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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1933)
MEDFORD MAIL TRTBUXE, MEDFORD, OREGON", FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1933. PACT. TO Medford Mail Tribune 'Emvont SoutKirn OrtflM Amoi in Mail (ribon' Dll ttwwt (UUtrdH PuhiurMJ ti MKUHiHl) PHI NT) NO CO i& ti tv N rw 8t piwm UOBKKl tt UUUU Editor 4 infoptMtaot NwiMW CuttfMl u rcuoo cln mtlM tt Utdford Ortfoo. andM net l Utfts I. 1110. 4,1W HIPT.ON KATES Wf MiU p Vttam Otllj wr fur ft 00 DiJll ti nuntm t-f Dally, mi awnUi ! Rt Curlv In Artrino Mfdfofd. 4s&land JaeksonTlll. ttri Polm. PbotnU, TUtat OnM Bill lad m tttchr. O&iiy S uo Dtll ti nontlw lift Dillt om monU) 80 All UfDM ei4 Id ulunc. Official Mpi of in Clu of Medford. Official hum of Jacktoo Count MKMKKK Of MB AtMOt'lATKD PI.K88 UMaitint Kull Luud Wirt tforvlt Iba ocblMi Hrw It rwlu.tl wiilM to IM W lot ouMiello or m nm auvmxatw credit' U it oUitrl eredlt) ir till PDt fwi iltn u th total nen Dtir.llliJ rwrtln. AU ic&U 'or puWIeailon of tpwlal dlipatcn Otrtla arc- iw retenaa MEM HP, H Uf UNITED PBKM WtMIlKH OF AUDI1 BUHEAO Of CIKCULATIUNB rtwrtttnt KeprtnUttea a C MMliENHKN A COMPAQ Omem la Nm York, Chlcao, Of Holt, lu PnneUOD Ancaia scauia roriuMn. w Ye Smudge Pot By artnui ferry aAm ViMAtit.lful hatlnff Is ffolnff on these boautlful Ootober days, aug mented by tome delightful rumors of deaths, tnat nave not ocoiumu. It la hoped to have the gossiping' back to the 1033 venom level by the tune snow flies. A ehlvaree was committed, again or yet, night before last. Owing to the lack of time for organization the atrocity missed going by three homos with sick folks therein. However, the welkin ringers emitted cowboy yells at strategic points. It Is get ting so every time there Is a wed-1 ding, people wlto nervous aliments j are delayed 80 days In recovery to good health. The ehlvaree Is a low- grade hick trick. Unless restricted . soon, the Diamond Jubilee should be switched to the Pageant of the Hick ory Nuts. Dewey Hill, the Prospect hired man and outstanding hill-billy of the re gion, la In town on business, and all dressed up In bis Sunday suit, Mr. B1U bss been wearing a necktie, and can hardly breathe. DEPRESSION OVP ARTIST (Chico, Cel.. Enterprise) A report that a man had re fused to work when offered It on the grounds that he was receiv ing aid from a public source and that this would be lost to him as soon as he went to work, was ordered Investigated. When a citizen walls he will have to wear his 1928 overcoat again thla year, It means he will soon be wear ing a 1933 auto. "For Bale Well-conditioned Ford. It will pay you to Investigate." (Willows, Cal., Tidings.) The frank and candid advertiser shows up, The Portland and upstate press doubt that the Nasi movement "will make much headway In Oregon." The Portland and upstate press doubted 10 years ago that the shirt tailed' Ku Klux Klan would make any headway. They awoke one day to find themselvea terrified, and a goodly portion of the Oregon poll ution crazy and the proud possessors of 910 nightgowns. The Nazi emblem In Oregon will be a silver shirt. A silver shirt should .bave far more appeal than bedroom attire, among Oregonlans, who will Join anything once. t JUST PLAIN TALK (Pntoka, 111., Krtlater) 48-lb. sack only 11.00 Thla flour Is supposed to have buga In It, but I can't find any and I doubt If you can. Bolt this flour and It la Just aa good as any, or leave the bugs and use less shortenlng.- I eat It and you are no better than I am. J. W. ALEXANDER. Btockmen have been rounding up their cows. They do not know what they will no with them. . It Is sus pected they will be sold. , Suburban potato growers report that thieves are stealing their po tatoes before they can dig them. The President has announced that the main Idea of his administration and the NRA Is to abolish poverty. It la hoped there will be no truther delay, as many cannot hold out much longer against Lie wolf at the bsck door. The abolishment la to be ac complished by putting everybody to work. In several Instances this In Itself will be a Job of no mean pro portion. Putting some men to work will come under the head of a ti tanic struggle for the government who, Instead of putting loafers to work, should provide shade for them. It provides nearly everything else. Officers Here A group of army of ficials have arrived in Medford to assume duties at the various CCC camps where they are being assumed. They Include First Lieutenant Rob ert John Craren, Second Lieutenant John Patrick Mackln, Captain Chaun ey Lee Pierce, First Lieutenant An drew Jackson Hemstreet, Jr., First Lieutenant Harold flollday. Beeonrt Lleutensnt Kenneth W. Porter, First Lieutenant petac P. Moehkolf. What Price Tammany? INVESTIGATOR PECORA joins the "Holy Joe" McICee ticket in New York, as candidate for District Attorney. This shows pretty well how the wind is blowing. Pecora is a smart man. He wouldn't throw his hat into the reformer's ring, if he weren't pretty sure of a victory. But we doubt if Tammany is as worried as it appears to be. If the truth were known, it would probably be found that the Tammany higher-ups have, already discounted their defeat in the coming election. Every now and then in New York city, the reform wave goes over the top and the tiger is given a breathing spell. Tammany expects it. Tammany would prefer JIcKee to LaQuardia, so a secret understanding with Holy Joe, in operation "w, would surprise no one familiar with Tam many tactics. DUT these reform administrations never last long. Tammany always comes back stronger than ever in the next election. The reason is plain. Tammany has a permanent organization, and one of the most efficient political machines in the country, It is run by professional politicians. The reform organizations are run by amateurs. Tammany is on the job all the time. The reformers are only on the job, when conditions become so rotten that the rank and file are aroused and demand a house cleaning. When the clean-up has been effected, there is always an emotional let-down. The reform army promptly scatters, and resolves itself into its various conflicting elements. The people as a whole lose interest, and in this atmosphere of popular lethargy, the tiger comes back, with tail wagging and a grin on his face. IT'S the Same old story, as old as American politics. The "pro- fessio'nal" always wins. With Tammany, politics isn't an avocation or an indoor sport. It's a business, and very effici ently conducted business. It is conducted for profit, monetary profit and that is what it gets. The higher-ups get big money. But the "lower downs" aren't left out in the cold. They get their share. As a result they are working for the higher-ups all the time. ' And in poli tics, as in most other things, it is work that counts. OF course the people pay. They pay through the nose as t.riA nnviniv trnoa TOlif fnliv nnnn a. - J- -"o e,"-. uuij ul , ivva;o iu a uucauu uu they Tise on their hind legs and object to it. Then when they get the change they demand, thoy proceed to forget about it. So the merry farce goes on. We have rotten big city government in this country, simply because the people as a whole who suffer from it, refuse to pay the price to terminate it That price is meeting organization WITH organization! meeting a permanent group of professional politicians, looking for private graft, with a permanent group of professional poli ticians LOOKING FOR HONEST AND EFFICIENT PUBLIC SERVICE. Until that is done, men may come and men may go, but cor rupt city government like the proverbial brook, will go on forever 1 Oh 'T'HE Oregonian should have known better. In an unguarded moment it endorsed the idea of calling the Bonneville dam, the "McNary dam," as a tribute to Oregon's senior senator, who was so influential in securing it. Whereupon the Willamette Democratic society at Kelly's yesterday presented with its first gavel, proceeded to pound the table and demand that the dam hn nailed th "rf.mtrat, CHARLES C. MARTIN DAM wrougn nis leadership, tact and aggressiveness, ably AIDED by Senator Charles L. McNary I" This is followed by a contributor to the Orogouion's "lettor box" ursine that the dam b rmlWl th. "irr.Bni roi- Roosevelt dam" which will "bring Oregon before the whole world, as it should be." And now of oourse, the "Joe Carson for Governor club" will want to call the project the "Joe Carson dam"; and the White Faced Calves club of eastern Oregon will want to know what is the matter with tho "Walter Pierce dam" and so on and so forth. "DAM-DAM-DAM!" how did our astute and judicious "Oom Paul" of the Oregonian ever pull such a boner! One might as well try to elevate the cat's mfinw in e Am? - " a mw0 pound. QALL off this rechristcniug of the Bonnevillo dam, gentlemen, before it is too Into, or the cat fight ensuing will reach such sanguinary proportions, that the national guard will have to L . .... ue cniiea out, ana tne president will squash the entire business, to prevent open revolt and bloodshed. ; Forgot it! Build the dam first and then worrv about nam. ing it. Or if some title MUST be tude, then call it the "Depression dam," for certainly this dam depression was chiefly responsible for it. Yes, but for the de pression the dam would never have been ordered, at least not now. Let that be tho interregnum cognomen so to speak. Then when the dam is built and we all have electrie light and power, at ten mills per k.w.h., loave the name to popular vote. We will be better able to afford a civil war then, Communications Student Thanks Business Men. To the Editor: It Is In this manner that J, a stu dent of the Medford high school, give to you to make publlo the general straightforward feeling of the Asso ciated Student body towards the business men of Medford for their devoted support to the athletes In supplying funds for new suits and equipment. A change has fallen upon every student. He or ah has grasped a new spirit of liveliness as the result of the Chamber of Commerce lunch eon at the Senior high. A more per sonal respect for the "Medford men of yesterday" prevails and we are ready to five our support with more enthusiasm than ever before. With the continued support of the Msll Tribune, Medford will pull through oot only la Xcotbau but ss Dam! on the ground that it was won selected to a. "well-known popular olty of the Pacific region. The Medford Senior high extends it trunks to the business houses, clubs snd organlntlons of this "fslr city" for Its successful get-together banquet, and may there be more of them. Three cheera for Medford I (8lned) A MYSTERY STUDENT, Van Nuya, cal, October . Fined 10 Claude Sullivan, arrest ed by city police early Thursday morning, near the Bear creek bridge, was fined 110 In elty court yesterday afternoon on chargea of being drunk In a publlo place. Swedish Massage Corrective Exercise Hours I to o By AppL Oscar 8. Nlssen, P.T. Physical Therapeutic Formerly Director and Instructor Masssge Dept., Boston City Beep. 6s B. Main St. Medford. Ore. Personal Health Service By William Urady, M.D. a it Deo Itfturt prtauiiiO co personal aeauta ud ajrlcoc not Co dttv 9tM dUttfutMU of LrealmenU wUi iw uuwureo 0 Ur t$rad u ft ftampea ell-addreaed envelope enclosed Letters ouuld Oe artel too irrlttcD 10 ink Owing to tnc urg oumbai o! letters vedred only ce can be ant wered ber No rvpi; can 0 made to queries oot conforming to instruction Address Or William Bradj t6o El Camino. ttewlej Uiiia, Cal. BESIDES IT IS BETTER HYGIENE TO BE YOURSELF. The function of the diaphragm breathing, is automatic tho not in voluntary. Cogitating this dual char acter of the great breathing music one wonders whether the pow er to restrain and augment Its ac tion was not ac quired late In e v o 1 u 1 1 on and whether thla pow er Is not rather a detriment than an advantage to civilized man. Among more than a score of youths examined for physical fitness for a coveted ap pointment sn engineering student stood out by reason of his fine physique and his extraordinary chest expansion a good five Inches com' pared with the two Inches expansion most of the young men had two inches Is the average of normal adults. But this one phenomenal youth was rejected on account of In cipient tuberculosis of the lungs. How come? In the days of boiled shirts, tooth' pick shoes, toeing out and free liver at the butcher shop the prototype of Lionel Superb Manhood was laying tne foundation for the lucrative line 01 quackery that Is plied today by the brood who sell msll- order "courses" In so-called "physical !! ture," "vital breathing." "Internal bathing," "success psychology" and the like. This Gullible youth had taken quite unquestlonlngly the sug gestion tnat a large chest expansion "strengthened the lungs and so pro tected against such "weakness" ss consumption. By diligence In his dally practice he had learned how to expand the upper chest abnormally Just as any young person may learn to contort the body for freak show purposes. Along with that vagary the young man had absorbed certain other lessons taught by these self constituted experts on health, such as the notions that regular physio- tans are au prettj dishonest and medical science Is largely a lot of wild theories which any barbershop savant can ahatter between puffs on nis cigaret. The young wiseacre in evitably came to believe that the right 100a, plenty or fresh air, cold baths and the Interesting exercises pre scribed by the professor Insured one radiant health. So It seemed down right foolish to the fatuous victim tff consult a piker medical practitioner wnep ne nad what he called a "cold tnat nung on." Instead he wrote to the professor for more detailed In structions sbout the exercises, fasting. Dams, eto., and bo he got along fa mously until by this accident a diag nosis of his disease was msde. The Instance Is not exceptional. In deed, It Is quite common. The busi ness of teschlng the youth of the country things that are not so about health Is the main support of our Urge wood pulp magazine publishing inaustry. Most of these popular pub lication would quickly disappear If the freak and fad healers and health vendors should cease angling for new customers and attempt to coast along for a few months on the good will of their old victims! No chance of that. for there Is the test which ' dlstln- sulshes the honest doctor from the quack. The honest doctor Is content to let his satisfied patients tell the world how good he Is. r Extra Special Danish Pastry The real article at a very special introductory price. Both fruit and plain pieces. assorted pieces for Don't miss these. They are something new to our assortment of fine pastries. (TI 1 n 13 rural EXTRA! Watch this paper for details of the Orand Opening of our new plant on Oct. 14th. Plenty of surprises! QUESTIONS AND AN8WKH3. . Canned Versus Dried. Expectant mother. Husband out of work. I am trying to can vegetables for winter use. I have had trouble keeping spinach and kale. I wonder If these would be Just aa nourlahtng If I dried them for winter use? Mrs. T. Answer Tes. Both csnnlng and drying would destroy the vitamins In them. But otherwise the nourishing values are preserved as well In the dried ss In the canned articles. Elocution Instruction. I am "nervous." or I suppose I should say afraid when I think of going any place or meeting and talk ing with people, even visiting my husband's place of business. Would elocution lessons help me to over come this? Mrs. O. P. Answer Yes. So will swimming les sons or music lessons, provided you have a strict teacher. Starch Is Food. Awful craving for raw starch right out of the package. Am not an ex pectant mother. My doctor said he never heard of such a thing before. Mrs. H. A. B. Answer It is a harmless craving. Starch la good food, raw or cooked. Try chewing some wheat, or oats, or wild or brown rice, or raw carrots, turnip or whatever other raw vege table you like. AU these things are wholesome. Of course you will wash everything well before you eat It. (Copyright, 1933, John F. DUle Co.) Ed Note: Headers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D 265 El Ca mino, Beverly Hills. Cailf. . f NLW YORK DAY BY DAY 3y O O. MclntyTe ATLANTIC CITY, N. J Oct. The Boardwalk's greatest hours, to my notion, are between 8 and 11 at night, when the beaches are de serted and after dinner crowds are In a saunter lng, window shopping humor. Tae majority of the shops and stores are open until m t d night and after. There Is an open gesturing for trade that gives a round -the corner lure. but it is never annoying. Salespeople catch the mood of the prowler and permit him to mosey the labyrlntn of bazaars with no tagging at heels. Piers add a daszle with the coll and flash of their electrical zlz-boom-ahl At night ballyhoo bands of cow girls, midgets and Senegalese trum pet at entrances of the exhibits. And the old-time circus barker with neck tie diamond and hair in lion-tamer's roach, is In his leather-lunged ele ment. Above all, the lively crack and skirl of the surf. One finds, too, the Original Puppy man lathering hotdogs with mustard. A sandwich cave with Lew Tendler In red neon. Didn't he used to box Ben- 11c ran irmyn (5 1 I J "Penthouse' at m IT V. 'J MYKNA LUY ana WARNER BAXTER in ARTHUR SOMERS ROCHES' 'PENTH0U5E With Warner Baxter and Myrna Loy at the top of an tmprea&lve cast. "Penthouse," from the pen of Arthur Somera Roche, opens Saturday at the Holly. Directed by the masterful touch of W. 8. VanDyke, who brought such notable productions as "Trader Horn" and "White Shadows in the South Seas" to the screen, "Penthouse" pre ny Leonard? Chrlstenson's stallions! Old-fashioned minstrels. The wild animal nursery t Bluch. and his clown pageant! America, Indeed, at play! All the auctions are not of Jewelry as In Manhattan. Mostly they sell enormous rugs. Why tourists want to lug home such Impedimenta Is a question, but they do. At the rug auction are huge easels on which they are displayed while the muezzin bleats their Syrian ancestry. Rugs to me have always been something to trip over, but after tuning In awhile I came away with a definite tug for a rug, too. One of the human interest pulls of Atlantic City la to back a roller chair against the searall and watch the kalledoscopic blur. After night fall the sideshow freaks come out for a whiff of air. Thla eventnir. for in otarts Tomorrow - 4 Days of Mystery HE LEARNED ABOUT LOVE from A GIRL OF fi Charles Butterworth Phillips Holmes Plus "I Heard Betty Boop "Bundle Of Blues" "Duke Ellington" "Paramount News" If r It!- What a setting for a t luxurious towering J'ij I penthouses where love WA A VtWW'X cheap-where you can't 04& Y pvtiv VS, tell a debutante from a C ' tux demi-monde! It'll hold to the final fade. m Vi kit mii in ARTHUR h$f- jr , I .,ffSfw . ? F-V ISOMERS 5- H'tf? ' MYRNA LOY a (clrqbV((yj .rrt Holly Saturday" sents a modern and laudable picture of New York's high spots the Mad Manhattan that Walter Winchell and O. O. Mclntyre have glorified in the public press. Filmed almoat entirely In settings tha trepresent the lavish penthouse world atop New York's skyscrapers, the picture captures the pulse of the great metropolis roof-top life. stance, we saw a seven-foot giant with a midget elbowed In his right arm, chatting, oblivious to the rub bernecks. Atlantic City has 1,200 hotels to ac commodate the twenty millions year ly. Permanent population Is around 50,000, which 'swells to aa nigh as 450.000 during summer peaks. The boardwalk la seven miles long and the beach has swarmed with 100,000 bath ers. There are those who. getting over first blisters, do a seven-mile walk before breakfast. Al Jolson once cured Insomnia this way. Among a number of things not working along the shore Is the salt- snaker. Salt absorbs the moisture and becomes a rocklike clot. Scien tific minds have tried to prevent this but one still has to chink it off. That is why so many shakers are found in the beach combines. Deanairin; " "-". iiqo, swajjnu.uti neavea no. THE UNDERWORLD! "Don't Kiss Me Don't Ever Kiss Me Unless You Mean It!" Branded an outcast by the 400, he went to the world of the lawless to find romance! LAST TIMES TODAY "MONTE CARLO MADNESS" with Sari Maritza and Hans Albers Plus Clever Short Reel Flight 'oTime i (MearorO and JacitMJD Count) aislory from cne met oi I he Vail Tribune ot tv and 10 Year TEN YEARS AGO TODAY October 6, 1923. (It was Saturday.) The heaviest rain of the year de acenda upon the city and valley. Richard Payne of the First Na tional bank returns from a two weeks vacation. Mrs. Guy Conner Is back from a trip to southern California. Printed copies of the new city traffic ordinance are distributed, and after the campaign of education, ail violators will be prosecuted. Chamber of Commerce efficiency expert to open a class in scientific salesmanship. The Hl-Times named John Hola gang Its editor-in-chief. Dr. W. E. this city. Lantia to open offices In Federal court In session here, will visit Ctater Lake. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 6, 1013. (It was Tuesday.) Athletics win opening game of world series, 6 to 5, when Home-Run Baker lives up to bis name. rieiKta Oniric amntAita In IV Bates brothers' barber shop for the last three years, left thfs morning with his wife and family for an ex tended visit with relatives and friends In Pennsylvania. Mr. Saylor expects to return to Medford after the holt. days. A typical valley. Oregon mist visits the Federal court hall. convenes In Moose The Burning Rivet" at the Isis; "A Woman In the Uultimate," a story of the badger game,: and Blograph special, at the Star; "I'm Your Cooky" at the It. i guests, over the breakfast eggs, have suddenly turned to open windows and heaved ho. SaturrW Who Killed Mimi? you'll guess the ansivprl