Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 19, 1933, Page 8, Image 8

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    SEEDrORD WaTTJ TRTBT7STE, HEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAT 19, 1933.
Medford Mail Tribune
"Evtryoflt In Sootntrn orc?oa
Xtmu Uw Mill Tribuai"
OtUy Iiept 6ubiUj
PublbtMd bf
irvnmnn pHivriKn CO.
BOBEKT ff. BOHU BdlW
An Independent Nwipsrxr
Entered u twoad dm tuatuc it Medford,
Oregon, under Act of Mircb 8. 1879.
SUBSCRIPTION KATES
ft Mall In Aririn
. Dillr, om year tS.00
". Daily, ill DonUw
Diilr. on moolh .00
R Cvriv. in Adttne Medford. Aihltod,
JiekfomriUe, Central Point. Phoenix, Talent, Gold
Hill ind ca Dtgmin.
Dallr, om itu $6.00
Diilj, 111 montba 8.25
pill, om month .60
All lermi, tub In idiinc.
Official paper of th City of Medford.
OfflcUl paper of Jaetoon County.
MEMBER 07 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
RM-elriM Bull Leued Wirt Berrteo
Th AMoeliled Preu la txclinlrely antttled to
tM uh for puhiieatiOD or ui om ouyiiciKa
credited to U or otbervJu a edited lo this paper
ind alio to the local new nubllihed herein.
All rlgbtt for pubkleatlon of ipedtl dlapatcbaa
herein art auo mmeo. -
MEMBER 0? UNITED PRESS
MEMBER OP AUDIT RUBE AO
Or CIRCULATIONS
AdferUflng ftepreuatatlTM
M. C. M0OENSEN ft COMPANY
omeei la New York, ChleifO, Detroit, San
Francisco, Loe Angeles, 8eUUa, Portland.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By 0. 0. Mclntyre
vmw YORK. May 19 Thought
while strolling! Beer everywhere. But
they beef about the wallop. Odd how
1
I theatrical tem
I i perament as
fmyp winthrop Ames
wiwl WIS tnwwr.
Whatever became
came of Jaw
breaker, with a
caraway aead cen
ter? O. Soglow la
the size of nla
king caricature.
Herbert Corey,
a Toledo, O, boy.
' " like Will Rogers,
O. O. Molntyre n ridden the
range. Myra Klngaley suggest a
light from a atar, Nobody expreaaea
the peppermint quality of Eva Ten
guay on the stage today, wonder li
others also hanker for elastlc-slded
shoes.
One of my favorite people Teroy
Hammond. That queer little pucker
In Queenle Smith's emlle. And the
; frank open countenance of a ohow.
The oauUflowered boys around the
1 entrance to Jaok Dempaey's Broadway
offices. And what ex-champlon has
been Idolized ao long I
Those rooooco furnishings suggest
ing Illicit romance. And what sug
gests It more than ostrich plumed
mules? I wish Ohrlstopher Morley
would re-dlacover old Chelsea sullen
brick houses, window oats, cellar eeto
mlnete, door scrapers and seedy eata
fettes who ride pie-bald ponies In
front of freight trains.
One word description of Mae West
grletley. To the amy of chorua
girls he has trained, Ned Weyburn
, Is "High Pookete." Arthur Moes post
cards thoy are dyeing poodles pink
In Pares, run's fun, but It's tough
to make a alasy out of a pooch. There
Is enough of the human kind.
Bert Ennle, a scholarly observer,
three-sheets attention to need of a
purge for radio vulgarity. Since tlie
kick-off, broadcasting had little un
seemly ribaldry for the very reason
children are potential listeners. Yet
lately there has crept In rowdy refer
ences to oatlhartlcs, tapeworms and
the other morning someone spoke of
"Louie the Louse."
And oasoadee further disillusion
ment that radio applause Is largely
Inspired. Audlencea In studios are
directed when to start the hand-olap-plng
and at what point to ceaas by
means of cards held aloft by attendants.
Por years I taavs been one of the
amateur maglolana boring company
Insufferably on long winter nlghta
with clumsy prestidigitations. As a
result I have spent precious hours
prowling about magic shops and spec
ialized establishments catering to pro
fessionals. Houdlnl taught me one
evanlahment he claimed to have or
iginated, and known to no other save
his wife. My library on magto la
amall but comprehensive. The other
day a storage warehouss reported the
loaf, of two trunks, lodged there when
launching a bravura In housekeeping.
Today I learned tlhey contained my
magic paraphernalia collected over
a period of 30 years. Magic has play
ed no part In my Ufa for six years,
yet tonight somehow 1 feel an Bd
Wynn without hat,.
At old Ranuneratein'a an Australian
magician carried a Hon for a dlaap
pearlng act. After one matinee the
runway to It cage fell, and the
beast walked through an alley to the
street. Pedcatrlane shlnnled up ahade
trees and lamp posta. The lion am
bled amiably to the front of a saloon
and haunohed directly before the en
trance. Everybody cringed, waiting
for riflemen. Then in sudden hor
ror they saw a drunk who lurched
unconcernedly through the awing
doors and, passing the Hon reached
down, patted Its head and ataggered
on. I have thought the Incident a
magnificent comedy cllohe for a
movie short.
Speaking of loose animals. Central
Park and Riverside Drive have be
come' a stalking grounds for danger
ous and unleashed police dogs, on
two occasions I hsve seen them tear
Into smaller and harmleas peta and
rip them open. Sickening I
' Milady's tea hat Is twinkling the
venue with a Turkish tang. Among
wearer are MayoeUe OiweU, Mrs,
The Kaleidoscope
TTAliK about speed I The rapidity with which the international
situation is changing, can only be compared to a kaleido
scope geared on the fan belt of a twin-six engine.
Less than three days ago, it was the world against Germany.
Today it is the world against Prance. Tomorrow it will prob
ably be something else again. No one can tell, or keep up
with the headlong dash of contemporary history.
e e
WITH Hitler rattling the Kaiser's rusty sabre, and war
feared in every foreign office in Europe, it was the world
against Germany.
Then came President Roosevelt's demand for disarmament
and peace. Hitler not only executed an immediate right-about-face,
but turned a complete somersault. He accepted the Roose
velt proposal, agreed war would be a world calamity, pledged
his country to reduction of armaments. More than that. The
following day at Geneva he endorsed the British proposal for
world readjustment, by peaceful means.
. . .
PRESTO I Unofficially at least, the United States welcomed
Germany's changed policy. Great Britain also.
But Prance, through its premier, refused. "We judge Ger
many by its deeds, not its words," declared Deladier, to the
Chamber of Deputies. "France has a strong army now. That
strength will not be impaired."
But unless that strength is impaired, France's present army
and expenditures for armaments reduced, the demands made
both by the United States and Great Britain, can't be met.
So we have Germany, England and the United States on one
side, Pranoe on the other.
IT'S A GREAT game this game of diplomaoy and internation
al politics. Always complex and confusing, always one thing
on the surface, and entirely different underneath, the addition
of speed to the development of important events, has rendered
a clear understanding of the status quo,, and any sound predic
tions of what the future holdst quite impossible.
It can only be deolared once more :
"We don't know where, we are going, but we are on our
way." 1
A New World, Mates
AS WITH the international picture, so with the domestic
picture here in America, Change after change with the
tempo of lightning. Small wonder so few realize we are plung
ing headlong through a revolution a peaceful revolution,
economic rather than military, but a revolution nevertheless.
And what is coming out of it f It would take the seventh
son of a seventh son to say, but one thing is fairly certain:
an entirely new deal for business, particularly for big business.
There is going to be a new and definite economic plan.
Output is going to be controlled, profits are going to be reduced.
Speculation as it has been will be curtailed in radical fashion.
The principle of the farm allotment plan which merely
means controlled production will undoubtedly be extended to
industry. If there is an overproduction of ooal or steel or oil,
the producers will have -to curtail production, submit to a
quota system, and to a certain established scale of unit profits.
T LEAST that ia our view which, of course, may or not
A"
be,
see it, there is no other logical or possible outcome. Eggs
can't be unsorambled, the hands of history can't be turned back.
What so many call the "good old days" may or may not
have been as good as we thought them ; but they are certainly
NOT ooming back. The era of the elder Morgans and Rocke
fellers, the Harrimans and Hills, has passed, a new era is in the
offing in faot it is already here.
"lVJEW worlds for old," as H. G. Wells declared many years
' ago. But to our mind it won't be communism, or even
socialism at least not as Marx defined it. It will be capitalism,
but an entirely new, and hitherto untried, capitalism.
More than that, we believe the new world will be a BETTER
world, not better for the favored few, but infinitely better
for the rank and file. Human rights, not property rights will
be paramount; business will be eonducted, not for profits alone;
but to bring about the greatest good to the greatest number.
That as we see it, is not only the vision of our real states
men, but an immutable law of Nature up and down, back
and forth, but the MASS ultimately always moves upward
and up I
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, MX).
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease,
diagnosis or treatment, wlU be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped, sell
addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters sbould be brief and written In Ink.
Owing to the large number of letters received only a rew can be answerea
here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions.
Address Or. William Brady In care of The Mau Tribune.
SANITATION AND B OIL FERTILIZATION.
A correepondent aska whether
drainage from wptlc tanks Into ft
garden near by pollute the soil and
makes It unsafe
to eat vegetables
grown In the gar
den. The answer Is
no, with Unim
portant excep
tions. ' There Is prac
tically no good
o v 1 d e nee that
such contamina
tion of soil Is ft
source of any
known intestinal
Infection such as typhoid fever, dys
entary, cholera. The soil naturally
digests and purifies such organic
matter, at least the soil close to the
surface.
Carcasses or other animal or vege
table matter buried or worked Into
the soil within a foot or two of the
surface quickly undergo decomposi
tion, which Is a bacterial process that
utilizes oxygen from the air, and dis
ease germs present In the matter so
added to the soil are soon destroyed
or dendered Incapable of producing
disease. But If such organic matter be
burled several feet deep, especially In
clay or Band, It may resist decomposi
tion for many years. The bacteria of
the soil must have oxygen and hence
they thrive only in the top soil.
Intestinal parasites, especially hook
worm, round worm, tape worm .or
rather their eggs, do survive In pol
luted soil, and In the Instance of
hookworm the eggs develop Into lar
vae In the soli, and we know that
persons who go barefoot where the
soli is polluted with hookworm may
contract "dew itch'Vor "toe itch."
which li the skin irritation caused by
penetration of the hookworm larvae,
and a little later the parasites enter
ing the body In that way lodge in the
duodenum and the host develops the
characteristic apemla and "no ac
count" languor of hookworm disease.
But even these parasitic Infesta
tions are quite effectually guarded
against by ordinary washing of vege
tables or fruits which are to- be eaten
raw, and of course all risk of Infec
tion via contamination of such pro
duce by polluted soil is obviated by
ordinary cooking.
A leaky cesspool or broken drain
which discharges into the soil seve
ral feet below the surface may pol
lute the ground water, but the same
surcharge upon or near the surface
Is comparatively harmless In that re
spect. '
Below six feet the soil Is usually
sterile or practically free from germ
life.
The soli of graveyards, contains no
more bacteria or disease germs than
does the soil of a garden.
Experiments have proved that It
is very difficult or Impossible to
make known disease germs grow or
survive in soil. The soil temperature
Is too low. its oxygen, sunlight and
nutritive elements are not suitable
for disease germs.
Tetanus bacilli (lockjaw germs) are
about the only disease germs that do
exfit In soil recently fertilized with
manure the tetanus bacillus Is a
natural Inhabitant of the Intestinal
tract of horses, cows, sheep and per
haps other domestic and wild ani
mals. 1
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Lockjaw.
Is there a serum that cures lock
jaw? M. J.
Answer Antitetanus serum (te
tanus antitoxin) -is most efficacious
as a prophylactic dose, which should
be given the patient as soon as pos
sible after any wound or Injury which
may Involve such Infection. Once
the disease has developed, the anti
toxin is of value only when adminis
tered in very large doses, at least 40,
000 units, Into the muscles or other
tissues, Into the vein and into the
cistern or space around the brain and
spinal cord. Most lives are saved
when the tetanus antitoxin Is In
jected into the cistern through a tre
phine opening In the skull.
Goitre.
After careful examination, physic
ian said I have exophthalmic goitre
and the only cure is operation, but
he suggested I get the opinion of
another physician, which I did, and
the 'second man said medical treat
men would probably control the
trouble. The first physician says It
may do so for a while, but eventu
ally, maybe 20 years from now, I will
reach a crisis and have to be ope
rated on ... I am now 21. ...
L. H. M.
Answer Time to cross that) crisis
when you come, to It.
It Is a Wonderful Machine.
Kindly tell me why It Is that the
body maintains a steady temperature
around 08.5 degrees F. whether one Is
living in equatorial heat or in the
extreme cold of polar regions , . .
W. G.
Answer That's a ' thing I've often
wondered about, too. You might get
the lowdown about the regulation of
the body emperature by consulting
Howell's Textbook of Physiology,
which you can find In every library.
(Copyright 1933, John 7. Dllle Co.)
Communications
Condemns Fishing Methods
To the Editor:
Having recently returned from a
ten day fishing trip in the vicinity
of Savage Rapids, I respectfully re
quest space In your valuable publica
tion, to offer a few observations. The
purpose of this article Is not to at
tack any one, but to state a few facts,
which the general sporting public
should know.
In the first place, the average,
ordinary Izaac Walton of limited
means who contemplates spending
the week end in the particular terri
tory, adjacent to Savage Rapids
should first mortgage his house and
lot to finance himself, for obviously,
that is the one specific section of the
universe where the depression has
not struck. For years the price of a
clumsy rowboat here has been two
dollars per day, and the privilege of
fishing from a pier, which cost ten
dollars to build, has been $1.50 per
day, per Individual. If the fisherman
owns his own boat he must first hand
over a "launching fee" of 95, prior
to approaching the water. This fee
ontltlcs htm to paddle across the
Rogue as many times au he chooses
during the fishing season, which us
ually lasts about six weeks. Every
available foot of land on either side
of the water front below this dam Is
privately or corporately owned. Every
where the outing seeker Is confronted,
with a breastwork of barbed wire en
tanglements, and faced with a bat
tery of signs reading: "Keep out,"
"No fishing," "No camping," "No
trespassing." Five hundred dollars
fine for doing this or doing that.
Never In my life have I seen human
cussed neas so Infernally mean as I
saw it here a few days ago. In some
unknown manner an old couple had
iun the gamut and seated themselves
on the rocks near the water's edge,
to watch the - fisherman and the big
run of beautiful Chinook cavorting
in the opalescent water below. In
less than ten minutes of time the
irate, hard boiled owner of the land
appeared and gruffly ordered them
off the premises. At the extreme
lower end of the rapids a number of
fishing piers have been constructed
to extend far out in mid stream. The
owners of this particular section of
water front, which affords the finest
fishing, have been seen to take as
many as a dozen large salmon from
one of these piers In a single day.
Indeed, It would be interesting to
know how many tons of fish are
taken from these piers every season
by two or three Individuals.
It Is simply a tragedy to stand at a
vantage point and observe the
schools of befuddled salmon hurling
themselves against the fish ladder of
solid concrete, which has been pur
posely placed on the wrong side of
the river until they wear themselves
out, and fall back exhausted to die
eventually. I will leave it to any
group of fair minded citizens any
where to Judge whether more than
one salmon out of five ever gets over
this ladder to the spawning grounds
above. To take a fish from this lad
der with a gaff hook Ihe poorest
prospector on God's footstool, -would
be fined and sentenced to jail; but
a bunch of movie sports from Holly
wood with plenty of Jack can obtain
a special permit from the state game
commission and snag all they want.
I stood on the opposite shore and
watched several hundred pounds
taken In this way, all for the benefit
of the movies, and free advertising
of Oregon's recreational assets, so
they said. ALLEN O. HESS.
Medford, Ore., May 19.
Neighbors Back Sheep Owners
To the Editor, the County Court of
Jackson County, State of Oregon,
and To Whom It May Concern:
We, the undersigned, are the neigh
bors of V. J. Fhllllpl and Jahn Rohr
on the Weaterlund Orchard in Jack
son county, Oregon, and as a correc
tion of the statement published in
the Medford Mall Tribune of date of
May 6. 1933, in reference to certain
sheep which belonged to said Phll
llpl and Rohr did not move -on
Philllpl and Rohr did not move on
to the Westerlund orchard until
March 27. 1933, and at that time they
brought with them the sheep which
were killed by dogs as referred to in
the above mentioned newspaper ar
ticle. That the statement In said news
paper article purporting to have been
made by Deputy Sheriff Edward
Leach to the effect that twenty-three
.head cf said sheep had died prior to
a certain date when other sheep were
killed by dogs would lead the reader
and public to believe that the other
sheep had died from other causes.
We know of our own personal
knowledge that dogs made three sep
arate raids upon the sheep of Mr.
Phillip! and Mr. Rohr. The first raid
was made on April 12, 1933, when
said dogs killed 9 ewes and 6 lambs.
The second raid was made on April
15, 1933, when said dogs killed 12
ewes and S lambs and the third and
last raid was made by said dogs on
April 24, 1033, when the said dogs
killed 19 ewes, 11 lambs and 1 buck.
Mr. Leach possibly was laboring
under the Impression that because
t,he Jambs showed different stages of
decomnosttlon that the first sheep
killed had died from some disease.
However, we were personally present
and assisted Mr. Philllpl and Mr.
Rohr in rounding up the dead and
Injured sheep and in treating some
that were wounded and recovered.
That the said article so published
In said newspaper was and is erron
eous, false and misleading and an un-
warranted injury to the good name
and reputation of Mr. Phlllipl and
Mr. Rohr who truly stated and rep
resented their loss.
EVERETT HUNT
ANDREW TELFORD '
SAMUEL E. RAY
A. R. RICHEY
J. E. GLASS.
Mnt. Thfl atnrv bj minted was
based on information obtained from
sources w.hlch tne Man iTioune saw
no reason to question.
Women Interested
In Burelson's May
Store-Wide Sale
With hundreds of southern Ore
gon women and girls taking advan
tage of the unusual bargains In
ready-to-wear, the second day of
Burelson'8 store-wide May sale wes
highly satisfactory, according to E.
T. Burelson. g
Additional values will be offered
dally during the remainder of this
Important sale event which Includes
quantities of advance summer mer
chandise In all departments.
Emmens in Portland Dr. Jaques J.
Emmens, Medford physician, was reg
istered yesterday at the New Heath
man hotel with Mrs. Emmens. Morn
ing Oregonlan.
ilii.j...i. ml an. i. ill Jpsi,', '
TALK about opportunities! Now you can buy a Kelvinator
a full-sized, full-powered,standard 1933 model Kelvinator
for only 15 cents a day.
' Prices May Go Up
The remarkably low price of $97 (installed, plus freight)
may go up at any time, Kelvinator has not cheapened, and
will not cheapen the product to meet a low price, therefore,
when material costs go up, the price of this Kelvinator goes up.
Lowest Price
This generous payment plan, combined with the lowest price
in Kelvinator history, brings Kelvinator within the reach of
every family. Now you simply cannot afford not to own a
Kelvinator!
FREE INSTALLATION
FEDERAL TAX PAID
STANDARD GUARANTEE
John Cupp Furniture Ston?e
335 E. Main Street
Phone 505
Donald O. Stewart, Lia Whitney and
Ona Munson.
Eddie Fink, long familiar to pa
trons of rejuvenated Luchowa aa
baton wlelder, waa surrounded by a
group of Hani aympatnleara protest
ing against bis appearance at a place
controlled by German Jew. "Dont
be rtdlcl" he gagged. "I work at a
Ontnese place, Lu obow'sl" and trip
ped blithely on,
Flight 'o Time
(Medford and Jackson County
History from tbe (ties of The
Man Tribune of SO and 10 tears
Ago.)
TEN WARS AOO TODAY
May IB, 19JJ
(It Waa Saturday)
Central Point high school to pre
sent a drama.
First cutting of alfalfa full of
weeda la report from Bden precinct.
The "Darwin Theory of evolution"
arouses people, and may be a cam
paign isaus.
There la a shortage of labor for all
kinds of work.
Delegates arrives for Federation of
Women'a elur convention here.
Three people attending masting
called "to re -organise the Klan"
TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY
May 19, 101
(It Was Wednesday)
A. 8. Roeenbaum returns from 'a
trip through 27 states, and declares:
"There is no place Ilka home." "I
have been to Chicago and New York,
and I hare seen nothing that com
pares to aoutbem Oregon In any
way." said Mr. Roeenbaum. In an ed
itorial, the editor says: "There Is a
booster for you. We need 10.000 more
just like him."
. High school graduating class heara
baccalaureate sermon at the Nat.
Leak In gas pipes, Inconvenience
many In getting their meals.
Seats all sold for Maude Adams in
"Peter Pan" aa opening attraction at
Fags theater.
Cattle higher, hut hogs price
slumps.
Chief of police telle city fathers "I
am through trying to make lady driv
ers stsy where they should." Tfie
chief makes ths prophecy "the auto,
is too much for a lady.'
Phone eta! We'll bam away your
refuse. City Sanitary Sexrtoe.
WILL H. WILSON
htu started a 2ND HAND
STORE at 32 N. FRONT
Same location where he was In
business for 15 jeara. Sale now
Going On.
USED CAR
SALE
Prices are going up
BUY N0W1
iee page 0, class, ad section
for list of cars.
Armstrong Motors Inc.
. M N. Riverside
Here's One Way to Keep Hubby
Around the House at Meal Time
But we suggest another way that's sure to be much more
pleasant for you BOTH , . , serve meats from the LIB
ERTY MARKET. We feature government inspected meats
and steer beef only . . . deliciously fresh, and kept fresh by
a modern system of refrigeration.
Specials for Saturday
'The Home of Good Meats Swift's gov't Inspected Meats'
Beef - Pork - Veal - Lamb
. Turkeys - Chickens - Rabbits
SPECIAL
HENS, each .45c
BROILERS, 3 for SI
SEES
mm
Liberty Food Storei
Liberty Bldg.
"The Home of Pure Foods"
W. Main St.
If you really want to SAVE :ind everyone does these duys
Do your shopping at the LIBERTY FOOD STORES Just one
stop here and you can secure choice, nationally advertised
quality trocerles fresh, tasty bakery noods and excellent
meats AT REAI, BARGAIN' PRICES, TOO! Just shop here
and see for yourself how easy It Is on VOIR pocketnook.
1
Phone 143
Alexander Grocery Inc.
Extra
Special
Canned
Rattlesnake
Meat
Can
$1.39
Extra
Special
Cockscombs
and Fries
Bottle
?269
- FREE DELIVERY E. F. ALEXANDER, Gen. Mgr.
-17
15
..5e-
No, 1 Size Cooked Corned Beef
2-lb. Box Sunshine Graham Crackers
Medium Can Fruit Cocktail, delicious mixed fruits
Tomjito Soup, can
Mt. Vernon Milk, 6 Ig. cans
Large Pkg. Carnation Oats or Wheat
9 lb. Bag Albers Quick Cooking Oats
Fancy Crushed Pineapple, can
Fancy Broken Segments Pineapple, can ;
24-lb. Sack Blended Flour
29c1, limit
W
29d
6c
- 6d
-49?
EXTRA SPECIAL 3 Rolls Toilet Tissue, 1000 sheets, orchid
tint, Free one 10c cake toilet soap . 25, limit
Home of Battle Creek Health Foods!
MODEL BAKERY
Phone 511, Joe Doblmeier
New Orleans Homemade Bread
Pecan Cakes Much preferred in many families
35c 3 for 20c
Fruit Twist, a wonderful tasting unfrosted Coffee Cake 10c