MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1934, PA(1E SIX Medford Mail Tribune "Ewryeni in Southirn Oregon Read tht Mill Triiim' Dally Eicepl iaturdar 1'iittliihfd by MEDKOKII F HINTING CO. 25-27-29 N. Fir St. Pftorn ft. ROBKKT W. RUHL, EdllQf Ad Indrpcndrnt NtTpapw Entered u kcomI elm matter at Medord, Orejftii, under Act of March 8, J8T8. SUBSCIllrTION RATES Br Mill In Advance Daily, one year IJ-OO Daily, all ff.ontlu Dally, ona month 80 By Tirrler In Adranee Medford, Aibland, Jirkiomllle, Central point, Phoenii, Tilint, Gold Hill and on lUnliMyi. Dally, ona year I OU . Dallr, ill months Dally, oo montli 60 All termi, caih In adranw. Off tela! paper of the City of Medford. Official paper of Jackson County. MEMBER Of THE AB80CIATED PRK88 RtMliina Full Leased Wire 8enlca Tlit Anodaieo Preas la ticlusltely entitled W the uit for publication or an news auoaicnn credited to ft or otherwise credited In Ihli paper and also to the local nevs published herein. All rlihts for publication of ipeclal dUpatcbes herein art also referred, MEM OUR OK UNITED I'ltEBB MEMBER OK AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATION. Adrertlilnc Repreientatlret M. C. MOCENBEN A COM PA NT Offices In Ne York, Chicaio, Detroit, Ban Kranelico Loa Anccles Seattle Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Terry. The woman named "Mehttabel', who wrote the atate highway com mission complaining that road work era wore no shirts, and exposed their .whiskered wishbone to public gaze, received but formal con Bide rat ion , The next time she will know enough to sign herself. "Blllye". The Oregon delegation In the lower I house, all voted for dollar devalua tion, proving nothing except that the Oregon delegation knows which side their votes are buttered on, Gilbert returned to the studio full of enthusiasm. One of the things that had Interfered with his earlier efforts towards a comeback had been the difficulty of getting people to look at his pictures. (Movie Maga elne.) The drawback of the come back. . . . The initial candidate for governor Sam Brown of Qervals, announces he will hitch-hike over the state In the course of his campaign. He won't do It, but will get the hitch-hiker vote, on the move, and dormant. This Is the nucleus of a fine Idea, and should be mandatory, and part of the Constitution. The more walking, the leu running. SIMPLE, HOMELY FUN (Salem Matesman) HAZEL GREEN, Jan. 23. An enjoyable evening was reported by those attending the "toe social" at the parsonage Friday evening. Oames were enjoyed until a late hour. The pastor, Rev. J. H. Wortman auctioned off the toes, delicious suppers went with the toes. There were a number of surprises, A small sum was realized to apply on shingles used on the parsonage. The Qleemen boomed and trilled Wed. evng. They sang ae one man, and the ensemble was In dress suits, instead of their shirt-sleeve.,, C. Von der Hellen, the Wellen country-Jake towned yesterday, and filed his declaration of intentions to do some ptowing, He Is a horny handed toller. "Youthful drlnklns la on tha sain " and from all reports, the country will j soon be flooded with Juvenile topers, flociety and the police are blamed for , the condition, though the youths 'do ' the drinking. It might as well have 1 been Hoover and the Depression, No body knows when the creation of I Absorblne, Jrs will stop, j The womtnfolkx are watching Old Sol out of the corners of their eyes, in anticipation of a new spring hat. , A couplo of sunny days, and there i will be announcer ?nts heralding the "Opening Showing of Vernal Head-, gear for Maids and Matrons." It ts understood the vernal headgear will I have brims and will rest on the fem inine noggin, instead of being neatly plastered on an ear. Some of the winter styles had devilish Ingenuity in making the wearer look like the dlckeua. The 1034 hats will "heighten the profile", and "give a shadowy ef fect". No doubt the shadows will fall heaviest where the wrinkles llnser the thickest. Immediately after the selection of the spring hat, the spring housecteanlng starts. This always causes the men to start digging a garden, to get out of beating a carpet. Wlglette A) i pole was down to the butcher shop Ties, with his com manding officer. He has reached the staiie of life where he is always trying to steal a watch, or pull off his paw'a 1 nose. A number of the country roads are showing the effect of economy, and are no better than their worst stretches. Several cltlceiu are "thinking serl ouily" of running for something. All hope none think so seriously they wrn't run, which msy happen how ever If they really think seriously. Two women CWA officials at Los Angeles have been arrested for graft ing .76.0GD In two month. This tjoea ,to shcr what a little rv-- Milling of the Depresfion will c"r, rn1 O. I. It. ft Opportunity 1 Mot Dead). Help the Children TICKETS for the "Koosevelt ball", to be held here next Tues day night are now available to the public. There should be a brisk sale, for all the proceeds from the affair will go to a worthy project the fight against the ravages of infantile paralysis. There is nothing partisan about this event, which is to be held at the same time, in all parts of the country. It is spon sored by prominent members of both major parties, President Roosevelt's birthday being selected, because he was a victim of the disease, and one of the projects "which will be benefitted, the Warm Springs sanitarium in Georgia, is chiefly responsible for his amazing recovery. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT has agreed to deliver a radio mes sage during the progress of the commemoration, which will also be' in the nature of a birthday message to the American people. The chief beneficiaries of this event, will be the children of the nation, for they are the chief sufferers from this dread disease. Medford children have already been treated at Warm Springs, with gratifying results, and the more successful this ball is, the more children in this state and every other, WILL be benefitted. The proceeds of the ball do not go to Warm Springs directly. The fund will be placed in the hands of the president, to be used in the fight against infantile paralysis as he sees fit. Certainly a more worthy effort could scarcely be conceived. So buy your tickets early. ' " " ' I The Press Agent Erred WE apologize to the National Geographic. The advance copy of the Oregon article contained no mention of Med ford, Jacksonville, pears, or the Rogue River valley, but the article as printed in the magazine DOES. There is a' picture of a pear orchard and the valley is pro perly mentioned as a large producer of fruit, and an attractive place in which to live. t Sorry I We would suggest however that the next time a resume of an article is sent to the press for PUBLICATION, ALL salient features of the article be included. Then even a supersensitive "local pride'' will not be disturbed, and approval of an excel lent publicity article will be universal. Good News 'T'HE announcement that the C.C.C. camps will bo continued until March 31st, 1935 is good news for Medford and South ern Oregon. There are about 2000 young men in these camps, with this city as a distributing center.' They are not only doing good work for this section of the state, but are having goefd dono for themselves. During such a period of time, there will be constructive work dono in the forests hereabouts, which will pay steady dividends for all the poople through the generations to come. Many young men who well might have become moral and physical casualties of the depression, will be returned to civil life as good citizens, at the end of that time. s Let the good work go onl The N. R. A. Is Upheld . T'HE ruling of Federal Judge McNary, against the Dallas Lumber company, in the first test case of the N.R.A. in this state, will go far toward clearing the atmosphere through out the coast, and upholding the principles of the New Deal, throughout the country. This lumber company signed the national lumber code. But when the' shoe started to pinch, it balked. The company refused to curtail hours of operation and thus hold down production, for it maintained that such action was discriminatory, and would throw men out of work. There was some truth in this claim. Business had started to improve. The Dallas company was in a position to do more business and employ more men at longer hours, than the N.R.A. allowed. But the company had SIGNED the code. That oode was not designed for the Dallas company, or any other ONE com pany; but for the lumber industry as a whole. To prevent com plete demoralization of that industry, curtailment of production was essential, IF one company were allowod to produce all the lumber it wished, the same privilege would have to be extended to every other company. Such action obviously would destroy the N.R.A. entirely, and put the industry right back where it started from. Wo can't have our cake and eat it. We can't maintain prices hy .eliminating over-production, and then allow one unit of the industry to turn out and sell all the lumber it can produce. The ontire recovery program is based upon the GREATEST GOOD FOR THE GREATEST NUMBER. It involves some RHcrifieo but that sacrifice is essential to its success, it is also essential to the economic survival of the industry as a whole. These principles have been sustained by tho fodcral court. It means that those who sign an industrial code and then refuse to abide by it can bo forced to abide by it, by court decree. This is as it should be. Comment on the Day's News Hi FRANK JKN'KINH. SENATOR CARTER C1I.A88. of Vir ginia proclaims that the Roose velt dollar devaluation bill Is uncon stitutional, As to that, of course, the supreme cur: mil dtciric but ihc C'-ii -n! t scUon ol I lot of people to Sens lor Olssa' contention will be: "Well, what's the constitution, among. friends. If It prevent us from doing what at the moment we WANT to do?" IN CASK you art Interested In the opinion of this humble writer, who la all tor giving an honest and un hampered trial to the new deal, here It la: If the members of the supreme court of the United States, who are able, honest, sincere and patriot: , ni-p. rs-rylnj upon their should:: jona ol tht greatest reaponnblulles Personal Health Service Hy William Signed letter, pertalnlr.t to personal health and hygiene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment, n 111 be answered by Dr. brad; II a stamped velf-addrer-ted envelope la enclosed. Letter, ihould be orlef and written lu Ink. Owing to the large number .ol letters received only a few can be an awered. No reply can be made to querlea not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, iei El Cajnlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. THE PHYSIOLOGY OF FAT. Every one knows that oil or fat is a better fuel than potato or white of egg. Combustion of a Iven weight, say a gram (about one-t h 1 r d of a teaspoonful) of fat or oil yields 9.4 calories from a gram of starch or sugar and 4 calories from a gram of egg white or protein, (aa In cheese or lean meat). Oils or fats In food are f irat emulsified into chyle In the small mvestlne. me chyle Is absorbed byMacteals, car ried to the (forgive me, old timers) receptaculum chylae and the great thoracic duct which pours It directly into the blood of the Internal jugu lar vein In the neck. Thus It mixes with the blood in the veins and is carried straight to the heart, pumped through the lungs, back to the left side of the heart and thence sent through the whole circulation. For hours after a meal the blood stream contains chyle fat. A speci men of blood taken within eight hours after a meal may be centrl fugallzed and the fat will collect at the top In the form of cream healthy blood containing perhaps one-half of one per cent fat. In many disease conditions, notably alcoholism, diabetes, tuberculosis and chronic nephritis, there ts an excess of -fat present In the blood. No one seems to know what significance this may have. But never mind about that. Just remember that any oil or fat that can be digested and ab sorbed is conveyed through the route described, and as It circulates through the body In the blood the tissues or organs that can use it pick out what they want. And any that Is not needed for fuel Is laid away here and there as reserve. . For in stance the pad of subcutaneous fat that keeps us all nice and soft and warm and sdme of us smooth and round. Gandhi to the c,n,w in any prolonged famine, fasting, starvation, the body gradually burns up all the stored fat, both that worn as a blan ket pad under the Pkln, and that wrapped around muscles and packed around various organs, such as the kidneys. Returning to my. little controversy with the anatomists and physiolo gists (how I love to return to such thlngfj), I may be betraying the dear old alma mater that turned me loose on the world as a doctor, but candor compels me to say I never came across a lymphatic vessel on my ram In ,the world, decide after mature deliberation that the dollar devalua tion bill or any other phase of the new deal, ie unconstitutional, we should accept their decision and say: "If It Is against the constitution, we DON'T WANT IT." Constitutions, at times, may pre vent us from doing what at the mo ment we think we want to do, but they are mighty handy things to have around, Just the same. Y -1 HERB In Oregon, so far as practi cal resuKs are concerned, we have no state constitution, for we amend It Just as easily, Just as quickly 'and with Just as little thought we pass a new law. This . situation Is not one to be particularly proud of. AL SMITH, we read, has lost favor with Tammany Hall. ' Mention of hla name at the annual banquet of Tammany'a speakers bu reau the other "night, New Tork Ttls patches tell us, brought boos and hisses, Instead of the applause It for merly called forth. If that la true put another credit mark on Al's record., CALIFORNIA newspaper publishers, assembled In annual convention In Santa Barbara, tell each other they think Hollywood la getting too big a play In the nation's news. And Almee Semple Mcpherson and her singing husband, they add. all fired up with the fervor that gripe newapaper men when they get to gether and tell each other what ought to be done about everything, are get ting space that should go to hap penings In the smaller towns of the state. WELU If that 'la true, why dont they throw Hollywood out of their papers and target all about Almee and David and their carryings on? They are the bossea. . They can and do. Incidentally print what they like. They are doing the choosing of what goea Into their papers. If they want to print less about Hollywood and Almee and more about i the smaller towns of California, there la no one to say them nay. THE successful newspaper prima what Its readers like to read. It It doesn't, It ceasea to be aucceasful Newspaper men, regardless of what Good News for Kidney Sufferers) H tt rtbW Hut to mM into tha tmtalmi wdnjr mnti Nd,lr ortrw so (piVkly. m nt KtualiyShK multa within fcfw hour Rwhri i potion, neulrtlim rnirt tnk hrmtt 'mpU,V!hnt rwnWt bsvt i SU.( U., w. f-i. - I . .... f,..,, ,,,.(, rt ihlw). vitvily A Hn fo FoWy P)V- a Uos hait aiwniiisa. OiM lirudy, M.D. bles through the human interior. Moreover, I think even the standard anatomy textbook description of such vessels is suspiciously vague. In short I venture the absurd conjec ture and I hope some scientific mentor will stop me if I'm wrong that lymphatic vessels are like capil laries Imaginary. I am fairly con fident that capillary blood vessels do not exist, that the so-called capil laries are merely spaces between the cells or fibres of the tissues, through which the arterial blood seeps like water through a blotter. In the same way I believe lymphatic "vessels" are nothing but channels, through which lymph seeps on Its way back well, well, here I find myself in a quandary. But pray be assured we'll find a way out somehow. - Remember, there's the good old receptaculum chylae. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Listen to the Parrot, My son is entering university. Authorities say he must be vacci nated. Always said I'd never allow any putrid matter from a sore on a sick calf , . . E. L. G. Answer If the authorities insist on vaccination by all means let the young man be vaccinated. You only betray your childish credulity when you, repeat, like a parrot, the cheap phrases of some charlatan, who sought to sway ignorant people. Vaccine virus Is not "putrid matter from a sore on a sick calf." Kegene ration. Please outline the "regeneration regimen" you advise for adults of 30 to 40 who find themselves slipping or going stale. M. R. K. Answer Send 10 cents in coin and a stamped envelope bearing your ad dress and ask for the booklet "Re generation Regimen." , Rheumatic Fever. Engaged to man who had rheu matic fever when a small boy. His doctor said It was hereditary." No one else In his family has had it so far as is known. Would his children bo subject to It. The illness .left his heart in bad shape. V. I. Answer So-called "rheumatic fe ver" is a streptococcus Infection In volving the lining of Joints and often the lining of the heart. Where the heart lining Is involved (endocardi tis) the valve may be left distorted by the scar, and that Is the common origin of valvular leakage. So far as we know there Is nothing hereditary about such an Illness or Its effects. (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr William Brady, M. D-. 2B3 El Ca. ml no, Beverly Hills. Cal. they may say when all loaded down with the dignity of men assembled In conventions, believe that readers like to read about Hollywood and Almee and a lot of similar stuff. They may be mistaken. But their circulation managers don't think so: WHAT do you, as a newspaper reader, think about .It? Do you pass up Almee and Dave and Rudy and Mae West and read only the solemn and heavy and se rious part of the newspaper which by the way. is by far the GREATER part? NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, Jan. 35. A glamorous mile to lay undef heel these crisp days is that Park avenue stretch be tween 40th and 60th at ft p. m. It is not the Champs Elyseea in spring, but the arched and gaudy grids of lights of the Orand Cen tral building pro vide a vlata com parable to the Arc de Trlomphe The Waldorf U, v J tea and cocktail -A j with laughter and music So ave tnose of iic revived Park Lane, acroa the way. Sherry's, too, and Theresa Worthlngton Grant's. Northward to ward the Rita Tower, Ambassador and Delmonlcoa add lustre. As do the fashionable Racquet and Union clubs. Chinchilla, sable and orchids are in profusion and most luxuriously up- How One Woman Lost 20 Pounds of Fat Lost Her Prominent Hips, Double Chin, Sluggishness Gained Physical Vigor A Shapely Figure If you're fat first remore the cause. Take cue half teaspoonful of KRUSCHEN SALT8 In a glass of hot water every morning In 3 weeks get on the scales and note how many pcamda of fat have vanished. Notice also that you have gained In energy your akin la clearer you reel yoiuvter In body KRUSCHEN wll: give any fat person a Joyou.. ; surprise, I Oet an Jc bottle of KRUSCHEN i SALTS from Woods Drutf Co , or anv ; leading druagtst anvwhere in Amer :ca lajita 4 week.). U this first not . do.M'l convln.- you this is t;. , e.iaiest. safest and surest wsy to loer fat jour mosey gladly returned. bolstered limousines are on view. Even the plum-llverled footman Is restored. There are sidewalk smoking debut antes, collegia tea, crisp white mus taches and lorgnetted dowagers like a scene of carnal dominion from an operetta. Recently, for instance, I saw Fannie Hurst, Katharine Hepburn, Miriam Hopkins, M. H. Aylesworth, James Montgomery Flagg, Paul Muni and Paul Brock all within a very few blocks. . In such a confusion of grandeur the depression seems en tirely lost. New York no longer has what th? theatrical profession knows as "tough galleries." Old Hammersteln's had the saltiest. Excellent performer? often got the bird. Nothing could be done. Unless a pif-awmer caught the favor of the upper roost he was a sad spectacle. The second roughest was the Colonial on upper Broadway, a vaudeville house then patronized by lads from Hell's Kitchen. George Jes sel lasted there In early days Just one performance. It broke his heart. I remember one heartless effort to razz an artist at Hammersteln's Cruelly enough, Marshall P. Wilder, the dwarfed monogollst. was the tar get. He did not leave the stage. Helplessly, he extended his arms and and implored: "Give me five minutes to do my best. If I don't please, hurl the fruit." He gave the performance of his career and wound up In a whirlwind of seven curtain calls. . One of the most notaolo Interviews ever given by Leon Trotzky when he was the Red War Lord came nearly being consigned to oblivion. Isaac Marcosson had gone to Moscow es pecially for the talk. After waiting many days he received a telephone summons at 11 p. m. to come to Trot zky's' office In the government build ing. Trotzky was in a garrulous mood. For five hours he paced up and down delivering momentous ob servations. They spoke in German and Marcosaon took no notes. At dayjlght the fatigued interviewer started walking briskly to his hotel On the way he stumbled over a sewer pipe and fell to the ground, badly dazed. When he urose he could re member only one thing that Trotzky said he was reading a Russian trans lation of Sinclair Lewis' novel. "Bab bitt." For three days he remained in bed nursing his, Injuries, with a pencil and pad at his side. And slowly fragments of the Interview came back bit by bit, until he had the finished whole.. .Thingumbobs. John Vandercook, Jr., at 30 has become the most widely traveled American for his age. . . . Joan Crawford sends telegrams to peo ple she meets at teas, if-she likes them, to greet them graciously upon arriving home. . . Joe, Laurie, Jr.. sticks to big cigars, although they Every Day TaZasaiTrTlsiMrisTaisill".! Specials for Fri., Sat. and SUGAR we Cane. QTf i lb. Bags :. Oil TOMATO JUICE Fancy. No. 1 tall cans 3 for FARINA Fresh Stock. No. 10 Bags Washing Powder Pride. Q. Large package ' wli CAKE FLOUR msdown. ge packages C3C Salted Wafers Fresh and Krispy. 2 lb. Packages : This week's baking. SHORTENING Swift's Jewell, Pure Vegetable. 44. 4 lb. Cartons OOU CLOROX 1 Qt. Bottles j Jg WALNUTS Extra good grade, locals. OCf 2 lbs tOl Marshmallows Fresh Stock. 1 lb. Packages SALMON Fancy Pink. No. 1 tall Tins. 2 for CHEESE Oregon Full Cream. Fresh and tasty. Lb.. TOMATO oz. Cans. 3 for Wyant's Milk Depot in Grade A Milk Grade A Table always make him dizzy. . . . Bob Rip ley employs 13 private secretaries. . . . Dashiell Hammett, mystery writer, has prematurely white hair. . . . OeTtrudc Lawrence has a maid named Sophie Sapp. . . . John Held, Jr., likes New Orleans so well after a visit he may move there. ... ' (Copyright, 1934, McNaught. Synd!- cate, Inc.) WtBSSBSL (Continued from Page One) tratlon Invited the New York news paper representatives In Washington to call on him to discuss methods of devising a new milk code for that community. None of the newsmen showed up. The hard-boiled house appropria tions committee gav4 In fast to t.he navy demands for more appropria tions. For the first time sino the world war itgave the admirals nearly everything they wanted. Some Republican wit has pasted on the wall of the Republican cloak room In the house a newspaper head line, clipped last summer: "Roose velt to balance the budget if It takes all . winter." Flight "o Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the Flies of The Mall Tribune or 211 and 10 Years Ajo.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY January 25, 1924. (It was Friday.) Star theater to be remodeled Into store buildings. Fred Thompson is named post master et Bcownsboro. . Sardine creek farmers repair own phone line. Auto output to be increased this year. County court orders paving of Ruch highway. Similar road to Lake Creek demanded, . WILLOW SPRINGS. Jan. 25. H. A. DuBuque has just cut an oak tres 108 NORTH IVY 9s Bargain Day at Boyd's Mon., January 26, 27, 29 FLOUR Klamath Falls. 49 lb. Bags .: 1 7C 47c Swift's 1 lb. 4 for Fresh. 1 lb. Bags 26c Shortening. 3 lb. Cans 13c 27c 14c Fancy Pack.' No. Vi size Tins. 2 for.. Wellnmn's. "Contains ian Mocha". 1 lb. Cans SAUCE 13c Cartons of 6 Boxes ... Cream Test Quart Cream Quart 35c OPEN SUNDAYS-8 to 12 A. M. wceWTnctwn on his ranch at "Green Acres" that ' yielded 33 tiers of stovewood valued at 14 a tier. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Elden and sons and Miss Rose Jones were Saturday night supper guests at the Parker home. TWENTY YEARS Af.O TODAY January 33. 1014. (It was Saturday.) Fishermen called upon to "save the Rogue from grasping corporations." Attorneys of county to organize. Five' Jackson county citizens are listed as good timber for governor. Among those listed are W. H. Gore, Evan Reames. County Judge Tou Velle. Association of Motorists asks con tribultons to "fight move to shove auto licenses down the throat? of the people." Local resident returns from a poker game in a Portland hotel, sadder ariti wiser, and out 9200. Crowds flock to hear Basco Com edy company. Basco la the leading comedian, and "kept the huge audi ence In hilarity by putting his foot In his mouth." The Mall Tribune dramatic crlcitc reported: "Every time an actor on the atase stooped over, a barrel stave waved." QUALITY SERVICE PRICE m Big Pines Lbr. Co. M DEPENDABLE BLDG. ADVICE Till:. 0. 1 $1.49 IDEPBNDAHLE BLDG. ADVICE J tui.. n. 1 II ciIMPEiy ANDSJ To quickly relieve Hi cliappirifiaiulrouehneas, PPly aoolhing. HI cooling Men thola turn. I Makes Good Bread Pancake Flour o. 10 Bags. der xtra Special ffcsQ Pork and Beans Tins. 25c Sample these delicious beans on on demonstration Saturday GINGER SNAPS 10c Graham Crackers Milk and Honey Sweetened. 5fi 2 lb. Boxes tC This Week's Baking Oleomargarine 25c ' MILK Tall Cans, Tea Cup or Libby's. 4 Cans aCSJC Cases, S2.85 SNOWDRIFT 39c 6 Cans 75 SPINACH 27c COFFEE Genuine Arab- 29c 2 lb. Can 55. Taste this wonderful Coffee, demonstration Saturday. MATCHES ; 20C Connection 9c, Gallon 30c it Kric:. S3c 222