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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1933)
page srx Medford Mail Tribune -Ertfvftw u Southern Qrqoe KfaM IM Malt Mhom" rubllite by .tEuroHii hintinu ca tlH-U N. tU BL BUBtttl HUUL, UIU U MWIM NtmpspSt found " ".?.' araoo. on" tf Mar . !!' OBSTKUTION DsllJ w tsar Pallv, lii aocst aATEB B. 00 Ml ' eo Utllf, m swots. ...... MHfnfrf. aibtina. Br carrur Hill and OD uun.iji. Dtllj, m ' Dallr. l swotr Dull. SOS owoUl All urra. cub In aarsDM. .19.00 . I.JS . .to Officii! PW" of Un CIU o Medlord. Official wm Jicuod County. MEMBEU 0 THI SSSOCIATtD PUEM is,ii ijd Wire crrlec to. auocuuo IT " IM u for ouBUotloo of til ore. crcolux to tt olMrl crllJ to "J"" .ad mo u Ibo lotal oen Pub""", j"". All rlmn 'or oublfcsuoo of UI ttwuM ocrelo art wo numu. ir.'.Mi 1 Of UNITED HIESB MEMBKU UD11 BUIBn 01 CIRCULATIONS Adiertlilni BeproMUllioi M. C. MOCiENBBN CUMPAK1 0fflc In Nr. York, Cbleo, W' f. ae Ye Smudge Pot By AftPul Perry ' ...... ... .tin mistaking each . . throughout the Stat. Th.y should be careful with their th are with their pocket- books. No hunter over throws down 3 bill, in mistake xor a air. The Older Olrl hav started mak ing preserves out of watermelon rinds, and are letting them cook too long. , . . The O. Hunt maglo lantern show door-tender ha. a mustache, which Ukei the cake ae a delicate and ertls tlo blotch on the upper Hp. The'1934 Juggernaut are here, ana an elfort hae been made to make the lender, look a. women', tall hat. a. Pl"- Wh Is needed la a 1B3S auto, that don t have to be p.ld for until IBM. Merchant et' al will dig up cart for the ha. football team. so they will have suits, etc., etc.. In which to battle for Old Medford on the far flung gridiron.. " I better th.t people be out yelling for victory, than up at the court house listening to a paranoiac demand an Insurrec tion, or lynching of the district at torney. The coach won't aneak up to the vlaltlng coach'a room, and tell him all the algnal. either. Fall plowing I. under way. and many farmer, have their ehoulder. to the plow. to David Wood. J. Kort Hall, and Pug Isaac, have protested against the way the Washington team was run the first two gamea of the world series. The owner of the Washing ton team ha. paid no attention, and will have the same manager again next year. Dewev Hill, the Prospect top hand and hill billy, haa been In town all week. He will never be broke to eitv life. He nets up earlier than a Jap Janitor, to milk hi. cow. while at home, and this habit U so strong thst he beats the Jap janitor, up, while In town. 0 o The Presidential plea to spend a toiler. 1. making Ufa-long Republt- jtsna out of a number of transient Democrats, who have been touring ketweea the two major political par ties all their Uvea. ... The NRA 5-day week dont mean thing to the Ooaslps, Liars, and Rumor-mongers Association. They are turning out nothing but 4-star Ilea. 0 0 0 The Bill Heath boy took hi. Paw downtown Thur.. eveng, and con ducted himself In a ribald manner, and was unruly, and Instated on pol ishing off a soda fountain counter with the seat of hi. britches. Instead of eating hla Ice-cream, which he was not supposed to have. He acted worse then Jim Bates, the barber. Several prospective settlers have cranked up their 4ds and departed the past 10 days, as the opportuni ties for raising hell on county beans all next winter are not very bright. The dismal caw of the crow 1. again heard In the rural area.. Luke 12:34 note.: "Conalder the ravens: for they neither sow nor resp; which neither have storehouse nor barn, and the Lord feedeth them: How much better are ye than the fowls." The ravens, unlike the humans, have no ayatemattred greed, to starve thouaands. while other thousands fatten. A great fuss U brewing among the politicians over the name of the Bonneville dam. A baby la not nam ed until It. Is born, so why name a dam before It Is built. All the pio neer Democrats want It named after them, and the OOP. and Oregonlan are stsndlng firm behind McNary (R) Ore. Twenty years from now nobody would know whether It Is Charlie or John. The dam should be called the Darn Dam. Ted and Evelyn Schrader's Dance etudio open every Thursday at the Aim ,ry Phone 378 J Shorty's Pender t Body Shop haa tuoved to T. N, Pairett s Bodjf 6Hot. Paul Mallon Returns A FTER a brief vacation Paul readers of the Mail Tribune, Behind the News," which starts This service was originally a will be wired to Los Angeles and thus coming under the heading of Mallon is president of the Association, in 1929 was runner-up for the Pulitzer prize, and is that rare combination, a bloodhound for getting the news first, yet a reporter who while frank and fearless, enjoyg the confidence and esteem, both of officialdom and his fellow news paper men. Mallon's batting average on nothing short of sensational. It was he who declared President Roosevelt was behind the Morgan investigation, six weeks be fore the fact was generally known ; and he gave the 5nside ac count of John D. Rockefeller, ident in going after the international bankers, a month before it was announced. Such a service is particularly valuable to the People at such a time as this, when bo many new experiments are being tried and so many intricate problems must be solved. The resumption of this service is in line with the Mail Tri bune's policy to give its readers the best news and feature serv ice of any "small city" daily on the Pacific Coast. Experts All Wrong, as Usual "PHIS is a bad year for the experts. The baseball seers will now have to join the prize nomic seers, and admit that they are all wet to the point of tears. All the baseball Experts before the world series were agreed that the Giants couldn't bat. They had an edge ou pitching and weren't so terrible in the field, but when it came to wield ing the hickory the Senators had it all over them like a tent. Yes, the New Yorkers couldn't hit. But since the world series started that is all they have been doing, banging the horsehide all over the lot. On total singles they lead tho Sen ators two to one, whereas the latter haven't been able to "hit the broad side of a barn. ' Think of yesterday's extra inning struggle, when with the score two to one against them the Washington champions, had thr?e men on bases and only one out all they needed to tic the score was a long-fly to outfield, and a single to win, but oven the team's pinch hitter couldn't get the ball out of the infield and proceeded to run head-on into a double play I The world scries havo never seen a weaker hitting club than the Washington Senators. And the sports ' writers all agreed that hitting was their dish, while their opponents couldn't crack a toy balloon. .Tho- baseball experts wero 100 per cent wrong about the world series, just as tho economic experts were 100 per cent wrong about the depression. It's a terrible year-for the experts. Religion and Recovery RELIGION is the joy of unselfish living. The command . mnnf: "T.nvs iliv nnitrlihnt no 4hvilF" mVirnore oil lutra solves all personal problems. It eliminates. Automatically, selfishness, condemnation, anger, and doubt. It is a complete, joyful way of life for social man. The fact is, of course, that Christianity in modem society has not yet even been tried. These principles of religion, how ever, are about to be applied in the partnership of business and politics. General Johnson's exhortation to the nation s business and labor to carry out a manifestation both unique and unprecedented. This act is not Socialism, nor is it Fascism. Although the General did not use the words deity or religion, the whole program is, in fact, an application of the commandment, "Love thy neighbor aa thyself." Under national regulation, we are all to cooper ate until each of our neighbors has a share in the nation's work. At the same time, we are to maintain self-respect and initiative. American individualism is to be made socially helpful. . .This is the firat time, perhaps, since the Middle Ages, that religion is to be tried out on a national scale. Henry Goddard Leach in The Forum. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 7. In ripe serenity, Philadelphia engenders a feeling of depth, excellent breeding. S3 poise, no one would hesitate to say: "I am a Phllsdelphlan." Driving In. there was a Jingle of thought Ben Franklin, scrap ple, Poe's tragic days, Liberty Bell and Walt Whit man. There la charm In the city's con trasts. No Amer ican park Is so beautllul as Fairmont. Few streets so cheap-John as Eighth. A second hand shop becomes "Mike's Almost New store." A hospital facade en graved: "Think not the beautiful doings of thy soul perish unremem- be red. They abide forever." Outwardly It', as splc and puritani cal aa the crossing cop's white cap. Or the statue of William Penn. Yet there 1, caprice. Any roving Journal- lit knowa there are assignments as exciting here as In Chicago or New York. I notice the Hotel Vendlgt beacon remained in the downtown silhouette. Any night In Its grill In the old days might be found George M. Co han, Raymond Hitchcock. Montgom ery and Stone, Lew Dorkiteder, Sam Bernard. Willi Collier and other trouper, playing here. who ifEDFORB MAIL Mallon, returns to give the his interesting feature "News in tomorrow's issue. mail service, but hereafter it sent by air mail to Medford, spot pewi. White House Correspondents v accuracy to date has been Jr.'s cooperation with -the Pres fight, the political and the eco the National Recovery Act is, Jested of Philadelphia's sleepiness, looked forward to a run here. One of the first persona seen com ing into the city was a Japanese let ter carrier of whom we inquired direction. It was as though Phila delphia, with a sly sense of humor ranged him on the outskirts to con found Bugs Baer'a gsg about the local letter carrier being mistakenly shot for a Confederate soldier. Philadelphia should be If they are not proud of their venerable restau rant. I refer to those especially In the terminal and market cone, as good and Interesting aa those fring ing Lea Halle in Paris. No swank. but rugged food for robust appetites. one in particular where we dined had the roomy barnlnea of a akatlng rink. There were table-side hat-rlcks, waiters who could sUth over changee in the neighborhood and a statu esque Clara Walsh kind of cashier. who said. "Thsnk yei." After dark, bustling streets such aa Broad. Chestnut and Market are abandoned to scattering strollers-and lilac-breasted pigeon. On almost expect to hear the ancient night watch boom: "All I, well I" But Phlla. delphla I, not abed. It's merely In door,. Thl, urge for behind the ahut ter Is especially pronounced In the suburbs, where grandeur and aloof neas, the Biddies and Drexl reign. Yet through all Its plutocracy Is a nlckeleodean thread. It's the birth place of oatmeal. The automat was born her. and Philadelphia waa slip ping nickel Into elou for food long before New York regarded the experi ment a 10-day wonder. I tried to find Ray Rohn. Ned Detetombe and. the brick home on Brandy wine street when Idgar Allen TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. Personal Health Service By William signed letters pertaining to persons! arena and oygiene not to dis ease dlagliueU or treatment, wllj oe leU-addreaaed envelope tf enclosed betters tnuulrj oe anel auo wriuco m Ink- Owing to the large oumrtei ol letters received only a te can He ans wered here. So reply can 0 made to queries not conforming w uuuuiuou Address Or. William Brady, xss El fsmlno, rieverley Una, CaL ' ASCARUSI8 AIST WHAT Many years ago th neighborhood ; Salreygampi had a- fine time going about diagnosing worm In children and plying the luckless young sters with favor ite worm medi cines. Today many a child grows up without ever hav ing been "worm ed." though It would not be ac curate to say these fortunate ones have never bad worms. Most children at one time or an other harbor worms, either rouno worms (lumbrlcold) or plnworms (oxyurts) or both, and the presence of these parasites as likely as not. causes no more definite trouble or symptoms than some external itch ing. Careful study of a large series of children with worms, compared with a similar group of children who had no worms, has proved that there are no characteristic effects or symptoms produced by these common intestinal parasites. Vague complaint of "bel lyache," restless sleep, and distension of the abdomen are perhaps more frequent in children who have worms than in children who have none. But (grinding of teeth, foul tongue and heavy breath, wnite lines arouna me mouth, feverlshness and spasmodic twitchlngs occur as frequently in children who have no worms as in children who have worms. Therefore the only way the pres ence of worms can be diagnosed Is by finding the eggs (microscopic) of the worms, or by the finding of the worms themselves. There are many worm medicines or treatments which can be given a child known to have worms, but' none that I can recommend as ef fective and safe, except as given un der the personal direction of the phy sician. Round worms (Ascarls Lumbrl coldes) are five to ten Inches long, paler than earthworms, live In the small Intestine, lay millions of eggs, sometimes occur in masses which may temporarily obstruct the intes tine. They occasionally migrate into the stomach and ate vomited, or into the bile ducts, causing obstructive Jaundice, even Into the Eustachian tube. A medical textbook which was once a classic Holt's Dlseuse of Infancy and Chi la hood) mentions as recently as the 1022 edition, the 'following symptoms of round worms: "The most frequent abdominal symptoms are colic, tympanltles (distension), and other symptoms of Indigestion, . loss of appetite, disturbed sleep, and grinding of the teeth at night. These symp toms are much more frequently due to other causes than' to worms. . . . The symptoms may i nil i.mi Aim m-ft 1 - Inflation to Make Jobs, Stabilize Dollar Value Gd Note: Mr. J. C. Barnes, who originated the Idea of the sales tax with shelter value offset, and who has made a life study of financial and economic problems, will write a series of 10 short articles on "lnflstlon," of which the following Is the' first. No. 1 Purpose. Savage tribes have been conquered.! forests cleared, land brought under cultivation, cities built, railroads and highways constructed, great Irriga tion and hydro-electric plants per fected, wars have been fought and in the end great factories and machinery of every sort has been created for the manufacture and distribution of nil the goods and all the things neces sary to the safety, well being, com fort end amusement of a great peo ple. Millions of men who found employ ment In these wars and In the per fecting of this great machinery for the . production and distribution of commodities are now out of work. While the machine Itself continually produces commodities with less man power and so continually Increases the number of the unemployed. ow to end unemployment ana raise the standard of living of its Po labored unsuccessfully to nurse his stricken Virginia to health. But the addresses of all escaped me. Poe s house la where he reputedly wrote The Raven," and also many short stories. Including "The Oold Bug." But It was late and a wayfarer, asked. scratched his head, and replied: 'I don't know. I've only lived here a few years." He was. of course, a foreigner. For wa, it not Christopher Morley who wrote: "Every man I a foreigner In Philadelphia until he has lived there three generations?" Leaving Philadelphia over the mag nificent Delaware Bridge toward Cam den 1 turned auddenly cut-uppish and asked John, the chauffeur. In the middle of the structure to turn back. They collect toll only at the Camden end and 1 wanted to see If It were possible -to ride the length of the bridge free. W returned about 0 yards when a cloud of motorcyclea surrounded us. What's the btg Idea? Oettlng tunny, eh In a piping tweet I explained It waa a bit of fooling, you know commissioner, a gag. Well. It would cost me a $A0 fine and a night In the Jug. And having scared me silly, they waved me on to pay th customary 35 cents. And had a good laugh for themselves, the mugs I O. yes, before departure we passed the Philadelphia mint. I signaled the driver to stop and back up to it. Then I got out. stood reverently un- , hatted. After a long stretch of mo- j torlng four weeks and two dava to i be precise I felt tery grateful that ' somewhere la th disordered world OREGON, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1933. Brady, l.D. ansHereo oy ur iaa u a iuiicu SHE CSED TO BE. be of the most puzzling char acter . . prolonged low fever, chills, convulsions, tetany, trans ient paralyses, such as strabls ums (cross eye or squint) and even hemiplegia (paralysis of one- side of the body) and as phasta (loss of speech). All these have been observed in con nection with Intestinal worms, and from the fact that the symptoms disappeared complete ly after the worms were expelled there seems little doubt that they were the cauae of the rymp toms. ... As In the case of the abdominal symptoms, how ever, Intestinal worms are only one of the possible causes of such nervous disturbances, and cer tainly not s frequent one." So even a conservative authority a decade ago was beginning to ques tion the diagnosis of ''worms" from symptoms alone. In some such "puzzling" cases the blood count gives a fairly good clue to the nature of the Ulnens. that Is. if the Illness la due to parasitic In testation there will be more than the normal proportion of white corpus clea that take a red stain they tire called eoslnophlle cells. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS No Universal Doctor Book Kindly recommend a good home medical book, one which goes ex haustively Into all matters pertaining to the human system ... (J. Answer Only quack doctor books purport to do that. If you will In dlcate what subject you wish to study 1 may be able to recommend books to you, but I do not advise a lay reader to study works on symp toms or diagnosis or therapeutics. Color Blindness Is there any possible cure for color blindness? I am 19 years old and keen to learn. to fly but when I took the physical examination I was re jected on account of color blind ness . . . (D. R. T.) Answer If it Is congenital, (that Is, If It was present at birth) It Is not curable. If It Is acquired It may be cured. Piffle How docs this square with your theories? (R. A. B.) Answer Clipping Inclosed quotes a physician as disagreeing with two experts who had testified that a man could not have died from the effects of one-fourth grain of cyan ide absorbed through the skin. My theories have nothing to do with It. No one has ever proved that cyanide or anything else Is absorbed through the unbroken skin and this goes for Prof. Muehlenberg or Kalenberg, whichever it is whose old students are forever citing as. an "authority" who has proved this. Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Or. Brady should send letters direct to Dt. William Brady. M. U.. 265 El Ca tnlno. Beverly Hills, Ca.lf citizens Is the problem that confronts our government at this time. A raise in commodity vatuea and relief of the debtor should be considered only as it has a bearing on this main prob lem of unemployment. It shall be the object of these articles to show how. through the Issuing of non-ln-tcrost bearing treasury notes, redemp tion of which will be provided fpr through Increased Income taxes, all the unemployed may be put to work and kept at work by the government In non-commodity producing enter prises and a minimum wage and a price level of commodities established and maintained so that a dollar will buy aa much and no more a genera tion from now as It does at the time when the price level agreed upon Is established. Flat money and a commodity dollar will be defined In the next article. J. O. BARNES. (To Be Continued) there was such a thing left as let's see. what did they used to call that atuff? Don't tell me. I know moneyl (Copyright, 1633, McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) PRAGTiCALJOKE E Gxplslnlng thst they had mistaken the home of Mrs. Sign Msrtln on South Central avenue for the home I of some friends, upon whom they wished to play a practical joke, Ellis Klncald. 33, and hi friend, Malvtn McMCarthy. 33. of Grants Pass were not charged with burg'.sry Saturday when they were taken Into, Justice court. ' Klncald waa fined ,10 for being drunk on a public highway, and Mc Carthy S3 for fstllng to give his nsme st the scene of an accident. The two were riding In the automobile that struck Jack Glllaspey. H. of Beall lane, who was riding down the high way on a bicycle. Swedish Maasage Hour, 1 to B I Corrective fcwrclse, B Appt- Oscar S. Nissen, P.T. rhv.lcal Therapeutic, Formerly Director and Instructor Ma.viie Kept.. Boston t'lty llosp. I &;a E. Main St, Medford. Ore. SATURDAY SALES WARD STORE SET Another evidence of the return of better times In southern Oregon was the exceptional sales record made at the Montgomery Ward store. In ths city Saturday. A greater volume of business was done yesterday In the Medford store than any other unit of the great Ward system In the northwest, according to late an nouncement made last night by D. C Bean, manager here. Fifty-three people were employed In the 'Ward 'store yesterday to ac commodate the great "Ward Week" crowds of shoppers. This big staff was kept busy from the opening hour of the store until closing time Saturday night, roUlng up a sales record that will place Medford on the map throughout the great nation-wide organization. "I am exceptionally gratified with the splendid response on the part of our southern Oregon patrons during the opening days of Ward Week." O. D. Bean said last night. "In spite of the large quantity of merchandise sold Saturday the stock of the Med ford store is still complete! due to the fact that we have one of the largest stocks of any Montgomery Ward store In the northwest." With another full week of this special sale we expect to establish an all-time record for Ward stores located in cities of Medford's population. . I . Jenkins' Comment (Continued from Page One) A LOT of good people think NRA HL won't work because no such scheme ever worked before. But nobody ever flew over the ocean until Lindbergh did It.. No voice was ever sent through thousands ol miles of air without wires until Mar coni showed us how. We are doing things every day that never were done before. So, you see, the fact that nothing resembling NRA ever worked before is no sign that NRA won't work now Returns from Salem Walter Olm- scheid, Jackson county sheriff, has re turned to Medford from Salem, where he has been attending to official busl ness. !P If It's at the Holly It's the Best Show in Town if I Medford's i"j"lr "1 B I Matinee . . 25c fH Finest I O ) 1 ik "EveninS 350 0 pj Theatre a.Cj laj Kiddies . . lOo jjpil NOW PLAYING . . . I wtx V -.- r m KiJlal i na .... vK" .it I ltv a IViSt M Betty Boop in "I Heard" Ml Iml WkWf: . A DoJw Ellington in "Bundle of Blues" . !gJ; ml : Paramount New, m UtfA . lUAi lh) DOORS OPEN AT 1:45 P. M. hB , ! a aJ j ,11 in i iii Flight 'oTime (Mmfora aod JecasuD unoi rJisuio rrum crie Kites ol I'br tlaJI rribune el to aod 1U ear 1(0.) TEN YEARS AGO TOD.U' ' October 8, 1023 (It was Mondsy) A Klan lecturer to appear at Ash land, and "all who desire to ssve the nation" urged to attend. John T6mlln, Leon Hasklns, Wll Danlels, and bunting trip. liam Hanunett. T. E. John Orth leave on i Living costs Increase In Septem- ber. Spectal train to be run by South- ern Pacific to Klamath Falls cele bration. A daughter was born Saturday, October 6 to Mr. and Mrs. Paul Scherer, and will be christened Paul ine. The first football game of the sea son will be played next Saturday In this city between the high school team and the alumni, and the lat ter are confident of victory. This team will be composed of the two Sherwood boys, Rudy and Dick Slng Ier, Ward Beaney, Hugh Brown, the Wataon brothers, Irish Coleman, and others. Coach Prink calllson of the high school haa selected a tentative first team, with Talent at center, Riley, a member of the Corvallls team last year, on one end, a Stngler on the other, Dressier and Perl at tackles, Von der Hellen at guard. Pabrlck at quarter, and Williams. Dally, and Neff In the backfleld. Eddie Demmer Is being drilled for kicking. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 8, 1913 (It was Wednesday) Jacksonville resident who failed to answer a subpoena of the federal court, now In session Is fined $50 and given a lecture by the Judge. "Leon B. Hasklns Is selected on the Jury. Wig Ashpole returns from a cattle buying trip In the Trail district. Fletcher Fish of Phoenix Is In the city listening to the returns of the world's series gamea, and pulling for the Qlants. If they lose he says he will cut off his mustache. Police ask parents to keep their children at home nights, as the town Is full of rough-looking char acters. The Q'llef of police In a huff, reports to the editor, more children were downtown last night than us ual. Management of Star theater apol ogizes to citizens for being unable to show Oaumont Weekly No. 64. Holly Star Myrna Loy Is beautiful with Warner J Baxter In Arthur Somers Roches "Penthouse," now playing at the Holly. It is a Cosmopolitan production, filmed at the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, and based upon the novel from the pen of Arthur Somers Roche, published serially in Cosmopolitan Magazine. As a scion of an aristocratic New York family, snd s society lawyer who chooses to defend notorious racket eers, Warner Baxter is said to give one of the finest performances of his long motion picture career. As fjertie Waxted, a beautiful nlgnt club girl, Myrna Loy Is reported by preview critics to have far surpassed any of her triumphs In previous pic ture productions. With exotic roles now a part of her brilliant past, in "Penthouse" she has taken command of one of the strong est and most lovable characterizations , of her career and her romantic scenes with Warner Baxter will long be re membered. Mae Clark. Broadway stage favorite and who has appeared In such screen successes as "Turn Back the Clock" and "Fast Workers." fills a featured role as Mimi. the gorgeous night club hostess who meets a mysterious death. leave for East Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Herman of 631 West Jackson street left Saturday morning on the Shas ta for Chicago, to' attend the world's fair. They plan to be gone about a month. DON'T SLEEP ON LEFT SIDE-AFFECTS HEART If stomach GAS prevents sleeping on right side try Adlerlka. One do. brings out poisons and relieves gas 1 pressing on heart so you sleep sound ly all night. Heath's Drug Store, and Medford Pharmacy.