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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1933)
PXGfE FOUR 'SrEDFOim WAIC TItTBTJNE. JIEDPOTID, OREGON, MONDXY, OCTOBER 30, 1933 Medford Mail tribune "tnryont la Soirtfttrn Oftnot Rtadi Ui Mail If I bunt'1 Dallj gietpt Saturday PuMlnhM) at MEUITtlJIl) PUINT1NG CO. 16-1T.39 ft VU 8L PttOM 1ft BOBKH1 W. BUHL, Editor Ao iwtewmlent NiMpaptr Enter) u teeunc elasi oattw it ilalford, Orrgoa, undir Act of :arca 8. lsitf. UUaHfHil'TION BATEK B Moll In Adiaoea nll dm rear tft.Ol) Dallj, ill mootM Daltj, cm aontb Of Br Curlv In Adtanea Medford, Aj&laiHi, JaeksonftUa, Central polot. Phoenix, Went. Gold QUI and on Hlnhaaja. pill j, on rw 99 00 Dallj. Hi month! . 8. UK Daily, om mooth 00 All urn, eub lo MTanea, Official paper of Iht Cllj of Medford. Official p(j of Jaciioo Cmmtj. I1CMRKH 0? TUB ARHOCIATHD PKKHS Heeemoe ITuIJ Leutd Wirt Brrdee Tht AmocUUO Crest U exduiliilj entitled u tbi uie for pubJJeitlon of all aewt dhpatcha credited to It nr olberwlie credited In Uil ptptr and alu to the local newt DuMlxhrd herein. At) flHU for publication of ipeclal diipelchet fterelo ara U0 rueTea. MEMHF.R OP UNITKD PltKHS IfEMUKII OK AUUI1 BUIIBAO OP CHICUI.ATI0N8 AdTBfttilnt HfpfetentstlfM U. C. MIMENBBN ft COMPANY Omcai In Nr t,ti, Chicago, Detroit, Sao FrancUeo K Aneelee Bealtli Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Artbui Perry. Thl 1 Hallowe'en and peopla will play Jokes on themselves. The last time the people played a Joke on themselves they rejected the Sales ax, which la ruining California at the rata of $32,000,000 per year In rev enue, and causes a corresponding reduction In direct taxes, such a the aehool and road levies. Oregon U always battling for tax reduction, and fearful she will get It. Relative to the proposed recognition of Russia by America, the question arisen whether Russia would have been able to recognlr-e this valley, when It was known as "Little Russia," and more or less proud of It. BEST MOUTHFUL OF LAST WEETK: 'The difference between death and taxes, Is that death don't get worse very time the legislature meets" ; Miami, Fla.. Herald.) Opportunities for getting shot for creatures of the woods or fields have narrowed down to ducks. As Man la Dot given to flapping around 300 feet In the air, there la slim chance for a mistake. However, a nlmrod can still throw a shotgun down In the bottom J of a rowboat, and blow a loft arm off. OPTIMIST RUNS AMUCK (The Dalles Chronicle) It's only a game, this thing we call football. Empires do not topple nor dynasties fall when a team Is defeated, after giving the best It had to offer. Such defeats naturally are disheartening, espe cially when championship honors were In sight, but the sun will rise and aet again Just the same. Henry Offenbach er of the Applegate was In town Bat. to smoke his week end cigar, and wished he was home. Mr. Offenbaoher concurred In the suspicion that somebody had sneaked In a skunk-cabbage on the cigar maker. A bounteous rain fell Sat., catching the usual number of farmers with hay down. GEN, JOHNSON, OKT THIS THAITOR (Boulder, Colo., Cn merit ) I believe our president to be a God sent man. I do not understand hU policies, but j believe him sincere In thinking I them Just. I have not signed his N. R. A. pledge becsuse: My business Intelli gence tells me If X do, I must I Immediately start chesting In order to exist In my particular business. X prefer to keep a clear conscience. 1 will keep the prices and hours im posed by the majority related organisations. Cong. Jim Mott, who thought up the current devastating delinquent tax law, which vlruatly makes it a felony to pay taxes on time, will be In the city and valley again next week. The Insanity dodge failed to work In Clackamas county lsat week. A Jury after short deliberation voted to imprison for life, a gent who clubbed A friend to death, when the friend suggested that he put on his pants. Inasmuch as school children were ap proaching the spot where he stood nude. Tie murderer had a penchant for nakedness. If It attracted atten tion, and had been In the nut house for the trick. Since Incarceration In the Jallhouse he has been sane enougn. and will continue along the on me calm lines, in the penitentiary. The slayer had an uncontrollable temper, which the warden will be able to control. He will be housed with a number of felons, who know all about going crary, when caught, nd facing punishment for criminal orneryness. The crime was commit ted October 18 last, and Justice had a move on, for once. No Women In Heer Pool Halls BOISE, Idaho. (UP) A city or dinance has been parsed to prevent women from entering pool hulls In Uolao where beer U sold. The law was presented by City Attorney Clar ence Ward because pool hall proprie tors complained women lined up at the bar lor beer and Interfere with business. The New Gold IF, as frequently reported, Professor Warren of Cornell is tne member of the brain trust, behind President Roosevelt's "new deal" in gold, then anything the professor has to say on the subject, should be of intense public interest. In today's mail we received advance proofs of an article written for the "Country Home" in which the Cornell authority explains his compensated dollar. "We quote: There are four factors In price, not two, a commonly sup posed. This error has been the cause of Innumerable business failures and of much foolish leglslstlon. ' "The price of wheat Is the ratio of the supply of wheat and the demand for It to the supply of gold and the demand for It." What a farmer gets for wheat, according to this Idea, depends only In part upon how much wheat there Is In the world and how much Is wanted. It Is bought with gold, and so the price also depends upon how much gold there Is In existence and how badly that gold Is being wanted. So with other commodities. Always, at the back of the general price situation, Is the question of yellow gold. The explanation that overproduction causes depression, Dr. Wsrren rejects. "For seventy-five years before the war," he says, "world physical volume of production of all basic commodities roso 3.18 per cent per year. Since 1915 the rate has been dis tinctly less, Instead of the phenomenal Increase in output which Is popularly Imagined, the rate of Increase In output has declined." The fall In demand for commodities nd the consequent low prices are a result, not a cause of depression, he argues. "The depression Is caused by the collapse In the price struc ture due to a return of the world demand for gold. It has pulled the foundation from under the whole debt and price structure. "Many persons have been misled by the Increase In the world supply of gold. They say trrnt the world supply Is larger than ever befuie, and there must be enough. This Is Just as logical as to say that a boy's suit Is the largest one he ever had, and therefore must be largo enough. "Beginning In 1916. gradual efforts were made to return all nations to a gold bAsls. Americans took a leading part In urging and financing this return, not realizing that the return of demand for gold would raise Us value and cause a price collapse. France returned to the gold basis in the spring of 1028, and the gold panic was on. It Is still here. "The rise In the value of gold caused such a calamity that the effort to re-eatabllsh it had to be stopped." "So." he asks, "why not simply change the price of gold? Why not raise it from 20.87 an ounco to a higher level?" Then, he says, prices will rise In proportion. A seventy-five per cent Increase to 38.17 an ounce, Dr. Warren declares "would bring quick recovery, quickly put men back to work, and quickly balance national budgets." The price of gold today is $31.90. This is about H short of the price Professor Warren fixes for his objective. But in this article, the author snys nothing about increasing the gold price, by federal purchases in the open market. He would rcvaluate the dollar, and then establish a commodity dollar. Wc quote: This would be accomplished by the simple device of reducing the number of grains of gold in a dollar from 33.23, the present legal weight, to 13.37 grains. Under a law passed last spring, the president has authority to do this. The figure Is selected In the belief that it would restore the 1026 price level, which Is said to correspond with the level at which the great part of existent debts are contracted. After the dollar is ro vain a ted, Its advocates point out that another step must be taken before there Is real stability In the unit of value. This is to establish what Dr. Warren calls the "compensated doll a v." If the wholesale price Index of 784 commodities, as published by the Bureau of Labor, Is used to determine the dollar's vnlue, the gold content would be raised or lowered from time to time as the gcnernl level of prices for j every-day commodities rose or fell, with a limit On fluctuation of one per cent per month. The Warren proposal alms to provide money with fixed and constant purchasing power but a flexible weight. "The dollar," he says, "has t. be rubber either as to weight or value. It can not have a fixed weight and also a fixed value. This proposal would give It a fixed value and a rubber weight. "A sclontlflo money Is one with a constant buying power for commodities, rather than a fixed weight of one commodity. Our whole tax and debt structure rests on commodity prices. If this structure Is to be kept sound either for the creditor or the debtor, It Is commodity prices that need to be kept stable, not the weight of gold for which a dollar will exchange." To those who understand such things, that should be plain. As before stated in this column, NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Oct. 80. I dined with friends In a pretentious speakeasy the other evening. It had the mlr- rory glint and over - stuffed splendor of a hall In Versailles. A muted orchestra murmured Vien nese waltr.es in mild overtone and a chanteuae warbled feathery lyrics. Walters glided noiselessly under watchful eye one of those aristocratic obes- lant maltrea d'hotel. Racked in deep-cuihloned divans against the wall like so many character In a play, were headline figures of Broad v ay Arch Selwyn. Tommy Man vllle, Ed lulllvan, Sanehes, the Cu ba i sugar millionaire and so on. But what Interested me chiefly was the flourish of spirits bubbling about the circular bar. A fleet of colleglat bar-tenders, one with hair en brosse a ringer for Skeets Galla gher, Juggled thPlr glasses and bot tles with the deftness of Serge Flash of the variety halls. Every drink of the old Hoffman House was be In turned out. Stout bottomed whiskey tumblers lightly rinsed with absinthe, based with bourbon and frencoed with fruits and a twist of lemon pwl. were as cun ningly devised as In what antl-quar-lans are pleased to twitter were "the good old days." One bon vlranl with a Morris OueHt tie who even ordered that poetical Hungarian libation, Hoas?u Lepes, two-thirds the waters of Con trexevllle and one-third Moselle, was not denied. A fat and malicious datnorel, confessing to downing her fourth silvery Ramos flra, switched to a more potent stinger while chid ing a simple nimon-looking slater for sticking to Innocuous and pallid ginger ale. Rimming the bar on spindly, high, ahort-berked chairs were human symbols of the aviary the moulting sparrows, birds of paradise, the pea cock and others of gay plumage as well, of course, as the carrion birds. Twigging In the background the altiglng-fnr-supper boys and sundry specimens of the oily gigolo gentry. I was especially intrigued -that term has gone out but X Ilka it fit a. J Deal Explained WE don't I j with a pert Jinkoe who drafted me Into conversation. "I'm a little drunk re from drlnkeel" she blurred. Herfrllly blouse had lost Its flounce and her chit of a toque more askew than the mode requires. An over lord of the establishment had given nor bartender the eye. She was to have no more. "How about a sip of yours?" she Inquired. I edged It over. "Danbury Fair stuff" she exclaimed with a wry smack at my lemonade. Then In mocking Jeer: "Go on deacon I Tell me abo&lhe pitfalls of our wicked city I" I felt helpless. And rather abused. Frank Sullivan came In uncon sciously to my rescue. I had chance to haloo across the pyramid of bottles centering the bar. One of those "hello, how are you" ex changes that might divert my tor menter. "Who's your friend?" she asked. I explained he was a cele brated up-to-the-minute humorist. So she yelled: "Hey you I Bright-aally-me and make It timely. I love puns." Sullivan, wiser than I, re treat ed. Oeorge Jessel was next to swivel on the horlwm. I am fascinated by Jewel's walk, the fast stride of a colt tortuously haltered. The lady of the Approaching Hiccup ob served: "It wouldn't surprise me to nee Frisco wiggle out of the wood work. Hey, Mr. Oimluy, you In the cute white coat. How about an other snort? Vlrgle la now as sober as Judge Seabury. And Count Sour Puas here Is twitching to buy wine." X could stand no more, waved to an imaginary ft lend and skipped the gutter. At our table the food was arriv ing. A huge tureen of petite mar mite, held high, while a bristling captain as advance guard cleared an Imperious path. Such studied ges tures beglamour a meal, European foi-do-roi, of course, hut American cafes are capitalizing it. I think it was Roy Howard wno longed for a red-corpuscled spurt of courage to scream to a waiter: "Take It backl It looka terrible l" Just as a bow ing captain lifts the lid of the en tree for the host to admire I What a glorious way to put a dinner on the blink. T was not to escape the loose tongued lady exiting She was teet ering with a stick of lip rooge be fore an anteroom mirror. "O ochre Daddy. You devastating spendthrift yon. Re careful of the night air," she called. So loud even the cloak rooms girls could hear. And tltterl 4 Aulhorirrd Maytag Arrvle. AM makes repaired. Pnoin 300. 1 tiros cn wina.tw Ued Oj fTOH j orldfe Caoinei Woxa. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. tfiRiiva letters pertiuning to persona uraita and oygleor not to dls se dlagiiusla or treatment, wUi oe answered oj ur. titad) u a itampea ttir-addresed envelope i enclosed. Letters mould oe orlet and written to ink Owing to the large aumhei of letters received only a tea? can ot ans wered here. No reply can Ur made to queries out conforming Co Instructions Address Or. William Brady, tan Ei Cam 1 no, Heverley Hi lis, Cal, THE CAUSES OF CVD Cardiovascular degeneration or dls- ease (CVD) Includes hardening of the arteries, myocarditis or alow heart muscle failure, angina pectoris, many cases of apoplexy (cerebral horn or rhage, stroke o: paralysis) and many cases of chronic nephritis (Brlght's disease). Besides this gen eral condition embraces a good many cases of "general break- down" where the brunt of the de generation la not felt chiefly In one of these more fa miliar manifestations. CVD now tops the list In the causes of death. Near ly all of us will die of It if we live lon and wrong enough. What we doctors don't know about the causes of CVD fills many tomes When we don't know much we always lean heavily on theory. Before we consider the nature and cause of the condition we had better dispose of one or two false conceptions based on exploded theories. First, the old saying that a mag Is as old as his arteries served to fix attention unduly upon the arteries. Of -course, a man or a woman or a child is as old as his arteries or his muscles or his lungs or his teeth. If a mnn has gray hair you wouldn't conclude he Is old because his hair Is gray: his hair Is gray because the man Is old. Second, the theory that too much meat is hard on the arteries, the kid neys, the blood pressure or something This theory was based on anoMier theory, that animal protein or nitro genous matter (albumen, lean meat) more read My undergoes putrefaction in the intestine and that the products of putrefaction are more or leas poi sonous and are absorbel Into the blood and product a kind of poisoning of the system called "autointoxica tion." I assure you this Is all a mis take. Scientifically no such systemic noldonlng has been demonstrated. Practically, experimentally, the ex cessive consumption of meat by man has been proved quite harmless. So I assert without fear of competent con tradltlon that there is no reason why CVD patients or persons training for cardiovascular degeneration should not eat meat, light meat, dark meat, fish, fowl, eggs, cheese, game. Third, the overeating Idea mind I don't call overeating a theory. There Is, I believe, good reason to think that' one who regularly eats mora than hej can metabolize to advantage (and this includes victuals and beverages), does put a load, a strain, a burden on his 'IsSK $ i' x BIG DIRIGIBLE REACHES HOME PORT t .a a 45V The U.S. 8. Macon at It arrived at Mof'att Field, Cal., new base for the craft south of San Francisco. The giant hangar can be seen In the background while the Macon It tied to tht mobile mooring mast. (As sociated Press Photo) av,-"M,"lVV?,w-M r 'ttti rJiiin itfcTifttsa i IN THE LAUCH - THAT'LL ROCK THE NATION heart and arteries and courts a pre mature physical decline, breskdown, degeneration. As a rule, persons who overeat perform their outstanding feat in the domain of the delectaole carbohydrates, starches, sugars, breads, cakes, pastries, sweets because these are the easiest to eat and most avail able. Frankly I don't know whether overeating has anything to do with CVD or not, but most good physicians still feel that it may be a factor. Per haps the real factor concerned, where overeating Is avowedly a habit Is neglect of exercise. The older medical authors all men tion alcohol as one of the causes of arteriosclerosis or CVD, but recently some good medical authorities have doubted whether alcoholism is a fac tor. Personally, I incline to the belief that It Is not alcohol Itself, but evils which alcoholism or Intemperance fa vors, that are the real causes notably venery and syphilis. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Sinus Infection. Many thanks for your fine health service. By the regular use of cod liver oil from October to May each year I have enjoyed comparative freedom from aggravated attacks now for sev eral yearsa suggestion I found In your column. (B. A. J.) Answer Because of Its Vlfiimln A, cod liver oil, or perhaps better halibut liver oil, Is helpful to persons subject to sinusitis or other upper respiratory trnct infections. No, Not a Real Baby. We have a brand new baby at our house and we want to start her off right. So. as the baby's father was raised according to Dr. Brady we nat urally look to you fo." counsel . . (Mrs. J. G.) Answer Well, I'd keep her. Better luck next time, and all that, but even a girl baby is not to be given to the Salvation Army these days. Send a dime and a stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for "The Bray Baby Booklet." Wart's This, Wart's Thl? By the simple application of ordin ary Iodine every evening for a week I have found that warts will vanish and leave no scar."(Mra. P. R.) 'Answer Thank you. Using lodin so often one must beware of setting up excessive Irritation. Apply It to the wart only, not to the surrounding normal skin. Discontinue It If It prov es too Irrltntlnrr. Ordinarily an appli cation of tincture of lodln should not be repeated within a week. (Copyright, 1033, John F. Dille Co ) Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Urady should send letters direct to Dr. IVIIhnm Urn fly. M. 1)., 2B5 El Ca. mlno, Beverly llllli. Cadf ;VJ WWWSJC EXPLOJION 3S KJt? Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS YOU read In the newspapers yes terday this headline: "Gold Control Plan Placed In Operation. U. 8. Offers to Purchase Newly Mined Metal at 131.39 an Ounce." itrHAT la this gold control plan? VlJ What does it mean? This la the answer: It means, In all probability, that' Inflation, long discussed, Is here at last, HOW dc ii Cwork? It was like this: In the past, the price of gold has been ap proximately $3040 an cuuee. That j to say, you could take an ounce of gold to the treasury and get 30.6 paper dollars for It. But now the price of gold li arbi trarily set at $31.36 an ounce, which means that you can take an ounce of gold to the treasury and get 31.3 paper dollars for It. IN, order to maketa little clearer, let's put It the other way around. In the past, you could take 20. fl paper dollars to the treasury and get a WHOLE OUNCE of gold for them. But now, when you take 30.0 paper dollars to the treasury, you will get only a little less than TWO-THIRDS of an ounce of gold for them. THE point, you see , is that there will be hereafter, as long as the price of gold Is held above $30.60 an ounce, MORE PAPER DOLLARS in proportion to the existing gold. That Is Inflation. TUT why," you ask, "go to all D that trouble when all that would be necessary to bring about inflation would be to start the printing presses and pay the govern ment's bills with the printed mon ey?" This la the reason: It la desired to bring about CONTROLLED Infla tion that Is, to have a certain amount of Inflation one month and DIFFERENT amount, either more or less, the next month, according to the needs of the moment, &i de termined by the movement of prices up or down. It Is hoped, in this way, to give us Just the amount of Inflation or deflation we need, In order to hole! prices at a certain stable level. f HOW can mat be done? It Is HOPED that It can be done In this way: If prices show a tendency to rise too rapidly, the price cf gold In terms of paper dol lars will be rLlucert, so that there will be FEWER paper dollars out standing against each ounce of gold. If prices tend to fall too rapfdly, the price of gold In terms of paper dollars will be increased, s that there will be MORE paper dollars outstanding ' against each ounce of "gold. THAT Is wha(Mihave been see ing referred to In the papers as a "managed' currency. The man agement Is to be accomplished by raising or lowering the price of gold in terms of paper dollars or, In other words, changing the gold con tent ot the dollar. LETS put It n a somewhat simpler way: Tou have, let us say, a steady market for a gallon of milk each day. But your cow gives VARYING amounts of milk. One day she gives two quarts. Another she gives three quarts. On at 111 another day she gives five quarts. But you want JUST ENOUGH milk each day to supply your market, so one the day when the gives two quarts, you put In two quart of water. On the day when she gives thre quart, you put In one quart of water. On the day when she a gives five quarts, you THROW AWAY one quart. WHAT you want to accomplish, In the case of your cow, la to have just enough milk each day to sup ply the needs of your market, ao that the price of your product will remain stable, not varying up or down with varying conditions of sup ply and demand. What the governments wants to accomplish. In the case of Its "man aged" currency. Is to have Just enough money each month, or each year, to supply the needs of busi ngs generally so that prices of commodities, instead of going up and down with varying conditions of sup ply and demand, will remain at a stable level. REMEMBER the wheat farmer, re ferred to in this column yes terday, who borrowed a thousand bushels of wheat and had to pay back SEVEN THOUSAND bushels. The purpose of a "managed" cur rency or perhaps It would be bet ter to say the HOPE Is to insure that when you borrow a thousand bushels of wheat you will have to pay back only a thousand bushels. T'S all very complicated, this busl- ness of money and prices, and you may be utterly weary of these discussions of them. If so, SKIP them. And this scheme of a '(managed" currency, which we're preparing to try out, is also quite complicated. It may not work. But we're getting ready to try It out. 1 Long Mountain LONG MOUNTAIN. Oct. 30. Mrs. Julia Stlmson of Meorord Is spend ing several days at the olmes home. Tim Dugan has been painting and remodeling his home. Mr. and Mrs. George S towel I, Mrs Will Jackson, Mrs. George Jackson spent the afternoon at Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Jackson's. Mrs. Alice Nichols called In Med ford Tuesday. George Stowell was a business call er in Eagle Point Tuesday. Mrs. Alice Nichols and brother Ot tls, Mrs. Nevah Holman and daugh ter, Grace, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stowell and two children. Tommy and June, Orie Miller and Dorothy Coy attend ed the dance at the Lake Creek grange hall Saturday nlgh. A surprise birthday party was giv en for Mrs. W. R. Holcnan Oct. 31 Those present were: Mae Stowell, Lizzie Perry, Stella Holey, Rosa Smith, Ethel Coy, Mabel Harnlsh and two daughters. Ruby Young and the .hostess, Mrs. Holman, Mr, and Mrs. W. R. Holman called at the Roy Stanley horn In Eagle Point Friday afternoon. .Mrs. Sleegh III Mrs. R. F. Sleeg'n Is a patient at the Sacred Heart hoj pital for medical care. TayJ Brown Weds Raymond C. "Tay' Brown, for mer star tackle for tht University of Southern California, Is thown with hit bride, formerly Helen Tucker of Los Angelet. They were married In Cincinnati, where Brown It line coach at the Unlver. alty of Cincinnati. (Associated Presa Photo AGAIN TODAY AND TOMORROW Mat. 1:45 p.m. Eve. 6:45 Mat. 25c Eve. 35c Kiddies 10c o Flight 'oTime (MKdrord and Jackson Count d I story from the rniea ol I he Mall Tribune 0I to and iu Kear Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY October 30, 1923 (It Was Tuesday) Police arrest three youths while at tempting to tip over a house In south ern Medford, while the occupants were asleep. Income tax debate at the Greater Medford club falls to materialise. Apples to be served at C of C. forum In the future. Portland excited over nude figures on a new building. Sen. Couzens ridicules idea of Henry Ford running for President. Siskiyou suspects now reported In New Mexico. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 30, 1913 (It Was Thursday) "Grist to M1U," Essanay's two part dramatic master piece at the It the atre tonight and Saturday night. To all who believe in the undying devo tion of a woman who truly loves and is patient this photoplay will make a strong appeal intensely Interesting, a Jiovel plot and counter-plot built around a situation that Is a grooving evil of the times. A picture story each member of the family can appreciate. Owls causing havoc In Table Rock district hen houses. Local militiamen gird for war 03 Mexican border. California dry In 1914, plan of W. C. T. U. Motor service on the Espee to be re sumed). (Continued from page one) The profit to be made from a forty percent devaluation would be 66 2-3 cents and not 40 cents on each dollar for those who fled abroad with dol lars, Notes The unfortunately raised Jewish Is sue will cut no Ice In the New York City election. Prominent Jews are on both sides. That must have been a Republican young lady who swam to shore from Alcazar prison a few daya after At torney General Cummlngs announced It could not do done. At least they suspect at the Justice department that either a Republican or a p -bllclt-y man pjt her up to it. There are apparently credible re ports around In ;he best sugar circles that a reorganization la imminent t" the sugar institute. 3.2 Is No Bar. BOISE, Idaho. (UP) Board of education members may serve in Idaho regardless of their standing on the Intoxicating ability of 3.2 per cent beer, Attorney Oeneral Miller's office has opined. Citizens of Achol, In northern Idaho, questioned the qualifications of a board member who sold or consumed the beverage. Midget Photos, 3 for 10c. Studio, op p. Holly theater. 1 Real estate or tnsuranc to Jones. Phone 696. Peasley Phest Colds; VV Best treated without "dosing" V VapoRub Swedish Massage Bonn 8 to 6 Corrective Exercises By Appt Oscar S. Nissen, P.T. Physical Therapeutics Formerly Director and Instructor Massage Dept., Boston City aosp. 528 E. Main St. Medford, Ore,