notice the difference between gasolines, then that difference is worth talking about. We urge you to try the NEW "FLYING A" because you can clearly hear and feel the difference it makes in your car. It is the same type of difference you get with Ethyl gasoline. To the outstanding "FLYING A" we have added a new quality a recog nized anti-knock quality never before obtainable in non-premium gasolines. That's one reason why . . . mew FLYIN is SMOOTHER ad QUIETER than any other gasoline except Ethyl