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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1934)
PAGE SDC MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1934. Medford Mail Tribune "Emyont in Southern OrtQoa Htad tha Mail Tribunt'' Dally Ktecpt Saturday PuMlihed bf HfcDKUHD PHISTINU CO. IV'JT-SK N. Fir 8t Poom fft HOBKHT W. HUHL, Editor Ao Indepentnt Nmpaptr Entered u Mcood elast natttr. at Hadord. Orr. under Act of Marc s. 1 819. bTBKCKlPTION BATES R lltll In Adtanet Dally, ont year 15. OU Dmil. all tontba I.IO Dtltr. OM mofltb 60 Rt firrter In Ad una Medfofd. AlbUnd, Jarksoutlli, Central point, Phocoll, TaJeot, Gold Bill and on lUthiiys. Dally, om yar I6.0U ' Dillv. all month! 1.25 Dally, ooa month .60 A LI tarn, eaib In idtue. Official paptr of Uw City of Mtdford. Official paper of Jackaoo County. HEUBEK OP THE ASSOCIATED CHESS Keulvlnc klill Uued Wire Serrlcf i ttia AuocUleis Press li tieltultely tntltled U tb ust lot publication or ail oei oiipawne a edited to It or ollwrwlit credited In this paptr and alio to the locsJ newi outmsnM nerain. All rlghU for publication of ipeclaj dUpaUba herein art lo reaerred. MBMBEH OF UNITED PRESS MEMRBr. OF AUDIT H II HEAD UK C1UCULATI0NS AdrertlxtmE Kepresentatliea H C. MOOENSEN COMPANY Offices In Nev York, Chicago, Detroit, Sao Friiwlteo is Angeiei Seattle Portland. 1 "'cll 'W '' Editorial Correspondence BOULDER CITY", Nevada, March 2. This in the third larg est city in Nevada Reno and Las Vegas ranking one and two. But it is unquestionably the first in beauty, cleanliness and moral tone. Everything of course is new, and while the workers' quarters are temporary, they are neat and attractive, while the permanent part of the city, consisting of the various adminis tration buildings, residences of the higher officers in charge, churches, and an extremely attractive hotel bear the mark of some architect who knew his business. Uncle Sam may be slow in getting started, and slow on the job, but when whatovcr he sets out to do is DONE, it is done RIGHT. dam it was a dusty, rough ride from Las Vegas. Now it is da mit was a dusty, rough ride from Las Vegas. Now it is a dustless, smooth ascent over a paved highway that is as straight as a bee line. That's another thing about Uncle Sam when he wants to go places he never forgets that a straight line, in spite of Herr Einstein, is the shortest distance between two points. We would like to give a pen picture of Hoover dam in its present state, but no thanks it can't be done. It is one of those things that must be seen to be appreciated. Neither photographs nor the printed word and there are tons of both around here for sale do it justice. 35, and you will see why SHE and we were glad to leave L. V., IMMEDIATELY. B. W. R. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Ferrj. The "Bloodless Revolution." report. ti by eome of the "beet mind" of the lend aa resins'. 1 showing eigne local ly of alio being shavelese. If we HAD to give an idea of the thing in one word we would probably choose the word "KOLLOSAL !", preferably with a German accent. For there is something foreign, alien, about it, something having to do with another world it isn't quite human. With a guide we went pretty much all over the project, and that guide had worked as an engineer on the dHin and knew his job. He filled us from hat to shoe leather with coffer dams, intake towers, diversion tunnels, penstocks, gates, spillways and portals there they were, too some of them in action, but to be honest we didn't' know anything more about it when we got through than when we started. In fact through out the trip we kept trying to figure out what it WAS the dam reminded us of we knew we hadn't seen it before, but also knew we had seen something like it. Finally, just before the finish when we stood on observation point and secured a birds eye view of the place including the Colorado river, and large sections of both Nevada and Arizona, it came to us in a flash. It was a picture in a book of our youth known as Gulliver's i Travels, the giant Gulliver, on his back, pinned down to the winter vacationuu are returning rock with swarms of little men busy putting tuiy. ladders on from California wishing they ni,hjg torso, binding his huge legs with ropes, and making his er money ac 'head fast like a flock of ants hamstringing a giant beetle. Aa near aj can be made out, the financial situation la getting no bet-. yep t1Bt wfla TT00VCr (inm 1 Thcro were the ants a thousand ter laat. owing to moat of the money ' ' . , being in the handa of people who are feet in the air, riding in steel buckets along a cable, there they too good at hanging on to it. wer0 jn tiny towers on the canyon riin, the tower platforms A. u . , . ' sticking out with no means of support like springboards. Here Fletch Flh, the boom day tenor of I B 11 i Phoenix, was chagrined Tuee. and bit I they were pulling levers and switches; thcro they were with hi upper lip, muauche and an; steam drills along the canyon wall; there they wero scaling old fashioned grandmawa, wearing up rope ladders, on the sheer rock, they were here, there and aprons, are busy moving aeraniums everyWhere 4000 of them more or less, although there never from the parlor to the south side of ... ., ,. .. tho house. .seemed to be more than 50 in sight at one time. The others ,. , J were probably in the underground tunnels somewhere, out of nr ilia nft- aalraX miHt. nn. "Wnt I " ' do you think of the new deal?" sight. And like so many ants they were nil busy at their Hp Representative Clyda Wllliama of Mia- pojnto(i (nsfS kne,v juat wiat tlev, were doing, and WERE sourl makes an Irishman's answer by i ' ' " , , asking another, "How did you like they doing it! while the giant Hoover dam lay prone, having the old deal?" (Chlco, Calif.. Enter- ong sjnce censed to struggle, prise.) Now la the time to mention j . . . . that portion of the population, that1 . . , don't think much of either the old ! Aye, verily, the efficient Liliputians! There they were doing Deal or the New Deal. J such a job as the early Egyptians did with the pyramids, only . " . , far more difficult, intricate, useful and impressive. There la considerable upturning of ... , , , . ,. , earth, in the rural areas, and the far- And the net result was to make the present writer GIDDY! mera are doing more hopping and . 'fliis was not so true looking down from above as looking up hoping than a year ugo. , '.,.,. , .i . . . . from below. We got our biggest kick from the bottom of the O. Strang, the pioneer pllllst. waa p;t neBr tMe front waii tle dim,, say 200 feet wide, 50 forced to neglect his golf for business, I ' . ' . ' the 1st of the wk. ' feet nign, "d 50 feet deep, and there is nothing so sensational ' Who can remember when this was "the heart of the Mld-Paclflo empire", and Marah Dana of Portland took an oratorical flight, and called this area Signed letters pertaining to personal health aod hygiene not to duv ease diagnosis or treatment. wlU be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped tclf-addressed envelope Is enclosed, tetters should be ohef and written id Ink. Owing to the large number ol letters received enly a few can be ao swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructlona Address Dr. William Brady, 263 El Camloo, Beverly HIUi, CaJ. SUBLUXATION OF THE ILIAC JOINT about it. But put another 50 feet on top of the first fifty, another 50 on that, and so on and so on, until you have a sheer flat wall going up and up six or seven hundred feet, then just 'th valley of voiuge"? it vu th register your blood preasure I It isn t normal it s uncanny yr of the "Jubilee of vwom at least it was td us and we don't believe that gravcl-blnsting laed" when a movement wm launched t t bo to change the name of Main street to! trip from Beatty made US unduly impressionable. Broadway. Above all of that and around it, throw in steam shovels, and There u at in tome' excitement over I cranes and a thousand feet in the air a network of steel cables bowling, confined. Mu.ualexcluilvely along which tiny mp ftrc piflj g in buckets where a drop to the bowlera. Bowling will never! " , , . , , uuum spins,, mem on iito tsoun rocn dciow jikc uiHiu-uugs uu a windshield and sec if you aren't glad to crawl back in your car, drive slowly away and give Nature a chance to resume the normal processes of visual digestion. arouse anybody to paint hla Initials on the roof of his neighbor's garage. Spring hats are adorning the Gal she vl kli more and more, and some of the modes squaAh down like a Rosen berg Bros. Improved Picking Pall, It now develops that Mr. Jno. (Dangerous) DUllnger. the super bandit, In hts evaporation from the Crown Point. Ind., escape-proof baa tlle last Saturday, fashioned the wooden gun with which he "over awed some 30 persons," with a safety raor, and not a Jnck-knlte, aa first reported. This does not matter much, as Mr. DUllnger la now successfully elsewhere, but the fact remains that being what he Is, and where he waa, had aa much bust new with one aa the other. Incidentally, the lady sher iff la now "gleaning the remaining facts.' This ought to be easy, ss facta are better at remaining than John la prone to do. The general public aurmtoe that It was not so much what the killer held In hla hands, aa what he plnced. or caused to be placed In other hands, that We could ndd a pago of statistics to this the number of carloads of cement being poured per day we believe it is 25, the tons of gravel and crushed rock, tho horse power, the acre feet, the kilowatts, tho total cost, etc, etc., etc., but anyono can get that by sending 25 cents to the Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce for a little and very excellent pamphlet, entitled the "Romanco of Concrete and Steel." If interested we advise them to do so. We shall add only one fact to this description of Hoover lioulder dam a fact which to us was astonishing. We thought this was a DAM BUT damned if it isl It isn't a dam and it isn't constructed in Boulder canyon. It's a curving concrete wall, nearly 1000 feet high, from shoro to shore of the Colorado river, constructed in BLACK Canyon, 30 miles down from Boulder, and unless something breaks which is incredible, not made his escape possible, it u alleged one drop of water will over come over that wall. Therefore in there waa some cahootery between . . . n t the partiea of the first and second I1"0 ordinary acceptance of the term this isn t a dam at all. In part. And, regarding the lady sheriff, fact if water should come over the top at anv time it would the general public feels, that a mem- r n i i i i i i n ber of the sex that gets scared at a ' 0n "c generating plant below which wouldn t be nice at all. mou- cpt when wearing cotton j No, the water goes through pipes and diversion tunnels around JiwrtoneUof d"1". t0 fnl1 on the turbines and generate power, to return desperadoes. to the Colorado river, and supply irrigation and to enter various The Prohibition cause is being I Mtt,in8 tunka and supply the district of Los Angolcs with drink- helped along dally by juvenllea whojing water. llXthTartdrUnk'n1ClaCCOr1 ' Tlmt sl,CCr ,u?"n".v WflU (i,a,u,a thcro to? ieUii.g mrougii the years yen, ami through the ages! We were not sorry to leave Las Vegas in fact we were very BALKM, Ore., March 7. API C. A. Schooling of Junction City today filed hla declaration of candidacy for suite senator. He will seek the Dm-- glad. Just before filling the gas tank, a ladv in the partv who oeratle nomination from Linn and l u t i i , , Une counties. .never had' played roulette decided she would try it before she left. She placed five cents on the No. three and for no reason in the world one of the oldest, and CKRTAIXLY the luckiest member of the party moved it to the double 0-0. The little .white ball rebjej & ht double, 0-0, AJLultij)l live ceula b PENDLKTON. Ore., March 7. AP Henry Koepka, sr.. 90, one of Uma tllls, county' bent known wheat rancher, died at his home near Atheoa last night, What I have to say about this com monly maltreated disability will Irk many of the orthodocs, so I hope my o s teopathlc friends. If any, will bless my memory when I'm gone. The Junction of the sacrum, at the base of t h e spine, with the Ilium or wing of the hip (lnnom lnate) bone 01 either side, bore the forbidding and Inaccurate title of "sacro iliac synchondrosis" in the gay nine ties when we orthodoc knew nothing about It and fiercely resented the danged osteopaths superior knowl edge of the anatomy, physiology and pathology of the Joint. We had It from some distinguished old "author, lty" that this lilac Joint (as It is now properly called) was not a true Joint and permitted no motion at all. But thank heaven for the spirit that led the osteopaths astray, for they learn ed better. Osteopaths have been talking about "slipped innominate" since way back when it was as much as a regular physician's rep was worth to be seen even chatting with one of the cult heelers. Today sacro lilac sprain, atraln or subluxation Is a well recognised disability, at least among doctors who are not too old or too snooty to learn from other sources than the somewhat cut and dried classical medical textbooks. One regular or orthodoc says: "Sublaxatlon (that means displace' ment or Incomplete dislocation) of the aacro-lllae Joint Is too frequently diagnosed as 'sciatica', rheumatism 'neuritis, 'lumbago' or fallen arches', and hence treated Ineffectually with coal tar pain-killers, liniments, baths, electricity, diet, arch props and the like until someone finally recognizes the trouble and gives Immediate re lief by reduction of the displacement and a suitable plaster or other sup port. Every suh patient is entitled to an examination stripped at the first Interview, and of course a rectal ex amination. One can palpate (feel) the sacro-lllac nerve plexus and if it Is tender to gentle pressure that is strong evidence of iliac sublaxatlon." No matter Just what the symptoms are. Anyway, I advise the layman who contemplates faking sacro-11 Lie strain to take a complete course In a good medical school flret, or else choose only nice old fogy doctors to try It on. If your doctor Is the kind that ac cepts you own ready-made diagnosis or knows by Intuition the nature of, your trouble without the Inconvenl- I ence of making you atrip for exam Inatlon, you had better look up a good osteopathic physician. If I had auch disability I'd prefer an up-to-date or thodox physician, but of course such a physician would welcome consulta tion with a reputable osteopath in any such case. I think It is a wise plan to sever relations aa quickly as possible with any physician, orthodox or osteopath, who Is at all reluctant to confer and cooperate freely with any other REPUTABLE physician in any case, regardless of the therapeutic methods either prefers. This quack- lah bickering between "schoolo" "pathles" makes my neck ache. Formerly, women were more subject to strains and apralna of the sacro iliac Joint than were men, but today women get a better break in the mat ter of dress, work, play, physical edu cation, hygiene, and are less suscep tible to the "female weakness" props ganda. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Ponderous Talk About a Light Subject We have heard about the harmful effects of aluminum ware when cer tain fruit or vegetable acids come In contact with It . . . this gets Into the system and causes all sorts of trou bles . . . M. J. Answer It la an old Joke on the wiseacre pubUc. In our house-we have used aluminum ware for 30 years or so and I don't mind If you cook and serve everything on the menu to me in aluminum. Sterilizing a Septic Focus. Would the diathermy method which you recommend for removal of ton sils serve to clear up a throat infec tion In which a smear from the crypt is analyzed as "staph ylococcua"? M W. Answer In my opinion, the dia thermy method. In the hands of the nhyelcian skilled in the technic, is the moat effectual we have for ster ilizing such a focus of Infection. .Mythical Mucous Colitis. I am troubled with some mucous colitis and would thank you for a diet. H. D. Answer There Is no such condition as "mucous colitis. Wiseacres who (think they) know more than a mere doctor about such matters are more or less incurably afflicted with the morbid obsession. If you are not of that type, possibly you can get some help from these booklets: "The Con stipation Habit": "Guide to Right Eating." Send a stamped envelope bearing your address and inclose a dime for each booklet wanted. (Copyright, 1934, John F. DUle Co.) Kd. Note: Readers wishing to com rutin Irate with Or. Brady should tend letters direct to Or William tlrady M 0. m El ea rn t no. Oeverly Hills. Cat. the aalea tax as unjust and discrim inatory and plain hellish. But the sales tax la Intended solely to raise more money for the depleted coffers of the schools that th schools may not close or shorten their terms, that education may continue, and that the district may meet Its obligations. Including the payment of wages to union painters and carpenters. Nothing could be more evident, in simple arithmetic, than that the schools have to .have money or they cannot continue to run. They can not .hire painters. They cannot hire carpenters. Be It big wage or little, short week or long, they have to have money or they cannot hire, painters and carpenters. Something for the painters and carpenters to be worry ing about. If they must fret, la the question of whether or no the schools will be able to hire them at all If the sales tax be scuttled. The main Idea with the opponents of the sales tax seems to be to pum mel it into smithereens, and then cheerily wait for a miracle to save the schools. Well, they may be part ly right, since nothing less than a miracle would be of any use. Ore gonlan. i Linstock PORTLAND, On.. March T (AP) CATTLE: 150, calves 10; steady to weak, unchanged. HOGS: 250; ateady to weak; light weight, good and choice, 4-4.78: me dlum weight, good and choice, $4.40 4.75; others unchanged. SHEEP: 50; nominally steady, unchanged. Communications NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.Mclntyre NEW YORK, March 7. Elisabeth Cobb, in private life Mrs. Alton Brody, has. with her third successful novel, taken a place alongside her Illustrious father in the realm of creative fiction. Sho Is & striking brunette in early thirties and mother of two- chllo'ien Patricia and Cobb. The only child, she Is the apple of her father's eye. And In turn hla most appreciative audience. Much of her leisure Is spent in his company and'she has inherited largely jus gift for spinning yarns. Turned out by a glossy finishing school, her early life was spent in Florence. The backgrounds of her novels were salvaged from real life. She has traveled with Ringling'a circus as an equestrienne and one of the few out siders admitted to the close-knit In side sawdust circles. She has also voyaged on cattle-boats as well as being a member of Eaathampton's "younger set." To her Intimates she Is "Buff." a relic of her baby efforts to pronounce Ellnabeth. Her mother, Mrs. Irvln Cobb, always Inconspicuous, Is "Mowle" to the entire Cobb clan. Her gentleness, patience and encourage ment have been larte factors in both the success of her husband and dau ghter. And they adore her. A res tun rant on Madison avenue. recently opened. Is dedicated to the highly praiseworthy service of get ting theater-goers to the play on time. It Is a sort of cocktail lounge, serving an appetleer. entree, dessert and coffee in quick success ion so everybody may reach the play In nick of curtain time. the sudden spin of what proved to be a very brief curve. I called on "a prospect" In the old Putnam building, where the Paramount theater stands. For no reason, save perhaps my cheeklness In being alive, I was out rageously abused and ordered to make myself scarce. Many sleepless nights X dramatized myself as sitting before a row of push buttons In state while my tormentor called, hat In hand. But life reverses fiction. The other day I saw him for the first time since my humiliation. He was at the great desk with the battery of push-buttons. And I'll kiss a pig If I wasn't standing before him, hat In hand. There was another downward yank of gravity that sent me to the cellars of literature. For two months I wrote a fashion column for an obscure monthly of styles under the quaint pseudonym "Young Brummel. The publication buckled into bankruptcy without even listing my two months' pay of 126 aa a liability. But even a pay leaa Job has Its compensation. Because the office was near his great store, I came to know Charles Broad way Rouas. the blind merchant. And several years later sold a feature article about him to a magazine for a ISO. Defends Barton To the Editor: I read the article In the Tribune written by F. W. Taylor In which he states that George S. Barton la not a taxpayer and therefore has no right to oppose the sales tax. .Well, I Just want to say this much that there are a whole lot of people In Medford who are not taxpayers and are pay ing more money for rent than a lot of people who own the property are paying in taxes. There Is a man liv ing right along side of me who has two children going to school and Is paying 180 a year rent 920 more than the county pays for his chil dren's schooling and he Is a man who has to work by the day to support hla family and it la a tight squeeze for him to make both ends meet if you will listen to my gentle voice. I am not going to argue anything about the sales tax. but I do intend to defend Mr. Barton from attacks by men who do not know what they are talk inn about. I was In partnership with Mr. Barton for many years, and I know him to be one .of the most honorable, conscientious, and upright mm in this, or any other, county In the state: and has been the means of bringing more money Into this and Josephine county -than anyone else. He furnished chrome for the gov ernment in time of the world war. and paid out thousands and thou sands of dollars to working men and he made one mining deal In Jose phine county that brought in a lot of money, and the first payment on that deal was a check for 930.000. pned by Geo. S. Barton, and him alone. And I can produce the fact. If anyone doubts It. that Geo. Barton has been paying taxea on property in Josephine county ' for many years. that I know of. Whether he is now or not I cannot say, but perhaps Mr. Taylor can tell us. In opposing the sales tax. Mr. Barton is doing what his conscience tells him Is right, and for no other reason and I will say further, that if every county in the state would send' men like Geo. S. Barton to the legislature, that we would have some different laws than what we have now. I read some arttcles in The Tribune a while back In regard to the sales tax. and all I have got to say. Is that I haven't found anyone yet that knows any more about It than they did before. , JOHN B. ORIFFIN. Medford. Ore.. March 6. 1934. Portland Produce PORTLAND, Ore.. March 7. (AP) BUTTER Prints, extras, 38c; stan dards, 'io-ic lb. BUTTERPAT Portland delivery: A grade. 23-24c lb.; farmers' door de livery, 20-310 lb. EQOS Pacific Poultry Producera' aelllng prices: Presh extras. 15c; standards, 13c: mediums. 13c dozen. (Cartons lc higher). Buying price of wholesalers: Presh extras. 16c dot.; firsts. 14c doz.: mediums. 14c dot.: pullets, 13c doz.; undergrades, 10c doz. Cheese, milk, country meats, mo hair, live poultry, potatoes, new po tatoes, strawberries, wool and hay, steady and unchanged. Portland Wheat PORTLAND, Ore., March 7. (API Wheat: Open High Low Close May .73 .73 .73 .72 July .7314 .734 .72V4 -72V4 Cash: Big bend bluestem. 73; dark hard winter, ah pet., 78V4: do. 11 pet, 73: soft white, western white, hard winter, northern spring and western red. 70!i. Oats: No. 2 white. 121.50. Corn: No. 2 E yellow. 23. MUlrun, standard. $13., Today's car receipts: Wheat, 128: flour 13; corn 5; oats 2. Chicago Wheat CHICAGO, March 7,-r(AP Wheat futures: Open High . Low Close .87 .87 .86 .86 .86 'i 36 .85 .85 .87 .87 .86(4 .86 May .... July . Sept. . Wall St. Report Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson County Hlstury From tba Files ol The stall Tribune of 20 and 10 Vara Ao TEN TEARS AOO TODAY March 7, 1934. (It waa Friday.) Tag day for Girls' Protective leagua to be held. Citizens who Insist on parking their sutos on realdentlal atreets all night liable to arrest. Gold Hill la thrilled by speeches of seven candldatea for governor and senator. Medford high defeats Roseburq. 14 to 10, to win district title. . It waa a fierce and rough battle. The "bobbed hair" craze hlta the city, and spreads Into the rural areas. The state chairman of the Repub lican party pleads guilty to posesslon of liquor, causing great Joy among Jackson county Democrats. Valley citizens, who spent winter In California, returning home. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY March 7, 1914. (It waa Saturday.) Robert Clancy will be the groom and Phyllis Diamond the bride in "Tom Thumb Wedding." Hester Wake Held, Ruth VanScoyoc. Moore Hamil ton, Allan Perry and Warren Conrad" also have parts. The tender of the Shasta Limited Jumps the track near Talent, causing some frsin delsy. Council votes 200 to send a repre sentative to Washington, D. C to plead for a railroad to Crescent City, and later rescinds It. Two carloads of Porda arrive, and are sold at once. Industry clubs organized In all schools of the city. JOHN F. ELY DIES Fl Stock Sate Averages (Copyright, 1934, Standard Statistics Co.) March 7: 60 20 20 60 Indl's Rr's Ufa Total Today , B4.7 48.7 75.0 84.2 Prev. day .... 97.3 50.1 78.9 86.4 Week ago .... 98.2 48.9 76.4 85.4 Year ago ....44.7 24.9 71.8 46.4 3 Yrs. ago ....134.9 100.0 195.2 140.1 (1926 average equals 100). Bond Sales Average (Copyright, 1934, Standard Statistics Co.) . March 7: 4 20 20 20 60 Indl's Rr's Ut's Total Today 80.1 86.2 86.7 84.3 Prev. day 80.2 86.4 86.7 84.4 Week ago .... 79.8 85.8 86.3 83.0 Year ago .... 58.3 87.0 75.6 63.6 3 Yrs. ago .... 88.8 103.6 100.8 A7.7 (1926 average equals 100), At the Colony today the price of an order of mushrooms touched off a fright wig effect. Awkt I thought of the first man to eat mushrooms In our town. He ran the wagon yard where mushrooms grew as big aa Al Smith's derby and as thick as red ante at a picnic. Nobody In our town had ever heard of mushrooms and for years he was known aa "Crazy Dutch who eats toadstools." (Continued tivn page one) Also no one ever had squab In our town until someone waa sick. It was delicacy associated only with ty phoid fever or spinal meningitis. At such times they would go up in the hay loft- pull off a couple of heads. Et votUI And no one ever thought of eating guinea hen. They were solely to scare away th chicken hawks. (Copyright, 1P34, McNaught Syndi cate. Inc.) more probable reason Is that he help ed form republlcans-for-Roosevelt clubs before the last election. Because of the ambiguous phrase ology In some sections of the stock market bill, a Wall street economist Is suggesting that another provision should be added to It, reading: "Nothing la Intended by this legisla tion, except what the authors had In mind.' The Wall -street ers say the reason the market has gone no lower in the face of the regulatory bill Is that no one expecta it fb be enacted In Its present form. Another reason given is that the speculators hope to have a field day before It goes Into effect. They do not desire to sacrifice their market position before they get a laat chance to make some money. Some skeptics say Mr. Roosevelt omitted an "R" in describing his movement to the code authorities when he called U "evolution." Ye Poet's Corner ' Thumbing yellowing theater pro grams today I came upon the name of Richie Ling, bringing back with rush memories of hla day aa de bonair tenor with Lilian Ruiwrll. How quickly such popular veterana drop irom sight I Yet always remain nudging phantoms. Edi lorial Comment A Comedy of Ernr. j Painters and carpenter, working for the school district, and unionized j of course, want more money and , shorter hours. Gentle artlssns. who does not? But the cupboard of Old Mother Hubbard, meaning thereby j The RIU Is to try out an Interna- I u bare, or nearlv bare. It Is so nr- 1 tlonal exchange of bartender in Its y bare that the directors, the Dar- plnk glowing cocktal! room, like the j enta, the pupils and the teacher, j swapping of profesaora at various col- too. strangely enough are worried. ICSes. First Will Come Yank Of th I Htlll th pirnntr inH M!nlra tn. ' Paris Rita for a few months. Then I stst on higher wages and a shorten Harry Craddock of the London Savoy, j day. St ranee. Strange. Here are, August of the Ad I on In Berlin, and these member of organlred labor1 so on. All have mixed drink for j entreating, demanding, of a per! an International clientele. plexed and well-nigh pen nt less . school svstem. that their earnings be tn one of those periodical .shake-up mcrem-ed. And at the same time that come to editorial shops, I onoe there are officials hlsh In the com becama an aavquui aciicuor. luicU ol uulou labor um are iubtuif1 A Pica I am your City Park I have served you well; Each tree, each flower, My recreation center. My fountain Are all sacred parts of me. As well uproot my sturdy trees. Tear out my shrubbery, Or kill my verdant lawn. To tear down my fountain Emblem of those who have Helped to make me a haven For all who care to come And spend their moments, hours, Or even a day within My boundaries. As well to fling a cruel taunt Into the face of a friend. To erase forever My meeting place of young and old Where clinking homeshoea hav Often welded, with their cheerful sound. Friendships that wtlt live on, A trtbut? to me. your Park. Per, remember, I belong to all. Contributed. NEW YORK, March 7. (AP) The stock market suffered a sharp sell- off late today after moving dully early. The reaction followed, word from Washington that General John son planned to curtail NRA code working hours through an executive order. Leading equities lost 1 to 3 or more points. The close was heavy. Transfers approximated 1.800,000 shares. Today's closing prices for 42 selected stocks follow: Al. Chem. Ss Dye ....148' Am. can 99 3i Am. & Fgn. Pow. - 94 A. T. Si T llfls. Anaconda , 14' Atch. T. S: S. P. ... Bendix Avia Beth. Steel California Pack'g. Caterpillar Tract . 28' Chrysler $2V Com I. Solv 263i Curtiss-Wrlght 37 DuPont w 983i Gen. Poods , 33H 64'i . 18 H 43H 24S John Lafayette Ely passed away at a local hospital Tuesday at 9;15 p. nv, after an illness covering the past three weeks, due to heart ailment. Mr. Ely waa born In McClellan coun ty, Texas, October 11, 1865. He spent his early life and attended school In Texas, and when a young man met Miss Samantha Hard. They were united In marriage at Temple. Texas, January 17, 1893. They lived tn Tem ple until 1913, whan they moved to Lubbock, Texas, and in 1927 came to southern Oregon. They purchased an orchard on the Old Stage road, living there until the time of hla death. During their six years In southern Oregon they have made many frlenda and acquaintances, who will mourn his passing. They have no children. Mr. Ely was a member of the First Baptist church. Funeral services will be announced later, through 'the Perl Funeral Home. Gen. Mot - Int. Harvest I. T. St T. 36 .... 40 13 Johns-Man ECVS Monty Ward 30 i North Amer 18 Penney (J. C.) 65i4 Phillips Pet 17 Radio 7?, Sou. Pac ...... 27 Std. Brands 21 St. Oil Cal 37 St. Oil N. J 45 Trans. Amer , 6 Unton Carb. A 44 Unit. Aircraft 23 U. S. Steel 63 EMirt Wheat. PORTLAND. March 7. (AP) For the second consecutive day the emergency export corporation today remained out of the market for soft white wheat for foregin shtpment. Monday's quotation was 77 cents a bushel (AP) o. b. San Franrlco Butterfat SAN FRANCISCO, March 7.- First gTade butterfat 26c f. San Francisco. Silver NEW YORK. March 7 t APt Rbf I silver barely ateady, c lower at 46c. Now! A Quicker Way to Ease Pain ( MAP.IC, TELEPHONE TO JACK MAO.STON THAT I CANT GO TO 1 T BFAUX ARTS BAU-IONIOHT-Wf A MOUTCKniBlE HEADACHE aS,T WWml L OH, MIM JMiRLfY WHAT A SHAM! I TY 1 "BAYER AfPlRlN FIRST TUCV WOMK SO VAST iu err 5 owe now. 5r 2 Jwi - Z. 30 MINUTES LATER Mft.MAniTON IS WAiriN&., TOU rEE L ALL RIGHT, Mill" SHIRLEY? FIQF,CHV WON0EQT-UL I that mahvelou? Aven ASPIRIN ACTUALLY STOPPED y Hf A0ACHC IN A FEW MINUTGSf Don't Forget Real Bayer A, m Few Mi 11 Vi spirin Starts "Takina Hnld" Minutes Here is quicker rfliff from pain the fastest ialt relief, it is said, ever known. This is due to a scientific discovery by which BAYER Aspirin starts "taking hold" of pain a few minutes after taking. 1'he illustration of the glass here tells the story. A Bayer tablet starts tn disintegrate or dissolve go to work almost instantly. This means quirk relief from pain femr lost hours from headache, neuritis, rheumatism. And tuft relief. For genuine Bayer Asoinn does not harm the heart. When you buy, see that vou get the genuine Bayer Aspirin. The best way is never to ask for aspirin bv the name "aspirin" alone. But it vou want Baver Aspirin's quick rrlitf tlway, to iy "BAYER AspiriQ." r UUV B A VCR ( ASPIRIN WORKS SO FAST Drop a Bvpr TiMet m (tUt$ of w-fT. Note that BRFORE It fOUfh rvittntn tm started (o dis- migrate. V hat it don in this I'm it does in your Jtoach. Herw its (ast act ton. IR U Does Sot Harm the Heart