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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 12, 1933)
PAGE STX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1933. ' 3 Medford Mail Tribune "EnryoM to Southern Origse fiudt Uii Hill TribUM" Oiiij Biotpt ttaturdtf Published or UKUruUU P1UNTINU CO. 23-3f2 (L Fir 8L Fboot 16 BOBEH1 tf. ttUHL, Editor Alt UfcDd Nmpw KaUrtd u mcooO elm vitur IMTort). OtHoo, uodir Aet ol tord, . 1IT8. SUBflfKIPTION SATU a Mattln Adranea Dilly. W TV IJ.OU Hail at nnnthi I.I ft Dsilj. mm moot. 0 H. farrier Id AdiiM Medford. ilhUM, Jirkoorult. Ctrtttl Point, Pbotoli, TaluC Gold BlU wd oo Hlglwtjt. DJl7. om rear Se.00 Dallf. ls Bontht t.So . Diily. OfM month 0 AU loni, tub to riium Official otpr or tbo dtr of Modford. Official paper of Jackaoo CoueIj. uzmKU or this associated phew ItMMirirv ruU LuHd Wirt SartlW Too AMoeUtod Preu to leluflttlr toMtltd to tht um for pubuntioo or an om ouptwiw crodlUd to It or eUwrvtso eradltod lo this paptr nH aim ta Um local oen publlihed twftlo. AU rlfbti 'or publication of (pedal dlipatco BireJo trt um roMnia HEMBEB 0' UNITED PKEB8 UEMBER Or AUDIT BUREAU OP CIHCULATI0N1 Adrtrthlng BvprwtoUtlTM M. & HOI i ESSEN COMPANY fjffteaa lo Nit York. Cbietco. Dttrolt, ti rraodtt t Angelas Seattle Portland. Ye Smudge Pot 87 ArtBUJ Perry OMwh fnr . um for tht Bonneville 4am continue!, with no reaultt. Fed eral fundi will build It, and 8eh McNary did' yeoman service to seoure It, ao why not call It the Porklnary dam, and cover the why and the why tore, with one fell iwoop. . tt la hoped that all the criminal insane who escaped from the state asylum will be captured ere spring, thua eliminating any danger they will run for something In the primary, and be elected. BUT WHV ANY 'sURrLDST (Springfield, 111., Record) Jaa. A.. Worsham, author of 'Low Pressure Belling" and now at work on a novel about big , business, "Money First," likes for breakfast home-cured ham, red ham gravy, hump-back biscuits, rolled oats, German friend pota toes, grits, strawberry preserves, quince Jelly, blackberry Jam, inllk and coffee with light-bread and butter. With such a breakfast before him recently, he comment ed, "I can't have as much a I used to. Times are too hard." ' ' . Dewey Hill, the Prospect hillbilly Is till In town, and dressed-up. He picks up city ways fast, and can now lean against a bank building with the outstanding economists. However Mr. Hill has not acquired the art of leaning against a bank building all day, without moving, or crossing and rs-crosslng his legs. Amerlcsnlsm Deciding to risk no unnecessary spending until recovery Is assured; denouncing the firm that doesn't oo-operate with NRA. (Los Angeles Times.) Telling everything In one fell swoop. Mrs. Machine-dun Kelly, on trial In Oklahoma with her kidnaping hus band for moat of the major crimes. If freed will become an evangelist. The Jury should be apprised of this threat.. The Housing Pl&n of the govern ment, aa drafted, does not provide for -wheels under the same, or a garage. 1'4-Jtmmy. the Portland burglar, who aerved eight years In prison for burglary and failed to learn anything, returned to his felonious enterprise the first of the week and was ahot In the leg.- He will aoon be back In hla cell. It doth appear that an error of about an Inch has occurred In the measuring of Jimmy. ' - There was another shlvaree In honor of a week-end wedding. Many hold that the shlvaree was also a wesk-end affair. . The police warn the people to look out for counterfeit money. While about it, they will also look out fur the other kind. a . Next to the weeds, nothing grew ao politically and bounteously as the summer aqusah, for which there Is no demsud. The summer equaah Is worthless aa a food for man or beast, or a weapon. 1934 model autos have arrived on the scene, and only cost approximate ly agoo more than the prospective buyer has available. Republican leaders have started writing articles In the megaalnet en deavoring to explain the lass rout at the polls. It I attributed to most everything but the lack of votes. The poor are still with us, but there art not so msny of us, as a year ago. FURNITURE FACTORY OUTPUT UNLIMITED WASHINGTON, Oct. 13. (P) Senutor Frederick fltetwer'e office here was today sdvued by the acting ad ministrator in charge of the furniture national recovery code that the ad ministrator had recommended thst me Doernuecher Furnlturs company ot Portland be permitted to operate aa many ah iris at desired. The company now It tmploylng 8,000 men. Broken windows glased by Ito triage Gaunt Work The County Budget IT IS so easy to criticize. And criticism is so frequently in inverse proportion to knowledge. That is tho less a person really knows about some public action, the more he seems to criticize it. The county budget committee finished its labors, Tuesday after working on it night and day, for weeks, and the budget was published in this paper yesterday. It would be interesting to know how many people read the budget carefully. Wc hope a great many. For it is an impor tant matter to everyone in Jackson county. A ND we hope, even more strongly, that those who did NOT carefully read the budget, will reserve judgment concern ing it until they HAVE. And then we hope those who DID, will take their criticisms to the public sessions of the committee soon to be held, and there give the committee members an op portunity to clearly explain, whatever action they took, that is not approved. That is the way and the only way to reach a satisfactory solution of such an important public problem. HPHE 1934 budget is approximately the same as the 1932 budget, but larger than the budget for the current year. At first blush any increase at such a time as this will be resented and probably criticized, but we are quite sure if the people understand WHY, they will agree that, under existing circum stances, there was no other way. 11THEN the 1933 budget was formed, no one could foresee what the future in this county was to disclose. They could not foresee, that nearly 30 percent of the total budget would be spent to put down a threatened revolution in this peaceful section of the state. The budget committee this year, figured the total cost direct and indirect of this tragic and futile dissension and strife at $57,000. The total budget for 1933 that is the general fund was less than $166,000. Naturally the budget allowances in those departments in volved, directly or indirectly in law enforcement, were exceed ed, and ran up large deficits, over $16,000 in the circuit court alone. ' Those deficits must be balanced, from moneys collected in the ensuing year 1933-1934. While there were other minor causes for an increased budget over last year, this and the county commissary expense, were the main items. Items which could not be foreseen, and could not be avoided. In other words, unexpected debts incurred this year, must : be paid next year. And the only way to pay them is through la tax levy, which the budget for the ensuing year determines, I that is increasing the budget over a budget which had no such expenses to meet. CO read over the budget carefully, brethren. And if you have criticisms to make, take them to the public hearings, and thresh the matter out with those who have had the perplexing problem of the 1934 budget to solve. They are eager for sug gestions, and we know are as anxious to further reduce county expenses AS ANYONE, provided such reductions' caff be made without sacrificing efficiency and elemental principles o sound finance and good business. Such a course will assure us a budget of which the people of the community as a whole will heartily approve. Judge Norton s Decision JUDGE NORTON shows he is not only a good judge but a l?nnrl fnirisfinn fPrhnn riirhtlv iinilnl'slnnrl tliov nr tlifl . w . - - --O-'-'J ..-.--....., same thing.) At any rate in his treatment of the case of Mrs. Henrietta Martin, Judge Norton put himself above any thoughts of retali ation, entirely eliminated any personal feeling he may have had, and roturned good for evil. The people quickly forget. But those who attended the last few meetings of the Good Government congress will not soon forget what the leaders of that organization said about Judge Norton, and the efforts they made, under the leadership of their president, to recall him. Charges as libellous as they were unfounded, were publicly made against him. Every effort was made to hound him out of office, discredit him as a judge, and disgrace him as a man. With the leader of that congress before him, convicted of a crime, her associates in prison, Judge Norton certain would have been justified in taking advantage of a long delayed oppor tunity, and, as the saying goes "throwing the book at the defen dant, in fact the entire law library. Instead of that he merely pointed out the foolishness of her conduct, deplored the fact she had been made the victim of a group of self seeking and designing politicians, and trusting she had learned her lesson, suspended her sentence cutirely, peuding good behaviour. CERTAINLY a very generous decision, and in our judgment, a wise one. If this action does not convince the defendant and her associates of the fine quality of the man who presides over our circuit court, his integrity and high minded sense of duty, then nothing else can. If it doesn't make them all feel ashamed of what they said and did against him, then nothing else will. But we believe this action will eventually do this, we believe it will in time, show the defendant and her associates the error of their ways, and the destructive and childish folly of their whole program of false propaganda and fruitless agitation, fighting windmills of wickedness and corruption, when no wick edness or corruption existed. If it doesn't, if the lesson has not been learned, then obvi ously there will be only one thing to do. A suspended sentence does not mean a DISMISSED sentence it means a sentence that can be applied any time Hint circumstances justify it. IF Mrs. Martin shows by her future activities that she can't appreciate justice with mercy, then she should be and we feel sure will be MADE to understand justice without it. True the crime for which she was convicted was not a serious one in itself, but it involved a most important principle, the principle that the government under which we live can not endure, if the individual any individual is allowed to take the law into his own or her own hands. Mrs. Martin's conviction sustained that principle. Whether the lesson that must be taught, has been learned in this instance, only the future can disclose. The responsibility is Mrs, Martin's, which in the judgment of thia paper is precisely where it should be. Personal Health Service By William Brady, U.U. ttlfned letters perUuning to penutul UMJta aod aygient not to dt om diattoiMlA ot treatment, wljj o uuwereo oy Or (.ad a tiampcd ddreued envelope tat enclosed- Letters mould oe artel ana mitten in ink. OtriDg to tbs tare oofflbm ot letters .Bcetied only tew cmn 0 ans wered oere No reply can or made to qoertee oot conforming to Uutinctlona address Or. William Brady. 865 CU Camino, rJeverle? ttilla, Cat CALCIUM TREATMENT OP MIGRAINE y,' fr For several years we have been ad vising sufferers with migraine (peri odic sick headache), asthma, hay fev er and one or two '"JSWNk other conditions. to take calcium lactate. Every lit' tie while some former sufferer from one of these conditions writes in to report the extraordinary re lief experienced after a course of calcium. Some Interest ing observations of the effect of calcium treatment of migraine have been made by Dr. I Dow Inskeep of Medford, Oregon, who reported his work In Northwest Medicine. First, in the study of the blood chemistry In a series of cases Dr. Inskeep noticed that the calcium con tent of the blood was rather low In all of them. He tried giving calcium lactate by mouth. In doses of 16 to 30 grains a day, but this proved rather Irritat ing to most of the patients, so he switched to calcium gluconate which was easier for the patient to take. Calcium gluconate la a newer or ganic preparation, containing less calcium than the lactate and costing more, of course, but where a patient finds the lactate Irritating the glu conate may be substituted with ad vantage, for It is usually less dis agreeable to take. Dr. Inskeep noted that when the blood calcium content came up to a higher level the migraine attacks ceased. He starts the patient off on one dally dose of calcium gluconate, from 16 to 30 grains, best taken In the morning before breakfast. The patient returns In a week, usually re porting that he has had an attack or two, but the attacks have been less severe. The serum calcium at this time is found Increased but still not up to top normal level. After another week or two the pa tient returns for another blood test, and now the calcium content is well up to the normal" and the patient reports that the attacks have stopped. Then the calcium treatment is kept up for three months, though In small er doses, say 10 or 16 grains a day. Then an intermission of two months and then the course Is repeated. Patients taking this treatment were not given any cod liver oil, vlosterol or parathyroid, as It was felt that the dangers of hypercalcemia (too much calcium in the blood) were greater than the benefits of a speedy increase in serum calcium. Calcium is the chemical name for the element commonly called lime. The body of a healthy adult con tains three pounds of calcium and l'.i pounds of phosphorus, these be ing the chief elements In the com position of the body. There is about a pound of potassium, six ounces of magnesium, a teaspoon ful of Iron, a dash of silicon, a trace of flourlne, a trace of copper and a good pinch of lodln. Some physicians believe other salts of calcium are quite as effective as the lactate or the gluconate, for In stance calcium carbonate (prepared chalk), calcium chloride, calcium hyposulphite. Ultraviolet light (in sunlight or light from special lamps) on the skin favors the utilization of calcium In the body. So does the medicine cod liver oil, or vlosterol, and treatment with parathyroid gland extract. ' QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS That Dark Ancestor. Your article stated that the child will be dark aa the darkest parent. Do you mean the Immediate parent, or are grandparents included? Mrs. M. H. Answer 1 said nothing about the darkest parent. There can be but two parents, one of whom may be the darker. Children are rarely darker than the darker parent. The super stition of a black child being born to virtually white parent; because one or both parents has a drop of negro blood, is purely superstition. Htllts Deform. Been told wearing spike heels causes the hips to grow larger. Please en lighten me. Miss E. M. Answer If that means extremely high heels, it deranges posture, makes you walk like a horse and tends to produce lordosis and sway back, which makes the hips seem larger. Prevention of stage Fright. Once you suggested quinine to pre vent stage fright or to steady one to face such an ordeal. I am in a sweat already over an address I must make before a club next month . . . Mrs B. N. Answer Take one grain (pf quinine blsulphate In capsule, after food, three times a day for 10 days or two weeks before the great moment. Then please let me know how you come through. (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dille Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D 205 El Ca mino, Beverly Hills, Calif Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. WILLIAM LATRASSE, who got into the headlines in a big way back in 1010 by holding up a Missouri Pa cific train SINGLE-HANDED, has just been sentenced to 10 years In the Mis souri penitentiary for robbing a ham burger stand. He Is slipping down In the scale of crime, Isn't he,? HY has he slipped? Well, this may have something to do with W it: When he held up the passenger train, he was In bis late twenties. When he held up and robbed the hamburger stand, he was la bis early FIFTIES. HOLDING up a -train single-handed and alone takes courage, daring and initiative. Here is a thought that la worth holding: If William Latraase had put into LEGITIMATE BUSINESS enterprises the courage, daring and Initiative he put Into holding up railroad trains, he would be a lot better off than he Is. IN BPITE of all the hooey that to peddled in these days about gangs ters and their vast profits, crime DOESNT pay. You can put that In your pipe and smoke It. EMPLOYEES of the Coos Bay Lum ber company, at Mar&hfteld, pro test against enforcement of the lum ber code. If the firm that employs them Is required to shut down when It has exhausted Its code hours, they say, they will LOSE THEIR JOBS. THAT Is true--and no one can blame them for hating to lose their Jobs. Moreover, if we look at It from the narrow viewpoint of ONE Industry and ONE community, we are torced to add that prosperity Isn't promoted by compelling plants to shut down and men to lose their jobs. But the lumber code, looking at the WHOLE Industry and at ALL communities, seeks to adapt produc tion to the demands of the market, so that workers may CONTINUE .to have Jobs, Instead of holding them for a little while and then losing them because of disastrous over-production. That Is the whole story. NOW let's glance critically for a moment at the Coos Bay- Lumber company and its contention that1 it should be permitted to go on and ope rate REGARDLESS of code restric tions. What it really proposes Is this: "Let EVERYBODY ELSE restrict operations, thus creating a good mar ket at a fair price. Then let US go on and operate WITHOUT RESTRIC TIONS, thus getting for ourselves the lion's Shane of the benefits resulting from the restricted operations plan." Properly analyzed, that is what the Coos Bay proposal amounts to. YOU may be tired of farm figures, but here are some more that arc exceedingly interesting: In September of this year, the general average of prices of farm pro ducts was 70 per cent of the pre war average. That Is to say, in September the farmer was getting 10 per cent as much for what he sold as he got be fore the war. BUT in Septembe the general aver age of prices PAID by the farmer was 116 per cent of the pre-war aver age, which means that while the farmer Is now getting only 70 per cent as much for what he sells as he got before the war, he has to pay lti per cent MORE for what he buys than he paid before the war. LETS put it a at tie more plainly: Every time the farmer takes in 70 cents he has to PAY OUT $1.16. THAT can't go n Indefinitely ' without pauperizing the whole farm population. You may think the agricultural adjustment act, with Its processing taxes and Its hiring people to leave their land out of production and lta slaughter of millions of pigs, la a desperate remedy. Maybe It is. But it Is Intended as a remedy for a condition that will become , more desperate If It Isn't remedied. , hands, are busy theso days chopping v and piling the winter supply of wood T In anticipation of a hard winter. Two carloads of cord wood arrived Sunday for the north end of the county, and are being unloaded today by the woodyard owners. Trouble breaks out again In Mexico, and President Huerta suspends the constitution. Controversy ends when street car company agrees to use T-rails on Main street. A lovelorn traveler on the Espee commits suicide in the drawing room and the coroner, will bold no Inquest. A band of gypsies are ordered out of town by the police, but not before they bilk a citizen out of $11. Grants Pass and Ashland to send delegates here for discussion of Good Roads and more railroads. Flight 'oTime t Medford and Jackson CouDt distury from cne Files ol i'be Mall Tribune ol in and to fear 4KO.) Jefferson Trims TEN YEARS AGO TODAY October 12, 1923. (It was Friday) Posses scour hills for Siskiyou Tun nel bandits and murdeerrs; blood hounds rushed from Seattle and San Francisco; authorities believe three men committed the crime. One ol the passengers caught a glimpse ot one of the robbers, and described him as a small man. No money or valu ables were secured in the robbery. Ed Lamport lends the authorities rifles and shotguns. Daniel O'Connell, chief special agent of the Southern Pacific, arrives to take charge of the hunt. Giants defeat Yankees 1 to 0 in the third game of the world series, before a crowd of 62,730, the largest In the history of baseball. Talent library fund benefit nets a goodly sum. ThA RriAn Vnllav tnmotn .rnn 1. n , u money-maker, farmers report. , Co. A of Medford Joins hunt for Siskiyou bandits. TWENTY LEARS AGO TODAY October Vi, 1913. (It was Monday) A number of Medford citizens, who do not have to labor with their i Franklin 18-0 PORTLAND. Ore., Oct. 12. AP) Showing much Improvement over its earlier form, Jefferson high defeated Franklin, 18 toO, here yesterday in the oepnlng game of the second round in the Portland Interscholastic football league. Q nagging backache with bladder insularities and a bred, nervous, depressed feeling may warn or some disordered kidney or bladder function 1 Ok Don t delay. I ry Uoan s rills, f Successful 50 years. Used tlie world over. At all druggists. TJoan's PILL5 Swedish Massage Hours to 5 Corrective Exercises By Appt Ofipar S. Nissen, P.T. Physical Therapeutics Formerly Director and Instructor MosMifie Dept., Boston City Ho&p. 628 E. Main St. Medford. Ore. NEW FEED PRICES PEE CWT. IN TON LOTS Turkey Fattening Feed It will he to jour ndviuitage to buy 1 your TURK I. Y FATTENING FEED at our new low prices. Uuy now w title u arc able to make you right prices. F E. Phone 833. 229 N. Riverside Again Today and Friday 4 Days Starts Saturday October 14th to 17th Plus Short Features "WHAT MAKES A CHAMP?" CARTOON "I VAM WHAT I YAM' "MARRIAGE HUMOR" NEWS REEL 1 C fMJ . -.-tr I,' r JVS Continuous Shows Saturday and Sunday 1:45 P. M. to 11 P. M. Mat. 25c. Eve. 35c. Kiddies 10c i 1IGHC1S uulette. COLBERT A Paramount Pi dure . with RICARDO CDRTEZ DAVID MArWERS LYDA ROBERTI and BABY Li ROY Medford Finest Theatre With Air Changed Every Seven Minutes o w o W o I -3 w w d o H 1 w a o o ta H H) Sots M W w W o a o i Ki H O O r at 3 a to o w o a w . f w anj . uav jutaaip m n. sp w .4 1 V