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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1932)
MEDFORD' ICSXL TRTBTOTE, 1MEDFORD, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1932. Medford Mail Tribune Cvtryoni In Southern Ortgoa readi thi Mail Tribune" Dally Ctcepl aaturtaj fublined ft? MEDFOKD PUINTLSO CO. 1 tS-1M N- Vi BL nam ft BOBKKt tt. KUHL, tditM K. U KNAFP, Utm;m AO IwlepiPdem newspaper Enitred u wcood elajt natter it Uadford Oregon, under Act of March 8. 1819. 8UB8CHJPT10S BATES I By MafV Id Adiinc I Dalli, rev $'00 Oailr, mooth By Carrier, to Adoee Medford, Aibland, JaekHDviUe, CcnlraJ Point, PboanU, TalwU Uold Hill and oo (Hctivaja, Dailj, Bjonlb $ Dally, on year T80 AU tarros, eaab Is adrioca. Official paper of tba City of Madford. OfftcUl paper of Jaetwp CouDly. HtllltKH OP TUB AS8UCIATKD PUE88 Raealrtng full Leased Wlra emlee Tba Associated Pratt la eielmltely aotltlad to Uia ua for publication of all am dlipatchaa erdited tt It or others-Is eradltad to thli paper tod also to the loeaj newt published herein. All rlghta (or puhiicaUoo of apaelai djipatcbai hereto are alio reaened. MEUBEU OF UNITED PUK8S UEMBEH Oir AUDIT HI J HEAD Or CIRCULATIONS AdTertlilni KepraiaoUtlTM M. C. MOlIBNSEN COMPANT Offlcea lo Ne York, LMcaio. Detroit, Sao Francisco, Lot Angeles, Seattle, Portland. wuui Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Ferry A list or petty gyps, committed tn the name of Sympathy, with the Depression as an alibi, would be a trifle long, but good reading. ' I The suggestion of the Democratic i convention keynoter that "the Be-1 publicans hang their heads," Is timely snd noble, and excelled only I by the counter suggestion that the t Democrats go the Republicans one better, and also "hang their heads." i and all other portions of the an- j atomy. I i The Older Girls are bus; oannlng. ! preserving and Jellying. Between j Old Sol and the stove, the kitchen! Is red hot. That Is why they come i down town In the lata afternoon j with a coyote hide wrapped around their necks, Ah Wing Pheasant, the corn patch dandy, Is snooping and promenading through the new-mown wheat these long and lazy evenings. His tall Is a thing of beauty, and what Tomui Bwem would call a tone-poem. THE UNAFRAID PRESS. (Abilene (Kan.) Reflector) The Clay Center Times comes right out In a long editorial and gives Mohammedanism particu lar heck as a rotten religion and declares that It Is practically on Its last legs. We Join heartily in the movement. Bo fBr as we know no Mohammedan la a sub scriber or advertiser In this paper. , "AMERICAN FAITH, CONFIDENCE. SND PANIC THREAT." (Headline Mall Tribune June as, 1030) It was good medicine then, and a liberal dose would do no harm now. est It Is noted with alarm, In the dispatches from Chicago, that "the efforts of the Oregon delegation to drown Milton A. Miller of Albany were unavailing." Milt la mentioned as a vlce-presldentlal nominee, which Is probably the reason for desiring to drown him. He Is the Elder Btatesman of Oregon democraoy, who never got quite over the "free silver question," Is always running for something, In the face of certain de fet and Beta more publicity than one of Almee Semple Mcpherson's beaus. If tho Bourbons should win the day next November, Milton will be an outstanding candidate for collector of Internal revenue at the Port of Portland. The eagle Is scheduled to scream next Monday, but It Is problemati cal If the national bird, will make any headway against the current pessimistic squealing. - It begins to look like a number of professlonsl "warm friends of the farmer" had overheated themselves. The traditional good nature of the Irish was successfully demonstrated Sunday when religious creed mem bers, hilariously threw rocks st mem bers of an opposite faith. The church committee were out on a shopping expedition to Im prove certain features which had fallen Into aad decay. (Ceyuse (Ore.) Items) Does my nose shine, Dearie I A former high official of the Ku Klux Kan, with a high-sounding title, at hla own request, has been declared sane. It must be remem bered that he had 10 years In which to recover, see Properly economical persons will send out as much mail as poss ble. including next winter's greetings, before July, when the new r . i .ffactlve. St. Louis Times) "It is fashlonsble to be tnruty." In the absence of anything else, the heat can be blamed for the de mand for a special session of the . Oregon legislature. Such a step would bring the chaos up to par. It would be more sensible to appeal to the patriotism and manhood of the leglslatora, and have them sign a pledge, not to attend the regular session next January. "Henry Oddlngs, hsndsome farmer of the Russian Flat country, was a visitor In town Saturday." (Hunt ington News) Oh, yeahl But Henry would rather be homely, and a pro gressive and prosperous farmer. All agree that nothing would help out Ilk anoth.r war, but as yet no body has enlisted ahead of time, for fear ha will not get to go. Wanted-Coalition Government IF A rudderless ship were being whipped by a terrific storm toward the rocks- and the crew instead of working together to prevent disaster insisted upon fighting among themselves, what would one decide ag to the sense and sanity of the sailors? What would one think if the owners of the ship, on the shore, instead of ordering the erew to stop fighting and man their posts, joined in the spirit of the thing, and egged on one faction, then the other. Any sane observer would conclude cither the ship was not worth SAVING or the entire outfit had gone completely CRAZY! YET applying this figure to the present political situation that ship IS worth saving, for it represents the American ship of state. The crew represents the politicians of both par ties; the owners on the shore represent the American people, and everyone assumes a vast majority of both are sane. But due to present economic, industrial and social conditions, that ship of state is rudderless, and instead of the ship's crew and the ship's owners joining together shoulder to shoulder to prevent the ship going on the rocks, they are engaged in a free-for-all fight, determined to have their petty partisan way, regardless of consequences. And this free-for-all fight, this political fiddling while Rome burns, is going to continue for at least four months, and unless all signs fail, the people who own the ship, are going to stand on the shore and cheer the rival combatants on. sees DURING normal times, the people of the country can afford such an indulgence, and absorb the wasted energy, time and money, without risking a national disaster, but the present times are not normal far from it, and while any supreme disaster will undoubtedly be averted, the strain on the ship of state because of this crazy and futile free-for-all, is going to be TREMENDOUS. Too bad! It is only added proof that our present political organization lias outgrown its usefulness, is tragically out of date, and our political machinery woefully inadequate to meet the exigencies which confront us. e e ENGLAND does things differently. When a government loses popular support it doesn't wait for the next election, it falls immediately. When that crisis, it doesn't try to surmount of battle, it forgets partisanship, in a coalition, with a common aim, the saving of the country. If we were ruled by reason instead of tradition and political partisanship that is what we would be doing at the present time. Instead of wasting four months in a free-for-all fight, with President Hoover leading one faction and Governor Roose velt, or someone else, leading the other, President Hoover would gather the best men in the democratio party around him, they would meet TOGETHER around a table, form a coalition government, and present a united front against the destructive forces that threaten serious disaster. f P we were not all more or political partisanship, no thinking person would deny that this COULD BE DONE at the present time! For what vital issue really divides the two major parties, on WHAT issue would such a coalition split! Prohibition f Both parties are opposed to the prohibition status quo, thoir differences on the best solution, are the dif ferences between tweedle-dum and tweedle-dee. The tariff t Road the two platforms, the Republicans favor a tariff that will protect the American worker from cheap foreign competi tion; the Democrats, at last report, favor the same thing, but condemn the Smoot-IIawley bill. Neither favor free trade. Both favor reciprocal trade agreements. There isn't a tariff differ ence that couldn't be left to the ruling of a NON-PARTISAN tariff commission. FARM relief, monetary reform, foreign entanglements, unem ' rtlnvmnnf ranl nvn. tliA wi nlnf frtimo tho rllffnrnnpfta if wire reports are correct, are entirely rhetorical, they stand Bhouldor to shoulder on the common aim, of doing whatever is best to bring the battered ship of state, out of its present tail spin. Their differences are not in principle, but in detail, in mothod. . . What folly then for the two parties fighting each other at such a time, what a waste of energy, for President Hoover, and men like Dawes, Butler, Borah and Mills fighting the Democratio candidate, and men like Baker, Byrd, Ritchie and Traylorl There is no reason in the world except a blind and stupid partisanship, the desire of the outs to get in, and the ins to stay in. There is no valid exouso whatever for men like Hoover and Roosevelt, Baker and Borah, Mills and Ritchie, not getting together, and all putting their shoulders to the wheel of the mirod national car, and pushing it out of the ruck and mud. No reason at all, except the fact that this is a year for the presidential election, and we haven't the originality and courage to do what the situation demands, instead of doing what foolish tradition and selfish partisanship, dictate. SO THE absurd sham battle will go on. One party will win. The other lose. Instead of the best talent the country affords being available, only the talent one faction can provide will be available, the talent of tho opposing party will be lost entirely. THIS IS THE TRICE WE TAT, FOR THE LUXURY OF POLITICAL PARTISANSHIP, FOR PLACING ROMANCE ABOVE REALITY, WHEN NATIONAL CONDITIONS, DE MAND THE ABANDONMENT OF BOTH! PARIS (AP) The continued drop In the French birth rate la, aa It has been for years, a source of anxiety to the authorities. The problem Is being csrefully studied by experts on population and measure aiming at encouraging bigger families will be brought be fore the new chamber of deputies. Better housing, highr taxes on bachelors and spinsters between the ages of 34 and do, pensions for per- country is faced by a supreme that crisis, by a partisan trial and all political factions unite, less infected with the virus of enta and modification of Inheritance laws are among the schemes sug gested. Ths birth rate council ssys that whlls In Idea births totsled 1.034.000, Including 10.000 foreigners, the total In IPSO dropped to 746.000, of whom 65 .000 were foreigners. The sverage number of births per msrrlage today la CI. It Is held that unless the average la 9 the population la bound to dimmish. Paris Mimetim Profits. PARIS (API Ths little war M seum In the Am de Trlomphe. under which France's unknown soldier is burled, snowed for lSl a profit of 38.000. only slightly below the figure tor the big Louvre museum. Oood grades ot lumber at cull prices. Medford Lumbar Co. Today By Arthur Brisbane 2 Rounds for Roosevelt, Wonderful Flying, He Will Kill Himself, Sen, Reed's Plank, Copyright King Features Bynd, Inc. CONVENTION HALL, Chi cago, June 28. A few minutes before six, and the crowd is streaming from the big sta dium. It has shouted and yell ed, watched a few "almost" fights, has seen Governor Roosevelt win his first two rounds, the Louisiana delega tion contest, and the naming of Walsh of Montana for perma ment chairman. Now it is go ing home to eat, talk even, per haps, to THINK. More important than any nomination was the exhibition by army fliers on Chicago's lake front last night. We have good times and bad times. ' Good times come from the generosity of Providence, bad times from our own stupid ity, and weakness. All that we possess depends on our ability to defend our selves from attack IN THE AIR. You would believe It, If you had seen those huge baby army bombing planei, roaring In close formation over Chicago's skyscrapers, in the dim twilight yesterday. While Chicago's crowds looked on. admiring, the same crowd would have witnessed the complete destruction of Its sight and of a million lives, by poison gas and bombs, in the earns length of time, had they been enemy planes. In the morning there had been pre liminary flying, planes zooming low. hundreds of pigeons on the lake front, fluttering wildly in all direc tions, filled with fear at the approach of those super-hawks. W. R. Hearst, Jr., remarked that sea gulls seem even more frightened when he files over the water from his New York office to the far end of Long Island. The night display was most amas- lngly beautiful and daring. The great planes flew so close together, their I wings seemed to touch. They took ! strange shapes, like a great sled, Macedonian wedge, a long drawn out j monster roaring, made of many units, each keeping its place. And the laying of a smoke screen, ' by one single plane, a screen high and wide enough to hide whole air fleets or a fleet of battleships, show ed how hopeless attack from the ground must be, wltti swift planes above. In modern war, land armies and floating vessels would need squadrons of planes to hide and pro tect them. Stupefying to spectators was the performance of George Holloman, a young army lieutenant, "stunt flying" In the dark. The ship sent out a trail of fire, aa he flew, giving abso lutely perfect imitations of a sky rocket. He rose at frightful speed, high In the air, not "almost perpendicularly" but as straight up as an elevator ris ing In Its shaft, then turning, as a spent rocket turns, he dropped to earth like a falling spark. M. C. Meigs, the all-America foot ball star, who pilots his own plane constantly, wlto his family on board, said of the daring army man: "Yes, of course he will kill himself event ually. But Isn't it worth It, to do what he Is doing for flying?" If there Is any nation across the Pacific or Atlantic, thinking It might be a good Idea to attack this country. It should first send observers to study the fliers of our army and navy. The country asks: "What sort of platform will the Democrats hand their candidate and the voters? One plank that ought to be In the platform, but probably will not be there, waa written yesterday by former Senator Reed of Missouri and given by him to Louis Seibold. It read as follows: "WE DECLARE THAT THERE SIKH LP BE A STRICT ADHERENCE TO THE TOMCY ENUNCIATED BY (lEORClE WASHINGTON, NAMELY, THAT WE HHOl'LD KEEP FREE FROM ENTANGLEMENT WITH THE DLPI TES OF FOREIGN POWERS, "WE Fl'RTRHKR DECLARE THAT THKHE SHOl'LD DE NO CANCELLA TION OF THE INDEBTEDNESS DI E IS HV FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS' Ninety per cent of Americana old enough to rote and Intelligent enough to think for themselves would vote for that plank. But platforms are not written for 00 per cent, but for 10 per cent of the population, where foreign debts and forelga non sense are encerned. ' Charles Dana uibson's clever pub Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters psrtalmng to personal health and hygiene, not to diaesao diagnosis or treatment, wtU be answered by Dr. Brady li a stamped sell-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered here. No reply can be made to queries not 'conforming to Instructions. Ad dress Dr. William Brady In care of The Mall Tribune. A COLD DRAFT BLOWS THRU Seven Yale students have been used as experimental material by Drs. Winslow and Greenburg (we are not going to divulge the Identity of the students, be cause we don't want to give their mamas 't papas an anxi ety) The investi gators exposed the students to drafts and chill ing, In 26 experi ments. The seven stu dents are still alive and not much the worse for their terrible experiences. They were exposed to alternate high and low temperatures, and the Investigators observed the effects on pulse, respiration, blood pressure, sur face temperature and temperature of the lining of nose and throat. Prom these experiments the investigators concluded that chilling of the body surface produces contraction or blanching of the mucous membrane lining nose and throat, which is ac companied with dryness or decrease in the normal mucus secretion. That Is rather the opposite of the effect popularly ascribed to exposure to chilling. However, a little thing like that doesn't detain these "scletv tiats" long. They make no bones at all of citing the blanching effect of chilling as "lowering the rlslstance" of the mucous membrane. If nobody knows what "resistance" Is, that's no concern of the scientific gentlemen they wash their hands of that. Puruslng the experiments on the seven students Drs. Winslow and Greenburg observed that chilling the feet or the head had similar effects. However, they reluctantly report, only one of the seven subjects developed a old during the course of the ex periments. Whatever that may mean Drs. Winslow and Greenburg will be among the last surviving physicians or health experts to commit them selves about that. In their work It Is much more Interesting to leave the question "What is a cold?" unan swered. It gives a vast field for specu lation. Thus, conclude the savants, while drafts apparently may predispose, one to colds, chilling of the feet or other part of the body as a whole has no demonstrable Influence on respiratory Infections. This will come as a shock to a lot of old women In the profession. Today's Guest Editorial The Moll Tribune, thanks to the courtesy of the American Legion. Is printing a series of guest editorials written on Important questions of the day by prominent citizens In various walks of life. The Mall Tribune offers these editorials as an Interesting feature but does not necessarily endorse the sentiments expressed. ARTICLE FOR CITIZENSHIP DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM By. WM. JOHN COOPER, United States Commissioner of Education, if the Great War established any one thing clearly It was that a tBhni. nation roes to war with an other nation or that groups of na tions engage In battle wun omer groups of nations. Accordingly, while m.n Ann women of all social classes are required to support It, the lead ership in conflict falls upon the educated classes. These men are re quired In the chemical warfare. In aircraft battles, and In the correla tion of the various aspects or ser vice. It Is Inconceivable, therefore. that mir educated men should be entirely ignorant of the principles of war. In 1862 President Lincoln signed the first Morrill act, which brought into existence a new set of colleges. Each of these naa oeen required to offer military education. At the present time good people are trying to have military training dropped from these colleges. It is more conceivable to think or tne army iialntr an entire collese. It will use such a college not exactly as the army has used tnem in me past, but, to take a land gTant col Ucatlon, Life, publishes tn Chicago's Herald Examiner today a page on prohibition that should be printed In every newspaper. Gibson deserves public thanks for his convincing ap peal to public opinion. Say he: "Llq quor can be had In open defiance to the Inw In any city, town or hamlet. Ask any bell boy or policeman. Wher ever you go, a push button Is open sesame to a bar. Mr. Gibson asks his readers to send to the chairman of the resolutions committee In Chicago the following wire: "Put repeal In your platform; I'M help you win." Women are In the news, every where, determined to count, apart from "mere production of babies." That production la their most Impor tant work, nothing else really counts, except creating a better race. However, they must decide. One English woman. Lady Catherine Car negie, crossed the English channel yesterday on a surf board, drawn by a power boat. In OA minutes. Miss Llyl Cop pies tone of New Zealand In the opposite direction. In 03 min utes. Devoted women here hand out tracts asking you to stick to prohi bition and you say with John Ruse. "Sancta stmpltcltaa. Other ladles bring you Ice cream In a restaurant, wearing little caps labeled. "We want beer." Very gentle ladles, well dressed, sell THE HAW HAW CORNER. But It won't make a bit of differ ence to the rank and file of physici ans who find the "cold" obsession handy where It Is desirable to hedge on the diagnosis. Nor will It impress the laity very much, not as Drs. Win- slow and Greenburg Interpret the re sults. As long as there Is plenty of ex perimental material available at Yale we can defer our plan to turn over long-term or life convicts to the doc tors for the purpose. As long ss sere are heroes who are willing to get their feet wet or sit in a draft while the scientists observe the ef fects, I suppose the dear old "cold" delusion will survive. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. One Doctor at a Time. My wife Is getting cataract. Kindly give us a list of the best oculists In , who can remove cataract without It costing a small fortune, . . . (M. J. S.) Answer Send a stamped envelope bearing your address and I'll name a competent oculist in your town. I can give no information about fees or expenses. One doctor at a time and him done well Is a very good wny to be economical. Supplementing Baby's Diet. Our 14-montha old baby seems quite healthy and sturdy but is slightly bowlegged. He gets (a fair diet) and orange juice dally and also two spoonsful of cod liver oil. He be gan walking at 11& months. Is there anything we can add to his diet to prevent bowing or his legs (Mrs. J. j C.) Answer Yes, feed him a nifty sun suit and a few hours of play In the open every day. also a puflh mobile, tricycle, velocipede or other vehicle which will encourage the active use of his less. With plenty of exercise and sunshine on naked skin he will straighten out In a season. Gasoline for Ivy Poisoning. There Is a lot of poison Ivy about our summer camp. What Is the best first aid remedy to keep at hand in case anybody gets it? (R. P.) . Answer Immediate sponging of the exposed skin with ordinary gasoline (not ethyl), by means of pledgets of cotton or soft cloths dipped once in the gasoline and discarded after single sponging. Continue the spong ing gently for five minutes. Then ap ply a lotion consisting of one ounce of photographer's (hyposulphite of soda), otherwise known aa thiosul phate of soda, in a pint of water. (Copyright John P. Dllle Co.) lege for example, one may think of the chemical laboratories which have been modified in such a way that their work leads to the chemical warfare division at the same time that students learn the arts of peace. They give attention to the manufacture of various kinds of gases or the preparation of the defense against these gases. It is true that there will be much less emphasis put upon drill as such for In gene ral trench warfare there la little opportunity to drill and very little emphasis needs to be given to marching. In a similar way the physics department will emphasize artillery and explosives. . These are as essential in peace time as they are tn war. Science instruction in our colleges is not yet -a hundred years old. Nevertheless. It now has a splendid position In practically every college. Just as the older form of college gives way to a newer type which gives a place to science, so must these new divisions emphasize the preparation required for a changed form of warfare. For it Is only by having our educated men prepared for war that it can be avoided. Tomorrow: Rear Admiral Sumner E. W. Klttelle (retired). the Christian Science Monitor with unselfish perslstentcy, that would make any publisher wonder. If you tell them to keep the change, they will not do it, but give you more Monitors saying, "Give them to your friends." The saddest story comes from the 32nd story of a Chicago hotel. A young bride, married last Sunday, wept when her husband said he did not think she could mske him happy. after they had been married only one day. . She replied: "I cab only give you all I have." took off her wedding ring and engagement rlcg.a handed them to him, and Jumped through the window to death. She suffered but a moment. He will suffer while he lives. Oregon Weather. Fair tonipht and Thursday: but cloudy on the coast: no change In temperature: moderate north and northwest winds offshore. Double Relief In Italy. MESSINA, Italy (AP) Workers engaged In Mussolini's public works program In six months built low rent apartments here for 112 fami lies st a cost of s.W.OOO. The pro gram not only furnished Jobs, but also helped solve a housing shortage Arm Hamburg "I." Men. HAMBURO. Germany (API Be cause of a series of robberies at sta Hons, the Hamburg Elevated Rail may had armed Its employees and allowed them time off for target DracUce. Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson Count) History from the Flies of The Mall Tribune of M and 10 Yean Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY June 29, 1922. (It was Thursday) Mexican, Calif., gambling hell, Is swept by fire. Dr. Sawyer, president's physician under fire for delay in construc tion of veterans' hospitals. First rumble of the Harding scandals. Crater Lake lodge open; road to lake cleared of snow. Fishing conditions in Rogue de clared "deplorable and intolerable.' Rapid progress being county fair, buildings. Ashland to show most elaborate "display of fireworks In history of southern Oregon." Water famine caused by break In main pipe line ended, when re pairs completed. TWENTY YEARS AGO. June 29, 1012. (It was Saturday) Bryan switches support to Wood row Wilson In Democratic conven tion, and reads riot act to Tam many. Beef weighing 1800 pounds to be barbecued at Eagle Point celebra tion July 4. Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Daniels plan to motor to Portland next week. "Force" enjoys huge sale among local residents. Prospect youth shoots off big toe while hunting rabbits. Soldier Elder, "White Hope and Walter Monahan to battle at Nat July 4. Talks T& sparatts NIGHT SCARES By Alice Judson Peale A little girl who had recently gone through three severe operations began waking with wild screams In the mid dle of the night. Clutching her mother, she would cry out that somebody was holding a knife at her throat. It required much reassurance and being held In mother's arms for a long while fin ally to convince her that this was not true. Even then it was necessary on one or two occasions for mother to take her In bed to finish the night. After this had occurred a few times the child began waking up regularly each night, crying hysterically and demanding to be taken Into mother's bed. Increasingly It was evident that while the actual fear was diminish ing, the crying was being used as a means of getting mother's attention and the privilege of sleeping with her. There ensued a long trial of pa tience. Night after night the child would wake up, partly genuinely fearful and partly wanting simply to feel that mother was near. Night after night her mother would come to sit at her bedside, talk to her reassuringly and sing to her until finally she went to sleep. Each night the episode became shorter. At last it needed only the momen tary entrance of her mother Into the room with a soothing word to cause her Immediately to go back to sleep, After several weeks she slept soundly through until morning. This sort of problem often de velops as the result of Illness or of some other shocking and frighten ing experience. It Is Important on the one hand adequately to meet the child's need I IVE in a $9,000,000 hotl...F ..if .. . .L yVll VII VII.MipiUll.llip eount...riJs with tHt cowboy guidts along mountain trails... climb with Switt guids-.ply fail tsnnis...iwim in warm tulphur pool or glacial plungt..danct..stroll on tht romantic ttrract undsr a tilvtry moon. What t vacation! It'l clour than tvtr this year, btcaus all costs at Banff tea I. down . at Chattau Lata Louisa loo, just forty milts away, and at th Chalsl-Bungalow Camps. Ask about special weekly or monthly rates, American or European plan. Take advantage of Low Summer Round-Trip Rail Fares. Enter for the Willingdon Golf Cup (July 18-13) or the Prince of Wales Trophy (August i-70.) Canadian Pacipic W. H. Deacon, Genl Agent Passr Dept. 14S-A Broadway Amcricsa Bank B!dg. Portland BRJuy 0637 CANADIAN TAClflC TlUVtUtm CHEQVES COOP THE WORLD OVER ROAR OF PRESSES, TYPEWRITER CLICK IN MUSIC SCORE Composer Finds Inspiration in Newspaper Plant Roll of Big -Press Dynamic Declares Ferde Grafe , NEW YORK (AP) Ferde Grofe composer of the popular "Three? Shades of Blue." and other orches tral works, Including the recently completed "Grand Canyon" suite, has found his latest inspiration in. the newspaper field. The composition on which he nowi is engaged has tentatively been titled "Tabloid," and in it Grofe will essay a musical picture of newsdom. The composer's inspiration cam when he listened to the clatter of automatic printers, the click of type-; writers and the roar of presses tn sv newspaper plant, and the musical themes that came to him at that time are now being elaborated in a typical Grofe score. : Grofe's ambition Is to "interpret the American scene in modern Amer ican music; tc express musically the things I see anU feel and hear of the ever changing aspect? Amer ican life." J nil ui& uiumiiai nutiw wwiut'- oils" of a few years back gave hla Impressions of the big city life; his "Canyon Suite" represented his re action to a trip to the Grand Can yon; his "Mississippi Suite," was his Interpretation of life along the Fath er of Waters; "Knute Rockne" caught the staccato accents in the life of a great football coach. Now, in "Tab loid" he has turned to newspaper life. "The composition starts with scene at the city editor's desk, wltlt ing and printing machines clacking.' said Grofe. as he turned to the piano to run over the dominant phrases of the work. "The clang of police pa trols and fire engines and other themes will be introduced, "Near the end will come a pause "30." Then in conclusion will be heard the roar of presses. There Is something dynamic in the roll of a great newspaper press. The first time I heard that sound it thrilled and Inspired me." Grofe recently directed the New York premier of his "Five Picture! of the Grand Canyon." He now la scoring the work for full symphonic orchestra. Both the Philadelphia and Boston symphony orchestras have expressed Interest in a produc tlon of the composition. for security and on the other In creasingly to demand that It become once more Independent. 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