THE REGISTER-GUARD
EDITORIAL PAGE OF
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
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Inportanaa lo aa community, andaavoring fo ba candid out
(atr and hatsaul tka oaralapeMnt of aoutnictlva com
a unity policy.
HAZING MEDICAL PROFESSION
Indictment of ranking officers of the
American Medical Association and three
medical societies in the District of Colum
bia for alleged violations of the anti-trust
laws amounts to hazing the medical pro
fession. It is a procedure which will not set
tle any of the problems involved in the con
troversies over state medicine, cooperative
medicine and private medicine, but it is
rather typical of the sophomoric zeal of
those ardent leftists who have been direct
ing the latest phases of the New Deal.
Even though it must be admitted that
the doctors have brought much trouble on
themselves, the sins of the few do not war
rant this effort to rouse prejudice against
the entire profession. On the whole the hu
manitarian services of the medical profes
sion outweigh by far all those sins which
may be termed "commercialism."
Furthermore, here and in many other
parts of the country, the doctors themselves
are making many experiments in the di
rection of cooperative health service. And
experience has shown that such enterprises
must be approached with a large measure
of caution. It is not protecting health or
helping those of limited means if standards
are lowered.
In Oregon, it has required considerable
alertness and effort to prevent the gypping
of the public by purely commercial organi
zations pretending to offer group service
at cut rates. There is a point beyond which
rates cannot be cut without either subject
ing the patient to treatment by doctors of
Inferior ability or lowering the standards
of hospital care and these practices are very
' dangerous. .
In those countries which have tried
"state medicine," it has been found that
there are quite as many problems as in free
practice. State medicine involves all of the
troubles which we have found under con
tract medicine and more. Laws cannot be
made to set aside the human fact that the
relationship of healer and patient is or
should be a personal matter.
The problem in this country today is
beat expressed In the statement that except
for the very well to do or the very poor the
beet In medical service is "beyond means."
Doctor themselves recognize this problem,
hope earnestly to find the answer. Maybe
it will be found in the larger endowment
or public support of hospitals and clinics, or
In forms of group practice which do not
eliminate the personal relationship.
The answer will not be found in pub
licity prosecutions. The greatest sin of the
A.M.A. is that It has not come freely to the
public with its problems. It has chased
ethical rainbows instead of dealing boldly
with that minority which tears down the
good will earned by the thousands of con
scientious self-sacrificing practioners.
$600,000 additional steam plant. It is still
a very conservative bite into the net profits
of the water and light systems which earned
last year a net of approximately $333,000,
It will not jeopardize the program of bond
retirement nor will it retard the policy of
building cash reserve to replace obsolete
plant and equipment.
That the move is a by-product of the re
cent campaign is reasonably clear. Even
the $5,000 reduction in city rates shows an
unbending in the Water- Board's attitude
toward the city government, but the distri
bution of the lion's share of the "dividend"
to the water and power uses indicates the
desire to perserve the position that first
duty is to the consumers.
The issue of some fixed annual payment
in lieu of taxes remains definitely unsettled.
The Water Board still has leeway in case it
encounters taxing legislation in the legislature.
WASHINGTON LETTER
By JOHN T. FLYNN
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
The principle of incentive taxation now being
discussed by a Senate committee is almost as old
as the government. Tariff legislation is, of course,
incentive taxation. It is taxation imposed in sucn
a way as to encourage production.
But a more direct type of Incentive taxation
is in effect in New York State and New York
City now. As far back as 1921 the City of New
York, under a state statute, passed a tax exemp
tion law to encourage new building. At that time
residence building had come to a standstill. The
city was faced with an acute housing shortage.
But labor rates and "labor rackets, material prices
and material rackets and contractor agreements
had tied the building business in such a knot that
building ceased.
Kesults Came Hurrying
To encourage building the city exempted from
taxation for a period of 10 years the improve
ments in the case of any dwelling structure to the
extent of $5000 per dwelling unit. The effect on
home building was immediate. The day following
the passage of that tax exempt law the builders
lined up in droves with their plans before all the
building offices of the city to file their blue
prints. The city went off on such a flight of house
and apartment building as it had never seen
before.
The law was far from a perfect law. It was
not passed, to stimulate business but to get the
city out of the most serious housing jam it had
ever known.
Later that law was amended and improved
several times so as to limit the tax benefits to
low-cost tenements and then only for limited divi
dend corporations. But the law is still in exist
ence.
The idea, of course, is to extend this plan to
other lines of industry. The New York tax exemp
tion law amounted to a 2 per cent subsidy for
10 years and made a considerable difference, of
course, in the cost of the house.
One may well doubt if the tax exempt law
would have done so much if at the same time
Samuel Untermyer had not broken up the labor
and contractor rings that strangled the building
business.
Three Kinds of Tax Contemplated
One idea proposed now for all Industry is to
divide the federal taxes into three grades nor
mal, surtax and super-surtax. The normal and
surtax taxes would apply to all. But the super
surtaxes would be subject to numerous deductions
for the purpose of encouraging manufacturers and
builders to engage in new enterprises.
Like the building business in New York, it may
well be questioned whether tax relief would do
the trick unless many other adjustments were
made. And then there is always the question
whether a tax exemption on one group of enter
prises would not be a tax penalty on all others
who have to compete.
(Copyright, 1038, NEA Service, Inc.)
WATER BOARD'S DIVIDEND
Very timely and also very interesting is
the Eugene Water Board's decision to make
cuts in power and rate cuts which will save
consumers $76,500 in the coming year. The
detail of how these cuts will be applied to
the various classes of consumers, household,
commercial and industrial, has not been an
nounced but the city government is to re
ceive reductions which will approximate
$5,000 this year.
The Water Board evidently is moving to
forestall the possibility of being included in
the plans to tax municipal utilities and
utility districts which will come before the
Oregon legislature. The Bonneville Federa
tion, which J. D. Ross is guiding, has draft
ed a bill which includes among other things
provision that public utility districts shall
pay 5 per cent of gross earnings in lieu of
taxes as is required in TV A and many
Mher operations. There are other measures
which will seek a reapportionment of the
taxes which privately owned utilities pay
in order to give urban districts a larger
share of the revenues now going to rural
districts where plants are located and the
legislature's Interim committee has con
sidered bringing municipals into line with
this program.
The Water Board's $76,500 rate reduction
is more than twice the $30,000 which would
have been involved in the defeated charter
amendment to require the Water Board to
take over the function of street lighting
and municipal power and water supply.
This Is interesting mainly in view of the
campaign cry that the $30,000 concession to
taxpayers would have made it necessary
to raise rates.
The $76,500 rate cut is made possible by
the decision to buy peak load power from
Bonneville rather than proceed with a
AN EDITORIAL ON HEALTH
By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN
Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association,
and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine
The New York State Department of Labor has
given special consideration to carbon monoxide
poisoning, and has issued the following advice to
be adopted when difficulties occur:
(1) Keep windows open as much as possible.
(2) Do not permit the engine to run and dis
charge exhaust gas directly into the air of the
work-room. Every workroom should have a
flexible tube which can be attached to the ex
haust pipe, and through which the exhaust gas
may be carried outdoors.
(3) Remember that carbon monoxide gas has
no smell. You cannot, therefore, know If carbon
monoxide gas is in the air by the smell of the
room or by cloudiness of the atmosphere.
(4) If you suffer with headaches, report the
fact at once so that the air conditions may be in
vestigated, and proper ventilation established.
(5) If you do not feel well, sec a doctor at
once. You may be particularly sensitive to carbon
monoxide gas, more so than the others. In that
case you had better change your occupation. It
is not safe for you to be exposed to even very
small amounts of the gas.
Do nnt linrrv nrrtnnH nnnnra;Garilu at vaiik
work. The more exercise you take, the more car-
Don monoxide gas will get into your blood.
If one of your comrades faints, get him out
into the fresh air at once. Put blankets under
and over him, and surround him with hot water
bottles or hot bricks. Keep him warm at all
costs or he may develop pneumonia. Persons
who become asphyxiated with carbon monoxide
gas are peculiarly susceptible to pneumonia. Call
the gas company and an ambulance at once. You
must always call both of these, because ambu
lances are not equipped with resuscitation ap
paratus. In the meantime the patient should be
given artificial respiration by what is known as
(he 'Manual" or "Schaefrr" method.
Everyone working in industries where there
is a possibility of exposure to carbon monoxide
gas should be familiar with this method of re
suscitation. It is easily carried out. Anyone
can learn how to do it. He may thus by his
knowledge be able to save someone's life.
If the Schaefer method of artificial respiration
does not produce results, it is now a standard
procedure to administer, together with the arti
ficial respiration, a mixture of oxygen and small
quantities of carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide
stimulates the brain center associated with breath
ing and the oxygen will help to displace the
carbon monoxide from Its combination with the
i-ed coloring matter of the blood and thus give
the tissues of the body opportunity to recover.
Four Former
Members. Are
Guests at Event
By MARIAN LOWRY
Q SOCIAL meeting was held by
the Spinsters club Tuesday
evening, Miss Madalena Giustina,
president of the group, being the
hostess. Twenty attended.
Hour former members were
guests, Miss Marian Morse, Miss
Brandon Young, who has been in
San Francisco studying harp, Miss
Gale Buchanan, home from Palo
Alto for the holidays, and Miss
Elizabeth Ann DeBusk.
Misses Jean Taylor and Phyllis
Atwater were hostesses with Miss
Giustina for the meeting.
Miss Janet Hall will entertain
the group of January' 10. ' '
HOME FOR HOLIDAYS
Mrs. Roberta Spicer Moffitt,
who has been studying cello under
Miss Miriam Little at the Univer
sity of Idaho at Moscow, has re
turned to Eugene to spend the
holidays with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. F. M. Spicer.
a
TO ENTERTAIN GROUPS
Mrs. Foster Burnett will enter
tain for her card club at a Christ
mas party Thursday afternoon
Additional guests will be Mrs.
Henry H. Norton, Mrs. Milo Mar-
latt, and Mrs. Keith Fennell.
On Friday evening, Dr. and
Mrs. Burnett will entertain for
their supper club.
a
CLASS MEETS
The monthly business and social
meeting of the Marie Fletcher class
of the First Baptist church was
held Tuesday evening at the River
Road clubhouse, with forty-four
members present. Included on the
program were a solo by Mr. Ban
ton, a reading by Mrs. Clark
Devereaux, and pictures and a talk
on her trip to Norway by Miss
Doris Hansen. An exchange of
Christmas gifts was held.
a
MRS. READE SPEAKS
The Matrons' Guild of Central
Presbyterian church met Tuesday
afternoon in the church chapel.
Mrs. J. F. Reade talked on her trip
to the Holy Land. Miss Ruth
Sprecher and Joe Keever sang a
duet and Mrs. E. A. Stacks led
devotions.
a a
CHRISTMAS PARTY
The annual Christmas party of
the Women's Alliance of the Com
munity Liberal church was held
Tuesday afternoon at the Osburn
hotel. Christmas carols were sung,
with Miss Wanda Eastwood accom
panying on the violin. Miss Arlene
Soasey sang a solo. After the pro
gram, tea was served and gifts dis
tributed. Mrs. Harry Woodhouse
and Mrs. Belle Lydick were hos
tesses.
a a
R. N. A. EVENT
The Christmas entertainment of
Royal Neighbors of America was
given Tuesday evening, with the
Juveniles of the group presenting
the program. Mrs. Frank Hyland
was in charge of the children's
work. About one hundred fifty
members attended.
a a
WIN PRIZES
Mrs. Harry C. Farley and Mrs.
Alice Goepferd won prizes at the
card party held by Women of
Moose Tuesday afternoon. About
twenty women attended. At the
next party, January 3, Mrs. George
Simon will be hostess.
a a a
AUXILIARY EVENT
A Christmas party with exchange
of gifts was held by the V. F. W.
auxiliary at the home of Mrs. Rose
Summerville Tuesday afternoon.
The business meeting of the auxil
iary will be January 3.
a a
CAROLING PARTY
A caroling party will be held by
Theta Rho Girls and Junior Odd
Fellows Thursday evening. The
group will meet at the home of
Miss Erma Miller, 1571 High street,
and after the caroling, will return
to her home for refreshments.
a a
DINNER PLANNED
A covered dish dinner will be
held by the Genevieve Turnipseed
class of Central Presbyterian
church Thursday at six-thirty in
the chapel. The evening will be
spent filling sacks with Christmas
candy.
MR., MRS. TERRY
HONORED ON ANNIVERSARY
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Terry wore
honored Saturday evening on the
occasion of their first wedding
anniversary at a party given by
Mr. and Mrs. George Terry.
Entertainment was furnished by
Lee Potter.
Among guests invited were Mr.
and Mrs. Arleigh Powers and Mr.
and Mrs. Cleve Powers and son
of Monroe; Avery Powers, Mrs.
Sarah Powers of Junction City,
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Potter of As
toria; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Knox,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rabenan.
Miss Elsie Putnam, Mr. H. Jones.
James Dorr of Springfield: Mrs.
A. Stou and Waller Stou of Philo
math; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Terry,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Terry, Mr.
and Mrs. Edwin Terry, Mrs. A.
w. urumwell, Mrs. Earl G.
Biumwell, Misses Irene and Al-
verra Terry and Frank Rood of
Eugene.
C.Y.O. SKATING PARTY
TO BE WEDNESDAY
The Catholic youth organiza
tion is sponsoring a skating party,
Wednesday evening. The group
will leave the parish house at
seven-thirty o'clock. Following
skating, the group will return to
the parish house lor refreshments.
. . 1 . '""J11'
CLUB HAS SOCIAL : MEETINQ ON
V
HOMEMADE stuffed dates belong in the. "folksy" Christmas gifts
that carry on the good neighbor policy- at this time of year. Use
as many different stuffings as you can think of, and package your
dates gayly and if possible, in useful containers'.
Many Children
Attend Annual
Party of Group
piFTY-FIVE children were guests
for the annual Christmas party
given by the American Legion
auxiliary Tuesday evening at the
Moose hall. The auxiliary gives the
event each year for children of
members of the Legion and auxil
iary.
An unusually beautiful Christ'
mas tree was set up by the com
mittee for the party, Santa Claus
called to give treats to all. The
auxiliary members also provided
treats for the thirty-seven mem
bers In the Girl Scouts troop they
sponsor.
For the program, Charles Gran-
zer and Dorothy Bruhn played
harp duets; a 'cello quintet played,
including John McGree, Tommy
Tugman, Billy Hall, Donald Talbot
and Edgar DeCou; and the Merrick
dance studios presented a tap dance
number. Games were played.
On the committee for the party
were Mrs. J. P. Schimberg, Mrs.
W. B. Card, Mrs. O. H. Ford, Mrs.
W W Wnttera Mrs. T.nlii Rnrn
Mrl. Myrl Garnett, and Mrs. E. D.
Lake.
Calendar
Today's Recipes
(By NEA Service)
pLUM PUDDING puts the merry
in iu lamids lu many (jcupie.
Whether it comes in flaming and
pungent, or is followed by a bowl
of special fruit sauce, Its the tra
ditional finale to the family
Christmas dinner. - .
Plum Pudding Delight -
Two and one-half cups seedless
raisins, 2 cups cooked prunes, IVi
cups cut citron. cup cut pre
served orange peel, 1 cup sliced
candied cherries, 1 cup coarsely
chopped walnut meats, cup
plum nectar, 1V4 cups ( pound)
butter, Vi cups granulated sugar,
4 eggs, 1 tablespoon vanilla extract,
2 cups soft white bread crumbs,
3'a cups sifted all-purpose flour, 1
teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon salt, 3
teaspoons cinnamon, 1 teaspoon
cloves, 1 teaspoon nutmeg, 1 tea
spoon ginger.
Rinse and dram raisins. Cut
prunes from pits in small pieces.
Rinse citron, orange peel and
cherries; drain and dry on a towel
before cutting. Combine fruits,
citron, peel and nuts. Add nectar
and stir to blend. Let stand while
preparing' batter. Cream butter,
add sugar, and cream thoroughly.
Add beaten eggs and flavoring and
stir to blend. Add bread crumbs
and flour, sifted with soda, salt and
spices, and mix. Add fruit mix
ture and stir until fruit is well
distributed.
Pour into greased pudding molds,
cover and steam. Sufficient for one
2-quart and one 1-quart mold or
three 1-quart molds. Two-quart
moid will require approximately
4 hours steaming; one-quart molds
2V4 to hours. Test puddings
for completion with a cake tester
pick before removing from steam
er. Allow puddings to cool uncov
ered in molds or serve hot. They
may be reheated.
Serve flaming with brandy or
nectar sauce.
Nectar Sauce
(Makes approximately Wt pints)
Three-quarter cup plum nectar.
3 tablespoons lemon juice, 3 table
spoons cornstarch, 1-8 teaspoon
salt, 14 cup butter, 4 cups confec-
uoner s sugar, 1 egg white.
Combine nectar. lemon juice.
cornstarch and salt, and stir to
blend thoroughly. Bring to a boil
and cook, stirring until very thick.
Cool but do not chill. Cream but
ter, stir sugar into butter slowly,
!fii(a"t:ct
Shirts & Ties
5
S Men's ROBERTSON'S Wear
L61 E. Broadway Eugene j
MftMMiMMiMiMiMiMiMt!
Wednesday
7:15 p. m. Frances Willard
P.-T. A. meets at the school
house. 7:30 p. m. Dessert of Past
Matrons of Willamette Court
of the Amaranth with Mrs.
Oren C. Davis.
8 p. m. Artisan's Christmas
party at Moose hall.
8 p. m. Card party of Wo
men of Moose at Moose hall.
8 p. m. Rebekahs meet in
I. O. O. F. temple.
8 p. m. Christmas party of
Central Presbyterian choir
with Mrs. E. E. WyatU
Thursday
6:30 p. m. Dinner of Gene
vieve Turnipseed class at Cen
tral Presbyterian church.
7:30 p. m. Caroling party
of Theta Rho Girls and Junior
Odd Fellows.
alternately with slightly beaten
egg white. Fold cooled nectar
mixture into butter and sugar
mixture. Serve over steamed pud
ding. Apricot or peach nectar may
be substituted for the plum nectar
in this sauce.
Guild Meeting ,
St. Clare Guild of St. Mary's
Episcopal church met for a Christ
mas party at the parish hall,
Tuesday evening. .There was a
Christmas tree with exchange of
gifts. For the program, the dra
matic group from the Business
and Professional Women's club
presented . a skit and Miss Lois
Greenwood read the play, "How
Come Christmas" by Bradford.
Hostesses for the meeting were
Mrs. Milo Glassman, Mrs. Henry
H. Norton, Miss Lois Greenwood,
and Miss Grace Griggs. The next
meeting will be on the second
Monday of January.
He Streaked
Into Her Heart
Sally would never forget
that first moment when
she saw Dan Reynolds,
a dark figure poised high
above her head, next a
lightning streak, skim
ming down the trail of
the slick, steep slope
toward her. Actually, that
moment Dan streaked
into her heart, but Sally
was to learn that love
does not come so easily
without a price. Her
story is revealed in the
romantic new serial
Beginning
Wed., Dec. 28
Register-Guard
Kotillion Club
Dance Attended
By Large Group
JOTILLION club's Christmas
dance was an event of Tues
day evening at the Eugene hotel,
forty couples attending.- On the
committee for the party were: Dr.
and Mrs. Samuel H. Tyler, Mr. and
Mrs. A. R. Chaffee, Mr. and Mrs.
Damon Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Don
ald Moore, Mr. and Mrs. A. V.
Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W.
Moore.
A dinner dance Is being planned
for January, and on the committee
will be Mr. and Mrs. Elisha Large,
Dr. and Mrs. J. F. Cramer, Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Dutton, Mr. and Mrs.
C. A. Barnes, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Stalsberf, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
runaier.
ESS SEE CLUB
PARTY HELD MONDAY
SANTA CLARA. Dec. 21. (Soe
elal) The annual Christmas party
of the-Santa Clara Ess See club
was held Monday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. S. S. George with a
dinner at six-thirty o'clock. After
dinner bridge was played, honors
going to Mrs. C. D. Chezem, George
Phillips, Mrs. Fred Dotson, C. P.
Hart and Mrs. Archie Meyers. The
following program was given:
Recitation, Veneta Chezem; piano
duet, fctnei Hart and Jo Dotson
skit, Ed Hart, Vivian Meyers, Harry
caaore and George Phillips: music,
harp, kazoo and bells, Clinton
Chezem, Vesta Shaffner, Paul Wei
ser and Fred Dotson; skit, Alice
George, Preston Hart and Hal Dob
son; Christmas carols, Cora Phil
lips, Hazel Dobson, Archie Meyers
and Arthur Shaffner; recitation,
Florence Hart, introducing Santa
Claus in the person of Elsa Cadore,
Gifts were exchanged. Lastly, each
wrote a letter to Santa Claus, the
letters being shuffled, redrawn and
read. Enjoying this party were Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Weiser, Mr. and Mrs.
C. P. Hart, Mr., and Mrs. Arthur
Shsffner, Mr. and - Mrs. S. S.
George, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dotson,
Dr. and Mrs. H. C. Dobson, Mr. and
Mrs. C. D. Chezem, Mr. and Mrs.
George Phillips, Mr. and Mrs. H. L.
Cadore, Mr. and Mrs. E. C Hart,
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Meyers and
Mrs. Rebecca Watson.
BUSINESS VISITOR
SPRINGFIELD, Dec. 21. (Spe
cial) Arnold Acheson of Donna
was a business visitor In Spring,
field Wednesday.
All-Church Supns,
.Planned By Sf
ne next ill.ri,i.
per of h. pi " '"Pit e.I
Pal church Kr'H
j January 19. t Th5l
the business' lZl!T 3
men's Union t..-?. J" ? wj
Division two will h. L rH
table setting J n,.!
of making the coffes KkSH
Division four vm Zl-'i
ity commits ti,. e
ary sietyeUng"1
the mornin. tw. d
day table at the un
were Mrs. M. Y W.
Mrs. Snnhi. u..... .. frtel
Parker. Mrs. r,'lS.r'!'M
R. Sweetser M . mS m1
hue, Mrs. N. ri
Martha Drum, and
Mr,. Louis E. BeaiT prH
sone servira u. k.u
leading devotions. M Tt A
NaUvi,y.MrE.V,2l
Danied h, Mr. p n f' ,cc4
a solo. Miss MaA, v r.i
u, were given hr a
v sion secrat.H.. m .-1?.4
mond reported on the'reil.l'3
r
Bethel Pupils To Give
Christmas Program
BETHEL. Dv 91c..m,
The P.-T. A. of Bethel kU
wm sponsor a Christmu jJ
ffram and tri.a Th,,Mi n
beginning at 8 nVlivV Tk. i3
grade pupils will present uJ
w..., ooiims vacation, ipj
the UDber srsda nuniu n .71
vide the music. Mrs. rioiaj
Bennett and Miss Violet Bleco
quist are in charge of the JJ
nlu ijci&n rain,
me singing.
Operetta Is Planned
By Danebo Pupils
An operetta, "Ths End of &
Santa Claus Trail," will be pn
sented by the pupils of the Dot
bo school Thursday at t p. i
The teachers. Marguerite Vtal
slid and Irene Chapman, in dii
recting. Dorothy Stump will pn
sent the opening number, lis
between the acts will be pn
vided by Evelyn Berntzen, aid
quartet composed of VioU Wiei
Genevieve Garoutte, Rojersai!
zen, and Robert Larsen,
ha.
The New
"CART WRIGHTS"
Are In 1
For Your Holidares !
Swiihy taffeta, swirling net, or JZ
for gala evenings. Brilliantly designed afterowu
dresses for important informality, exclusive with us,
STYLES FOR AFTERNOON AND EVENING
1Q75 22.75 29.75
Ay Arrive,,
Dresses ttoUdoV
7.95 to 22-75.
STORE OPEN UNTIL 8:30 P. M.
THURS. AND FRL EVENINGS
So That You May
"Present with Pride -a Kaufman Gift