Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1933)
PAGE TEN SEEDFOTID MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE" 1, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "Eviryont In Southern Orison Atsds thi Mall rribunt" Daily Except Riturd; Published by MEDfUHD PAINTING CO. ss-ir-se (t fit at room tc BOBEBT W. RUBU Editor ao Indapeodrat Newspaper Entered ta second elan matter it Orefon, under Act of Hard. 8, 1870. SUBSCRIPTION BATES H Mali In Adrinc DUlj, oem rev $B.0O Dally, ill months 1.T6 Dally, one month CO Of urrier, in agtwiob meuioiu, miuwj JaeiMSTille, Central Point. Pboeolx, Talent, Gold WU and on Hiistwajs. Dally, OM rear ..8.00 Dally, lis monthi Daily, on month .00 All Umi, cash lo adrane. Ofricltl paper of the City of Madford. Official paper of Jacttoo County. MEM B KB OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS RetctTlm ruU Latsed Wire Serrleo Tfcs Associated Press U aieluilMly SDtltled to thi tut for publication of all oewa dispatches . credited U tt or otherwise credited to thi paper and aJao to the local oem published herein. All rlgbtJ for publlcatloD of special dlspatdMt berelh are also resened. UEMBEB Or UNITED PRESS MEMBEB OP AUDIT BUBEATJ OR CIRCULATIONS Admtlilnt RepressntetlrtS ML a MUUKNBEN A COMPANY Offls lo Ne York, Cblco. Detroit, Sao Francisco, Los Angeles, Beattle, Portltnd. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Parry. imlan. Wash.. 1 BtdlOted With Young Communists, who demand the right to raise neu wuuuuv .nn. from constituted authority. Ju venile morons, lull at half-baked, aeml-ldloUo Bolshevllcl notions, Is one thing thla community missed, and baa yet to give uianas ur. STATE OF THE UNION (Hlgglmvllle, Mo., Ad7Bnce) The Lion Club met Wednes day night at Lelman'a Cats and alter hearing a ahort discussion on aome way ttiat Congress might and the Depression, and hearing a report on the Boy Scout cabin being erected at the fair grounds, they adjourned. ... An Italian aviator announces his Intention to fly across tha Atlantlo ocean and land In Egypt, it boped that the press of th land will keep the information relative to this aulclde on the want ad page, where K belongs. .... The Older Girls, owing to Vie ad' vent of aummer, are wearing around the bouse what would be a Mother Hubbard, if It was not called some thing else. The garment, whatever It Is, looks more like a Mother Hub bard than a man looks like a aeer. ... The police yesterday arrested man who wu so drunk he would not try and drive his auto. ... Tourists are not very plentiful, but what do ahow up look like they would not have to borrow any gaso, Una from Vie county to get back borne. . The bole for the new H. Flewher bakery Is completed and la a much better hole than the majority of the population think they are In. ... The senior clsas of the hi. has crossed the bay, and the open sea lies beyond, and will at once take up a position In the rear ranks In the battle lor pancakes. i A freight train went thru Wed pra. catching a lot of 4ds unawares before they oould endeavor to knock the locomotive off the orosslng. ... Picnics are the order of the day, the picnickers coming home ousalng the ante for getting In the butter. 8olomon advised the sluggard to do aa the ant, Instead of lolling around a bank corner gazing peevishly at his fellow men. ... The Salem Statesman editorially congratulates Itself and Journalism In general, on tihe fact that no edi tor received any favors from J. Pler pont Morgan, the Wall St. wretch and plutocrat. This is Justifiable grounds lor condolences Instead of congratu lations, but from all that can be read of the liberality of Plerp. It was the editors' own fault. ... S. (Flea) Davis has rtd. from a sojourn In Calif., arriving here two days alter the first earthquake story. ... A miner was In town the first of the wook, with IS gold nuggets and a pill bottle full of gold flakes, com plaining bitterly because Whiskey Creek was not another Yukon River. ... Young men are arriving from the east and going Into the woods, whloh every two years are full of candi dates. This year they will have nothing to contend with but wild creatures, 2nd loots, rugged terrain, and the natural disadvantages of the high tpots. ... IIAPPV DAYS TO BB There will then be no long, linger ing, palnfl Illnesses, no slow declines with gradual loss of mental and phy sical function. Instead, whether It la 11-year-old Johnny or 73-year-old grandma w,ho Is to pass on, the event will take plaoe with a dash and verve. One moment the candidate for disso lution will be In full career perhaps two or three miles up In the air, or In oome wonderful, beautiful factory of awlftly sldlnlg, quiet, steel wheels and levers, and the next, with a dra matic rush and bang, will be In eter nity . No one win ever be quite cer tain of living out the day; everone will stand a lair chance of living to be ISO; a mood of adventure and gaiety will doubtless settle down upon the world. The doctors, of course, will starve to death, though the sur geons v.lll contrive to eke out a liv ing; and on the whole the prospect la a very pleasing one Independent. Klectiio beating has been Installed In the cells of the new Jail in Ches- ter, England. An Answer to T170NDER of wonders I The Mail Tribune has received an anonymous communication from a member of the Good Government congress, which ical. It is even signed "John Z. Smith", and post marked Med ford, but as neither the city directory, telephone book, nor careful inquiry repeals any individual by that name, we con elude it was written by someone who insists upon anonymity. The Mail Tribune doesn't nor any communication the but we would gladly print this entire letter, if the writer would send in his or her name. For the communication stresses a point which we believe is important. This point can be made clear by the following condensation: "You continue to condemn members of the Good Govern ment congress. Well 1 am a member and many of my neighbors are members. Continued attacks merely strengthen us In our purpose to stay In the organization and continue our fight for good government. We believe there Is need for such an organi sation, we are as devoted to law and order, as opposed to violence and lawlessness aa anyone. We believe a vast majority of the membership la, but they have been misled and betrayed by their leaders. We want new leaders and Intend to get them men and women who believe in the fundamental principles of the Constitution and Declaration of Independence upon which this country was founded, and are opposed to communism ana tne strong arm metnods or communism, which the author ities here adopt. . . , You claim you want peace In the valley, but you will never get peace by continuing your abuse and persecution of the Good Government oongress, but only pro long the dissension and strife, that you claim has done thla community so much harm. Call off tha doga of war and you oan get peace, we can all work together for better government orderly and truly representative government In Southern Oregon." The answer is the Mail Tribune does not now, and never has, opposed the Good Government congress, In so far as it is hon estly and sinoerely devoted to seouring better government in this community. Conditions are not perfect anywhere, and there is always room for improvement, particularly in the direc tion of securing more competent and conscientious public offi cials, and raising the character and quality of the public service. If our correspondent would look up the files of this paper, he will find that when the Good Government congress was first organized this paper welcomed such an organization, and re marked that if REAL good government was its purpose it would have the support of the Mail Tribune. But from the very outset it was plain the Good Government congress, so called, was NOT devoted to good government, at all, but to the WORST sort of government, an absolute dictator ship by a small group of self interesetd and unscrupulous poli ticises, determined to rule or ruin. So we immediately opposed the organization, for we knew the ultimate outcome if not opposed could only be, what it finally proved to be, virtually a reign of terror, culminating in crime, violence and bloodshed. OUR correspondent is right when lie deolares, members of tfllB nrtnb-rAHfl BinKAI-nlv AVnlai4 tA MinA rtT.nmm nr. f nrAMn v -"..0 , U. UV.U.J uu.uuuu TO (JUYOlllUIVUL, VY C O misled and betrayed by their leaders. John Z. Smith and ALL his "neighbors" should either have resigned at that time, or deposed those leaders, and not only tragedy for this community, but John's present predicament might have been avoided. But now because of what he likes to call "abuse and persecution" of Good Government members, sees no peace, unless "the dogs THERE ARE no "dogs of war." As the situation now stands there is not even a battle and the "eongress." The issue those who believe in a government between those who believe in bringing criminals to justice, and those who DON'T; between what every good citizen knows to be RIGHT j and what every good oitizen knows or SHOULD know, is wrong. "PEAT'S all. A murder was S WBntan ffeimilfl nma 1i.ua ing and perjury. The point is no longer whether individuals guilty of these crimes, were, or were NOT members of the Good Government oongress, or any other congress. The point and the only point is WHETHER OR NOT THEY WERE GUILTY OF THESE CRIMES this ooramunity to see, that they Just as John Z. Smith and his and order, who beliove in upholding the principles upon which this government was founded, the leadership of thoir organization, WHEN that leadership betrayed themj so now they should oondemn individuals guilty of such crimes, and should be ment agenoies in bringing them ovcry way to thwart them. For be true to the principles in which GOOD GOVERNMENT. This duty is so plain, that it it to the attention of a person temperately as our anonymous correspondent. CO OUR advice to John is to WAKE UP! As a sincere be liever in good government and seouring better govern ment no one has any quarrel with him, or with his noighbors. As long as he remains true to the principles of good government he has nothing to fear. Moreover, if he wishes to form another organization, TRUE TO THOSE PRINCIPLES, that is his privilege. But as a good citizen, or as ment organization, to directly directly or indirectly oppose punishment of crime, is NOT know it, "PIIE reason he doesn't know it, fallen into the same error aa views the trouble down here aa a a rough-and-tumble fight between no basio principles involved control. It isn't that. It hasn't been simply a conflict between law and order on one side, lawlessness and violence on the other, whether a government under the law shall be maintained; or whether ouch a government shall be broken down. That's all. We have gone into this matter at some length with the hope faint we admit, and his neighbors, their mistake. If they and other sincere Good Government congress COULD be shown, then indeed our troubles Jjere to Southern Oregon jvould be over, "Mr. Smith " isn't abusive, threatening or illog print anonymous communications author of which is not known he intends to stick it out, and of war are called off." between the mythical "gang' is simply and solely between of law and those who DON'T; committed cold blooded and linan nnmmitta kallnt AS CHARGED. And if so, for are brought to justice. noiglibors, who believe in law should have repudiated publicly aiding the regular law enforce to justloe instead of trying in only by such action can they they profess to believe, i. e. seems almost needless to call who ean write as clearly and a member of any good govern or indirectly, oondone crime; the attainment of justice, and his privilege, and he should as we view it, is that he has the Portland papers. He still sort of neighborhood quarrel, two political factions, with other than which faction shall that for a long time. It is that we might show Mr. Smith but misguided members of the Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal bealtn and hygiene, not to disease. diagnosis or treatment, will be snuwered by Or. Brady um stamped, se li ed dressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters sbould be brief and written In ink.. Owing to tbe large number of tetters received only a few can be ana were o bere. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instruction. Address Dr. William Brady in care of EGOS, MEAT Eggs, meat and nuts are all nitro genous foods, that Is they contain considerable proportions of albumi nous or protein nutriment, Yet somehow they are incompatible. Almost Invariably nuts are opposed to the eating ol eggs and meat as freely as one might wish. The nuts seem to di vine by Intuition, certainly not by physiology, that meat or eggs are very bad for you whea they are good and downright poisonous when they are better. Every nut who goes Into the healing or diet racket or the health food business bases his appeal to the customer on the theory that meat and eggs cause autointoxica tion, and every graduate of a high school or college may be confidently expected to develop autointoxication when he has read two or three of the announcements of such a firm. Prom autointoxication it is an easy flight to hardening of the arteries, or at least high blood pressure, compli cated with rheumatism, neuritis and chronic copremla. Thue while regu lar physicians stand by and wait, the diet and health nut malls his stuff and gets the trade. The last remaining prop was knocked from under this fancy that meat and eggs ore bad for you by the actual test of the matter by the explorers Stefansson and Anderson. They subsisted for a year exclusively on meat, under constant study and observation by physiologists, chem ists, nutrition experts, etc., and they finished In all-around better condi tion than they had been at the start. No mean task, living on nothing but meat. Try It for 34 hours some time If you doubt It. If I had to do without one food material I'd prefer to do without meat. My notion of a bard life would be a diet containing no carbodydrates. The Delectable Carbohydrates. In most cases of overeating the cul prits gorge, not on meat, but on car bohydrates, that Is, starches and ' f HAVE YOU HEARD ABOUT THE NEW GOODRICH ( YES. . . I'M GETTING A SET. ) - SAFETY SILVERTOWNS! IJ LIFE'S TOO SWEET ' '?J 3 TIMES SAFER FROM lliird TO TAKE CHANCES f (BL0W-0UTS AT HIGH SPEEOSjiSf 'lii Wi illM 111! ill! ' It it YMr fel fill Iff pill Ifl llflA 2j . i- i I K'ili in te&iinUfrvk Mt-fw lTP lift ste w bL'. r . - . . . L,i..,.;. ; Tbe Man Tribane. AND NUTS. sugars. Bread, rolls, rolls mlt leedle poppy seeds or other seds, any other seeds but caraway seeds In 'em, crack ers, cakes, candy, flapjacks and syrup, honey, Ice cream, bpown sugar, mo lasses, genuine French fry taters (NOT the travesty you get In most restaurants) these are so easy to take in excess, easy to buy, easy to prepare, easy to nibble by way of pastime or as a social pleasure. Since It Is the delectable carbo hydrates that one Is most likely to overindulge In, I would suggest that here Is the .place to make any re strictions In diet one may be dis posed to make on his own, no matter what the trouble may be high blood pressure, kidney trouble, rheumatism or Just plethora. Normal persons derive four-fifths of their energy from carbohydrate material when at rest. With activity the Increased fuel demand Is met chiefly by an Increased appetite for or tolerance of carbohydrates. Even a diabetic patient can assimilate more carbohydrate If he or she has a good walk every day. So keep your mind on the delectable carbohydrates when bent on restrict ing your diet, for reduction or any other purpose. Or rather, try to keep your mind off from theml QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Maybe Sclimldtty Will Tell Vs. According to recent press publicity D. P. Schmidt of Berlin has meas ured the skin temperature of volun teers who have been thoroughly chilled by exposure . , . Stick around, old timers, this is going to be interesting, if true . . . And be bos found that those who recovered tbelr normal skin tempera ture slowly after the exposure caught cold; the others did not. Answer Having settled that, will Schmldtty kindly tell us how he can tell when a person has a cold? That's a mystery which no physician or health authority on this side of the Atlantic even dares to attempt to solve. And while we are on the sub ject, It is fair to remind all con cerned, no one has as yet found any evidence that lowering the tempera ture In the skin produces any Illness. Cider liedlvlvns. Is It all right for a person to drink Safest from WHEN you push the "gas" pedal down .the tern, perature inside your tire goes up; The heat be comes terrific rubber and fabric begia to separate. A blister starts grows grows msidi tbt tin, trim yea cm'l st. it. Then, whea you least expect it BANG! A blow-out! The tire 6attens s : ; drags the car from the road ; ; ; and you're headed for trouble. An Utterly New Kind of Tire! To protect you from such accidents, Goodrich Safety SiWertowns are now made tbret times safer from blow outs by the amazing new Life-Saver Golden Ply! This remarkable invention resists internal heat keeps rub ber and fabric from separating prevents blisters keeps yon safe by eliminating tbe came of blow-outs! In gruelling tests on the world's fastest track, this new Silvertown, with the Life-Saver Golden Ply, lasted three times as long as first quality tires that did not hsve ' v I i I jit 1VEW ck Eighth and Front Next to cider preserved with one-tenth of 1 per cent sodium benroats? W. L. 8. Answer One glassful might do no harm, but I should not advise drink jlng cider that baa to be "preserved by chemicals. (Copyright, 1933, John 7. Dille Co.) NEW YORK ' DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK. June 1. Some of the most acceptable poetry of the day .1 turned out by those who relegate verse to a aide line. Margaret Plshback is an advertising copy ist for a large department store. Ogden Nash oc cupies a full time post with a firm o f book publishers, Samuel Hoff ensten sold him self "down the river" to Holly- gL jf 7 wood and Martna s I Wllchlnskl trum- la nnt.R for a. plnmn O. O. Mclntyre cathedral. Bel ma Robinson conducts a publicity bu reau and Edna St. Vincent Mlllay has become active on the radio. In sudden seizures of off hours they twang the lyre. John Masefleld and Edward Ar lington Robinson are reputedly the more highly paid of poets. There is a steady market for their wares but they work by fits and starts. At times they spend many weeks in chase of a single fugitive line. Poetry is not governed by the com fortable stocklng-soled codes of prose and that's why materially it Is usu ally unprofitable. The poet's chief fear is stagnation. Ever so often the flow of rhyme malevolently stops. And that's why poets grow unkempt, long haired and perhaps soulful I Columbus Circle's bonfires of illu sion burn more brightly than ever. Everywhere at night the sedition mongers are screaming doubts over civilization. It is great fun for heck lers whose wit crackles liveliest when others are talking. Suspicion at cap italism and religion flares like light from the yard arms of the banjo torches, i Everybody expects some thing to happen. Nothing does. Often I try to locate In the circle the exact location of Faust's that used to glow so red for gourmands of another generation. It was some where on the northwestern curve and featured the supremest of puddings Tire Ever Built Now 3 Times Safer Blow-outs at NO EXTRA COST! Silvertown WITH Lir.SAVER Hotel Jackson "We Never Close" Phone 1300 listed as -Pudding Marguerite wltti sauce Mephlstopheles," and In reali ty stale cake generously covered with what gradma called dip, still a pudding par excellence. Splendid by day a low-priced con tinuous vaudeville show geysers the only touch of night life in a roaring Broadway littoral once bounded on the north by Buatanoby's with Its sidewalk cafe and lady's bar on the south by Relsenwebe-.'ft -where Doral dino, Sophie Tucker and Veronica felt the first flush of fame. To add to the nocturnal group of a once opulent section, a great city's eco nomic question mark, the breadline, colls there. Tblngiunabobs: Tony Blddle la rare ly without a blackthorn walking stick. . . . James Forbes, playwright, began bis theatrical career as a press agent for Henry Bt Karris. . . . For rest Wilson sometimes dons a mon ocle after the second cocktail. . . . Gene Byrnes, the cartoonist, bos Joined the Majorca colony. . . . John Barrymore's first public appearance was in Coatesvllle, Pa., in 1001. . . . Frederic Arnold Kummer la "Fritz" to bis pals. . . . R. H. Burns Ides lunches at the Lambs In the winter. wearing .als overcoat. . . .' Christo pher Morley Is home from Hawaii with essay material. , . , Ferenc Mol nar cleanst his pen every morning on his tongue. Nearly every dunce whose love- dripping letters are read to IS per fect strangers before being spread across the tabloids, longs to crawl off some place to die. Their icke-ackle-oogle would gag a buzzard. The only Romeo who has shown poetry in ,his soul was Prlmo Camera In his penned ardours to a little waitress in a London A. B. C. So wistful, deli cate and exquisite were these tendril shoots of love that a wide-awake publisher Is bringing them out In a binding of floriated heliotrope and under the hotsy-totsy title of "Fire balls in Elysla." There's always a thrill for blase first nlghters when some youthful unknown Jerks an audience to its feet, cheering with the final curtain. I've seen it twice once with Helen Hayes and more recently with Bur gess Meredltth, a Junior Jim Barton type with a tousel of fiery red hair, playing a tough brat in a reform school. What a surge of emotions such a fortunate unknown must feel In the dlnl In both Instances tears glistened. If It is any comfort 10 R. M. Carle ton, the smartle out in Chicago, he has gummed up my entire day. "Tour's so slick," he says. "Repeat this quickly three times: Rubber Buggy Bumpers 1" (Copyright, 1933, McNaught Sundl cate, Inc.) this feature. These SILVERTOWNS never blew-be-cause the Life-Saver Golden Ply refused to give! Safest Anti-Skid Tread But that isn't all. Scientific tests with leading makes of tires prove that Goodrich Safety Silvertowns have the most skid-resisnng tread on the road; Even on wet. slippery pavements, the squeegee drying action of this famous tread gives your car extra road-grip and reduces danger of skidding to a minimum; Come in and let ns show you this remarkable dre that is rr times safer from blow-outs at high speeds. Remember this amaz- ing protection is free. For Goodrich Safety Silvertowns cost no more than other stand, ard tires. GOLDEN PLY In the first 18 months of opera tions of the only a!r service in Greece U carried 10.950 passengers, 257.000 pounds of merchandise and 17,550 pounds of mall. Building activity in Czecho-Slo-vakla last year was greater than in tv. 1933. LOST 40 POUNDS ONDOCTOR'SADVICE "I'm a user of Kruschen Salts as a reduclm remedy and can say they are fine. Ilave lost more tlian 40 lbs. In the past vear. Am gradually reduc ing as my doctor ail vises." Miss Ber tha Waldo, Hainan, N. Dak. (Oct. 30, 32.) unce a uay one half teaspoonful in a glass of hot water first thing every morning Be. . . . i ft ct rcr.v vrtii'11 Sides lOSIIlg Ufiijr . - j -v. gain in health and physical attractive ness constipation, gas and acidity will cease to bother you'll feel young more active riuu oi amoi- non cieur bam -oh1" A Jar that lasts 4 weeks costs but a trifle at Jarmln Ss Woods, West Side Pharmacy or any drugstore in the world but demand and get Kruschen and if one bottle doesnt Joyfully please you money back This should be your Choice of Hotels Because: t 6 The New Low rate m&n the DANMOOHE tho meet eccn omical pood hotel. $1. 11.50, J2, J2.60. Special Umily rates. S) Nearly every room hu s pri vate bath. j ) Women travel! nf flnaecompaa-l led reeci re every courtesy. ) Downtown location, close to the at ores, but not noisy. Dan J.' Moore, formerly of tho Moore Hotel in Pewide. owns and operates tbe DANMOOHE personally. A: A: A: Offic Opposite Hotel Opposite Terminal Sales Building TWELFTH AND MORRISON i ska) at I e-com Sifcry tS , tS I Lti., im2 '"dies: