Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 22, 1932, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1932.
Medford Mail Tribune
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Bi Carrier, Is Aifraoea Madfors. AtUaot,
(atksoonlla. Casual Paint. PbosuH. West. Hold
Bill am oa miuwara.
Dalit, Boom I T
DUU. ooa raw "
AU uraa, esab Is serines.
Olfldal w at IM Clli at Medlars.
Official papa, 1 luZ'ao Count,.
mxmbkh or rKi sjbocutku eaai
The uaodatad Pres. l ueluttalt aotlUad lo
IM uaa roc puaueauoo Of au oewi iwbw
uadltad U II at euarelae enlltad Is tola papoi
All rUMa for puDllestlu of ipaelal lUpaUMi
errata ara vao iveuu.
MEMBER OF UNITED PHKHS
UXHVEH Or AUDIT BUREAU
or ciBCPLATiom
AdttftUlm Bapmaoutrna
M. C. HOUENBEN A COM? ANT
Offltaa la tin Tart, Ulleaio, Dotrolt, Ess
francisM, Ua aosalai, Baillla, Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
Br avitniif perry
It 1 about time to start crying, lor
th mtd fate of the Valley Wranglers.
who In their self-admitted sanctity,
have alaDoed themselves in vne .acu,
with the custard plea of their own
Ilea, and are now wallowing in a m
of their own creation. The last card
of the demagogue, la to get the boob
vote bawling, and to that end, the
preliminary sympathetic whlnea have
been uttered, mere win po iv
atraln on the community tear ducta,
aa Truth haa finally woke up, and
aided by Common Senee haa started
to chae the conspiracies, that are
auppoaed to be lurking behind every
pear tree. Into the open, iner
Teat nubllo weariness with the non-
aenalcal plot and Miotic raving of
malignant minds. There la going to
be an accounting and a huso on hate
and hellralslng.
ooa
Upstate haa adopted the Wolf Creek
road to the aea. It should run by
every kitchen door, so as to give all
the wolves lurking there a direct
route to the aad anrl solemn aea, aa
long aa they won't loaf on their own
creek. It la understood that the
Wolf Creek route la very mountalnoua
with only a couple of flat places
suitable tor the construction of per
fect "8" curves.
The morns are getting nippy, and
the hills plum colored In the evening,
and a man reported to the pollot that
hie overcoat waa gone, so It begins to
look like fall,
0 0
How do the Iowa farmers, on
"atrlke" expect to make a success of
It, with no agitator from Portland to
lead themt
a a
Young Democrats of the county
will be organized for the campalgrl.
The young are generally too smart to
be Democrats. If not, the Republi
cans should worry. They will be
come Old Democrats, and vote for an
Independent candidate for governor,
when their own la a high type of
cltlaen, with a chance to win.
a
"Sometimes you wonder Just what
else the statesmen would have done,
had they deliberately tried to wreck
the world" (Publlahere Syndicate).
Orub for thought, but It appeara to
ua that the atateamen deliberately
left the world In the hands of an
expert typewriter repairman not
that he would not do a good Job,
but It takea him so long.
" . ' "
Kerensky Shlmoda. a Nipponese
mopplst wan considerable put out
Sunday, as he bought a chicken, and
aa usual failed to beat his oldest boy
to the gluaard. The gleaard la to
Hon. Shimoda, what Manchuria la to
the Mikado.
a a a
IAOK OF FUNDS NOT CONVINC
ING (Del Norte Triplicate.) If any
body knowa anything more convinc
ing than lack of funds, please stand
up I
e e
It will soon be time for the husky
and reckless young motorcyclist,
whose mother won't let him play
football, to ahow up.
a
Oloomy pictures are painted of the
distress next winter, though the na
tion, la knee deep In foodstuffs, and
haa' too much of everything, but
brnlna. The more excited pessimists
predict that the auto tramps will eat
up the provident and the poor, be
fore aprlng cornea again. There Is no
danger of this coming to paaa. The
auto tramps will be too busy rushing
to a bigger bean pot, over the hUl, to
commit cannibalism,
a
"Jay Leghorn haa returned from a
vtatt with hi brother In Wyoming.
He waa urged to atay until fall, but
thought It best to return o home
dules." (Ollllam County Notes.) He
Just wouldn't be egged on.
A raconteur waa here from Frisco
en the 18th Inst., and Just before the
deal wa closed, expressed doubt that
he would ever be able to tear himself
away from this fair valley but ha
did.
a a o
The proposal of the Roaeburg
News-Review, that the legislature be
abolished Instead of the University
Of Oregon, I too eenalblo and unex
pected to merit the slightest consid
eration. a
He discourses upon any and aome
tlmea every measure thst comes up,
and his machine-gun patter pro
claims the ubiquity of his under
standing, the propinquity of hi feel
ing and the obliquity of his reason
ing (Oregon Voter.) Speaking of
eiuberencs ol lbs verbosity.
Editorial Correspondence
GALENA, III., August 15.
The fascination of Onlona is
this; it takes one back into thr
past figurately and physically.
Taken by and large it hasn't
changed in one hundred years.
Although it ws the home of
General Grant and as a tourist
attraction, derives its chief im
portance from that fact, it
doesn't represent the Grant
era, Quite the reverse in fact.
It represents not only tTie pre
Grant. but the ANTI-Grant era.
In this, Gulcna is in marked
contrast to Bockford, Freeport,
Elgin and other cities in north
ern Illinois. The old homes in
these cities all 'represent that
flambouyant, nouveau riche.
period whioh followed the civil
war (with only those excep-
tions which prove the rule).
This was the period of ginger
bread architecture, of cast-iron
fountains, -and cast-iron deer;
of turrets and cupalos, porte
cocheres and stained glass bay
windows, a mushroom manu-
faotunnir aristocracy, with a
great deal of money for those
times at icaut and very little
taste.
When U. S. Grant stepped
off a steamer at Galena in 1860,
carrying a couple of wooden
chairs, while his wife carried
the babies, tho city that claims
him, was at its high tide social
ly and commercially. It wai
finished, a finished product.
Unlike other cities in northern
Illinois, it didn't boom after
the war, it started to go down
hill. . As a result it missed both
the post-bellum prosperity and
the post-bellum architectural
debauch which accompanied it,
and is properly identified with
its famous son.
As a' result a walk along the
Quality street of Galena up
on the hill of course (since
the medieval barons built on
hills, aspiring humanity has to
lowed their example) is a de-
light for sore eyes and provides
that romantic thrill which al
ways acoompanics th(j process
of turning the hands of the
olook of time, backward, in the
realm of the imagination.
Just how much the presence
of a good local architect had
to do with It we don't know,
but the . fact remains, that
arohiteoturally, both from the
standpoint of homes and of
churches, Galena surpasses
anything we have ever seen in
the Middlewcst. In fact as one
walks about it is impossible to
believe that one is IN that part
of the country. It is like the
Old South or old New England
or even like old ENGLAND
it. is like anything but the
corn and Chautauqua belt, of
20th century America.
There is a genuine Old South
church there is a venerable,
ivy grown AUTHENTIC Eng
lish chapel, there are brick
mansions, with their white pil
lars and green blinds, and
brick coach houses all in ex
cellent repair and believe it
or not women whose dresses
trail on the ground, come out
of them I
Of 0011186 there are some
jarring notes Grant old
brick home (not the Grant
mansion which the crateful
people of Galena presented to
him after the war and is now a
museum) has been ruined by
the addition of a icraggly
wooden porch. Someone placed
cloctrio globes, on the marvel
lous facade of "Old South"
so members of the congregation
would not stub their toes on
the stone steps no doubt but
all in all little architectural
butchery and little bungling
restoration has been done.
The mayor of Galena is try
ing to make Galena a real tour
ist attraction. That is the right
idea from the standpoint of
commercializing its unique as
sets, but we are jjlml we had a
chance to walk up and down its
hills, before the movement
gained any headway. . ,
Galena is a Hip Van Winkle
that went to sleep a life time
ago and has not yet awakened.
As far as we know the pbenora
enon is unique in the Mississip.
pi valley, if not in the entire
country.
The country around Galena
is beautiful, high hills, and
thick woods, areas given over
more and more to grazing. A
cement highway runs through
Galena from Kockford to Du
buque and one is not surprised
to learn the contractor lost
money. For miles it is like a
I giant switchback way up and
way down, the crest of each
hill being about level with the
next one. At the top, gorgeous
panoramas of lovely country,
which are thrilling and bring
"Ohs!" and "Ahs I "particu
larly from the women passen
gers. Motoring through thick
woods, approaching Galena,
red and white road signs were
surprising "DANGER BE
WARE of RATTLESNAKES 1"
It seems the woods on both
sides of the highway, harbor
scores of rattlers When the
road was built 300 were killed,
and the workers were obliged
to wear leather puttees, and
carry first aid for snake-bite.
Limestone rocks within the
woods, are the favorite haunts
for the reptiles.
A big one was brought into
Galena the other day. The man
who captured it, took a piece of
red flannel; the snake struck,
so did his fangs (in the flan
nel), and the citizens of Galena
.(at least so the story goes) pro
ceeded to pull them out with a
pair of pliers. There wag the
snake as evidence in a' store
window. Quite a thrill for
Galena, more people on Main
street .than at any time since
Christmas. R. W. R.
Flight 'o Time
(Medford and Jackson Count)
History from the riles ot The
Mall Trlbon of M and 10 Vaan
Ago)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
.August It, 11X2.
(It wa Tuesday.)
Fall furl tons decree that the wom
en's vanity case, be large, roomy and
the alee of a "portable typewriter
case."
Judge Colvig, who wss called a
"has-been" by John A. Jeffrey of
Portland, calls Jeffreys a "never-was."
and vowa to argue with him no more
via letters to the editor.
O. of O. forum urges Mayor Oatea
to name city planning board.
Sportsmen pass seven resolutions
for the improvement of the fishing.
Epidemic of spare tire thieving hits
city.
Mr. and Mrs. O. M. English and
Mrs. Ralph Bard well leave tor trip
to Alaska.
Concrete poured for Hutchison A
Lumsden buUdlng at Sixth and Bert
lstt. AutoleU urged to "set a good ex
ample for tourists, and not speed on
th highway."
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
August II, 1911.
(It waa Thursday.)
Revelations In murder of Gambler
Rosenthal Indicate that there la close
union between police and gangsters.
"Oyp the Blood." alleged slaver, eludes
arrest. Police Lieutenant Cnarlea M.
Becker held. Charge that Rosenthal
wa slain when he threatened to di
vulge graft stories to grand Jury.
fllngllng Brother circus burn up
at Sterling, 111.
Three alngle tax orator
valley next week.
Thunderstorm breaks over valley
and cools sultry air.
Local Bull Moceera launch move
ment to have T. R. speak here next
month.
Mrs. A. B. Cunningham
returns
from VUlt at Bverett, Wasti,
Attorney Hsrry D. Norton of Grant
Paaa ha purchased th Stlte ranch
on Williams creek.
County Republican launch another
appeal to 'Republicans to cling to
the constitution with both Roosevelt
and WiUon on the wing."
When needing duplicating sale
books, flat-packs or fan-fold cash
r ( 1 t r forms, ledger sheets
for bookkeeping machine or
any other kind of printing,
don't order from out-of-town firms
and pay more. Phone 13 and one of
out representative wui oaU.
Today
By Arthur Briibtnt
104 On the Mohave,
Rabbits and Aldabaran,
Cash Irrigation.
We Lose a Customer
Copyright King feature Synd., Ino
HODGE, Cal., Aug. 21.
Pleasant day here, on the Mo
have desert, temperature one
hundred and four in the shade,
but not disagreeable, thanks to
a breeze blowing steadily from
the Pacific, sixty miles to the
west.
Quite cold in the night, one
thin blanket not enough. Cold
nights, and in the day time men
sunburned as dark as Indians,
working with no clothing above
the waists, with heat from one
hundred and two to one hun
dred and twelve an interest
ing contrast.
Last .night, youth, led by
Howard Hill, the champion
young archer from Opalocka,
Florida, went out to hunt jack
rabbits with spotlights and
bows and arrows
The rabbits stup for a second,
huge cars eieot, when the light
falls upon them, and the rabbit
moi taljty is net high.
The young men take turns,
one runs the cor, another, sit
ting on the far end of the mud
guard, does the shouting, hold
ing his balance with one leg
curled arourd a lamp. -
Criminal rabbit that have bur
rowed under the fence Into the al
falfa lands, their , Idea ot heaven,
come down to th fence, but Its close
weaving makes th arrow useless.
You might send dogs after them,
but doge and rabbit would make
paths In th green velvet of the al
falfa, more harmful than the rabbit's
moderate eating.
If Jack rabbits dodging spot light
and arrows do not Interest you, you
may look off to a great three-corner
ed, xed moon, rising over the moun
tain, or up where the milky way
makes a path ot brilliant whit, and
the bigger stars and planet stand
out on a blue black aky.
. Some ot those suns are one million
times aa big a our own and our sun
Is a million ttmea aa big aa this earth
So nothing li big, nothing U little,
and perhapa a dodging Jackrabbit U
aa Important aa Aldabaran, or even
Orion' giant nebula.
At four o'clock thU morning, the
alfalfa balling machine U at work,
outside your window, men with pitch
fork feeding It, while th gaa engine
chuga.
Big horaee, at the word of com
mand, move the bailer Just the right
distance to th next pile of hay with
the night dew atlll on It, which makes
the perfect hay. One set of nimble
fingers attend to th wire that hold
th bales together. Women can do
that.
It 1 Sunday, but hay must be
balled when It I ready. Would you
enjoy working at four In the morn
ing and later, In the day'a full heat,
raiting alfalfa to sell at eight or nine
dollars a ton for th highest grade?
There I other' news, although ft
aeema distant here.
Oovernor Roosevel discovers that
our trouble are due to President
Hoover. He, the president, encour
aged stock gambling, then kept the
facta to himself when the depression
came. Oovernor Roosevelt hsa seven
remedies, read them.
Oovernor Roosevelt proposes, ft
elected, to have government regula
tion of Wall street. This will make
Tall street more than aver anxloua
to put up prlcea and persuade the
voter that bad time sr over sine
stock are going up.
Unfortunately for these election
plans, about ten million Americans
will not believe that bad times1 are
over until they get Job. As long a
you can hire all th men you want
tor fifteen cent an hour, tome will
believe that bad tlmee are not ended.
Oovernor Rolph of California will
not abandon hU aoldler bonus sug
gestion, although high finance tells
him he la wrong. He would give sol
diers ot California bonds of this state,
guaranteed by California. In exchange
tor their bonus certificate.
Whan th certifies tee come due
California would collect from Uncle
Sam. Th soldiers, easily selling their
tax exempt California bends, would
have the money to spend now, when
they need It.
Bonus certificate an not nego
tiable and that might Interfere. But
there It no doubt that payment of
the bonus NOW would do more to end
this depression than anything else
could do. Distribution, ot two and
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M. D.
Signed Utter pertaining to personal Health and hygiene, not to disease
duuraoal or treatment. wlU be answered by Dr. Brady u a stamped self -addressed
envelope I enclosed. Letter should M oriel and written In Ink
Owing to lb Urge number ot Utter
bare, no reply can 0 made to queries not eonformlng to Instruction. An
dreas Dr. WUllam Brady In care of To Mall Tribune,
OLD FASHIONED VERSUS MODERN TREATMENT OF FRACTURES.
There l-no difference between a
fracture, break and crack of bone.
Th term "compound" fracture means
that there is a
wound or break
In the skin over
or near the seat
of fracture, and
this gives the ad
ded risk of infec
tion at the time
of the Injury or
aubaequently
from Improper
handling. It la
not evidence for
or against a frac
ture that the patient oun or cannot
move or use the injured member.
The old time doctor waited till the
awelllng. had aubalded to set or re
duce the fracture, that U, to replace
the fragmenu In aa nearly perfect
position a possible. Th modern doc
tor reduces the fracture Immediately.
The old timer used apllnu, ban
dage or other meana to prevent aU
motion, and often he applied ban
dagee' so tightly that the bandages
caused the victim greater discomfort
thsn ths Injury did and If such dress
ing wsa left undisturbed tor daya
and weeka, the permanent damage
the victim Buffered wa say fifty
fifty halt due to the Injury and half
to the crude maltreatment.
TJio modern physician of course
he 1 a surgeon too, for every Indi
vidual who receives the degree - of
M.D. and the legal right to practice
Is licensed as a physician and sur
geon eo fit hU splints and other
dressings aa to give the patient the
greatest degree of comfort consistent
with good surgery and satisfactory
healing, and If he uses bandages he
does not use them to compress the
broken bones In place. His bandages
are Invariably applied so that there
la enough "give" to Insure against
that, and yet they are snug enough
to aupport and retain the splint In
place.
The old timer allowed the apllnta
or other rigid dressing to remain un
disturbed for several weeks. The mod
ern physician removea the dressing
dally to be that all la right, to apply
gentle massage and movementa. He
la atrlvlng to keep the soft tissues In
good condition, to maintain a good
circulation, to prevent harmful ad
hesions or deformity. The old timer
hsd an eye and idea of merely a
broken bone.
Formerly, and even now, physicians
employed plaster of Parle for apllnta
or casts In many feature case. Here
the difference between the old foe
sll and the physician with up-to-date
surgical training U less obvious, but
If the cast completely encircles limb
or body and la allowed to remain un
disturbed for weeks rTke that It Is
a quarter billion dollars In every cor
ner of the United States would RE
VIVE BUSINESS, put men to work,
start factories going.
And the government need not beg
or borrow the money, or fear Infla
tion. It could print the money and
Issue It, no Interest to pay. It gold
supply la ample, It credit U good
As well talk o( a flood, when you
irrigate these alfalfa fields, a talk
about Inflation. If money were dls
trlbuted evenly In every corner, every
store, theater, factory In th country,
However, our high finance geniuses.
that have Just proved their intelli
gence by throwing away billion of
private dollar In Europe and South
America, aay NO, and therefore the
bonus will not be paid, although lta
payment would benefit them, more
than ethers.
They fight that now aa they once
fought the federal reserve bank propo.
altlon. And without that federal re
serve, thi country would recently
have gone through such a black panic
a th world never aaw.
The government U dumping lta bil
lions into financial Institutions, lend
ing to great corporation auma up to
on hundred millions, hoping that
th money. In some mysterious way.
will aeep out and reach th peoples'
pocket.
That aa foolish as though th 60.-
000 gallon of water pumped from the
well on thla ranch every hour ahould
be pumped Into the big concrete re
crvotr, and left to find 1U own way
to th alfalfa root, Instead of pour
ing through pipe and ditch that
distribute the water to th root of
every plant.
Japan went IntoManchurla, apent
money, and her finance minister con.
fessee that the U now In a Tery bad
financial crisis. Let US not crlticue
Japan. We went Into Europe's war,
head over heela, pocket book and all.
W spent billion and sent billion,
and when It wa over. Ilk a parcel
of brilliant Idiot, w lent down ot
other billions. That I costing us
more than Manchuria wlU ever cost
Japan.
a -
Britain's trad center nc at Otta
wa end, and tens of million worth
of goods that Canada used to buy
from us every year, ah wlU buy uo
mor for th present. W cannot
criticise the British and their domin
ion for endeavoring to establish free
trad among themaeive, a w have
It among our 4 states.
On the other hand, we buy every
year from Canada mom than the
whole British empLre buy front bet.
3
received only few can be answered
an old fossil In charge. If an up-to-date
man uses .plaster of ParU, he
either mold a light splint to fit one
side ot the Injured limb or If he ap-
plies a complete casing ot the plaster
he Immediately cut It Into two halve
lengthwise and then regularly re
moves one or both halves to Inspect,
massage and gsntly move the Injured
limb.
The modern doctor discards all
splint or other rigid dressings In
from three "to four weeks In meet
cases of broken leg or arma. The
old timer kept the victim. In splints
till the cows came home and that ex
cessively long disuse brought about
a good deal of permanent disability,
The anatomical and functional re
sult obtained by the ordinary every
day practitioner now are superior to
the best the great surgeons of the past
generation ever aaw.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Essentials for Recovery.
It Is not true that the essentials
for recovery from tuberculoele are
plenty ot fresh air. pure food and
rest In bed? A. O. J.
Answer Yes, It la not true. The
regular attendance of a good physic
ian U the first essential, and the use
of the other weapona ahould be en
tirely under hla supervision.
Flyblown.
A believes meat that la flyblown. Is
harmful. B believes It Is not. Please
give your opinion. J. L. W.
Answer- That meana flies have de
posited their eggs upon the meat and
the eggs have developed into larvae
(maggots) which will become files In
a week or 10 days. If the flybloVn
meat la thoroughly cooked It Is still
harmless food. . But It would probably
be unfit to eat as cold meat. The
same applies to any other food that
hnppena to become flyblown.
Foot Itch.
What about athlete's foot? Is Whit
field's ointment the best remedy? Do
you advise occasional appllcatlona of
benalne? H. E. J.
Answer Ask for monograph on the
subject and Inclose stamped envelope
bearing your address. Gasoline, not
benxlne. Is a good remedy.
Calories.
Please give the approximate num
ber of calories In the following: Three
medium alxed hot cake (350 calo
ries). A malted milk containing one
heaping teaspoonful malted milk (36
calories), one egg (75 calories), one
glass of milk (150 calories) and one
scoop of Ice cream (360 calories).
Glenna.
Answer It seems a tho the good
things are all nourishing and fat
tening, doesn't It? But never mind
all you have to do Is walk three mile
extra to burn It up.
(Copyright, John 7. DUle Co.)
We may be able to transfer that buy
ing to home producers. It we do,
Canada will congratulate us. In any
case our total export amount to only
10 per cent of our total production,
even In boom times. It all our peo
ple had all they want of everything
the ten per cent export would soon
be absorbed.
Communications
Tonlo of Confidence Needed.
To the Editor:
What Is wrong with Medford, and
how long are It citizens to remain
aaleep to the fact that they are de
stroying their own beat Interest by
their indifference and failure to
rallne existing conditions?
Anyone who ha lived In Medford
or Jackson county for the past 30
years (or the past ten years) knows
what haa been accomplished In the
way of progress and oannot faU to
feel the contrast In the eptrlt of
those daya to that of the- present
time. To be sure, this psrlod of
world depression U more a moment
for holding on than for branching
out but more than ever It is Im
portant that we hold on firmly and
unitedly to the atructure that has
been built up for us In the past.
Are we doing that? Have we the
same spirit that gave Medford and
Jackson oounty a prominent poeltlon
In th state? Others think not, aa
la plainly evidenced by recent frank
expression of various up-state or
gans. , .
Isn't It time for Jsckson county to
wak up? Let's get down, to brass
tacks, look each other equarely In
the face? We have the aame type of
clttren In Jackson county we have
always had honest. Intelligent, fear
less, able and ready to continue the
task ot development begun by the
pioneer father the highest type of
cltlaenshlp any part ot th stete can
boast. We don't lack optimism, vigor
or courage; we lon't lack brains or
ability to see opportunity, or the
capacity to seize It. BUT WE DO
LACK UNITY, and unity U essential
to community success.
Nothing U so destructive as sus
picion and doubt, and unlesa the
ettiEcns of Jackson county determine
to cast them out and re-embrace rea
son In their stead, there can be no
hop for the constructive messuree
which are so sorely needed In this
year of trial and uncertainty.
ror the past year and a half we
have been assailed by a perfect hail
storm of attack upon th Integrity
of our governing official. As hall
pecks at th fruit of a tree, leaving
It marred and misshapen, a bruised
and ruined crop so dee thi sort of
propaganda sap and destroy our civic
vigor and endanger th harvest of
our effort.
Abuse haa been heaped upon prac
tically every institution and official
of city and county and many private
citisen and enterprises hav also
come under the barrage.
In no alngle Instance haa there
been shown any real foundation or
corroborating evidence for the Insinu
ations and hint so freely published
Haven't bad enough? uaa t
It been brought home to us that this
sort of thing is destructive to honest
endeavor?
Let's get back to harmony and a
constructive program. Strengthen
our institutions with fslth and con
fidence. Refuse to listen to slander-
oua criticism and unsubstantlsted
tale of mlacarruute of justice. It Is
only common sense to clean house
when It Is needed, but any house
wife knowa that the threaten and
nlan to clean house every few dsys,
with all the resultant tearing up and
disorder to routine, Is a futile waste
of energy. And any man knowa It
not only destroya the comfort of hU
home but Imperils the getting of
three square meals a day.
We have a hard winter ahead of
us. Msny men will be out of em
ployment and msny homes will be
without provisions, and unless we
strengtnen cur organisations ana
those directing them, with faith and
confidence, we cannot handle the sit
uation capably or give the help that
will be needed.
Disinterested public opinion has
served a a clinic In diagnosing our
malady. Let's be guided by this
opinion shun the poison that has
been crippling us and prescribe for
ourselves a dose of the tonic of con
fidence. (Name on file.)
Should Be Annual Affair.
To the Editor: -
I have Just read the account of
the Jacksonville celebration. This
should be an annual affair, but
should be held on September 4.
The first celebration ever held In
Jacksonville was on September 4.
1853, celebrtalng the arrival on Au
gust 15, 1853, In the valley from the
south via Link river route, of the
Rockefeller train of about 100 wagons,
300 people and 1500 cattle.
I will quote from the diary of my
father, Welborn Bee son, aged at that
time 17 years:
"Sunday, Sept. 4, 1853.
"Father and I rode down to Jack
sonville, about 10 miles from Wagner
Fort. The country Is very fine. The
town Is wedged up Into the moun
tains. But the mines are aU atoped
Business Is very dull, although I saw
a load of melon sell for 1200 cash
We got back by 6 o'clock."
A boy'a description of the town
and celebration follows, and further
on notea he saw fish In Jackson
creek. WELBORN BEESON, II,
Ashland, Ore., Aug. 31, 1933.
Editorial Comment
The Bar Association.
L. A. Bank of the Dally News Is
busy as usual msklng mountains out
of molehills. He has attacked the
Southern Oregon Bar association for
Its action In regard to the recall of
Judge H. D. Norton.
To our mind, the action of the bar
association In passing resolution of
confidence In Judge Norton waa abso
lutely within our rights. The attempt
to recall Judge Norton was sponsored
by parties unknown and the bar as
sociation had a perfect right to ex
press confidence In the Judge If they
saw fit.
That Is all they did In their reso
lution and we fall to see where the
publisher of the News finds evidence
of gross wrongdoing In their action.
We can see nothing pointing to an
endeavor on the part of the legal
fraternity to Interfere with the con
stitutional right of anyone. When
a public official Is attacked, either
for his official actions or his private
life, his friends certslnly have as
much right to express confidence In
him s his enemies had In starting
th attack. .
The printing of these recall peti
tions and the placing of them about
the county for signatures was an open
attack upon Judge Norton and he
waa openly defended by the bar as
sociation, which la no more than fair
play. (Arthur Powell in Central
Point American.
i
Navy Cameramen '
To Shoot Eclipse
WASHINGTON, Aug. 33. -- (If)
A battery of giant cameras operated
by the navy will "shoot" the sun's
eclipse August 81 with a range and
accuracy that the fleet's best gun
crew can never hope to equal.
The navy'a "armament" of cameras,
now resdy to go Into action on a
Maine hllltrm rival in ..... un
bre the big guns of a battleship. They
win ao ineir anooting over a range
93,000,000 miles.
of
Call Dr. Standard
On Hibbard Case
PHOENIX. Aug. 33. (Spl.) Dr.
Dan E. Standard was called to Burns.
Oregon. Wednesday to council with
Dr. B. F. Smith of Burns, and Dr.
Otla F. Akin of Portland In the case
of George Hibbard who was seriously
Injured by diving from a spring board
Into Sllvles river, suffering a disloca
tion of the vertebrae In the neck
which caused Immediate paralysis of
the body. Dr. standard practiced
and 'conducted a hospital for several
years in Burns during which time he
wss the family physician In the Hib
bard family.
At ttearv mntt ...
cl,covi,itor flodsSin Francliro".fin..t" niV0 P"""'-
hotel. Here, those whT.pp'ute an ur..'W,r,, """U f,,
nvlronmentofquietlivellnessresuM X""1' ""Florentine Room
to be found -each yr ,et wS V"'?"!- ljKhlful"'1
travelers returning to enjoy its ifr x X' i m,ln lobby'
able atmosphere. Fortunei e.t f P"n ""ne W gvnl
located in the very rramQ X' jl--' j V f"y dcsircJ "
itan San FranclscW r & .cj!? ?" m furnish
heretheCliftiaejlFls. . V A-'rfO.acP Vght future are
the better
bo pa.
at ha
from
Outstan
v
to every
ma na re me
the tuMuHfu'
the it nirfn ri
per haps Sao F
lir hntl im
teen floors above
decorated and ric
nificient room wr
a la carta urW
the diner a for
Cisco's multitudinous
ihip-itrewo Bay, the tecro
Itakland and Berkeley
the hills on thm nnnMii
awav. Th vi h. t.
marrpiftut- a ixltHr in iua
few i'jS
EXPORT BARRIERS
BERLIN. Aug. 33. OP) Barriers
hindering the exportation of German
goods must be removed if Germany
Is to meet her foreign debt payment,
Professor Hermann Warmbold. rulsts
ter of economic, declared today.
The cabinet member the only on
held over from the old Bruenlng ad
ministration denied emphatically
that the government wa considering
a one-sided reduction In private debts
or that the retch waa about to aend
a special debt mission to the United
State. -
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