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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1925)
tA(fh FIVE nFOPJ MATL TftlBTTNE. MEDFORD. PREPPS; THURSDAY, JULY 30, -1625- LOFH. CQDBT SAYS BORAH Idaho Chief Would Quit Sen ate Before Voting for Plan to Allow Eleven Men to Dis pense.. Justipe. to World Address at Boise, CANCER STitL TREMEROOUS PERIL. 1H VICTORY FAR OFF EVEN IF CAUSE AND CURE HAVE BEEN FOUND, EXPERT WARNS BOISE,. Idaho, July 30. A more ambitious and presumptions effort to establish Judicial despotism was never conceived than the International court operating under the league of nations, which America is being urged to join, Senator Borah told BolBe laborers at a meeting ,au the Labor temple here last night. The chairman or the foreign relations committee of the senate said he felt so strongly on the matter that "if I , had to tender my resignation In the senate or vote for thlt court as It now stands, It wouldn't take me one minute tq resign. "I believe'- this court Is dangerous. The men urging .it are not telling you the "truth" sbout It. If they were I would leave It to the , people for, a vote without opening my mouth. "I do not want it thought that I am opposed to a world court in general. I have been advocating a court for several years.. A world court could be, created which it would be safe for us to join, and which would help pro mote .the' cause of. peace.. 1 do not Intend -to bring up changes in the present, plan - when It comes before the senate I mean the plan of joining the league's court with the Harding HngheB reservations. "Labor .feels that courts should not make their own laws. Some courts now establish principles of law in the statutes,. It Is planned to create a court to render decisions while oper ating under no' law.. ''In the proposed court you do not elect the judges, you cannot recall them, you cannot appeal from their decisions. ' This is practically judicial . despotism. Here would be eleven men, the judicial body of the world, who may render decisions with no law to govern them. A . more ambi tious and presumptlous effort to es tablish Judicial despotism was. never conceived!" ' ' By Margery VK'kunl. , Central I'ress Correspondent. NEW YORK. July Just what is there to the cancer discovery of Dr. Willla.ri E. Oyo and J. E. Barnard, Britishers, hnve made? What does It amount to? ' Does it mean that mankind is . ut last to h liberated from this, now greatest of , all scourges? A group of New York .cancer - perls. Is going to find out the nnswei to these questions, hed by Dr. Wil liam H.'" Party director of tho New York public henlth laboratory, they have begun experiments which will put 'fiyo-Bn'rhard conclusions, so fnr as they are known, to the acid test. Tho aim of the experiments, It Is explained, Is- not to discredit the (.lye-Barnard claims, but to assure cancer experts this side of the water that the British discovery Is a sound foundation for further research work over here. . ' Another American, Dr. George 80 per, managing director of the society for the control of cancer, is now: on his way to England to study the Gye Bnrnard methods at, first hand. ' He will also investigate a cancer serum which destroys cancer cells without damaging live tissues that has been discovered at the Lister Institute by Dr. Thomas Lumsden. Experiments have, not .yet been conducted on liv. Ing creatures, and the success so far is llcited - to the effects on tissues kept in 'glass vessels, but tho tests are ' attracting much attention In the London medical world. What It Amounts To. "The researches of Messrs Gye, Barnard and Lumsden nppenr to be of great value," Dr. Sopor said be fore sailing. . " "A word of caution . should, how ever, 'he given with respect to this subject. Even though we grant that cancer in human . .beings, has been found to be due. to n microbe and the microbe . found and . a curative serum prepared for the successful treatment of this disease, the prob lem of . eradicating . cancer by no means has . been solved -completely. "The most effective serum treat ment for a disease which is at till 13 V 1 8 mm common la ;.'lhn nitfUoxliV: pto,eiJuro again) diphtheria,, iind this has not yet eliminated wholly that Irifec tion. "If we had nn effective serum for the prevention rf can cm' today, there; would be' a very few people who could he Induced to use it In time to avoid the hegirjninK of this din. euHe, for the reason that few people, experience hIiows, will take such a precaution unless compHfd to do so. "If we had n curative instead of merely a preventative serum more practical knowledKe would attach to it. although It would probably always remain but one of n number of procedure which medical men would find It n ec epsa ry to em p loy . "No one must be led astray by the brilliant and hopeful prospects which the English discoverers offer. There Us no reason whatever for one to re- linfiuish their vigilance in seeking to disepver , th presence of cancer in Us ear Hem .staves and .decaying radical y eat men t which the physic bins and surKe'ms who are compe tent students . of cancer In America have come to regard as standard pro ordures." . Hon w nee In" plsoovery. Rack of the discovery of an In fective agent of cancer lies a re mantle story of a successful London business man. who has microscopes as ,n hobby, local .candor author! ties have learned.. It was ,J. R. Barnard, proprietor of a fashionable hatter's shop in London, who mnde. It possible for Dr.; William. E. Wart Oye, to see the organism., which hitherto had re mained Inside through all the an nals of medical search for It. For thirty years Barnard has spent half- a day In the hat business to earn money to enable him to Rive the rest of. the day to microscopes. - When the .British. medical research council, four years ago, started work on microscopic investigation of dis ease causes, and out of which effort has come the cancer discovery, Mr. Barnard offered , his services, which were accepted, v ond every afternoon since, he has spent In laboratory as a valuable assistant to British medical research experts. Dr. Gye and his helpers, following up the work of Dr. Peyton Rous of the United States, as. well as the work of Drs. olltsky and antes of the Rockefeller Institute, proceeded in theory that cancer had a parasitic cause. They turned to the study of chicken sarcoma, proceeding on the basis that there was a germ to be found.' -All thrt - microscopes which had bee$ used on both sides of the At lantie. had' failed to bring Into vlsl bllity- the organism sought. Mr. -Barnard had been workinir with ultra violet and other colored lights for microscopic" work which, while invisible to the eye, would im press n photographic plate. And It was with. his. special microscope reg istering aa a camera that Dr. aye first saw the pneumosyte organ ish. the discovery of which has caused such a sensation. WHEN BETTEK AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT, BUICK WILL BUILD TKfifcf 7 MT7 DUGO AND many other qz6 improvements With the Women of Today IN; WILD BATTLE Peru has honored Miss Sarah Wambaugh, of Cambridge, Mass.,,'ly asking her to go to South America and help the Peruvla ngovernment in tho plebiscite on the Tacna-Arica dispute between Chile and Pero. Miss Wambaugh Is the daughter of Prof. Eugene Wambaugh, of Harvard University. She was conected for sev eral yearfc with the League of Nations secretariat nt Geneva, Switzerland, nnd Is the only woman ever to have addressed the Institute of Politics at Wllliamstown, Mass. She , Is nn au thority on international Inw nnd pleb iscites. On the latter subject sho has written a book. 1 A number of hrlllinnt short stories With human appeal are the work of a woman patient In a London Insane asylum. She Is said to appear sane while writing, hut Is hopelessly Insane at other times. SAN FPANCISCO. July 36. (A. p.) Sport writers hero today credit ed Referee Joe Gorman with admin istering tho knockout last night In the hoxinir combat In which Fronkle Campbell, n San Francisco light-, heavyweight, was declared . winner ( over ."nacehorse" Roberts of Oak-. land.; ' AS tne reporters uescriueu 1 fair,, Campbell had been leading for several rounds and ' in tne nimn floored Roberts for a count of nine. In tho tenth, the final round, Rob erts,, still groggy, decided to endure the prescribed three minutes through one prolonged clinch. The referee, bnlked In verbal and physical ef forts to separate the men, finally gave . Roberts, a , terrific, tug.. The Oakland battler went whirling thru the air and landed outside, the ring. The referee then counted him out. Roberts, badly .bruised made no ef fort to climb back ' The hall was In nn uproar. Fans rushed the ring. Somebody threw a bucket of water at Roberts In an effort to revive him, but It landed nn the referee. Two state boxing in spectors ruled that It was n valid knockout nnd will so report to the California athletic' commission. Mrs. J. D. Hopper,.-superlntendent of the women's reformatory In . Massa chusetts, la the only womnn appointed by President Coolldge to attend the International Prison congress in Lon don In August. At Wllliamstown, Mass., thirty-six women are regular members of the American Institute of Politics. 'i t I y t v , Making country life more Interest ing to the farmers' daughter Is the work 'of Miss Gertrude Warren, spe cialist in the United States Department of Agriculture. She organizes girls' clubs . and strives to Improve home making and to give the girls a whole some iind inteligent viewpoint of farm life, r Miss Laura Heller, newly elected president of the Cleveland League of Women Voters, with the aid of Mrs. PEAR CORE BREAKDOWN CAUSES HEAVY I-OSSEK TORONTO, . Ont., July 30.- The George cup, emblemntlc of the R class. International yacht champion ship, went to the United States to day when the Kathen of Watertown, won her third siraigni race in many days, defeating the ' Nnyada, Canadian entry and cup defender and Rogue of Rochester, N, Y. , i v Canoes, - "Qulnqulreme of Nineveh from dis tant Ophlr, Rowing home .to., haven In sunny Palestine, 1 With a enrgo of Ivory And apes nnd peacocks, Sandalwood, cedarwood, ond sweet white wine. Stately 8 p a n I s h ' galleon coming, coming from the Isthmus, Dipping through the tropics by the palm. green shores . Wlat) a cargo of diamonds, Emeralds, amethysts, Topases and,! clnnnmon, and gold moldres. Dirty .British coaster with a salt raked smoke stack, Butting through the channel In the mad March -days. With a 'cargo of diamonds. Road rulli. pig' lead. Firewood,. Ironware, , and cheap tin 1 , trayi n . John Maaefield. ' When money nt limited l Is better to concentrnte on food and rare. In the home treatment of tuberculosis, than to wut it on the desert air. CORVALLIS, July 30 Core' break down causes heavy losses In stored pears In Oregon unless they are picked nt the right time and handled in the right way. of the various lots under observation nt the ex periment station In the last seven years, only the late-picked fruit de veloped the disease to any extent, regardless of (the kind of. storage. ' "The later the time of picking the more serious the. trouble becomes," says a recent station report prepared by Henry Hartman of the station staff.. "The use of the pressure fester to determine time of picking has in many cases eliminated core breakdown entirely." . Pears are often handled so poorly by. the trade and by consumers that .even high class products deteriorate into poor stuff. Although properly grown, and handled . by the grower, they often go .to waste or develop Into' "cookers," because poorly treat ed In the ripening perldd. . Breakdown Is characterised by the softening and darkening of the core and the 'fruit about It, even ' while the outside of the fruit seems, per fectly sound.' "As the disease ad vances the pear emits a foul odor, often Just as the fruit should be ap proaching its prime condition. Unlike most fruits, the pear 'de velops Its best quality only when picked Immature, and the big prob lem of the' grower Is to determine just the right degree of maturity. Usual maturity signs such as site, color of seed, ease of picking, fruit color, and nature f the bloom are not reliable, and a special pressure teat has been developed by the sta tion to aid growers In making their own determination. Methods of using the tester and handling the, fruit are contained In the report Issued as station bulletin :i, free to residents of Oregon. 1 ' , ' Mlsa Snrarli, AVambangli Malcolm McBride,. former pff sldent, has organised the Cleveland! league into districts. Kach league operates as n complete Unit with round table study groups on Important legisla tion. The parent tengue stands ready to supply speakers, conduct meetings and hundle publicity for the district leagues and will conduct several largo study, and forum projects into which all the districts will gather. 'The league engages speakers both for and against any measure discussed so that every member has had n chance to vote on it Intelligently. WAS NOT FIT TO l DO HER WORK Dreadful Condition of Mrs. Fullerton's Health Remedied . by Lydia E. Pinkham's , Vegetable Compound .Clearfield, Pa, "I cannot begin to tell you how much Lydia G. Pinkham's Veg- eiaDie (compound has neipea mo in every way. Before taking it I couldn't stand on my feet without pains run n ing all through my whole body from my waist down,.jusl like threads pulling. I was not fit to do any work. My mother got ma to' try the Vegetable Com pound and I have found great benefit, and I not only recommend it for such troubles, but to build up the whole ays tern. 1 have used it for most every thing that gets wrong with me. When I begin to feel nervous and irritable I don ' t stop long in getting a bottle of the Vegetable Compound if I haven't got one in the house. It gives a fine appe tite and makes a new woman of me. You may use this testimonial in my own town or anywhere else, and I will an swer, any letters I receive." Mrs. Rush Fullebton, 626 S. 2nd Street. Qlearfield, Pa. Ifou are suffering from nervous troubles, irritability, give the Vegetable Compound a fair trial. For sal by druggist everywhere, U0k Little Doses of Common Sense Prevention is protection. Prudes prate at a fool's folly. 1 Early,, decajf Is , the- late price of neglect. ' r ' . ' f "'.-', Pit folks ftttild .prny mora nnd ont less, '. V (j' ' ' ' ' Dufity sweeping starts widows weppinK. ' rn,ja Hit 1 if The Bef for BUICK " JP sf & MEDFORD AUTO CO- v Buick Dealers , 123-127 South Riverside Ave. . i .' Phone'73, t : The Balance Whell of Motoif Consistent Gasolift& O, ,:;vv...'- x' . f A' Judy & Frohbach, Inc. Wholesale Distributors ftememhetr. GENERAL Oasoiin ammwm . YOflr . JJWOMUM MILEAGE; CLEAN . COMBUSTION j . 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