PAGE sd: fEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD OREGON, TTEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "Cvtryont Southern Orttoa Rum Ul Mall fHfcunt"' Oalli Kiecpf Saturtfaf eubliihMl or MEUITUKD PBINTINO CO. IS.3r-38 N. fir BL RiootfO HOB KM W. BUHU MHor Ao btdcpiodtot Ntwiptpw Bound u wcood cltsa matter al Uadford. Oratoo, godv Set of Uueh t, 18T9. SUU8TK1PT10N BATM Mm Mi1Ln AriisUiM DaUv, a fair 15-00 Dall. iti month Dally, oot mootb 80 Br Carrier In Ad'anes Medford, Afbland, JarkaonrlLit, CarrtraJ Point, Pboeali, laltot. tioid BUI and od UltbviTS. - Dalljr, out rear $8-0U 0allj. li montha I-8ft Dally, out montb .0 All Urns. can la idTtre. Official oaptr of trw Clij of Madford. Official paucr of JaeksoD County. MEMBKU Or TUB AB80C1ATKD PUE88 Uttririr rull Laased Wlra 8rrlea Tbs AMOdatd Praaa la axctivltalr autitlad to tha uaa for pubUcatloo of all oawi dlipiubta eradltad to U or othirwlM wed I ted Id tbli papv and alao to tot local oewi publlihed herein. All rtghta for puhliuilos of ipMlal dlapatenaa btrelD ara alao rewired. MEMBKB 0? ONITED PUIKS IfGMURU OP AUDIT BUBEAO 0? C1HCUUT10N8 adTartlilng KepraftnUtltM aL C MOdBNSEN COM I' A NT Office to N York, Cfalcaco. Dilrolt, Baa rruduo I ao Angtleo Beattla Portland. U.I. it Smudge Pot By Annul Herry The verdict In the San Jose. Calif., lynching 1: Not Oullty. but don't do It any more. Eastern capitalists are reported considering Industrial development and investment In this state. If the legislature can't chase them out be fore they atari, the whipporsnapper candidates for governor, the Portland valley "popuiisti "win have something to fight besides tnn "i-ower barons . "Residents of Kings Valley, Go and Come. Defying Big Bad Wolf" (Hd II ne Corvallls Otuette-Tlmes.) Proof that Man may be out of beana, but never gasoline. John Andersni of C. Ft. towncd Tuesday, and iu'l a turkey extracted oy J. Madison Keeno, the dentist. Mr. A. is back 'loin Frisco, where he : wont with a load of the sucoulent fowls. BAWI.KD AND I'AI.I.ED (Press lil'tp.itrli) Pox also told of asking aid from Richard Hoyt, a partner of Hayden, Stone & Co., which had done some Fox financing. When he received an unsympathetic re sponse, Fox snld he told Hoyt: "Perhaps you would like to cut out one of my kidneys." "I would like to cut both of them out," Fox quoted Hoyt. as replying. It seems to bo fairly definitely known whst the governor of Califor nia said to all the other governora. The farm strike In the Middle West has petered out. Burning a railroad bridge and shooting at the caboose of a freight train, failed to raise the price of wheat. ... The movie magnates are now look ing for a rival to Mae West, the slithery hip gal. They will probably call her Fae East, when and If found. THANKSGIVING The time has come again for the annual chewing on the drumstrlck of a turkey, and the giving of thanka for the strength to chew the same. It does not seem like a year since last Thanksgiving. Time is travelling in a V-B. There la really very little to be thankful for, outside of health. The healthier you are, the poorer you are. On the other hand, the Banker Ben Harder nuerltla has no more twitches and twinges than our own. The un even distribution of wealth continues, and Is why there Is not more thank fulness. This will be remedied when all the wealth la divided up, the 1st and 19th of every month. The more you have the leas you think of the Ides. It would only amount to about 143 per capita. In cash. While the blessings have not come the past year In steady showers, there have been quite a few causes for rejoicing, mixed with the causes for regret. The taxpayer can be thankful he Is not having "real economy" rammed down his gullet. He swirged a costly aos.000 overdose of It. The experience ought to stop achoolhouse oratory about economy for a few months. The community also hsd the Keeley cure for political Intoxication,, aa a result of the plnhaaded extravagance. I It also stopped wholesale goring of farmers, by tha bull. All the little boys, and all the little girls, are coming and going from school, without a atate police escort, to thwart a homegrown kidnap plot. Neither Rss there been a fire In the packing house district. Our cities and creeks have faded out aa a Mecca for transient indi gents full of gall. This enables the worthy poor to secure their due, without a riot on the courthouse steps, Bo people can be thankful this ; Thanksgiving, for many things. There is but slight talk about the horn of plenty. Come to think about It, Mr. Average Cltlaen In these parts has not heard an 889 horn, on a 830 auto, since the early aprlng of 1030. Phone Ma w will tiaul away jouitsooner we will restore that "bulwark refuse, City tfaallajj Sonic, Thanksgiving! 'TOMORROW is Thanksgiving. But what in the midst of the greatest economic depression in world's history ia there to be thankful fort Believe it or not, the answer to that query, from an anonym ous correspondent is "Not much. Certainly for the man out of a job with a family to support, there is neither Joy nor reality in this Thanksgiving." Kof Well let's stop a moment and think it over. And while we are thinking it over, let's read our history for the past two hundred years. What was the lot of the common man in France during the gay and gilded reign of Louis XV! Ag Henry M. Robinson recently pointed out in his article "No time like the present La Bruyere gives a realistic description "Scattered about the country one sees certain animals, male ' and female: they ara black, livid and baked In the sun, and they are attached to the soli which-they dig, by almost Invisible chains. They retire at night Into dens where they live on black bread, water and roots." Or glance over your Voltaire: "The French peasant of Rousseau's day was a cross between a rodent and a beast of burden, 38 separate taxes payable to landlord, clergy and crown crushed him flat upon the earth, yet he dared not Improve his sod hut or buy a runty pig, lest he be penalized by a still heavier tax. But taxes were not his only bane. After he had scraped his half acre of lifeless soil with rude tools, and sowed a few miserable grains of corn, his harvest was Invariably trampled by a party of nobles dashing across It In pursuit of a hare? The peasant was not permitted to shoot or trap the deer and rabbits that foraged among hla crops; these animals were the sacred property of the noblea and death was the penalty If a starving peasant killed a rabbit and popped him Into an empty pot." t But THAT was in decadent about Merry England, under a century later, AFTER the French revolution, and AFTER the Duke of Wellington had driven we quote: "In the city of Leeds, 30.000 people live In rat-Infested cellars, unprovided with water, heat, light or sewers. A dozen people eat and aleep In the same room. Water, the commonest of human necessities Is doled out by the factory that controls the water supply, three quarts a day serves an entire family for washing, cooking and eating. , . . The English mill hand works IS hours per day and receives S2.50 per week. Hla wife prob , ably works beside him, perhaps badly fed and 111, and get ; 25 cents per day. . , . Children six years old tend spindles 13 hours a day, or drag coal from mine shafts not large enough to admit a man. If they have parents they get $1 per week. If they are orphans they get nothing but their keep. The city of London has contracted to'aupply the great midland mills with foundlings, the only stipulation being that It be allowed to Include one Idiot In every shipment of 30 children I" But this was over in Europe, 0f tho free and the homo of the t this time in the United States? great deal to say about this, m can democracy. To quote a few items at random: "In the United States In 1800 the small farmer, the artisan and the manual laborer lived on the very brink of subsistence I mwov uviug jjeiauiia wuuiu uuw despise. triggers on wie i Pennsylvania canal for instsnce received e5 per month for work ing every day from sunrise to sunset. It they lost at leg or an arm In their work that was merely their tough luck. If they i were HI there were no doctors to attend them, no hospitals to wnich they could go, no organlred relief of any kind, ... In the year 1819 one seventh of the entire population of New York (today's equivalent would be nearly a million people) were ' paupers. They died like rats, thousands literally starving. Infant mortality was Incredible. ... In 1830 Imprisonment for debt was universal In the United States. In the foul prisons to which the debtors were sent, murderers, thieves and degen erates were locked In the same cell, with Juvenile delinquents: they all starved, froze and rotted together, . , , One man re mained In prison 30 yean for a debt of 81801 And this was only a little over 100 years ago,' in the history of mankind, not the wink of an eye lash! TOOTHING to be thankful fori Just glance back over the A ' page of history a hundred years, and it seems to the pres ent writer that we as a people have a great deal to be thankful for. As Mr. Robinson concludes: " . "For all Its chaflnga and Imperfections, our age la superior In security, comfort, leisure and economic reward, to any other period or condition of life that ever existed In this sweating, tear-drenched world." ' But this doesn't bring a job to the man willing and eager to work who can't find it; nor does it provide food and shelter for his wife and children. . ' , But what are we as a people DOING, what is the government DOING, the government that in another civilized country only about 150 years ago when informed the people had no bread, in fact were starving, replied : "Let them eat cake !" TPHE government is providing food and shelter,, not only in direct charity, but by providing work ,to the needy at good pay. The people as a whole, fortunate enough to have what they need to eat and wear, are giving until it hurts to supply those Iprs fortunate. In this supreme crisis the entire country, its government and its people, is to see that no one starves, that Meanwhile, thanks to this will and determination of its steadily improving. Tho situation today is immeasurably better than it was 8 or 10 months ago. One does not have to be soft headed Polyanna, to feel certain, that from now on while there may be ups and downs, conditions WILL get steadily better. THERE aro still many abuses, many imperfections, much to be done in the way of human betterment, particularly in perfecting a better method of tho distribution of life's necessi ties, but all in all, we maintain this is a pretty good world we live in. Anil wo further maintain that alt of us, no matter what our present, temporary lot may be because of an unprecedented economic condition, have good reason when the sun comes up tomorrow morning, to get down on our marrow bones again and be truly THANKFUL I Communications A query Is Aaked. To the Id 1 tor: I Hsa the Committee of One Hun- ,rwl bn dissolved yet if not, why not? CARL Y. TENOWALD. Medford. November 39. She Fators l..vnrhlng. I To the Cdltor: j The sooner all ktdnapara art hung. , lynched or legally extermlnsted, the of civilisation, laws and order," and royalty ridden France I How constitutional monarchy half Napoleon to St. Helena t Again 3000 miles away from the land brave. How about conditions Well, Professor Beard has a his absorbing history of Ameri united on one maj'or purpose, no one needlessly suffers. government, and thanks to the people, material conditions arc Let one of your own be kidnaped and murdered, then what becomes of law and order? South of the Mason and Dixon line there are few If any kidnaping. ' They know what they will get and how. North of the Canadian border such crimes are un known. Between the Canadian bor der and the Mason and Dixon line, the so-called bulwark of the elvlliej tlon on thta continent, 'there Is no lsw and order, as regular ganga, mur dering and kidnaping. We have had enough of soft-handed Justice In this country without criticising people who have guts enough to say what they think ana Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Klgnea letters pertaining to persons) aeaita and nyglene not to dis ease dlaguuals or treatment, wUi De answered oy ur. tfrady U etsmpeo tell-addreesed envelope is enclosed. Letters tnuuld be artet and written tn ink. uwlng to Che targe numbes ol lettera received only a tee) oao be ans wered here. No reply can be made to queries oot conforming to Initrocuone Address Or. William Brady. 289 El Cam! no. tsemley Hills, Cel. TAN FOR Constant ipr&y or a full bath wltb tannic acid solution la one of the most effective methods of treating W0ltltm burn. In report ing ma laDorious technic of the method, for ex tensive burns, Dr. Ronald B. Wells of Hartford says: "I have not had to resort to skin grafting In a sin gle scald treated by this method. and I am ln clined to believe that the reeplthellzatlon In every dif fuse superficial burn may be more nearly perfect and leave leas scarring when It Is developed under the pro tection of an aseptic tan than when It Is promoted from any form of a skin graft." The achieving of an aseptic tan for the purpose Is a task that demands the untiring care and skilled atten tion of doctor and nurje. The ex tensively burned or scalded patient Is put Immediately Into a large tub of tannic acid solution, enough tan nic acid In the water to make It mud dy In color. Tannic acid la cheap and a great quantity Is kept on hand for emergency treatment of burns. The temperature of the bath Is regu lated to suit the patient's comfort, Fresh water Is run In and the solu tlon drained out continuously, more tannic acid being added from time to time. ' Usually the patient experi ences so much relief that he freely co-operates with doctor and nurse for the rest of the treatment. Once the tannic acid bath has given this primary relief loose tags of burn ed skin are cut away with scissors and thumb forceps. Tops of blisters are trimmed or wiped off with sterile gauze. Unburned areas right up to the margin of burn are gently, but thoroughly scrubbed with soap and water. When the tub becomes grossly fouled It Is drained, quickly cleaned and filled with fresh tannic acid so lution. .This mechanical cleansing Is kept up as long as necessary It Is back-breaking work for nurse and dog tor for a good three hours per haps. The objective Is mechanical cleansing of not only burned area, but of the entire skin surface, by which cleansing disease germs and the dead or dying ttsues they live on have been comoletely eliminated. The bath facilitates the removal of clothing, conserves body heat, com bats shock, gives the patient much relief. While the patient Is In the bath he U given as much fluid by mouth as he will take water, coffee, orange juice, milk, weak tea, soups to prevent dehydration or exces sive loss of water from the body. do what they know will protect fam ily and community from further out rages, and make law and order that bulwark It should be of civilisation. MARY ELLEN RYAN. (Ed. Note: We trust Canada, which haa for so many years been able to maintain a fair semblance of law and order without lynohlng, will heed Mary's advice and promptly abandon net soft-hearted and soft-headed aversion to mob violence.) Flight 'oTime l Aim ford and stack ion Count) tiutory rrom the nira ot rbr Mall rnbnne of to and 10 keart Ago.) TEN YEARS AOO TODAY November 29, 1923. (It was Thursday,) O. O.' Bors la retired as special prosecutor of Jackson county by the governor. J, 0. Mann entertains a number ot friends with an old-fashioned oysUr supper. Five residents of rural areas are fined for not having their 1923 auto licenses. - Two local citizens are flnM for having no lights. Medford defeaU the Ashland high, 19 to 10, tn the final game of the year, before a crowd of 11500. Half back Cliff Dally wins the game with a spectacular 09-yard run. Fullback Senn. Tackle Dressier and Guarl Prultt "did noble execution, anA Quarterback Fabrlck was a holy ter ror Christmas window to be unveiled next Monday. Man with eight children Is arrest! for operating a moonshine still. TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY November t9, IBIS, (It was Saturday.) A burlesque company is sought to fill an engagement at the Page thea ter. 'The public desirei to note the human leg," observes the editor. Whliler bill for standard ancle boxea to be presented to congress. Ralls have been laid as far aa Cen tral avenue on Main street for the street car tracks. On Their Wedding Eva.' featuring Clara Kimball Young and Mauri Cos tell o, at tha Star; T"h Love of Lucy" at the Uls: "The Bandit's Baby, or 91 Years tn Alng 8lng," at the It Young delinquents or city are taken to the reform school. Warrant a Called for Payment. Notice la hereby given that there are funds on hand for the redemption of School District No. S9 warrants Hem 107 to 1171, Inclusive. Payable1 at in rat National Bank of Medford Interest to cease December 9, 1933, H. L. CARLTON, Clerk, Prospect, Oregon Nat Bowling Alley la open afternoons and enmities. CM BURNS. By the time the patient la clean and ready to leave the bath the tan Is already established a smooth, thin adherent coagulum or film. The pa tient Is transferred to a warm room, placed on a dry bed, and from this time on kept absolutely d?y by means of continuous warm air draft from one or more ordinary hair-dryers. For two or three days the burns are fre quently sprayed with a weak tannic acid solution and Immediately dried with the blower, only a small sur face being sprayed at a time, and that well dried before the spray la applied to the next area. The bed must never be allowed to become damp. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Well, It's a Change From the Moon, the Stars and My Baby. W. H. D. offers this testimonial for what It may be worth. My Iodine Ration. Itr seems almighty funny that there's men with lots of money who can spend It all a'chasln' some fool hobby down the line, while for me I'm quite contented and my purse ain't beln' dented, for my hobby, plain and simple is one drop of Iodine I Yepl There's chapa that pet their livers, an' there's racin' boats and flivvers, and theres some that alnt contented without wlmmen, song and wlie. Well, them things they may be snappy, but I'll bet I'm twice as happy Just goin' along right peaceful with my drop of Iodine. . Answer Has any other reader any thing to say before we pronounce sen tence on this man? Not Too Late. I notice a woman 43 asked if It la too late to have a baby. I say no. I was 39 when my first baby was born. I know of several women who were past 40 when their first baby was born and they all had normal births . . . not a question of one's years, but rather of how one has lived . . . Mrs. W. E. R. Answer That's what I try to tell 'em. but the old grannies tell 'em first and last. A Lot o Lll Leasons. Inclosed find 10 cents and stamp ed addressed envelope. Please send me a copy of "Little Lessons tn the Ways of Health." I am an old reader and have derived many fine health hints from your column . . , R. L. 8. Answer That Is the name of a se ries of booklets. I am sending you "The Ills Called Rheumatism." (Copyright, 1933. John F. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should tend letters direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D 205 El Ca mlno, Beverly Hills. Cailf Continuous Shows 1 :30 P. M. 11:00 P.M. Starts TOMORROW Thanksgiving A Mad, Mirthful, Musical Comedy That will make You Give Thanks that You Can Still Laugh A Tuneful Riot Exploding with Girls The world hung on their tvords, The blondes hung on (heir necks. . ...AND THE REST IS HISTORY in a Tuneful Scxpedition of Hysterical Importance lit' ar i8r With MARJORIE WHITE Comment on the Day's News. By FRANK JENKINS HERE Is a statement, made recent ly by a large Eastern publisher, Wihlch all business men will find In teresting: "Prosperity la being retarded by almost absolute prostration of the capital goods industries, which make the machinery and other equipment used In Industry." fiAFITAL goods Industry" la one V of those high-sounding terms that people use when they want to: Impress other people with the extent of their knowledge. The trouble wit,"i these terms Is that they go over the heads of com mon, ordinary people, such as most of us are. leaving us puzzled as to Just what Is meant. So let's see If we can get an under standing of Just what this "capital goods Industry" is. IF YOU work In a sawmill, you know that tt contains machinery. Like wise with a creamery, or a cannery any sort of factory, in reality. Or with a newspaper, which to about half manufacturing enterprise. This machinery la known aa capi tal goods, and the concerns that make It are known aa capital goods industries. Manufacturers Including sawmills, creameries, canneries, . newspapers, etc. aren't buying new machinery to any considerable extent right now, so the Industries that make this ma chinery are in a bad way WHY aren't manufacturers buying new machinery? Ia It because they don't need it? We can hardly believe that when we hear from competent authorities that at least .half of the machinery used In. American Industry today is OBSOLETE. Obsolete, you know, is another of these big words, meaning "out of date." With half of Its equipment out of date, It can hardly be said that Industry is not in need of new machinery. SO WE get back to the question: Why aren't manufacturers buy ing new machinery? Here Is one answer: Because they can't get the money. WHY can't theyget the money? Well, one of the principal rea sons Is that those who HAVE money 1 nc woria nung on weir woras, ig are afraid to lend it because they don't know what kind of money they will be PAID BACK WITH, IF WS are going to have Inflation, let's have It. If we aren't going to have Inflation, let'a KNOW It. Let's inspire confidence In the future, ao that business men can again make commitments with reasonable- assurance that they will be able to carry them out. Until that la brought about, we can't have prosperity. THIS same Eastern publisher saye: "Industrial organizations should gear their ADVERTISING of capital goods to MODERNIZATION, because that is the only outlet trhat the manufacturer of equipment will have In this country for the next few years." Sizzling J Jj H Picture U.i ' "jKef j U v w XI Here Until Friday TJ -A. . 4 XSr. t , 1 its MAE WEST "I'm -No Angel" with CARY GRANT A Paramount Picture SHORT SUBJECTS EDGAR KENNEDY in "Art in the Raw" MICKEY MOUSE in "The Mad Doctor" PATHE NEWS REMEMBER Continuous Shows 1 :30 to 11 :00 P. M. ENDS TONIGHT! Walt Disney's Silly Symphony in Technicolor "Three Little Pigs" WHO'S AFRAID OF THE BIG BAD WOLF PLUS TOSflCl Expansion, ha says, la OUT. In dustry Is already expanded far enough too far, perhaps, because In dustry's capacity la already ahead of Ita market. What Is needed Is more modern equipment, in order to make goods at lower prices, ao that people can afford to buy them. Get your new winter coat now dur ing Adrlenne'a Thanksgiving Sale. Special Turkey Dinner 5 course 50c KOFFEE Kl'P CAFE Opposite Boxy Theater Contin uous Show Thursday 1:45 P.M. to 11 P.M. Prices Mat . . 25c Till 6 P.M. Eve . . 35c Kiddies lOo Continuous Shows 1:30 P. M. to 11 :00 P. M. Marian Marth Reilnald Denny Richard nennett Norman Foater 1 V