Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 07, 1932, Page 8, Image 8

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 1932.
PAGE SIX
Medford Mail Tribune
IwriM In Southern Ortgoa
rudi thi Hail Wbunt"
' Dally Bipt annrdiy
publltd trj
MEprOKD PUNTING CO.
Ml ft H til 81 T
SO II Eta W BUHL, BdlU
C L. KJJAPP, Hunger
Ad Independent Newtpip
nitrtd u tecooit dm natter at Medord
OrtfOQ, uodw Art of March s, 18TB.
BUBSCKtPTlON BATES
tf Mall lo Adiaoea
Dallf, ru It.OO
Dally, month TO
By Carrier, In Aiitioet Medford, Aifiland,
JaeUODrtlla, CeoUaJ Co tot. PboaoU, "sloL Uold
BUi end oa Hi&hura.
Dally, ddUi I -TO
Dally, fine year f.ttO
Aii wrtne, tub Is adraoe.
Official paper of tbe City of Medord.
Official p4per of JackMD County.
MKMKE8 Or THE ASBOCUTKU PUE88
Beedflns Cull Uaaod Wire Befrtre
Tb Aatodated Wen tf eieluihtlj entitled to
On um for puntleatloD of all oein dlipatebw
credited U K or otberwlee credited In Uili oaptf
tod alto to tbe Local nen publtihed bereln.
All rlfhti for pubJleilioo of epeclal dUpaletMe
herein are alio reaemd.
HE MB EM Or UNITED fBKM
IflCMBRR Or AUIMT H II HEAD
Or CIRCULATIONS
AdrerUelng Krpreeentatlfee
It C MOIiKNSEN COM PA NT
OfTloae la N Tort, taiceco, Detroit, Sao
, rrandeoo. Urn Awelee, SeatLla, Portland.
UCMtt.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Artbar Perry
"REBEKAH TABLEAU JOLTS DE
nsvBainH " hnslltnea tha esteemed
Baker Democrat-Herald, and maybe j
Baker uemocravnoram i
to do aomethlng about chasing Proa- j
pent j around the corner.
The Oeneral Board of the Metho
dlat church reporta a "trend towarda
spirituality and a decline In aln. ae
we know It." Thla waa auepected
when the little strawberries began to
show up In the middle of the box. j
...
A goodly portion of the hay crop
waa froat-lbltten. over the week-end.
Many wish It waa hotter, so they ,
could wish It waa cooler. 1
...
, "SCIENTISTS FIND NEW MOON" I
(Ohlco, Osl , Enterprise.) You ,
don't have to be a scientist to do j
that, It the country dances remain
In their orbits. I
...
O. Von der Hellen, tbe Wellen hay- I
seed, was In town Mon.. bright and
early. The last time he came to town
be waa brighter, and the time before
that, he was earlier.
...
Our sympathies were all with the
"bonus marchers," until we saw a
picture In the Oakland (Oallf.) Tri
bune, of a traln;oad of World War
veterans, pulling out of the Cleve
land, O., 'relght yards. In this picture
right back of the engine, was a flat
car, and alone, In the middle of It
atood a gent of runtlah proportions,
la the regalia of a 2nd loot.
. .
Tha earth waa shocked Monday
morn. There Is nothing left to be j
hocked, but the earth and the i
wheat.
e
A wolf-eel was suspended In front
of the O. Wig Aehpole nie&thouse last
week. If there la anything In the
re-Incarnation theory, thla la whnt
Jonn Curtis Hughes, the Llndy-llar
will be In the mysterious future.
. .
The Ks. gale are getting their hair
frlKved. preparatory to stepping out
next Frl. Into the cold, cruel world,
tf they make It that way.
at.
C. Bates waa among those who i
went to the ocean Sun. to freeae to
death, Instead of staying home to
freeze to death
I
There never was a time In the his
tory of the world when so many
tempera were equipped with hair
triggers, and the laces were so long.
If a person can't keep from smiling,
he or she, makes It as sickly as parti
ble, for fear they will be accused of
not taking the Depression serious.
Medical men predict an epidemic of
the seven-year Itch. It la hoped the
chronic pessimists lark sufllclent
strength to scratch. The penalty la
Just, but the sentence too short by
at least 00 years. It Is admitted by
one and all, nevertheless, that the
7-yr. Itch Is what Is due, by reason
of wholesale ornerynees and glorying
In It. The quicker the Itch starts,
the quicker man will start again to
try and act like a human being.
...
A Flaming Youth announce his
Intentions of writing a letter to the
paper about the Flaming Old Folks,
a he haa noticed them In their tur
moil. Some of their antics have been
boyish.
...
About 9.000 yeara ago, tha Celt of
Europ believed so strongly In Im
mortality that they would often tend
money with the understanding that
It was to be repaid In the next
world. (Collier's) Faith was stronger
In the old day.
...
ri'DLIC CHEATED AGAIN
(KC. Star)
A few days ago the eenate waa
told by one of It members that
It talk was costing th people t
million dollars a day. Senator
Keely of West Virginia ttrday.
OMptlng the estlme'.o. reduced
It to amsller factors, saying the
cost was $83,000 per hour or 1300
per heart-throb.
...
Fe:m work has started, and now
and than a pitchfork I seen In tire
forest of fishing pole.
...
On heara dark and dire hint of
the "coming revolution." around ttie
cigar atore and the street cornera
where the wis guys loaf. They point.
eared-Ilk, at th Democratic, claim
of 1.000.000 Jobless, and th .tepubli.
can eatlmat of 8.000,000 in thst un
happy etate. Orant that the lare-r
figure represent the revolutionist
What if they wake up the other
119,000.000 Americans, who do not
think the Urn Is rip for a reooUlonf
The Conversion of John D., Jr.
TPHE endorsement of prohibition repeal by John D. Rocke-
feller, Jr., is a very significant event.
No one can aocuse Mr. Rockefeller of being the victim of a
thirst. No one can accuse him of having anything but horror
for any action that would even REMOTELY threaten the return
of the saloon. No one can question his high moral character,
or his uncompromising devotion
And yet an ardent Prohibitionist all his life, a staunch
supporter of the Anti-Saloon league, morally and financially,
he publicly withdraws that support, and joins such men as JJr,
Nicheolas Murray Butler of
Dartmouth, and President Frank
hibition repeal, in the name of
of true temperance.
ONLY on that high plane, can any progress be made toward
Prohibition reform. These beer parades led by gigolos
like Jimmy Walker, do more harm than good. Constructive
progress can never be made under the slogan of" Up with beer,
let joy be unconfined!" Constructive progress can ONLY BE
MADE under the slogan of "down with the bootleggers and
down with liquor-financed crime!"
That is where Mr. Rockefeller stands. And thousands of
right thinking and self-respecting American men and women,
feeling precisely as he does regarding the old saloon, will stand
there with him.
Why Not Economize?
THE two conventions at Chicago will cost $500,000. In the
interest of national economy why not merge these two
conventions and thus save $250,000!
Compared with a billion dollar deficit, quarter of a million
may not seem so much, nevertheless $250,000 is $250,000 !
And holding two national party conventions is a sheer
waste of money and time.
COR there is no essential difference between the two major
parties at the present time. That 50-50 vote on beer the
other day was symptomatic. Half of the ayes were Republican
and half Democratic. That is approximately true all down the
line. The two parties are even a tie in federal administration.
The Republicans control half of it in the White House; the
Democrats control the other half in congress.
Take tax reduction, federal economy, the tariff, farm relief,
credit expansion, monetary reform, the differences between
the two parties are the differences between tweedle-dee and
tweedle-dum.
Even the old liberal-conservative distinction no longer holds.
The conservatism of the Southern Colonels in the Democratic
party, is as hide bound as the conservatism of the plug-hat
plutocrats in the Republican party. Liberals like Brookhart,
LaFolletto and Norris in the 6. O. P. are as radical, as Demo
cratic insurgents, like Wheeler, Dill and Blease more radical
in t net.
IN SHORT, and in plain English as far as political reality
is concerned the TWO MAJOR PARTIES HAVE CEASED
TO EXIST. There is merely one crowd thnt labels itself Re
publican, another crowd,, Democratic, both being as essentially
alike as two peas.
Over 2000 Years Ago!.
ft'T'ilE purveyor of half-truths is more dangerous than the
A purveyor of falsehoods. For the former adds hypocrisy
to mendacity, and treachery to deceit. Luring the unthinking
and unwary, by mixing what is true with what is false, he hides
behind the truth to escape responsibility for what is false, and
thus writes himself down as not only a foe of justice, but a
coward. These purveyors of half-truths, these wily distorters
of the facts represent Ihe greatest single danger to the Btate,
in the disorganized political situation we now face. With our
large and unscrupulous underworld, a group of self-seeking
demagogues, who have lost all respect for truth, all sense of
responsibility and all fear of consequences, threaten to under
mine the very foundations of lawful and ordorly government."
No, this is not Investigator Seabury pnying his respects to
the slick and slippery Jimmy Walker, nor is it the tribute of
Senator Smoot to his colleague Brookhart, it is a Bolitho trans
lation of Cicero's reply to Cataline.
Which only shows the dance of life is in a circle, and when
all is said and done there is nothing new under the sun.
NET QUEEN IN ACTION AT AUTEUIL
-' 'v'-"ilsr ,jiisw, - -
........ t: .v:.v-r.
' J js ? -i
-- '
This strlklnQ action picture ahowt Haltn Willi Moody, world'a out
standing woman tennis playsr, executing a smashing overhead shot
during a mixsd doublsi match (n tha tournament at Auteull, Franca,
hown with bar U her partner, $tdnsy B. Wood of Ntw York.
to the church.
Columbia, President Hopkins of
of Wisconsin, in urging Prr
a higher morality and the cause
Today
- By Arthur Brisbane
John D. Jr., for Repeal, .
Routine and Other Crimes
Chile Boils Up.
Loaves, Fishes Wanted,
Copyright King Feature 8ynd, Inc.
Washington reports that
President Hoover has approved
a plank for the Republican
platform letting the people
vote on the Eighteenth Amend
ment, "a resubmission" plank.
This recognition of the people's
right to pass on any part of the
constitution at any time seems
reasonable. It is supposed to
be their constitution.
The big prohibition news
comes in a letter written by
John D. Rockefeller, Jr., to Dr.
Nicholas Murray Butler, ex
pressing an earnest hope that
both Republicans and Demo
crats will incorporate a prohi
bition repeal plank in their
platforms.
This seems to dispose of the
theory, widely circulated, that
the younger Mr. Rockefeller
has been financing prohibition
recently.
This la a small part of routine
crime news in one city, New York.
Benjamin Rosenblum, owner of a fur
company, was locked In his fur vault
by bandits, and, not quite dead when
taken out, was resuscitated.
Agent H. J. Simons and Deputy
Bernstein, with thirty helpers from
tho department of Justice raided a
three hundred thousand gallon whis
key still, In South street, a few doors
north of the building in which this
Is written. It was well arranged,
with a tunnel leading to a garage,
as a "getaway," and In tha garage
waa a ten thousand gallon molasses
barrel.
-44-
Pederal Judge Coleman sentenced
three racketeers to prison for falling
to pay Income tax oh $1,370,000 of
net profits. They confessed. Crime
haa become a bualnesi.
Oeolando Ten-ana, restaurant own
er, was called to the door by a young
man, name unknown, yesterday
morning. The man fired two shots
Into Terrana's heart. His wife Is a
widow and his three children have
no father. The killer walked away.
Those are "routine" Incidents In our
crime wave.
44
One other crime waa not, or at
least ihould not be, part of any "rou
tine." A woman eighty years old,
defenseless In her little house, waa
visited by two men. They thought
that In her long, hard working life
she must have saved much money
and asked for It. She gave them
five dollars, saying It was all she had.
They did not believe her, beat her,
tortured her and left. She died.
Sven this callous age of crime
should be Interested In an Incident
of thst kind and do something
about It.
4
The world's restlessness comes to a
head In our South American neigh
bor Chile. President Montero Is oust
ed, a sort of communism taking hta
place. Big fortunes are to be confis
cated. Russia's soviet government Is
to be recognised by the Chilean gov
ernment. Americans have more than one
thomand million dollars invested In
Chile to say nothing of a 330 mil
lion nitrate trust, and some of them
are worrying. But that la probably
premature, Sometimes South Amer
ican republics have revolutions and
then change their minds,
A counter-revolution had started
yesterday. The Chilean army and
nary, Including the air force, are
with the revolution. That Is Im
portant, perhaps dangerous.
It Is amuilng to read thst con
gress Is guarded by extra police to
control vetersns, lobbying for the
bonus, and that "a food crlls Is In
creasing as 8,000 men near the cap-
ttol.
There wasnt any "food crisis"
when this country was Implored, be-
etched and commanded to feed
MILLIONS In Belgium, Armenia,
Turkey, Russia and heaven knows
where. Millions were easily found
for THAT work. Why Is It so dif
ficult to feed a small handful of
Americans who went through the
war, deprived of a chanca to get
their share of big war time wages,
to say nothing of patriotic grafting?
Owen D. Toungt speaking at Notre
Dame, says tha president of the Unit
ed States should have greater power,
even though It might Involve aban
donment In part of the present sys
tem of chocks and balances. Addi
tional power Is needed to enable the
hlef executive to deal effectively
.th economic crisis, according to
Mr. Young.
' Others be 1 lave that tha president
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease,
diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-addressed
envelope la enclosed. Letters should t brief and written In ink
Owing to tha large number of letters received only a few can be answered
hare. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Ad
dress Dr. William Brady In care of The Matt Tribune.
THE SMITH INDIAN C
Col. Henry Smith, famous op thai -mle
surgeon, had performed 35.000
cataract operations on his patients
In India up to
the beginning of
the world war.
He has taught
his method to
hundreds of the
worlds leading
surgeons, who
attend his clinic
to learn the
technic of his
method. Here
and there a pro
gressive special
ist In this country follows the Smith
method in operating on cataract,
but- the majority of oculists still
use the older method.
Par be It from me to criticise the
method of any man who can do
anything at all to give cataract
sufferers hotter sight. What I don't
know about ayes fills vast libraries
and maybe occuplea deakroom in
the rear of the village Jewelry store.
But I know a little about tonsils,
varicose veins and hernias, and what
I know about these things and their
treatment leads me to suspect that
our eye physicians are holding back
on the Smith method mainly be
cause they have not had the op
portunity to see It in the hands
of a master and to receive Instruc
tion from such a teacher. At any
rate, that Is the reason why many
of the old timers have held back
on the modern methods of treating
infected tonsils, varicose veins and
hernias.
In the old standard operation for
cataract the usual practice haa been
to wait for complete "ripening" of
the cataract, which means complete
opacity of the lens and almost help
less blindness, and then to extract
the lens usually In two operations.
In the Smith , Indian operation
It Is not necessary to wait for
"ripening" the most successful re
sults are obtained when the oper
ation U done early. Just as soon as
the patient Is unable to. read his
newspaper or do other close work.
Incidentally the patient Is In bet
ter general condition where the
operation Is done earlier. More
over the Smith method la compara
tively simple and la complete In
cne sitting.
One of the leading exponents of
the Smith Indian cataract opera
tion In this country is Dr. W. A.
Fisher of the Chicago Eye, Ear, Nose
and Throat college, who makes his
students do the operation on eyes
from slaughtered aulmais. He re
marked that if an apprentice has
to give a thousand shaves to qualify
as a barber, a man contemplating
such an operation as cataract ex
cision should first try It on a few
bushels of animal eyes. In 1913 Dr.
Fisher performed 576 Intracapsular
cataract operations In Smith's clinic
in India, with only pus Infections.
He says there Is even less chanca
haa more power than any ruler on
earth, now that the czar and the
sultan have vanished.
The early Americans, throwing off
the power of the English kings,
thought they could 'arrange a plan
under which power would be located
nowhere In particular. They were
mistaken. Power always goes some
where, and here It has gone to or
ganized finance.
The president of the United States
can take It away and exercise It
himself, whenever he chooses.
M
In Rome a young Italian Is caught
carrying a pistol and two dangerous
bombs, waiting to kill Mussolini.
Police saw htm before he saw the
dictator and Mussolini will outlive
him.
The young would-be murder, An
gelo Bard? Hot to, will soon stand up
to be ahot In the back. In accordance
with custom In such cases. Crowds
gathered to cheer Mussolini's escape,
knowing that to lose Mussolini now,
might mean chaos.
In Germany, rumor says old Pres
ident von Hlndenburg, past eighty,
win retire and "Crown Prince" Fried
rich WUhelm, eon of the former
kaiser will take his place and later
become monarch, passing from pres
ident to emperor, as did Napoleon
third.
Lord Rothermere, British publisher,
says Oermany wants a monarchy,
realizing that "it Is good for busi
ness." If Germany really wants more
than she has had of the Hoheneol
If-rns that Is Germany's affair. The
ex perm lent will be enltghtening.
Communications
-Jut As Easy"
To The Editor:
8nf, I been reading several pleves
In the Mall Tribune paper about the
Dayhsrk murder. Why don't you
take that man out and tie him up,
The people are getting tired of thst
humbi try in to smooth thta case
over all the time .nd make it favor
able for the so-called officers.
As far as ambushing the Dayhack
murder scrape. It .would be Just ss
sy to clean up thst scrape and get
at thj bottom of It as any crime com
mitted In Jackson county or the state
of Oregon, according to my opinion
and accord i n g to my best op i n Ion
and according to others opinion.
Ralph Jennln? is to Name over the
Dayhack murder scrape and every
man that waa in that raid should ba
Brady, M. D.
ATARACT OPERATION
of pus Infection compiler ting the
operation In this country because
eyes sre surgically cleaner here.
Cataract la probably less prevalent
now than It was formerly lp Ameri
ca per thousand population. Better
lighting of work, better care of the
eyes and better fitting of glasses,
and perhaps better food and better
care of general health are the rea
sons for this. In India cataract Is
exceedingly prevalent, probably for
the lack of all these advantages. If
there Is any special cause operative
there but not here, the ophthalmolo
gists do not tell us what It Is.
San Francisco eye surgeons (Drs.
A. S. and L. D. Green) find that
patients have better vision after
the Smith operation than they do
after the ordinary operalon and con
clude that it la the Ideal method
for the removal of cataract.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Prunes.
Please let me know what raw
prunes do to you. I sometimes
eat as much as a pound, of prunes
a day. Have Ben Told they make
you thin. Mrs.- S. R.
Answer If I thought they would
I'd eat a pound a day myself. But
that's Just one of Ben's Jokes, you
know. Neither prunes nor lamb
chops nor even lemon juice makes
you thin; these are aU foods, and
they all contribute some nourish
ment according to the quant tes
you take. A pound of prunes yli -Js
360 calories, more food than a pint
of milk, half as much again as a
pound of oranges. Prunes, raw or
stewed, are an excellent food for
any one. Borne persons find them
especially valuable as laxative.
Paste Dressing for Varicose Ulcer.
Some time ago you mentioned 'a
paste for varicose rulcer. I wish
you would repeat the directions . .
C. P.
Answer Send a stamped enve
lope bearing your address and men
tion your trouble.
Turn on the Oxygen.
Much Interested In your talk on
Giving the Victim More Oxygen, but
disappointed that you finished the
talk before you revealed, how the
victim is to get that oxygen . .
Miss I. E.
Answer Get It on the hoof. Dally
walking. Or golf, or mowing the
lawn, or hoeing the corn, or playing
tennis, or lancing.
Calfeln.
Do we get as much caffeln when
coffee Is not boUed and Is poured
right Off? I drink four cups a day.
Do we get ultraviolet rays from
breathing the air? Mrs, J. C. K,
Answer; There Is a grain or so of
caffeln (a fair medlmlnal dose) in
a cup of coffee, no matter whether
the coffee Is boiled or not. Boiling
merely brings out the acrid tannic
acid flavor and drives off much of
the pleasant aroma. I do not know,
but I fancy we do derive some effect
from the ultraviolet Influence In the
air we breathe.
(Copyright John P. Dille Co.)
Indicted for first degree murder 'f
you people don't want to take a hold
of this case and handle.lt according
to the laws of the state of Oregon,
why not stop bringing It up In the
paper and living old coals up and
ti.aklng hard feelings In the county
simply because the Dayhack murder
scrape Is one of the most cowardly est
and brutal 1st ambush murder scrapes
ever done in the United States, ac
cording to my opinion. And any man
that upholds for It Is lower down
than the one that fired the shot.
CHARLES PENNINGTON.
Butte Falls, June fith.
Box 134.
First Crater Lake Trout
To the Editor:
The Crater Lake chspter of the
D. A. R. la in error In your Sun
day's Issue when they state that
the first trout planted In Crater
Lake was a shipment taken In from
Medford November 6, 1896.
The first trout planted In Crater
Lake were taken there by Judge
Will O. Steel. September 1. 1888.
The shipment spoken of by the D.
A. R. did not reach the lake at
all as early snow prevented this
and the trout were put In Union
creek.
The trout taken up by Judge
Steel were obtained at the Oordon
ranch, 49 miles thla side of Crater
Lake. The two little Gordon boys
got them.
Due to the rough road. Judge
Steel walked the full 49 miles to
Crater Lake, carrying the pall of
young trout.
Also, It sounds very much out
of piece for Medford to lay claim
to Crater Lake. Whatever money
Medford subscribed for roads there
Is purely a commercial proposition.
No doubt this money has been paid
back several times over. Crater
Lake belongs to no city, town, vil
lage or Individual. It belongs to
the people of this land and Is to
be enjoyed by all who may come
regardless of any kind of avowed
distinction.
Crater Lake Is big enough and
beautiful enough to go round with
considerable to spare.
P. J. CLIFFORD.
Medford, June 7
The Intellectual Refpon.
To the Editor:
We are hearing a lot about the
"bright side of the depreion." As
you have pointed out, "Even the
cloud of depression has Its silver
lining" You predict In common
with many other writers, a revival
of rellgto" true religion," as a basts
for "fair dealing between men."
The much -q noted Roger Ba oson
thinks that the brightest fact pro
duced by the depression if the
undersigned correctly understands
htm. Is the move toward prayer
'Ane prayer." The word "pray"
Is much used by him In hi "scien
tific snulynts" of economic condi
tions. He always spells the word
with an "a" uevej with an e.
however.
Our secretary of tha interior, Dr.
Wilbur, thinks that the "depression
may be a good thing for ns, espec
ially for the children. Children have
never been fed more or better food
than they have been getting during
the depression." He adds thst the
little ones no longer face tha "perils
of prosperity" and thst fathers and
mothers tn hard times "stay home
and give their children more atten
tion." Whatever merit these views
have, they are, It Is believed by the
undersigned, Insignificant when com
pared to others which rarely ever
get Into tha papers.
The depreaslon haa brought to
light the fact of the lm potency of
our great leaders, bankers, indus
trialists, politicians, etc., to bring
order out of chaos to put "Humpty
Dumpty together agsln." It ahows
that they are the creatures not
the masters of capitalism: that they
even do not understand the system
they love so well. Perhaps the
greatest merit of the depression Is
the rapid dissolution of the "capi
talistic complex," permitting for the
first time, a. correct understanding
by the people Just why things are
as they are. Thus armed, they can
then make them aa they want them
to be. For these and other reasons,
the undersigned believes that the
"bright side of the deprselon" la the
Intellectual response, rather than
the emotional reactions prayer,
true religion, suicides, etc.
R. HEGNER.
Gold Hill, June 4, 1932.
Ye Poet's Cornei
God Won't Forget.
By Manilla Burden
Qod won't lorget. Hell let me keep
my memory of that star.
It won't be lost Into oblivion the
delight
T Mfc flraf Hleht of that Star.
Each night when aa a child I
always looked for It. at twuign.
Behind the church spire the bright
evening star.
God won't forget. He'll leave for
me the memory of the way foga
look:
How roses smell; the gladness each
n.v npiuton brines:
The rapture of the wilderness; the
music of the streams.
God won't forget. He'll keep for
me tbe Joy I feel
On happy mornings when a bird
elnss above:
To ee happiness upon my mother's
face,
And upon the face of all those
other one I love.
No. I don't believe God will forget.
and when I get on that shore
He'll hand these to me In mem'
ory'a basket, and say
"Theee are the things you loved
from the earth.
Now you may keep them forever
more." TRI-CITY TIEUP
TO LURE TOURIST
(Continued truco rage One)
ath Falls tomorrow noon, and the
invitation has been accepted.
"Medford, Ashland, and Klamath
Falls have a most wonderful oppor
tunity for attracting and holding the
tourist and vacationer, said Mr.
Gates this morning. In discussing the
proposal to be made, "we have in this
section of southern Oregon, more
outstanding recreational attractions
than any region In the country of
equal else, ranging from Crater Lake,
our outstanding attraction, to lakes,
rivers, mountains, caves, forests, and
with ocean beaches only three hours
distant."
"There la no logical reason why
these three communities should In
any way compete with each other for
the travel volume." he continued
"for travel to one of the three will
most certainly benefit the other two.
Let us, then, pool our advertising
resources In promotion of a real
southern Oregon advertising program,
advocating loop trips through Med
ford, Ashland, and Klamath Falls,
and advertising the many resorts
snd recreational attractions In this
area."
It la probable that at the meeting
tomorrow noon, a concrete proposal
will be made for a more comprehen
slve southern Oregon advertising pro
gram, participated In by all three of
the communities to be represented at
the meeting. Those who will attend
from Medford Include, C. L. MacDon
aid and W. A. Gates, chairman and
director of the chamber of commerce
publicity committee. Clyde Eakln,
H. L. bromley. Lee Bishop, and C. Y.
Tengwald. members of the commit
tee. end W. 8. Bolger, president of
the Medford chamber. Dr. L. G.
Bark well, president, and R. E. Diet
rich, "secretary, will represent the
Ashland chamber.
T
PARIS. June 7. (AP) Premier
Sdousrd Herrtot today made a decla
ration of reciprocity in war debt
and reparations negotiations at Lau
sanne June 16, and there waa every
Indication h would receive a heavy
vote of confidence from the chamber
of deputies'.
Th entire left, with the excep
tion of the communist, and a goodly
portion of the center groups, ap
plauded the premier's cabinet speech,
and his predecessor. Andre Tardleu.
of the moderate right, openly ac
cepted seme pssasge.
Premier Herrlot opened his Lau
sanne remarks with the ststement
j that his government would take a
'determined stand aaslnst violation
","of treaties and contract between
nation.
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson Count)
History from th Wee ot The
' MsU tribune of 20 and 10 tear.
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAX
June t. 1922
(It was Thursday)
Farmers with hay down fear rain.
Portland continues to seethe with
'klsn cussednees."
Big Pines safe robbed of (5 during
night.
Miss Helen Eeddy and Everett
Brayton are married at Hollywood
orchards. "After the beautuui cere
mony," saya thla paper, "kind friend
drove them through the business dis
trict on a truck."
Shrine special trains pas through
city. -!
Home of Mrs. Jessie Wood on South
Riverside destroyed by fire.
Grand Goblin of klan to pay city
a visit soon. It Is reported. The visit
will be secret. Maybe the Imperial
Wizard will come along.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
June 7, 1912
(It was Friday)
Heat spell broken by series of
thunder showers.
Thinning of apples underway.
New flshway at Ament dam com
pleted. Dolly Burton and her 35 trained
dogs special attraction at Isls the
ater. Paul Anderson and John Taylor,
13, narrowly escape drowning when
a load of hay tops over while cross
ing the Applegate.
Injunction filed to stop construc
tion of new bridge over Bear creek.
Round-up of delegates at Republi
can convention In Chicago for Prest4
dent Taft. Roosevelt cohorts Irked.
Needed A Separation
(By Alice Judson Peale)
A 10-year old boy la constantly
with his mother. He. goes with her
everywhere, sits next t to her at
table, and begs morsels from her
dinner plate.
The boy Is overweight, lazy and
so sluggish mentally that he appears
to be dull. Only when one has spent
some time with him does one be
come aware that he has a first rate
mind which is merely too lazy to
exert Itself.
The mother gradually Is begin
ning to realize that the boy Is not
developing as he should. He makes
no friends and Is not interested in
school.
&he urges him to study, to play
games and cannot understand why
he will make no effort In these di
rections. She haa bought him a croquet
set, a ping pong table and member
ship In the nearby athletic club. She
even haa engaged a young man
whose business It la to teach him
sports. But the boy does not re
spond. He prefers simply to sit about
the house reading, perhaps, but most
of toe time Just talking with hi
mother, fussing with her possessions
and demanding her attention In a
thousand little ways.
Insight on the part of the mother
into the way her mistaken love 1
hampering her boy's development
would no doubt help this situation,
but any real change can be brought
about only through a separation be
tween mother and son.
The boy gets so much satisfaction
out of being loved by his mother,
out of being the object of her con
stant solicitude, that he feels no,
drive toward normal achievement andi
normal friendships.
All hair cut 25c; ahavlng IS.
Grand Hotel Shop.
SALEM House Rivers and Har
bors committee tentatively approved
Improvement projects recommended
by army engineers on Columbia, low
er Willamette and Umpqua rivers.
PORTLAND Parker-Schram Co.
submitted low bid of SI 1.805 for re
decking Morrison street bridge from
Front street to East Water street.
Work of widening Pacific highway
between Salem and Brooks, distance
of etght miles, to cost $127,453, ex
pected to start soon.
Portland ehell Co. super service
station, being built at cost of about
HS.0O0 at 50th and 8ndy Boulevard,
to be opened soon.
TIT tTIOV
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON, FOR JACKSON
COUNTY.
In the Matter of the Estate of.
WILLIAM OROSH. Deceased.
TO ALL PERSONS. KNOWN OR
UNKNOWN. heirs at law of th
Estate of Wllllsm Orosh, deceased,
or who claim to have n Interest In
said estate: In pursuance of an order
of said court msde and entered on
the 7th dv of June. 1932. you are
hereby notified arid cited to appear
... ram vuun on is.iuraav. July IBth,
1S32. at 10:00 o'clock in the fore
noon ol Mid dsy. the same being the
July term of ssid Court In the court
room of said court. In the County
Courthouse at Medford. Oretton, then
and there to show cause, if nv thev.
or any thereof have, why an order of
said court should not be msde dlrect
' snd ordering F. E. Wahl, admin
istrator of ssid estate to sell the
blowing described real property be
lone.nc to th. estate of said decedent;
Lot 12. Block 1. Whitman Park
Addition to the City or Medford.
Jackson County. Oregon
which said real pfon-rtv" !,' of th
proSah'.e yahte of ,100 00 for th
pu.T of paying the claim, gnnat
t d estate, and the costs and ex
penses of administration
IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I have
hereunto set my har.d snd affixed
June"iUf roUr ,h" ,,h '
DKULIA STEVENS MEYER.
County Clerk.
By HELEN Ci'OAN.
Peputy.