I'AGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL" TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1934. VlEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE "Ewyoni In Southirn Crtgoa Read. Un Mall Tribunt'' Dilljr Eictpt Saturday PublhhM hy uvntrnun fRi KTiNn ro. -8.JT-29 N. bit 8U ROBERT . BUHL, Editor Ad Independent ymptper Entered as facond elm matter it Uedford, ilrnon, under Act of Man 8, 1879. BUBHCItli'TION BATES t tl illIn rititua Daily, cat rear fS-OO Dally, ill ttonthi DaJlr. one month 60 - n riirrirt- in Alliance Medford. Ashland, luksonrUle, Central i'olnt, Plweuii, Talwit, Uold Hill and on Ulgliuayt. Dally, on year 00 Dally, ill moot iu Jaft Dally, ont month . .60 All urmi, cut) in amain. Official paper or (ha City or Medford. Orridal paper of Jackaon County. UtMBKfl Or TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS Becelvli Kull Leased Wire Serrlca Tha Atiociiteo I'ren U exclusively entitled w be ute for publication or ail new. oipien credited to It or othtrniw credited fn thli paper d llao to the local neva puhllnhed herein. All rlfhti for publication of ipedal dlipatcbta nerein are auo ream to. MKMHKK OF UMTKII PItESS UEMBKH OP AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Adrertlslng llepresentatltei M. C. MOI1KN8EN k COMPANY Offices In New Vnri, Clitcaco, Detroit, Sao Francisco Lm Angeles Suttla Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Press dispatches state that "Borneo la no longer the home of wild men, and, neither la this vicinity. Chloken coopa are being robbed. The police hav not decided whether the thieving la the work of hungry transient indigent, or neighbors get ting ready to plnnt a garden. One of tha most Important mat ters !n the lire of a baby hu air eup- ply (Health Hint) And, that goee for tha rest of ua. The Administration Intends "to put 4.000,000 farmers to work," Just as If the farmers haven't been working. Tha value of the dollar haa ben whacked to .50c, but It hu tha aame wing apread, and fllea aa easily, as heretofore. THAT'S WHAT HE SAYS (Helmet (Calif.) News) As a prominent citizen of a large city was walking down the atrcet the other day a gypsy girl sort ot tipped her head and winked at him. Those are the prominent citizen's own words. She sort of tipped her head and winked at him. And what did he do? He resent ed It. Hate and gossiping has made one of the Older airla look like ahe had been plowing. MUSIC IS AILING (Hrtllne Bslem Statesman) Some araue lta the mu slclans not the musio. All and sundry, so busy listing the qualification of General Martin, Democratic candidate for Oovernor. should not forget to mention that the General la ably equipped to answer the 'biting sarcasm! of state Treas urer Rufua Holman, bite for bite. A local plutocrat la running around In a le-cyllnder auto with a horn that aneers ominously at pdestrlana. . That among primitive women a aultor'a gift for romance was Judged by hla ability to Imitate the roar of a bull ("Strange Facts") Clvlllaa tlon has marched on, so now they throw It. . . S. Morris, the T-Rock. G-II1I1, S Valley tiller has returned from the South, aa fit as a violin, and Is once again In the harness, pending kicking over the traces. Who can remember the good old days, when boot!eera were sent to the Kelly Butte roekplle, or liquor making school, and came back better moonslners? O. Bates, the tonaorlallat. battled a toothache and his brother James, Monday. The latter thinks everything that Repeal failed to cure, can be fixed with a monkey-wrench, or by driving another nail In It. . . Quite a few report, "friends have urged me to run In the primary." Nobody haa an enemy, who tella him not to run. A General Motors expert haa In vented a contraption that will split a hair. No restaurant as yet has re ported the theft of their butter cutter. .-.. Ill T NO AU'll Alii TM'AI, WASTE (Cong. Record) The sudden termination of the war found us with vast quantities of sur plus materlale quantities beyond all reason. The 41. 000.000 pairs of shoes bought for 3,500.000 soldiers: H0.460, eil bread cans 4a for every man under arms; 045.000 aaddlee, 1.000.000 seta of double harness, 1.14S.000 horse rovers, 3.850.000 haltera, 1.837.000 horse brushes. 3.0.13,204 nose baga for 891. 000 horara and mutes, and 38 seta of apur atrajis for every mounted of ficer. Civilian conservation corpa workers treated 67,000 acres In Sequoia na tional park for the eradication ot ro dent. Suits cleaned and pressed, 830. Dresses 75c up. Tel. S35.J. Economy Cleaner, 1728 Ko. Riverside, Hal CO it's "30" for Hal Hosg. No fight for life, than this veteran Oregon newspaper man, who left his copy desk on the Oregon City Enterprise to become secretary of state under the late Governor Patterson. ' A year before his death he was critically ill, and several years before that, he was a very sick man. Had he followed the advice of friends and family, at that time, and taken to his bed, he might be alive today. But while he looked like some sort of pre-Raphaelttic ghost, and presented wan and smiling countenace to the world, there was not only plenty of fire and iron within, but there was a spirit of fight and devotion to public duty, that was literally fanatical in quality. He also bad, as do so many victims of tuberculosis, (it ap pears to be a fundamental characteristic of the disease) an 'unfailing spirit of optimism a things looked they would come out somehow all right in the end. So he stuck to bis job, fought for what he believed to be right, regardless of the. odds against him, until he literally dropped in his tracks, had to be carried out, and wag taken to an Eastern Oregon sanitarium. But then it was too late, and for many months, the final summons, were only a question of time. Too bad! The death of Hal Hoss is a loss to the newspaper profession of Oregon, and a great loss to the state. He was a capable journalist, an efficient secretary of state, a most lovable and considerate friend. The Tuberculosis Toll NLT a short time ago, the Christmas Seal sale was eonclud ed, the proceeds of which go to fight this dread disease of tuberculosis. The death of .Hal Hoss again calls attention to the public and human need of such a fund how necessary it is that this fight should not only go on, but should, from the standpoint of the publio welfare, receive more general and generous support. Like many other diseases tuberculosis is not difficult to prevent, not difficult to control in its early stages, but once deeply entrenched and allowed to advance, the fatality percent age is simply appalling. ' This fun4 is devoted largely to prevention and facilitating discovery of the disease, so prompt treatment can start, the two methods of approach, which alone can place tuberculosis in tho same category as smallpox and diptheria once greatly dreaded, but now far down in th,list of death causes. "We hope that when another Christmas comes around, the death of Hal Hoss,r-stricken down in what should be the prime of life may be the cause of more people, giving more money, to support and carry on the war against this terrible disease. , Mrs. Greenway 's Debut XITHILE on this subjeot, which we admit isn't pleasant, but we feel IS, important we are surprised that the maiden speech of Mrs. Greenway of Arizona in the House of Bepresenta- tives on January 31st, did not receive more general notice in the press. Mrs. Greenway, as everyone knows, is not only a close friend of President and Mrs. Roosevelt, but one of the latter's most intimate ones. Tet her debut as a "congresswoman" was marked by one of the most "SCATHING indiotments of the administration's "ceonomy Jill" that we have accn. Here is, her picture, for example, of "WHAT this economy drive haB done to the war veterans'suffering from tuberculosis, in her own state i I want to give you a description of my home. We have two -enormous hospitals. In these hospitals In 1034 were put to bed hundreds of lit men on the presumption that they might poa albly become 111 through some service connection. Now, friends, think of this: Those men were not asked to prove aervlce con- ' section; thoee men possibly were not service connected It we are going to be honest with ourselves: and there la a very big school In this country that feela that those people never should have been put In thoaa beda and cared for at the expense of Uncle Sam. But those people were put In thoae beda with advanced case of tuberculosis, and their families were given 180, 150, 140 a month to live on In 1034. Thoee people have lain In thoae beda, presumably put there by a group of government offlclala, oureelvea, put there and told that they would be cared for while their families paid St, 5, and 810 a month on little ahacka which they hoped ultimately to own and live In. Today when you go through these hospitals In my state, hospitals built with federal funds, magnificent, adequate hospi tals, you will find that whole wlnga are empty and those men I aaw there theae years wasting away, who lost by the Economy Act that pittance upon which their families lived while they died, thoee men got up and asked for their clothes at a time When they had temperatures ot 100, 101, or more or leaa. 111, cadaveroua. with hectic spots In their cheeks; and thoee people today are walking the streets of my home state begging for work that they may support their wives and their children tor whom we as a government have been caring for for 8 years. And now the Issue In regard to the presumptive caeea, which Include the Spanleh war veterans, la: Do you. aa a body, mean to repudiate yourselves aa of former yearaf Do you feel that you can take dying human beings and when I aay dying I pray that none of you may know what It la to die with tuberculosis: It la an hour-to-hour angutah that cannot be described do you Intend to practice economy on bed-ridden human beings thla body of congress put to bed In 1034 and told to build up their Uvea accordingly? Mr. Chairman, again let me aay thla Is not sentiment: this la the human equation for which government was made. I beg ot you on both aldea ot the House to lay down political lines and now or never do for these human beings whose lives you took whst you said you would do for them in 1334. I hope that by standing before you for the first time In matter so vital to me, so vital to my state, that you will not misunderstand me. I am a Democrat anxious to make tha Democratic administration successful. I know that In tha weeping efforts ot last year some things had to be done in advisedly in part. I beg thoae ot you who car for thla ad ministration and the responsibility that It haa undertaken to square your shoulder along with your Republican colleaguea who voted for the Economy Act all of us and aay: "In major part our economies are right, but In some ot their details they are wrong." To undo In one sweeping act the results of 16 years ot Intricate and painstaking legislation la Impracticable and unjust to tha humans Involved. (Applause.) RESTS IN STATE BALEM. feb. 8 (AP) The state supreme court, In an opinion written by Justice Bean, today reversed Judge James W. Crawford of the Multno mah county circuit court. In a suit brought by the state ot Oregon to recover oailain cetacean known a Hoss man ever made a more gallant faith that no matter how dark a whalt of the classification Ore Gladiator, which was killed In Oregon lough In Multnomah county by Bd- 1 ward O. Leasard and Joseph T. L- sard on October 34. 1031. The lower' court held for the Lessards. "We think the complaint la sufflcl-; ent In that It plainly alleges owner t hip by the plaintiff and other facta! sufficient to constitute a cause of ! action for the rKuseaslon of the body of the whale," the supreme court opinion read. "There la no denial of! the ownership." In keeping with Vne times Driig and Tollftrlue at Cut Prices at JAR- Personal Health Service By William Digued letter! pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dls ease diagnosis or treatment, will be velf-addressed enrelope la encloaed. Ink, Owing to the large number ot iwered. Ko reply can be made to Address Or. nullum Brady. 203 El Canllno, Beverly Illlls. Cel. BUM GOES THE OLD BLUNDERBUSS. YEAR AFTER YEAR. Sometimes I wonder If the overedu- cated young doctor today are not aa gullible aa were the crudely trained practitioner of the nineteenth cen- wiyl tury. When I wia try doctor the large drug and chemical manu facturers e n t their repreaenta tlves out every spring to Intro duce to the doc tors the very lat est fancy concoc tion for cough. The essential for mula was the sune year after year, a fearsome blunderbuss mixture, but some new wrinkle In the style of packing or the color and flavor of the medicine in variably arrived In March. It was like the annual models In automobiles. Today I received a circular letter from a large drug manufacturer who supplies physicians. I am advised that colds, coughs and other respiratory Ills begin with the season of months that have "R" In their names. At that, wouldn't It be fine if respiratory ills did not occur in the months when oysters are out of season! The manu facturer' plea to the Incompetents In the profession goes on to say that during the season for respiratory dis eases So-and-so's Compound with This and That serves a double pur pose, protective as well as curative. "The product of cod liver oil, fresh liver, spleen, pancreas, predlgested and made easily assimilable, with hypo phosphltea and Iron peptonates, tend to fortify the organism for self-dd-fense against respiratory infections, while This and That act specifically on the disease Itself." There you have a typical specimen of the specious and utterly false rea soning on which many physicians, presumably with scientific education, base their therapeutics or art of treat ment. Theoretically cod liver oil, the crude fresh undoctored oil and not any' "product" or derivative, 'may help a child or even an adult to develop a normal degree of Immunity against respiratory infections. That Is a theory only, and has by no means been tested out in experience. All the rest of the plausible argument this medicine ven dor sets forth In behalf of his ridic ulous blunderbuss nostrum for the quack doctor trade Is sheer hokum. ! In this Instance the manufacturers NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORJC, Feb. 5. Diary: Break fasting at a Grand Central counter, the man next stool being Wlggln, the banker, or his double. So home Just missing Bert Wheeler, the cin ema comic, and found an auto graphed volume from Max Miller, fly-leafing that he "did not nei ther blush; It was a tight collar button." Scrl vening un- 10 Si w b and by Jf j Dili Carnegie 1 e a m along, wuJum bringing me his grand book on Lincoln. Later to Clara Bell Walsh's tea for the John Charles Thomases and then trollop Ing down the avenue, stopping to chltter with Blanche Sweet whose windblown coif fure remains the prettiest I know. Dinner with the Will H. Hays and the Conrad NAgles, the Fred Pea body ts and Karl Kitchens there. Then on to sit with Irma and Rube Goldberg and we fell to talking of our Evening Mall days when Ben P. Schulberg was an office boy, of Jack Rnnck, John An derson, the printer, and so on un.:l long Into the night. Rene Black, who will likely succeed the great Oscar when the latter re turns from the Waldorf whirl for the peace of his chalet now teetering on a Swiss cmg. take the proverbial busman's holiday on days off from maltre d'hotellng. Taking his violin along, he goes to homes of friends, prepares meals and plays tunes while they eat. He knows the history of every dish he prepares and can make It Into a atory so exciting everybody stuffs. The grandest squelch of the season for one of those tipsy talking pests of the ring Id was recorded at the Ca sino. A performer, frequently Inter rupted, finally came to a full atop and observed: "May I explain that an other guy la talking too. I would not want you to think I'm ft ventrllo qulit." Then the late Harrison Fisher's yarn of the small bit actor in Hollywood who, after a line In two different films, beoame puffed- with the divine afflatus. Swmmering down the boule vard, ft gentleman rushed up and pumped hie hand. The actor' reco,t nltlon was vague. He parried when the stranger recalled their many happy hours in the old daya and finally hlgn tonslled: "I seem to remem-bah you but. tell me. Just who are you? "Listen, you soandso," he snorted, "I'm your brother I" . Personal nomination for the dand iest ot th modern male mimics Ed die Garr. Shortly before Ring Lardner dee.l ed usual haunts, he was in the laambs' grill one afternoon mumb ling in his drawling hesitant way to R. H. BurnsMe. One of those breey boys whipped m like the tall end of a cyclone, pumped Lard tier's hanJ. crying: "How are you Ring? I Jrt got in from California." "Old jour drawled Hirjg. ' Wty? PI Urady, M.l). anenered 07 Ur. Brady If a itamped Letters ehould ba orlef and written In letter! received only a few can be an' querlea not conforming to Instructions. appeal Is perhaps a trifle too out spoken, especially where he describes his panacea aa having "curative1 properties and acting "specifically" on the disease what disease, good news knows, the writer of the circular for got to say. A minor point like that need not worry the quack who Is will ing to prescribe or dispense such medicine to his unwary customers, Give this circular to the right re- writer and the manufacturer of the nostrum could easily gain access to our most exclusive medical Journal and gain the respect and confidence of some of our most exalted medical practitioners. Indeed the official or gan of the medical profession . of the country Is full of Just such specious and unwarranted, assertions about the more expensive nostrums which the more exclusive physicians pre scribe, only the wording is Just a lit tle more equivocal. Barnum may have been great showman but as a salesman he was the veriest piker. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS No Morbid Information. Kindly tell me some more about "green sickness" ... (V. B.) Answer I do not think It would be kind to you. Acquired Derect Not Heritable If a man has an accident and con scquently has a sliver plate put In his skull, and later marries and has cnu- dren, would the children be defective In any way? (W. h. G.) Answer Not so far as that injury or the plate in the skull is concerned Cod Liver Oil X take cod liver oil as a protection against colds and sinusitis. However, I take only a teaspoonful once or twice e week. Is It necessary to take larger amounts? Are cod liver oil tab lets as beneficial aa the oil Itself? (B. T.) Answer There Is some reason to be lieve that Vitamin A and Vitamin P, of which cod liver or halibut liver oil Is a good source, may help to build up or maintain a normal degree of Im munity against upper respiratory in fections. One should take a table- spoonful of cod liver oil daily for two or three months In the winter. I do not believe tablets are as dependable (Copyright 1034, John P. Dille Co.) Ed. Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr William Brady. M. D.. 265 El Ca mlno, Beverly illlls, CaL Paul Wh Item an has the most un usual of the cigarette cases, ft large gold affair stuccoed with symbols of 'friendship in dazzling encrustations. There Is a diamond bar of music from the Prince of Wales, profiles of his wife, Margaret, and George Gershwin and other glittering do-dads from Margaret Amory, Buddy de Sylva, Ruth Roland, Al Jolson, Blng Crosby, Florenz Zlegfeld, Walter Dam roach and many others Including Eiffel Tower In rubles from an admiring French bootlegger. Witter Bynner. the poet, was rush ing through Grand Central with nts head knocking the stars when a seedy, furtive gentleman sidled up, cupping a glittering diamond ring in his hand. "Gimme a century note for It I" he croaked, and, to show It was real, scratched a deep mark on a shop win dow. Bynner pulled out a purse and showed a 95 bill, all he had with him. The salesman snatched It. dropped the ring In the. amazed poet's hand and rushed on. A Jeweler pronounced It of great value. New York I Bagatellea: John Mason Brown haa become a -sensation of the lecture field . . . Arnold Bennett and Somer set Maugham, both stutterers, were at their worst talking to each other . . . Joe Laurie Jr. smoked his first cigar at 18 and passed into a coma . . . Robert HUllard was the first actor to wear a silk robe In his dressing room . . . Edna Ferber, who started the show-boat craze, was born inland . . . Ward Morehouse and Miriam Hop kins went to school together in Geor gia. Dick Maney was telling of the dif fident lover in the moonlight who said, in flat monotone. "I love youl" Chlded for his emotional coldness the lady urged him to put some fervor into his work. "Tell me you love me with a ring to It." she exclaimed. So he cleared his throat and tried again with this: "I love you, ding, dong." (Copyright, 1934. McNaught Syndl . . cate. Inc.) TRACED TO PACKER PORTLAND, Feb. ( AP) Dr. Paul R. Taylor, federal inspector of meats here, today revealed that an Inquiry has been sent to the depart ment of agriculture at Washington, L. C, concerning the disposal of rbout 4.000 pounds of agricultural act mi nls tint. on pork which allegedly was privately shipped to a Portland packer after It had been condemned unfit for consumption at Kelso. WaVt. Dr. Taylor said the meat will be held pending action from the W wh ine ton, D. C. office, "after which It will be disposed of In accordance with our findings after thorough In spect ion." The packer who reported receiving the mev.t here aald that In his Judg ment tie pork was not spoiled. He resalted It and notified the federal inspector. It was understood here that the meat was to have been distributed to flood sufferers at Kelso but that It had been condemned by Dr, 8. J. Moffatt, city meat and milk inspec tor. Phone 333. Ranking Trucking Co. for, Modem fuel OU deliveries, Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. I'VE GAINED four pounds In the 1 last month, and haven't eaten any more ' than usual, either," ft friend said to this writer yesterday. "Maybe lt'a the result of ft calmer state of mind' he added. IT IS, In all probability. Contented cows, the advertise ment tella ua, you know, give more and BETTER milk. f N COUNTING the cost of these four 1 years of depression which now, we all believe, la coming to an end we can't possibly overlook the loss of peace of mind by millions of hu man beings. e-4 llHAT causes booms? ft What causes the depressions that Inevitably follow booms? You have doubtless asked yourself these questions hundreds of times You have heard others ask them other hundreds, perhaps thousands, of times. Have you ever found a satisfac tory answer? HOW'S this forananswer: A STATE OF MIND. A BOOM Is rather clearly ft state of mind. People get to thinking that wages and prices and profits will keep on going Up INDEFINITELY. So they lose their natural caution and plunge unduly. Because money Is so easy to get, they go Into debt recklessly. THE beginning of a depression Isn't due primarily to a state of mind. When you eat too much, especially of rlcb things, you have a stomach ache mind or no mind. When you live beyond your means you get Into trouble. That's Just plain cause and effect. But In Its later stages a depres sion really Is due pretty largely to a state of mind. People lose confi dence In everything, and because or thla loss of confidence recovery is delayed. Loss of confidence Is quite plainly a atate of mind. HERE la an Interesting thought: . ir we could all learn to THINK STRAIGHT all the time, we might be able to do away entirely with these terrible cycles that we call depres sions. ANOTHER question: What makes business good? Is It QUANTITY of money? CLEARLY not. , Back In 1928 and 1029, when business was undoubtedly exceed ingly good, the total of money out standing was ft little In excess of five billion dollars. Last March, when business was probably at the lowest ebb In the country's history, the total of money outstanding was In excess of SEVEN billions. IT ISN'T quantity of money that makes business good. What makes business good Is the SPEED with which money moves. WHAT causes money to. move speedily? Why, CONFIDENCE, of course. If you have confidence that you can get more, you spend freely the money that Is In your pocket. If you LACK confidence, you hold onto the money that la in your pocket. It Is upending, not hoarding, that makes business good. .. - BUT spend wisely not recklessly. Spend, for example, for life In surance, and for savings accounts, along with a fair share of the com forts and the luxuries of life. Spending for life Insurance policies and for savings accounts, you know, helps to make business good, Just the same as spending for clothes and automobiles and entertainment, for It Is such things as life .Insurance policies and savings accounts that supply the capital necessary for the expansion of business In a growing country. Communications Perhaps He Wasn't. To the Editor: After an absence of aome weeka from the atate. I have followed my usual custom of devoting a Sunday to scanning; the Oregon papers that arrived while I waa away. There fore thla communication may be too far out of date to be pertinent. I notice that a lady haa protested agAlnet the lack ot ahlrta on some of the highway employes and I won der If It ever occurred to the lady that they may have no shirts. In this connection. I am reminded of an Incident In my own aomewhat checkered career. My good friend, Walter Wiley and I were going to breakfast at a restau rant. In the little mining camp ot Oatman. Artaona. It waa a very hot day, but I waa wearing a coat, and after we reached the restaurant. Mr. Wiley, knowing that my heariug e not very acute, asked me It I had heard the conversation behind us. I replied that I had not. and he then (ulit ma tbat oas maa bad uked. au- other "Who's that guy that ain't got no shirt?" The other asked, "How do you know he ain't got no shirt?" to which the first one replied, 'Well, he wouldn't be wearing a coat, would he. If he had ft shirt?" Perhaps my friend Wiley was spoof ing me. ALBERT BURCH. Medford, February 0. Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the Files of The UaU Tribune ot 20 and 10 Years Ago.) TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY February 6, 1024 (It was Wednesday) President C. C. Lemmon of the Klwanls, becomes alarmed "over how the city will handle the tourists, and what aort of an Impression will remain with them, with no free auto camp." Bids opened for surfacing of Crater Lake road. Gov. Pierce Joins the Baptist church at Salem. Last rites for Woodrow Wilson, for mer president of the nation, held amid great simplicity. Mr. and Mrs. William Bolger re turn to the city after an IS months stay In southern California. Ben Harder dellvere addreas to Grants Pass C. of C. TEX YEARS AGO TODAY, February 6, 114. (It was Friday) Tango dancers to give exhibition "of their art" at the Nat, which causes the editor to comment: . "It is unfair to the community to tax those who pay to carry along those who do not, and the quicker euch condltlona are ended the better. Peo ple that can afford to pay 2.50 an hour for tango lessons can afford to pay their Improvement assessments. A chill wind sweeps down from the Slsklyous. causing a return to over coata. An eight-footed pig la born on Tyson Beau ranch near Central Point. Prosecutor Kelly, Chief of ' Police Hlttaon, City Attorney Porter J. Neff and grandfather and father lecture boy, 19, caught drinking beer In Front street saloon. Bartender shows authorities slip of paper, on which waa written statement boy waa 32 years old, and la exonerated. OF WASHINGTON, Feb. 6. (AP) How Representative Martin (D., Ore.) clip ped over the resurvey of the Snake river In Washington and Idaho on the house rivers and harbors com mittee was revealed today. Last spring the committee turned down Martin's proposal. Under the rules the matter could have been re fused consideration for three years. but apparently committee members who might have been Inclined to ob ject forgot. While winning the resurvey, which will cover navigation. Irrigation, soli erosion and power development, Gen eral Martin was highly disappointed that the committee refused to per mit a change In the specifications of the Bonneville dam, across the Co lumbia river between Oregon and Washington, to Include scalocks In stead of barge locks. Although the representative did not discuss the matter, the two projects are closely related as Improvement of the Snake Is looked on as a step toward navigation of the Columbia and Snake rivers Into the rich wheat growing region of the Inland empire. Sealocks would permit the operation of larger vessels from Portland and other lower Columbia ports up the rivers. Reports from the committee room said some eastern members became indignant at the representative's re quest for authorization of the sea locks, one asking. "What the do you fellows In the Pacific northweat want to' do, move the United States treasury out there?" Beagle BEAGLE, Feb. . (Spl.) Thirty five friends and neighbors gathered Friday evening and surprised the Reed family. A pleasant evening waa spent In games, dancing, music and Mr. Brome favored the crowd with several comic selections. Lunch waa served at midnight. Marie Seegmlller was among those who went with the Sams Valley bas ket ball team to Williams Creek rrl day evening. Ellrabeth Ryan has been on the sick list the past few days. Mr. and Mra. Milton Sanderson of Medford visited home folks here and at Reese Creek Sunday. Mary Sollee of the Meadows pass ed through Besgle Saturday on the way to Medford. Mrs. J. L. Prink and children. Mor ris and Emma, and Mrs. Jeas Walk er and children, Clorden and Loretta, were Sunday afternoon guests at Vie Chaa. Walker home. Mr. and Mrs. Dennlson and baby Mr. Walker went to Medford Satur day evening on business. The Nealon brothers have begun their spring slanting. Relatives from Medford visited at the Blaine home Saturday and Sun day. Oregon Weather Generally unsettled tonight and Wednesday with occasional light rains In west portions; no change in tem perature: moderate to fresh south, west wind offshore. Broken windows glaxed by rrowbtldi. Cause) WoU by AGGRESSIVE WAYS Males Think Of Matrimony As Jail Says Lady Psy- chologist Be Women First Is Candid Advice. By Elenore Kellogg NEW YORK, Feb. 6. (AP) Amer ican women are too aggressive and consequently have given men ft "flight complex," Dr. Margaret Dan iels, psychologist, asserted today. "The aggressiveness of American women makes men think of mar riage as a Jail, with the wife as the Jailer," said Dr. Daniels. "It gives men ft flight complex so that they can't see women In any natural way but Imagine them as harpies. And It takes away a large part of a man's own zest and sense of adventure, for It la still true that what men get too easily becomes of no value to them." Have Inferiority Slant Actually, Dr. Daniels eald, this feminine aggressiveness is due to an underlying sense or inferiority, "be cause from her earliest childhood, the American woman has lived In a man's world,' with men's standards the accepted ones." "It Is ridiculous to. think Amer ica Is a woman's country," she as serted, "A woman can go Just ao far and no further. American wo men have an inch or two more lee way than European women, but they think they have a yard.' The psychologist deplored the "pe culiarly aggressive, mannish type of woman who Is the woman execu tive." "You see In America the unhap plest, most restless, emptlst women chasing all kinds of phantoms and never finding real happiness," she went on. Be Women First "Women will never be really In telligent until they recognize them selves as women first. All' this run ning off the track, this aping men and competing with them, is Just an escape from facing their own lives as women. "We must re-establish the old fashioned virtues where the woman sits tight and the man does the woo ing and providing. If women obeyed their natural instincts, they would be without effort what their grand mothers were magnets for attracting men." Dr. Daniels Is married and the mother of two children. (Continued from Page One) tunlty to express Itself. 80 they elected him to a minor position to do the tedious detail work. He acknowledged their courtesy at the next board meeting by delivering & speech of acceptance. He will probably wind up some day greater than them all. Notes A CWA workera commented during the senatorial money debate: "Preel dent Roosevelt la trying to revalue the dollar and some of those aenatora are trying to revalue the president, but the real revaluation will come at election time." There are four mil lion votes In that crowd. The state department haa been somewhat confused by the fact that Russia loaned Turkey (8,000,000 Just at the time the soviet representatives were telling New York bankera that they must have credits to buy here. An architect says' hla profession cannot handle the rush nr hu.ine.. caused by the private homes, embas sies and clubs which want bars. An order haa been Issued by the Walker board requiring all depart ment to submit copies of every re port they give out, which has started the censorship murmurs again. A ahrewd disinterested Washington observer waa askd the other day the stock question: "Well, what do you think of the New Deal?" His re sponse was: "Which day?" JACKSONVILLE H. E. C1 MEETING WEDNESDAY Regular meeting of Jacksonville H. E. c. will be held Wednesday In the Orange hall. There will be quilt ing, aa usual, starting at 1:30. Phone 33a. Relnklng Trucking Co.. for Coal, Wood or Fuel OU. BEGINNING THE 2ND QUARTER CENTURY OP SERVICE Lumber Paints Roofing Bids. Hdwre. Big Pines Lbr. Co. iF.PFsn.ni.R ni.no. advice Tel. 1