PXGE POUR
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1934.
Medpord Mail Tribune
"Enryont In Sonthtrn Oragee
Dud! Ih( Hill Trlbunt''
Dallr Eie.pt Saturday
PubUihtd trj
UCDrOUD PK1NTIXO CO.
Il-lt-il N. rir L tlxm rt
HUBERT 0. BUHL, Editor
An iDdepradeot NtvfPlpw
Entered aa aecond elasa nitur it ftladrord,
Okioo, ondar Act of March 8, 18H.
BUBSCKIPTION BATES
Matlln Adranc
Dallr, on iur 00
Dallr, III eumtba .
Dallj. ont Bonis 60
Br Curler lo Adtanea Medford, Alniand,
Jaekaonrtlle, Central Point, Phocnli, Talrat. Gold
BUI and on illihnn.
Dallj, on. rear 0(l
Dallr, Ill nonUu .
Dallj, om moota .00
Ail ttrmi. eub lo sdrices.
Otridil paper of Iho Clti ot Medrord.
OrneliJ paper of J action Count.
MEMBER Of TUB ASSOCIATED PUE88
Becerrlna (Mil Leaaed Win Serdea
Too Aaaoelata, Preaa Is eieluilTelr tnllUod to
too no for publication of all oei dlipatehea
ertdltad to It or otherwlia credited lo thla paper
and alao to Iho local neta puhllahed herein.
All rujnta ror puhllcatloo of pedal dUpalebet
Beralo are aiao reaertea.
MEMBEII Or UNITED I'llKBS
UEMBEH Or AUDIT HUIIBAO
or CIKCULATIONB
Adrertltlna Kefireaentatlrea
M. C. MOGENSEN t COMPANY
Omeei In Niw York, Chicago, Detroit, Saa
Francisco Ua Anielea Beatlla Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthnr Perry.
With any number of epochal events
on tap, Including the proponed re
vamping of civilisation, and the re
modelling ot Human Nature, along
come the Ban Francleco papera with
the aatoundlng front-page newa, that
two Sealyham doga belonging to
Helen Wllle Moody, former women'a
tennla champion, are going to nave
pupa.
"County offlclala are getting too
much mileage," an old reliable cam
paign lie, haa bobbed up aa some
thing to get excited about. The time
to tear the hair about gasoline, was
when it waa being dished out, at
county expense, to transient Indigents
to get to hellralslngs, and change of
venues.
The Oregon version of the song of
the day: "Did You Ever See a Dream,
A-Walklng?" should be parodied to
go: Did You Ever Read a Candidate,
A-Dreamlng?
-
Rain to the value of 1,000,000 has
fallen over this section. Many feel,
with the tlmea being what they are, j
they should have their share In
money.
The wild rumor that the city would
run out of water next summer, was
followed by a wilder one, via: the gos
sips have run out of wind.
The Dubb Watson boy, 8, Is enjoy
ing a visit from hla Orandpaw, 88, of
Chicago, he leaving hla machine-gun
at home.
a
A farmer towned yesterday and
oratorlcally dismembered the govern
ment, and the state milk law. He
confessed he had no cow. The Idea of
try to farm without a cow, would
cause the old-style farming farmers
like Jim Owens of Wellen, and As
bury Beall ot C.Pt to awoon.
e
Civic workers are urging all cltltena
to vote May 18, whatever may betide,
and even If It makes them tardy to
the bridge game, or fishing hole, or
they are too weary from a bicycle ride
on May 17th. The civic workera stress,
"There is nothing so Important as
voting." It la also just as Important
that the votes are counted accurately.
Otherwise there la not much use In
voting.
a
The local economic altuatlon has
arrived at the point where It Is Im
possible to shoot a box car down the
Main Stem, without knocking the
tenders oft three 1034 autoa,
...
The WCTTJ. seek the banning ot
rum-candy bars, a confection aald to
contain Intoxicants. Your corr. haa
tried out one of the eame, and is ot
the firm conviction that one bit will
cure any Juvenile of the well known
kid trick of eating anything, It It haa
a little augar on It. There Is some
thing about the combination that
doea not cooperate, either before or
after reaching the alimentary canal.
It la practically a cinch, that the
aweet-toothed young gent, after one
experience, will take hla candy
straight.
a e a
Miss Dovey Riley and Tort Ander
son motored to Ash Creek Sunday
and hiked about two mllea up the
ereek. (Blaklyou News.) Some more
of everybody's business.
a
The mayor or Klamath, yclept
(whatever that means), Democratic
candidal for governor, will continue
hla campaign, despite the reported
, diversion ot charity funds to his cam
paign fund, and the purchase ot a
wrlatwatch for him, by Indicted and
ousted city policemen, from the same
source, A little thing like that would
never quash a candidate running un
der the Oregon primary aystem, Inas
much aa gall and gab are the vital
quallflcatlona. The mayor, one may
read, "la adept at turning aeemlngly
unfortunate circumstances to his own
advantage." The people will no doubt
be poaaeased ot a feverish dealre to
see the wrlatwatch. Others hold, "the
mayor's star haa atarted to decline."
The star seems to have been the
"Little Dipper," and the Idea was to
get hold of the "Digger Dipper,''
The "Diamond Jubilee"
1MEDF0RD has a big job on its hands for the next two
" months. It has been chosen by the legislature to act as
host to the entire state, at the celebration of the 75th anniver
sary of Oregon during the week of June 3rd.
This is a great honor and a great responsibility. It is also
a great opportunity, a great opportunity for Medford and
Jackson county to show the rest of the state, that the "un
pleasantness" of a year ago was contrary to its character, and
its traditions, that Jackson county hag "come back", and is
today what it has hag always been, one of the most enlightened,
enterprising, and united communities in the entire commonwealth.
' -nlS is not exclusively Medford's job, though Medford must
take the chief responsibility and supply the active leader
ship. It is also Jackson county's job, and judging by the initial
reaction throughout this section, the people of Jackson county
so regard it.
The headquarters of the celebration will be here. But during
the week there will be important gatherings at Ashland, at
Jacksonville, and every section of the county will directly or
indirectly come in for some recognition before the week is over.
TPIIE committee in charge has made a splendid start, in mak-
ing this celebration state-wide in character, worthy of the
great state whose 75th birthday is to be commemorated.
The danger of allowing it to
Humdingers jamboree, for local self-glorification alone, has been
carefully avoided. There will be plenty of fun, and spontaneous
gayety, but the dominant note
recognition of the chief factors that contributed to the formation
and development of Oregon, from the arrival of the early pio
neers to the present time.
This state was formed by a
fearing and hard working men and women, who eame across
the plains in covered wagons, overcoming great dangers, endur
ing tremendous hardships, to build a commonwealth in the
then untailored wilderness. They cleared their land, built their
homes, planted their crops, constructed their schools and
churches, laid out their roads and trails, and raised their
families.
It is not yielding to any mawkish sentimentality, therefore,
but most fitting, that the "Pioneer Mother," should be made
i the reigning Queen of such a celebration. It Is equally fitting
that religion, education, and good roads should be appropriately
(recognized, as the chief formative factors in this state's evolution.
i mis nas oeen done ana tno committee suouicl ne congrauuat-
ed on te intelligence and good taste, shown in its outline of the
I week's program.
jTpOMOEROW the first important step in preparation for this
celebration will be taken, and it IS important, extremely
so namely FINANCING the project.
Every citizen in the community should be willing to do
I SOMETHING in this direction. Whether the contribution is
large or small, it will all help. And while more important than
anything will be the spirit of unity and enthusiasm behind the
enterprise, nothing worth while can be accomplished, unless the
"sinews of war", are first provided.
CO we strongly urgo all the people in this communit.", to re
spond to this .financial drive, just as generously as the
status of their poekctbooks allow. Conditions are not the best
for Buch an effort, but after all, they might be worse and a
year ago they certainly 'WERE.
So let everyone do his or her bit. And if much can't be
given in money, offers in energy, efforts and new ideas, will
certainly be appreciated.
Medford and Jackson county are on the spot. Even those
who originally opposed the idea, must admit it's too late to
witli'draw now. The die has been cast. Let's show the rest of
the state and the entire coast for that matter, that when this
section of the state starts out to do a thing it does it RIGHT.
Come on, all together.
LET'S GO I
FOR SUBSTANTIAL
PROGRESSJN YEAR
List Thirty-Three Physicians
for Achievements In Medi
cineLate Dr. Coffey
Among Names On List
CHICAGO. (UP) Medical InrMtl
RAtlon of the many problem iUU
remaining u to th function and
disorders or the human body marie
substantial progress la 1933, accord
ing to the maaBln Modern Medi
cine, The mnMlne Hats 33 men on an
"honor roli" of doctors outstanding
in rarioue branches of medicine.
Study ot encephalitis, o sleeping
alcknfM, wm atarted aa a mult of
the epidemic which broke out in fit.
Louie. Fslttacotta, or parrot ferer,
was another dlteaM which became of
paramount Intercut to scientist be
cause ot recent outbreak.
Study ot ncepalltla, or sleeping
lew glands, continued to be the sub
ject of concentrated effort and won
honors for scientists in the maga
alne's list.
Among the students of encephalitis,
Dra. Char lea Armstrong ot Washing
ton, D C, Harold MoCordock and
Ralph S. MuckenfiiAS, both of St.
LouIa. and Ralph Webster of New
York, won mention for their work.
In the field of psittacosis. Dr. Kail
P. Meyer of San Pranclaco was hon
ored. Advance! In endocrinology brought
notloe to Dra. Herbert M. Kvana of
Berkeley. Cal., Harvey Cashing of New
Haven. Conn.. Davis Marine of New
York, Herbert U Blumgart, associated
i with Samuel A. Levtne and Elliott
i P. Jon tin all of Boston.
Dr. Arthur J. Atkinson, associate
degenerate into merely another
will be a serious one, fitting
group of hardy, reverent, God
with Dr. Andrew O. Ivy and Dr. Sam
uel Polgelson of Chicago, were named
for advances In the mucin treatment
for peptlo ulcers.
Dra. William B. Castle and Maurice
B. Strauss of Boston cooperated In
research work In anemia.
Research In heart d Is en as waa car
ried on by Dr. Frank N. Wlleon, Ann
Arbor, Mich., Dr. George R. Herrmann
of Galveston, Tex., and Louis N. Katr.
of Chicago.
Dra. George M. Curtis, Columbus
O.; Robert O. Coffey. Portland, Ore.,
(deceased), and Prank C. Munn of
Rochester, Minn., were prominent
names listed In surgery.
The others named were: Dra. Henry
A. Christian, Boston, for contribu
tions to general medicine; Benjamin
W. Clan-son, Minneapolis,-tor inves
tigation of art hrl tides: Alphonse R.
Dochea, Hew York, for research on
the common cold; Simon Plexner, Hew
York, for advance in treatment ot
poliomyelitis; Henry Jackson, Boston,
for treatment of agranulocytosis, an
unusual disease which destroys the
white blood corpuscles; Reuben L.
Kahn, Ann Arbor, Mich., for research
In immunology; George R. Minot,
Boston, research In hematology;
Thoma Hunt Morgan, Pasadena, Cal.,
for blologlral research; Alfred Sten
gal, Philadelphia, for pneumothorax
in pneumonia, and Harvey B. Stone,
Baltimore, for tUsue graft technique
and principle.
Seventy-tlve member of the Ox
ford School Dads club In Oakland.
Cat., volunteered their service free
of charge to make any necessary
alterations at the school to comply
with building safety regulation!.
Members of the Mt. Ralaton flan
planting club of Sacramento, Cal..
traveled a total ot IftfiS miles by pack
trains to plant fry.
A sheep owned by A. Laudermllk
of Gooding, Idaho, has given birth to
at iambi in nine year. Including
seta of quadruplets, triplet and twin
Welfare authorities report they
have succeeded in bringing about a
50 per cent decrease In Juvenile de
linquency at Greensboro, N. C.
Unusual Pcbruary weather brought
pussy willows Into bud near Anchor
age! Alaska. UU irtar
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D.
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis
ease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady It a stamped
elf-addreteed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In
Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be an
wered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions.
Address Or. William Brady, IVi El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Cat.
t
HOW FAR AWAY IS FAR ENOUGH?
Correspondent sends clippings from
metropolitan newspapers In which an
editorial writer comment on the
health commis
sioner's difficult
admonitions
about avoiding
colds. "For in
stance he says we
ought to keep far
awry from per
sona who have
colds. Easier said
thsn done. Hla
recommendation
to take walks
regularly for ex
ercise Is excellent,
but the time approacnes when wc
may expect some pretty bad weather,
when exposure might help give cold
to some people not hardened to wet
and wind."
Very true, I find encouragement,
however, In the health commissioner's
bulletin or whatever It was that
aroused the editorial concern about
the weather. The health commis
sioner courageously Inserted the word
PAR In the admonition. Hinted that
It la wise to keep PAR from persons
who have a communicable disease. At
this rate, In another ten years, I
dare say. some such creature of poli
tics will become reckless and. tell the
peasantry how tar It Is necessary to
keep trom the scoundrel who pur
ports to have what our eminent trick
health authorities call a cold. f
Then It will require only a few
years more to break It gently to the
public that the danger is chiefly
within range of the scoundrel's con
versational spray, which 1 less than,,
five feet.
It is, as the editorial writer, ob
served, easier said than done, not
only In offlcea and subways but on
buses and trains, at counters, at
ticket windows and tellers' grilles, at
soda fountains and across restaurant
tables, at the movies, In school, In
church In the home. The only In
fluence of bad weather on the occur
rence of conversational spray Infec
tion Is that It tends to increase the
chance of such Infection, since It
encourages people to huddle together.
Especially people who are Intimidated
by the obsession that "exposure" In
some mysterious way rob one of "re
sistance." This plausible, but mean
ingless theory persists In spite of the
fact that no one can define rr meas
ure or estimate In advance such a
state as "resistance" in any specific
case. It is perhapa confused in the
alovonly mind with Immunity, which
Is a well defined, in some Instances
measurable and positively predictable
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
BY O.O.Mcintyre
NEW YORK, March 38. Memories:
Eugene Walter, who had been a re
porter among us, coming back to
Cincinnati with his Broadway hit,
"The Easiest
S3
Way," and a enter-headed
cane I
T. E.' Powera'a
A ln Bryan'a
fS0SFt'v(Sl halr' M"x Marx,
tailor. Solly, the
Kam m e ra teln
doorman.
Veata' Victoria
razzed by the
gallery gang at
the old Colonial.
Joe Moore'e dis
covery of Tommy
Lyman wmspering his songs In a
Houston street dive. George Mc-
Manus'a table at Dlnty Moore'a. Fan
chon, the prop cocotto In the Gains
borough hat, at Madam Laloy a red
Inkery. Julia Sanderson's aong, "You
Wouldn't Believe Me."
The Sixty club, where Zlegfeld met
Blllle Rurke. The Herald reportera
at -the Marlborough bar at S p. m.
The glum Shubert press agent, A.
Toxin Worm. Standing with oene
Tunney, the challenger, aa Jack
Dempscy swung with studied Indif
ference at the Miami race track, por-
aldtno.
Listening to Dean Tnfte'a Invocation
at St. Paul'a ln London. The first
comic strip Jamea Montgomery
Flagg'a "Nervy Nat." SUvera' panto
mime baseball clowning at the Hip
podrome. Veranda dining tablea at
the Savoy. Valeska Suratt's back.
Grace LaRue'a wide hata. Mannle
Chappelle, the wine agent.
All the serious thinkers who cried
up America aa hostile to the artist
and that Paris was the place, have
drifted back. In the last humiliat
ing daya when their remittances
shrank to almost nothing they found
gay paree in reverse, lta vaunted hos
pitality a myth. Many, incidentally,
h.v lit out for La Jolla. California.
which haa become an enchanting and
sympathetic center for creative ariisis.
Le, Posner, Boswell ot the Black
Belt, telle about the Harlem boy
stopped by a 4Jnd street cop who
decided to hold him on eusplclon.
"Llasen," said the negro, reaching for
his razor pocket, "I got a mammy In
heaven, a pappy In hell and a gat
on Lennox avenue, and ! 'tends to
see one of 'em tonight."
Although known aa scrappy, the
late John Medvaw was only so bait
ing umpires. Among cronlea he ws
free going and eaay to get along with
About the only off-diamond battle he
had was when he came out second
best ln an exihange of punchea with
Bill Boyd, th, ataje actor. In the grill
ot the Lambs, yeara ago. rher. was
on epithet he loathed, so much so
sports writers dropped It ln later
yeara, and that waa "Muggay." On
nlghta out, McCiraw waa, ln ha day.
on, ot th. liveliest apender, on the
Big Apple. He liked a large evening
at Recore now and then. And a
Vst.WiTtlJ
3D
state, but always specific that Is It
appliea to some particular disease ot
Infection, not to a vague group ot ail
ments such as the politicians In
medicine and health would have their
Imaginary "resistance" cover. Immu
nity to diphtheria, for Instance, ha
nothing whatever to do with im
munity to scarlet faver or pneumonia
or Infantile paralysis. If you can
conceive some mysterious state or
Influence which protect one against
all of these respiratory Infections
then you should keep on be'leving In
"the common cold" and exposure and
all the rest of the bunk, for It 1 of
no concern to you which "weak spot"
your "cold" happens to, "settle" in.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Phenolphthaleln.
Kindly tell me what effect phe
nolphthaleln has on the system? A
friend says phenol la the same as
carbolic acid and a deadly poison . . .
Mrs. S. C.
Answer Phenolphthaleln Is a com
paratively harmless laxative.
Chocolate.
Will eating a piece of chocolate
heat the blood enough to make a
person perspire? My brother con
sulted a doctor about underweight
and the doctor told him to eat a
piece of chocolate every day, not to
Increase his weight but to' warm him.
He eays it does, and every time he
feels chilly he seats aome chocolate
. . . Mrs. J. V. R.
Answer No. The sugar In it Is good
food, provides quickly available calo
ries, whether for heat or muscular
energy. But it doesn't make one
perspire.
What, the Pupils Dilate?
During the past month I have no
ticed that the inside black cupping
of both my eyes 1 sometimes quite
large, nearly as large aa the surround
ing green part, and at other times
It is quite small, a mere dot. I have
never had any eye trouble nor worn
glassea . . . T. K.
Answer The dark central disk is
called the pupil, and the green,' gray,
brown or other colored ring around
it la the Iris. The pupil normally
dilates or becomes large when the
eyes look off to a distant point or
when there Is no bright light shin
ing on them. The pupils contract
when the eyea look at a close object
or when a bright light shines on
them. So you're all hunky-dory.
(Copyright, 1934, John P. Dllle CO.)
Ed Note: Readers wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should Bend letters direct to Dr.
William Brady, M. !., 265 B. Ca
mlno. Beverly Hills, Cal.
dawn wlndup at the Battling Nelson
grill at Jack's.
I thrill to the small bit actor the
capable forthright performer who
does his part and almost runs away
with the show, strolls to the boarding
house afterward smoking a five-cent
cigar to read a detective magazine.
They look for no plaudits or names
In lights, but do more to keep the
stage alive than many atars. Best, I
think. Is the Pittsburgh, Mo., born
Sidney Toler, now drafted by Holly
wood. Still anothor la Harlan Brlggs,
who as a country doctor, banker or
merchant, seems alwaya to express a
one foot hanging out the buggy aide
realism. There la another whose first
or last name la Etienne or something
like that. My failure to remember
after seeing so many of bis grand
performances Illustrates the common
fate of all small bit playera. E. G.
Robinson was one until the movies
grabbed him and made him a atar.
They are all atar material.
The moat earnest devotee of the
six-day bicycle race continues to be
Jim Barton, the dancer. For many
years he has cancelled theatrical en-
agements during this gTlnd and
spends 20 hours out of 34 at the Gar
den, Bleeping only four hours dally
at his hotel. Al Jolson Is another
addict whose passion Is not quite so
pronounced but is generally around
for several houra dally.
The other late evening I met the
fictlonlzed type of gunman's moll ln
real life. She was arranging with a
ghost writer for her memoirs. Turn
ed out gloeslly by a select school,
precise ln her English and exploiting
all the little graces of refinement.
ahe had neverthelesa cast her lot with
a crook a real desperado. But mnst
aatonlshlng waa her ahamciesencsa
over the affair.
Juat when I thought the cold
weather over I got to wondering last
night how they heated the Empire
building and rhumbaed right Into a
chill.
(Copyright, 1934, McNaught Syndi
cate, Inc.)
John Hutchlnga, of Lehl, Utah, has
a collection of more than 3000 arrow
points gathered from th. shores ot
Utah lake.
Workmen wrecking the old Butler
hotel In Seattle found a half pint
bottle of whlaky that had been en
tombed In the corner stone for 43
years.
Mlaa Margie Neal of Carthage II
th first woman to be elected to the
Texas senate and the flrat to hold
the prosltion of president pro tem
por. Seventeen conventions of as many
national organlratlons of the Luther
an church are scheduled between
June and November.
A pu'.plt bible from Birmingham.
England, used by two world-famous
preachers In Carr's Lane chapel, was
presented to the congregational
church ot Birmingham. Aia.
This year marks' the 400th annl
veraary of the appearance of Martin
Luther'a translation of the Bible.
An Independence. Ka., taxpayer
returned an asseaament blank listing
houaehold good at 30 and two doga
at 1300.
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
IO news today.
The threatened strike la settled,
and the great automobile Industry,
Instead f abutting down, will go on
providing Joba and BUYING POWER.
Jobs and buying power will bring
back prosperity.
JUST who won, the Federation of
' Labor or the automobile Industry,
doesn't appear very plainly from the
dispatches.
But thla much IS' plain: THE
PUBLIC WON. ,
No matter what else happens. If
the strike had been called, the public
would have lost, and lost heavily.
REVIVING prosperity Is a tender
plant. 1 Strlkea at thla particular
moment, by destroying Jobs and buy
ing power, will ahrlvel this tender
plant like a burning wind.
T1HE stock market reacts sharply
upward at flrat to the aettlement
of the atrike, then sags under profit
taking.
What la profit taking?
It la selling out at the higher price
so that the sellers may Jingle their
profits ln their pockets.
117HAT does It mean?
Why, It means that hoidera of
stocks are nervous about the future,
and fear that prices will go DOWN,
Instead of up.
So they sell while the selling Is
good.
PROSPERITY won't really be back
until people get over being nerv
ous and scary about the future.
In other words, prosperity won't
return until CONFIDENCE returns.
A DISPATCH from Salem tells us
'The state of Oregon will be
on a cash basis Wednesday, March
38, state Treasurer Rufua C. Holman
announced today when he Issued a
call for all outstanding warrants
marked "not paid for want of funda.
More good newa.
pHE atate of Oregon went on a
warrant basis by legislative act
on March 3, 1933 Just a year ago.
At that time, lta unpaid bills, as
represented by warrants, amounted to
about $1,800,000. Payment of these
warrants has been made possible by
prompt payment of state taxes.
OUT let's not Jump to the conclu
sion that we are out of the woods.
That would be kidding ourselves.
The tax money that has poured ln,
making possible the taking up of state
warrants, has been ln response to the
payment of TOTAL taxea for the year,
ln order to get th discount.
This means that we are anticipat
ing the normal revenue that would
come In the fall, so It Is probable
that next fall the atate will again be
short.
F, however," prosperity continues to
revive, so that taxpayera of all
sorts may again earn the money with
which to pay their BACK TAXES, the
stat and all Its subdivisions, Includ
ing counties, cities, school and road
districts, will have the money with
which to take up all their warrants
and get permanently onto a cash
basis.
But don't forget that this all de
pends upon the return of prosperity,
so that taxpayers may again earn the
profits with which to pay.
Let's not do ANYTHING, If we cm
help It, to head off the return ot
prosperity.
Oregon Weather
Unsettled with rain tonight and
Thursday: snow over mountains;
mild: moderate to fresh aoutheast
and aouth wind offshort.
Eleven fatal and 18 non-fatal accl
denta resulted from rabbit hunting
in California within a year, a report
of the state game commission shows.
Dead In Shanghai
?
'
C. C. Julian, former California
and Oklahoma oil operator, wanted
en mall fraud charges, waa found
daad In Shanghai, China. Phytlelan,
, axpresMd tha opinion h, committed
liuicldt. (Aiioelattrf Praia Photo)
I ite&zmM
SHAKE-UP OF NRA
WILL SPEED CODE
Johnson Places Transforma
tion in Hands .of Harri
man, Young Assistant
Litigation Bureau Formed
By JAMES COPE
(Copyright, 1034, by the Associated
Press)
WASHINGTON, March 38. (AP)
A complete shake-up of NRA, trans
forming It finally Into a machine to
administer the nearly 400 coded In
dustries, has been started by Hugh
S. Johnson.
New ordera to Johnson's staff of
1900 have placed the progrcess of
transformation ln charge of W. Aver
ell Harrlman, a youthful special as
sistant. He Is the son of E. H. Har
rlman, the railroad magnate, and 1
himself an Industrialist of wide re
sponsibilities. He is one of the new
comers to NRA.
Litigation Centered
T,he biggest change ordered was the
creation of a litigation division to
handle all court cases In the name
of the department of Justice.
This waa aimed at more speedy
disposition of cases, not possible at
the Justice department because of a
limited staff. The new division will
be under the legal department head
ed by Donald R. Rlchberg, one-time
railroad labor spokesman, who is
Johnson's general counsel.
All the other alterations likewise
were drafted for greater speed, to
cut off the protesta from Industrial
groupa which cannot get poltclea set
tled and complaints quickly attended
to.
Deputies Responsible
The reorganization made all dep
uty . administrators responsible for
quick disposal of all non-enforcement
complaints under codea under their
Jurisdiction.
It will be up to them, each equip
ped with a legal, economic, labor,
Industrial and consumer adviser, to
get action out of the compliance and
litigation divisions. Until how their
main Job has been to get codes
through the mill.
Harrlman will take charge of the
prompt formation and efficient op
eration of code authorities, advising
the Industrialist as to what is ex
pected of them. He will overhaul
the compliance machinery of NRA,
except for the field ataff nearly re
organized under the national emer
gency council. Three assistants, yet
to be named, will ahare his work.
Although Harrlman has been given
perhaps the most Important assign
ments on the staff, he will rank of
ficially tha same aa Robert w. Lea,
Industrial assiatant; Edward F. Mc
Grady, labor; Alvln Broan, executive
officer, and others.
Agricultural authorities of Jugo
slavia like the type of aweet potato
grown In North Carolina and have
requested the state college to ship
them some seeds.
Four-H clubs of Harper county,
Oklahoma, ataged rabbit hunts to
finance their county federation activi
ties. A Galveaton, Tex., warehouse com
pany haa a bale of cotton It has been
holding for a customer since 1900.
Kenneth Dunaway of Edna, Kas.,
claimed' a long-distance shooting
mark by bringing down a coyote at
a distance or one-fourth of a mile.
An official survey shows there are
about 3000 Judicial tribunals ln
Georgia, Including court held by
Justices of the peace.
Eighty-five Valencia orange trees
of the original 1883 planting near
Placentla, Cel., are atlll living and a
few yield fruit.
Deposits of iron ore lie beneath
lakes In the northern part of Minne
sota, and the state wants to deter
mine Its right to them.
North Carolina face losses from
dsmage done wheat, oat and barley
crops by the cold last winter.
ADMINISTRATION
Ease Pain Now
; In Few Minutes
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J .(JIK j PHONE IN! COME RIGHT ONOLtf'T I I
Vir I " WUI V OVER I J j VI I
A Discovery That's Bringing
Now comes amazingtu quick relief
from headaches rheumatism, neuri
tis, neuralgia . . . Ibtfa.iteit soft relief,
it is said, ycl discocered.
Those results lire due lo a scien
tific discovery by which a Bayer
Aspirin Tabl t begins to dissolve,' or
disintegrate, in the amaiing space of
two seconds after touching moisture.
And hence to start "taking hold" of
pain t few minutes after inking.
The illustration of the glass, here,
tells the story. A Bayer Tablet starts
to disintegtate almost instantly you
awallow it. And thin it ready to ao to
work almost instantly.
Wben you buv, though, see that
you get the Genuine B. KR Aspirin
l-or Bayer Aspirin's quick relief
alway, ,,y "BAVER Aspirin."
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson County
History From th. Files of The
Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 lean
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
March 28, 1934.
(It waa Saturday) -Gun
battle is expected when posses
catch up with Oregon Jones, who lead
a atate prison break.
Medford high school team reaches
Chicago, and warms up ln University
of Chicago gym.
Poor fishing In the Rogue puzzles
fishermen.
Bids submitted for the paving of
the Jacksonville road.
Copco kitten ball league atarta.
Sheriff Terrlll lays trapa for "Jail
snoopers," which la foiled.
noAntremont Brothers wanted for
the Siskiyou tunnel murdera reported
ln Detroit. HUgn, in younger, re
ported in the Orient.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
March 29, 1014.
(It was Monday)
A boy, "who has been paroled nine
times," leaves for the state peniten
tiary after being found guilty of ateal
lng four saddles, and setting fire to
a barn.
Charles L. McNary to seek re-election
to state supreme court bench.
Humanity at Its lowest ebb, ln the
shape of a mass of rags, dirt and
whiskers, afflicted Medford Friday
afternoon a man so nauseatlngly
filthy that saloons would not serve
him and the police would not lay
hands upon him. He was ordered out
of town for fear of contamination
of the air.
Fight for Crescent City harbor "to
wage until eternity," Commercial club
announces.
Amos W. Walker, the well-known
livery stable man 18 making a. lively
fight for sheriff on the Republican
ticket.
Ye Poet's Cornei
OREGON'S DIAMOND JUBILEE
Song
By Fred Alton Halght
Oregon, proud of her statehood
And heT nofele hlatory,
Gratefully opens the pages .
In review that all may see.
Through the years her growth and
progress
Should be honored, you'll agree,
So we celebrate her story
On her Diamond Jubilee.
Chorus
Oregon invites the Nation v
To her Diamond Jubilee;
Come alongl This celebration
Means a lot to you and me'.
Every road leads on to Medford
O'er the plain, up from the sea.
Oregon will read .her story
Prom the pages of her glory
On her Diamond Jubilee.
Oregon, the land of beauty -Land
of opportunity,
Land of wealth and recreation.
Wears a crown of destiny.
Mountains, 'plains, her hills and val
leys, Mighty forests, lakes and streams,
They are calling you to Oregon
Where the golden sunset beams.
KnifeWUldedln
Waterfront Brawl
PORTLAND, March 28. (JP) -John
O. Redmond, 32of Oregon City, was
In a serious condition at hospital
here today, suffering from knife
wounds in his abdomen, cheek and
right' hand. He said he received ths
wounds ln a fight ln a shack on ths
waterfront here.
Pat Murphy, 68, was booked on a
charge of drunkenness and was or
dered held for the district attorney ln
connection with the knifing.
4
North Carolina has an unwritten
law, rigidly observed, that its gov
ernors .must come alternately from
the eastern and western sections ot
the state.
Fast. Relic To Millions
WHY BAYER
ASPIRIN
WORKS SO FAST
Drop Rayir TtMft
in A !.. of Jtff.
Nolf thJt RPFORF.
it totifhei bottom, it
n started to 3i
intfffrat
V. hit it W in tbtt
bum it dc m you'
Stoma;h. HKt IU
flit Ct9r
R
Does Not Harm the Heart