Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 06, 1932, Page 4, Image 4

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Wedford Mail Tribune
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Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry
The main Job now. la to (tad an
uto license buying period that will
not conflict with Labor Day, the op -
enlng ot the deer season, the fall
fishing, duck ahootlng, and, at the
aame time, catch the proapectlre
purchaser in the mood to let go of
ome money. t t t
Ml the shady pieces are draped
with struggling humanity, orator!-
..nyaung . .
"dry creek FARMER hit w
FLURRY (Baker Democrat-Herald)
cruet and unusual.
. "" J. , .
A couple of the oilcani are digging
bigger holes, in which to put smaller
gasoiine tanks.
John H. Curtis, the Llndyllar, was
found guilty, by a Jury, in 4 hours ,
and 5 minutes. It la not known
what the jury was doing during the
4 hours. j
A greater portion of the fair sex la
Ither sunburned or poisoned lvyed. I
e
GREAT TRUTH REVEALED
(Collier's)
"In the present commercial
depreaslon there la no sanctuary
';. within the gates of either party,"
declares Harry Flood Byrd, for
mer overnor of Virginia. "A Re
publican can be as hungry as a
Democrat. I may shiver in tha
' aame cold that benumbs my Re
publican neighbor. We are Amer
icana. And It Is America that Is
ailing."
Corn, weeds, and kids are all show
ing remarkable growth.
F. Bybee, the J'vllle serf reports
that "the farmer will be naked and
hungry by fall." There seems to be
considerable doubt among the rank
and file, that the J'vllle serf will
ver be naked and hungry.
The sentiment for legalising the
manufjuiturji of beer, could be no
stronger, if everybody bad been com-,
mad.beer,Wn1' hm"
Occasionally a couple Impacted In a
rumble seat, forget to kiss each other,
the entire length of the Main Stem.
The very latest Hoover story Is
funny enough to cause even a mad
and despondent Demoorat to giggle.
Mr. and Mrs. Emory Robin, and
their Robinsons, have flew the old
nestalow.
If It has done nothing else the
depression has done much to cut
down the hostility to work. (Ohio
State Journal.) No local application.
Who can recall when the favorite
hour for an auto crash. In this burg,
was noon?
t
JUST TOO BAH
(Oakland Tribune)
A man who has been pulling
weeds at twelve dollara a week,
and thankful for the Job, Is ap
prised that he la heir to one
third of a fortune estimated at
twenty-eight million dollars.
Continuing to pull weeds, he
says, "It looks like my troubles
have Just begun."
The governor and secretary of state
have used up their quota for July,
of "having their Ire aroused." For
at least a month these two officials
have had a test to see which can get
to the attorney-general first for a
legal opinion. The attorney-general,
being of a Judicial, temperament
finds that both are right. If they
are not wrong. By getting the Ire
rousing out of the way ea'ly, there
will be no eonfllct with the stale
treasurer's attaint matAm mi i
Being "irked." How long will the
man In the street, and in the shade,
eontlnu to be only "hot under the
collar." when ha is both "Ired" and
"Irked." One of these dsvs he will
get "his dander up." and "fly off the
handle."
Old Solomon Is busy putting sugar
in the pesrs.
Invite Candidates
Attend State Fair
SYRACUSE, U. Y, July .(AP)
New York sute wants both Her
bert Hoover and Franklin D. Roose
velt to attend the state fair In Sep
tember. An Invitation to address
the fair will be sent the president,
J. Dan Ackerman, director ci the
(air, announced,
-4 Moratorium Needed
JVflRS. Amelia Earhart Putnam was not only becomingly
modest modest, but strictly accurate when she described
her record-breaking solo flight across the Atlantic as:
"Of no value to av'atlon. Just a personal gesture."
It was however a gesture sufficiently heroic and extraordin
ary, to entitle her to a niche in the international hall of fame.
Last night another Atlantic flight was on its way, which
aims to break the round-the-world record of Post and Gatty.
Today Griffin and Mattern landed in Berlin on schedule time,
which is a good omen for the
venture.
KTEVEBTHELESS we feel
flights would be in order.
ing throughout the world, we
needed to finance these stunts, might better be devoted to
charity.
Gallant personal gestures, of
well be postponed until a more propititious time.
The Right Spirit
jj 'mis railroads of the country might well take a leaf from
A the note book of the National Lumber Manufacturers
association.
This association instead of moaning over the present situa
tion and trying to recall the halcyon days of the past which
CAN'T be recalled, has set about adjusting its business to
present conditions.
At the "Rolleo" now going on at Longview, Washington,
cottages built of interlocking fabricated building lumber are
being erected in eight hours.
, homelike and attractive, so constructed in units that additions
! ' . t
, can be made at any time, and large homes can be provided at
, an UNBELIEVABLY LOW COST,
. . . . .
IJERE is an entirely new and exceedingly practical idea.
. A A Booklets describing the process, have been compiled and
will be distributed free, to anyone sending a request to the asso-
0iat;0I1 headquarters, 1337 Connecticut avenue, Washington,
j D. C.
ipfoe association is to be congratulated and commended for
. ......
its enterprise and courage. This is the sort of spirit the entire
i country needs. If all business men spent more time, trying to
' ' '
evolve new methods, adapted to conditions fundamentally dii-
I ferent from those to whioh we
; past, instead of sitting idly by
depression in modern history,"
' '
world, would be the better for
Call It
X7E are getting a trifle weary of this perpetual personal
feud between Governor Moier and Secretary of State
Hoss. The two state officials
auto license problem. A few
over the matter of license plates.
From all we can learn Governor Meier is mainly at fault,
although as is usual in such
thing to be said on both sides.
We feel certain, however,
purely PERSONAL and POLITICAL, were eliminated, these
incessant spats at the regular meetings of the board of control,
, would quickly disappear.
The present appears to us no time for high state officials to
indulge in controversies, which from the standpoint of the
welfare of the state, are entirely NEEDLESS.
Governor Moier and Secretary Hoss, should forget their
personal feud, and for the sako
8h"ke nA n1 make P-
Soak Them Both
"VNLY one vordiot in this unsavory legal battle between
Myrtle Joan St. Pierre, and Big David ("Iron Man")
Ilutton, is going to appease the skipper of this column. Namely
a verdict finding both of them guilty, and placing tliein both
under heavy bonds to forever keep their respective mouths shut.
Myrtle in our judgment should not be awarded a dime, for
she represents one of the most contemptible developments of
modern crime, the unscrupulous heart-balm racketeer. Iron
Man David, however, Is little belter, and as the only way
to what passes as his soul is through his pockothook, a judgment
compelling him to contribute $5000 to the Los Angeles com
munity chest, would in our judgment, be entiroly in order.
BOTH GUILTY 1 BOTH punished I BOTH swept from the
limelight, and deposited in the ash can of publio oblivion.
That would be a verdict poetically just, and a 100 per cent
contribution to the promotion of decency and the publio welfare.
TO
CORVALLIS, Ore., July 6. (API
Colonies of parasitised male earwigs
are to be distributed In at least It
communities In nine Oregon coun-
ties
through
co-operatlve arrange.
ment between the Oregon flute col
lege eitenslon service, experiment
station, and tha elty of Portland.
The paraaltliied earwigs will be sup
plied by Portland at coet to com
munities wanting them and the ei
tenslon service Is helping to place
the colonies.
Canadian Airmen
Killed By Crash
EDMONTON. Alts- July (.(API
Pilot Andy Crulckahanka and Me
chanic L. Kins and J. Tory, ot Cana
dian Airways, were killed at klue
mot Lake, north of Port Rse, a radio
gram to Royal Canadian mounted po
lice headquarters today said. They
had been missing sine last wednee-
y MEDFORD' MHi
eventual success of their sporting
a moratorium on further world
With bo much want and suffer
feel that the thousands of dollars
no real value to aviation, might
These cottages are small, but
have been accustomed in the
and wailing about the "greatest
not only this country but the
"
it.
Off!
are now at loggerheads over the
weeks ago they were squabbling
matters, there is probably some
that if an antagonism, which is
of executive harmony in Salem,
ONE KILLED BEFORE
IS
WASHINOTOM, July 0.(AP) A
sniper whose rifle and pistol killed
one policeman, wounded another and
kept at least a hundred more at bay
for three hours, finally was shot In
the arm early today, surrendered and
said simply that tie had tried "to
tart some fireworks."
Longs wife, prostrated In a hos
pital, could Rive no explanation of
her husband'a actions sava to tell po
lice that "he was always a mean
German Planning
Ocean Air Flight
HAMBURO. Germany. July
(AP) Wolfgang Von Granau. who
has flown acrosa the ocean twice by
way of Greenland, la about to repeat
tha trip, tt waa disclosed toay. Hts
plane Is being taken to Vie .aland of
ftrlt, whence tha trip wilt start. It
was unrifrntood. ha had engaged the
aame orew.
TRIBUNE, MEDFORD,
Today
By Arthur Brisbane
Beer Now? Perhaps,
Marriage a Comic Strip.
Many a Mickle,
80 Days, 6 Days, 1 Day.
Copyright King Peaturet 8ynd, Ina
Washington reports that Re
publicans, led by Senator Bing
ham, will vote for beer now,
taking from Democrats one of
their most valuable campaign
assets. Democrats in congress
could not well vote against
beer, having declared for it in
their platform.
It is suggested, not on "White
House authority, that if any
beer bill is passed while Hoover
is president, he will veto it. The
president does not forget as
some others do, that there are
quiet people in quiet places in
whose minds prohibition is a
perfect success.
Mrs. Minnie Kennedy Hudson,
mother of Aimee Bemple McPherson
Hutton, known to millions as "Ma'
described modern hasty matrimony I
better than It has been described j
hitherto. She has only friendship j
for her husband only recently mar
ried, but finds that her romance has
"turned Into a comic strip, funny and
getting funnier." ,
She adds that she will be respon
sible for none of her husband's debts
or other obligations.
Today you will buy new postage
stamps, for three Instead of two
cents. They are pretty, purple, with
the well known portrait of George
Washington by Stuart. Lincoln's
three cent stamp, now In use, will
continue.
Four thousand millions of the new
three cent stamps have been printed,
also a thousand million one cent
stamps, you may add one to the two
cent stamp now In your possession.
Air mall will coat eight cents here
after for the first ounce.
The extra money goes to your ;
Uncle Sam, who seems to show j
greater energy In taxation than In j
economy. "Many a mickle makes a
muckle." One cent extra for four I
billion stamps means forty million
dollars more for congress to spend.
Mattern and" Griffin, ambitious
filers, now on their way around the
world, expect to make the trip in six
days. A fog off the Newfoundland
coast may disappoint them.
Jules Verne wrote about a trip
around the world . In eighty days,
"only a dream." A trip around the
world In six days would Interest us
now.- A trip around the world In one
day, the speed that the sun seems
to make, one thousand miles an hour,
will be the record some day. 1,000-mlle-an-hour
filers will travel high
up In the stratophere, thin atmo
sphere offering little resistance to
tha plane. And that travel, fully
organised, will b safer than any
that men have known hitherto, no
grade crossings, broken rails, defec
tive switches, rear or front end col
lisions.
Human beings are not, usually,
as bad as you think them. Two Ger
man fliers, Bertram and Clausemann,
forced down In a wild part of Aus
tralia, almost starved to death seek
ing to evade "savage natives that
might be cannibals." Finally natives
found them, gave them a big fish,
brought other food and fresh water,
killed kangaroos and supplied fresh
meat.
If those Australian natives had
landed, unable to speak a word of
the local language. In this or some
other "civilized" country, they might
not have been treated as kindly as
they treated the ragged, half-starved
German filers.
Veterans that went to Washington
expecting a bonus will be surprised
o learn that the capital has tear gas
"available In case of a major emer
gency."
Tha gas would be used gently,
however, according to the authorities.
"There will be no obnoxious use of
gas. Tha candles available here will
spread only a thin cloud of smoke."
"The richest country In the whole
world" might find something better
for needy veterans than tear gas.
Europe ts alarmed by a drop In the
birth rate, France especially. Last
year only 741.000 French babies were
born. In 1668 tha number waa 1,340.
000. Poland, tha only country In Europe
showing an Increasing birth rate, la ;
a Cut hoi to country, and deeply religi
ous, aa compared with other Eoru
pean countries. Tha Catholic religion
forblda birth control.
Th Prohibition party gathered In
convention at Indianapolis yesterday, j
stimulated Into action by Democratic :
and Republican wet planks.
The party thinks Senator Borah,
who will NOT support President
Hoover, mltht cotvent to run for
president oa a cold vrstsr ticket.
OREGON, WEDNESDAY,
Personal Health Service
By William
Blgned letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease
diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady If a stamped self-addressed
envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink
Owing to the large number of letters
nere. no reply can be made to queries
dress Dr. William Brady In care ol The
ANYWAY LET US KEEP
Assume for the sake of the argu-
ment, If there were any argument,
that I still had a few friends when
we last defined
the effects of al
cohol here. You
assume that I
never do. I be
lieve it makes
for accuracy In
my teachings If
I frankly ac
knowledge X
haven't a friend
In the world, ex
c e p t my g 1 r
friend, for when you have no friends
who will Indulgent v overlook your
mistakes you have w watch your
step. When I asserted here that al
cohol is never a stimulant, never i
tonic or bracer or builder of strength
ened an Inhibitor, an addler, a weak-
ener from first to last, probably I
relinquished all hope of entering
congress, but I promoted aridity In
this country, and that, I think, is
effective health betterment.
If everybody knew what I know
about alcohol we could abolish the
onerous amendment and aU enforce
ment acts and nobody would be any
better off. Perhaps that would be
the best solution of the problem. Ten
years of education particularly in
the subject of physiology In the com
mon schools would make everybody
as dry as I am.
Dr. H. M. Vernon, English physiol
ogist, determined by careful measure
ments that there is an Interval of
one-fifth second between the recep
tion of an Impression on the retina
and the response of muscles of hand
or foot on steering wheel or brake.
Then he found that a pint of beer,
a glass of wine or drink of whisky
slows the reaction time down to
three-fifths or four-fifths of a sec
ond. This genuine depression pro
duced by the "stimulant" Is present
and measureable for hours after the
alco ol Is taken. It far outlasts the
temporary flush the drinker feels
from a drink or two. ' An automobile
traveling 35 miles an hour will go
25 to 30 feet farther In three-fifths
of a second. Plenty of room there
for accidents, even though the driver j
Is absolutely not "Intoxicated" in the I
orJlnary sense of the term.
Eflclency Is the great modern vir
tue. Athletes ambitious to excel do
not resort to alcoholic "stimulants."
Great Industries sack employes who
are discovered drinking. Big business
executives make short shrift of em
ployes who betray their fondness for
gin. Locomotive drivers are let out
when caught patronizing speakeasies
Today's Guest Editorial
The Mnll Tribune, thanks to the courtesy of the American Leelon,
Is printing a series of guest editorials written on Important questions
of the dnv by prominent citizens In various walks of life. The Mali
Tribune offers these editorials as an Interest Ins feature but does not
necessarily endorse the sentiments expressed.
Number 12
For Citizenship Development Program
of American l.eclon by Governor
Albert C. Hllclile.
A well regulated and disciplined
citizen soldiery was the most cherish
ed administrative measure of George
Washington aa President. It was the
most Important of the recommenda
tions to the Continental Congress
which he was requested to make at
the close of the War for Independ
ence. Washington believed the Na
tion's hope of securing future tran
quillity, dignity and respectability
rested upon a National Defense root
ed and grounded In the citizenry of
the country. He was thinking of a
defensive plan, a plan which would
guard our Nation against the calam
ities of war brought to ua by an ag
gressor. In the light of his experience
he placed his reliance. In no uncer
tain terms, upon the citizen soldier
ss the "palladium of our security."
George Waahlngton was a believer
In the principle that every citizen
who ejijoya tlie protection of a free
government owes a proportion of
what he has to that government and
should give his personal service when
necessary In Ua defense. It la with
regret that I find history records the
fact that the Congress failed to enact
the laws necessary to bring into be
ing thla defensive plan conceived by
Washington and his advisors. For
more than a hundred years we
floundered like a ship without a rud
der, without military policy of any
kind. The Washington plan waa act
ually lost In the archlvea of the Con
gressional Library, where It remained
for a century, covered with dust, until
finally brought to light and made the I
basis of our National Defense System.
Since the days of Valley Forge a
century and a half have passed, but
the principles Involved In the ques
tion of the defense of the Nation re
main the same. History has re
corded throughout these years our
distressing un preparedness, with the
resulting loss In men and material,
all of which la translated Into In
creased public' debt and burdensome
taxes. In 1920. following the ex- this subject, and I am glad also to
perlencea of th World War, the Na- I enlist In the cause of proper and ade
tlonal Congress enacted the present ! quste national defense.
Senator Borah has not said yes,
and probably will contlnu not to
say yes. He is not accustomed to de
feat in political undertakings.
This year the Fourth of July
killed 349. last year 500. The kind
of patriotism that calls for loud ex-
p!osic4is seems to have been subdued
bJr tn, fl.prnjion. Also unemploy-
m(nti n,en,T ,n ,n, nouw prob.
,biy mnl , ltnt crackers" In
the hands of children.
Oold Beach. Ttr.umjl and ticket
.ilA'e cf P.u-!f'(' C.f '.'"'.iv.d l:n now
Vii g hsnrtlct by v. X. Bean of Cen
tral service station.
JULY 6, '1932.
Brady, M. D.
received only a few can be answered
not conforming to Instructions. Ad'
MaU Tribune.
THINGS AS DRY AS WE CAN
or other dispensaries In their hours
off duty. There ts no sentiment or
prejudice in aU this. It Is the atti
tude Imposed upon us by hard facts.
Not until we can contrive to break
down the barrier and introduce hon
est instruction In human anatomy
and physiology Into the common
schools can we hope to dry up this
country. Education, not legislation,
will do It,
The I. Q. (Intelligence level) of tha
United States was gauged as about
that of a normal 13-year-old child,
at the time of the world war. It is
steadily rising, the psychologists in
form us. When It eventually reaches
that of a normal lfl-year-old child,
we shall have become dry, because In
an enlightened community booze Js
certain to be a drug on the market,
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Prompt, Not Gentle.
Please mall prescriptions for that
gently working emetic you described
In one of your talks. My wife has
stomach cramps so violent at times
that we have to send for the doctor
to pump her stomach out . . K. J.
Answer. The emetic I described Is
prompt, but not so gentle. It Is un
sulted for any such case as you de
scribe. It Is only for emergency use
where poison has been swallowed. It
Is one grain of copper sulphate dis
solved in a tablespoonful of water.
This may be given Infant or adult,
and It will bounce right back when
It enters the stomach.
Sour Milk.
Can acidophilus milk be made ot
home by adding a commercial culture
to ordinary milk? How does acid
ophilus milk differ from old-fashioned
buttermilk In composition and
efect on intestinal flora? O. D. G.
Answer. Yes, you can prepare
either Bulgarian milk or acidophilus
milk by adding to boiled milk or
boiled skim milk a commercial cul
ture of Bulgarian bacilli or acidoph
ilus bacilli (different strains of the
lactic bacilli naturally present In
milk), In my opinion there is no
significant difference between plain
buttermilk and these fancy beverages,
except In price. There Is no evidence
that commercial preparations are
more beneficial In any way than or
dinary buttermilk or sour milk. Doc
tors and folks are entirely too credu
lous about these modern nostrums.
After Recovering from Diphtheria.
I was In hospital 31 days with
diphtheria. Am I now Immune to
the disease? S. W. C.
Answer. If you recovered from
diphtheria you are now Immune. .
(Copyright, John P. Dille Co.)
National Defense Act, having for Its
main purpose the proper defense of
the Nation and the consequent de
velopment of a citizen army. In this
legislation, for the first time In the
history of our country, the Congress
took cognizance of Washington's
military plan for defense. In my
Judgment the present National De
fense Act is one of the most con
structive pieces of legislation ever
placed upon the statute books. There
Is provided a small regular army,
necessary for the training of tho citi
zen soldiers and for garrisoning our
overseaa possessions, but the main
reliance In a great emergency la
placed where It should be. upon the
citizens of the nation.
The National Guard, the Organized
Reserves, the Of fliers Reserve Corps,
the Reserve Officers Training Corps
and the Civilian Military Camps are
so placed in the scheme of national
defense that they all fu uniquely
into the plan, each In Its proper
sphere, In such a manner as to pro
duce. If lnti'llgcntly snd properly
administered. f.at trained ana equip
ped first line i,f dclense upon which
the nstlon can rely In any emergency.
Tl-ere Is nothing militaristic about
this set-up. In fact it Is non
mllltarlstlc, oecausc It rests upon the
citizens themselves.
Some there are In this land. well
meaning perhaps but misguided,
who would abolish important fea
tures of the prescribed tra ning, but
In the light of developments today.
In the east and elsewhere, our nation
can with safety do little less than Is
being done.
Wholeheartedly I favor peace and
oenrve m economy, but I think It
foil, to permit ourselves to be misled
ny tnoee who, under tha guise of
eronomy. would eliminate any part
of our present email, carefully
thought out defense training plnn.
The Regular army, the National
Ouard, the Officers Reserve Corps,
the R. O. T. C. and the C. M. T. C.
have each a definite place and should
be adequately supported. It Is with
keen appreciation that I note the
interest of the American Legion In
Phoenix Grangers
j Going To Talent
PHOENIX, July . (Spl.) Officers
. of the Phoenix Orange will conduct
! the meeting of the Talent Orange
I Thursday night and all officers of
Phoenix Orange are urged to be prea-
cnt to fill the chairs.
The program of the lecture hour
will be presented by the ladles of the i
P.loenlx Orange and win be the aame
program presented at the last mv
ing of Phontx Orang.
Junture. First of three bridges on
Trr.trrl Oregon hlctiw.iy. now under
i-onmuctton between this piece snd
Peach, completed.
HUNGRY JOBLESS
DEMANDING RELIEF
Washington Capital Refuses
Responsibility of Food
and Housing Radicals
Disrupt Demonstration
OLYMPIA, Wash., July (AP)
This city has washed Its bands of
the responsibility of caring for un
employed who have converged here
and those contemplating Joining
their comrades, In an attempt to
bring about a special legislative ses
sion for relief.
The city council last night passed
a resolution that the city would not
be responsible for either food or
housing for new arrivals. Those al
ready here, about 40 out of the 600
who arrived on Independence day
to seek an audience with the gov
ernor, are camped at the city auto
camp and were without food last
night. The remainder of the group
had left for their homes.
More to March.
The council s action, notwithstand
ing, calls had been sent to Seattle
and Tacoma for Immediate reinforce
ments and reports from the unem
ployed here said the appeala would
be met with new caravans to the
state capital today and tomorrow.
They have been asked to bring their
own food.
The first response to call by
M. M. London, executive secretary of
the united producers, and Carl Bran.
nln. executive secretary of the Se
attle Unemployed Citizens' league,
came last night with the arrival of
a small party of men from Everett.
A contingent from Belltngnam
went home yesterday for tents and
bedding, announcing they would re
turn today with several hundred re
cruits. Others were expected today
and tomorrow from Seattle, Tacoma
and Grays Harbor.
Reds Also Recruit.
The third attempt to see Gov.
Roland H. Hartley will be made lead
ers said, when a number sufficient
to make a demonstration has arrived.
Police reported that a body of com
munists, members of which disrupted
a demonstration on the capitol steps
Monday, also had aent our appeals
for recruits.
Anticipating further trouble with
the communists, leaders of the other
unemployed groups have placed their
camp under strict military guard.
If the communists bother us again.
there will be no conversation," Lon
don declared. "We are not Inviting
trouble, but we are ready for It.
Citizens here, alarmed over the
new call for unemployed, have urged
stnte officials to Induce the gov
ernor to hear their demands imme
diately. GARNER IN BLAST
AGAINST HOOVER
VIEWSON RELIEF
(Continued from Page One.)
principle of broadening the base of
the reconstruction corporation ao
that all persons could benefit from
It Instead of any one class.
Cannot Borrow.
Garner said "there la no place
where an Individual can borrow
money In thla country any more,"
adding that the banks that had
borrowed from the reconstruction
corporation were refusing to lend
money for the restoration of In
dustry or development.
Urging the house to stick by hla
principle of broadening the base of
the reconstruction corporation and
not to surrender on the direct relief
proposition, Garner said:
"I mcke that suggestion because I
believe we have got to have some
reservoir of relief or we will have
riots. We might as well be plain
about It.
Would Go to People.
"My desire Is to have this legisla
tion serve all the peopte of the
United States and If congrcsa does
not accept It. I am willing to go
before the country for the whole
people while President Hoover goes
before them for his selected clien
tele.' "
Garner said he believed the con
ferees might accept the president's
Aictgettons on all but that section
of the bill dealing with the recon
struction finance corporation loans.
ASTORIA AND SALEM
TO TRADE
ASTORIA. Ore.. July . AP) The
Astoria chamber of commerce hsa re
ceived an offer from relief author!
tlea In Salem to trade fruits and ber
ries of the Willamette valley for Col
umbia river fish. Both commodities,
under the proposal, would be canned
before the exchange.
Health Unit Of
Phoenix Meets
PHOENIX. July , (Spl. 1 Health
unit met at the home of Mrs. John
Oammlll Tuesday for an all-day aes- i
slon. Although attendance was not '
very Urge, due to the busy time of
the year, a good meeting was en loved
next meeting of the unit will be
at the home of Mrs. Ray Ward on
the first Tuesday in Aueust, and it
will also be an all-day affair.
When you shop at the Onx-eterls
park your car at the Oroceterla
'caiklng lot. 137 No. Central.
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson Count)
History from the Files of The
Mall Tribune of ) and 10 Kear
A(o)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
July 6, 1022
(It was Thursday)
"Citizens' committee" formed to
combat Ku Klux Klan In this vicinity.
"Ladles of the Invisible Eye" chapter
to be formed here.
Zero weather hits North Dakota;
IS In shade here.
Two slayers of Sheriff Til Taylor
of Umatilla county hanged at Sa
lem prison. Both protest lnnoosnoa.
Forest fires sweep over Washington
and northern Oregon.
City to build new reservoir In fall.
Citizens arrested for willfully water
ing lawns out of .hours fined 50 centa
and fines suspended.
Campaign to Increase truck traftlo
on Oregon highways opened.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAT
July B, 1812
(It was Saturday)
Olympic games formally opened at
Stockholm, Sweden.
Elmer Cox, driving Jack Morrlll'a
Locomobile, wins auto classic here.
Wild horse race thrills large crowd.
Mr. and MrB. T. E. Daniels are mo
toring to Portland the coming week.
Miss Hazel Antle entertains In hon
or of Miss Laura Page, who will leave
soon for Los Angeles.
Summer exodus of people to the
hills starts.
Local lodge of Elks leaves In spe
cial train for Portland to attend na
tional convention.
Table rock potato
tor break all records.
CrOD STtMCtArt
Jenkins' Comment
(Continued from Page One.)
yHE DALLES CHRONICLE thinks
It would be a good Idea to re
vlve It, which sounds reasonable.
The merchants of The Dalles want
people to shop, and plenty of park
ing space helps shopping along.
It might be a good Idea for other
cities to try this same plan.
NOW DON SUITS
Publicity, according to the state
police Bnd the district attorney's of
fice, has dampened the ardor of Ash-
land Juveniles of both sexes given to
going swimming together evenings
in the upper end of Emigrant lake.
They still go swimming but do not
hang their bathing suits on a hick
ory limb. The state police reported
ten daya ago that "parties" were be
ing held, and that the nudists posted
a guard on top of an auto to warn
of the approach of the law. The
swimming hole Is located about a
mile from the Pacific highway.
According to reports, Adam now
bathea at one end of the lake and
Eve at the other, if at all, and with
a chaperone, and that the former
"Doukhobors" observe all the pro
prieties religiously.
NEW YORK, July . (AP) Rath
er than curtail national advertising
expenditures, amounting to more
than tl. 000. 000 a month, Colgate-Palmollve-Peet
Co. today reduced the
annual dividend basis on the com
mon stock to tl a ahare from M.S0.
Directors declared a quarterly divi
dend of 25 cents a share.
Charles 8. Dewel, vice-president In
charge of finance, said the company
believed It was to the stockholders'
best Interests that sdvertlslnlg be
maintained "even at a sacrifice In
profits and common dividends."
FREEDOM FROM DEBT
Beagle school district directors
L. M. Sweet and William Lucas to
day conferred with the county school
superintendent on the feasibility of
paying the last eioo of a S3500 bond
Issue for construction of the school
house. The district has about $900
on hand and the dlscusson centered
on whether the money would not
be needed for school expenses next
fall and winter more than for tha
retirement of the last bond.
The bonds were Issued In 1033 for
30 years, but the district .has retired
most of them In ten years. Pinal
action will be taken when It la known
how the tax money comes In next
fall.
SWIM
In White Sulphur Water
Helman's Baths
AMH.AND
Tub Baths. Free Picnic Ground
FINE CLEAR PICTURES
Send Cs Tour
films
SWEM'S
.visiter Photo
Finishers
(Medford)