paor sit
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, APRIL 8, 1934.
Medford Mail Tribune
"Ewytnt in Southern Orison
Rtad tht Mall Tribuni''
Oally tSicepi ttaturrlay
(uhllshed b
MKDKOIIO I'BINTINU CO.
i6.3T.J8 N. Kir BL
KuBtia w. uuml, editor
Ad Independent NmiMptr
entered as teeood clut matter at Uedford.
Urccon, under Act of March 8, 1879.
8UIIHCHIIT10.N UATE8
Ht Mill In Ail.tnu
, Dally, odi year S.0U
: Dally, iix aonttu 3.Ta
Daily, om month HO
Br Carrier In Adranu Medford. Albland
Jacksonville, Central Point, Pbotnli, TaJtot, Oold
Hill and on (Jibaji.
Dally, one rear ,..$8.00
Dally, til non.iu 8.36
Dally, oot monto. 60
All term, asb In adraoec
Official paprr of tbt City of Medford.
Official paper of Jackuo County.
; HEMBBII OF TUB A8B0CIATED PKB88
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Offlcei In Nw York, Chicago, Detroit, Sao
Pranrtjteo lx Angelea Seattle Portland.
Becalmed
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
Tha Star Spangled Banner waa un
furled to the breeze Frl. This Hag
is 188 year old, but several around
here feel that In the New Shuffle. It
should be displaced by a more mod
ern flag, as they are tired of looking
at' "Old Glory." Many feel If they
want a new flag, they should move
to another land, and snapplly.
Dock Robinson, the Sultan
IT was once remarked that not over ten men really understood
the Einstein theory.
We believe the New Deal can beat out the Einstein theory at
Hie present moment.
With President Roosevelt still off on Vincent Astor's yacht
fishing, we venture to say, there isn't one man in this country,
who knows what the New Deal really means, today, or has the
faintest idea what it will mean tomorrow.
A CCORDING to press report that "Fifth Avenue palace on
a keel" the Nourmahal, is becalmed somewhere in the Gulf
Stream, and fishing isn't very good. '
"That picture of "dead calm" somehow strikes the writer,
as a perfect symbol of the present state of national affairs,
the quality of the publio mind (if there ia sueh a thing). Every.
thing appears becalmed, in a state of suspended animation,
we don't know where we are going, and we are not even on our
way.
T may be the ealm before the storm. - We hope not. For we
don't like storms. On the other band, it may be the calm
before pulling up anchor, turning the ship's prow toward a safe
and salubrious port, and signaling "full steam ahead." That's
better. Here's hoping that's the way it works out.
What's the matter? Probably nothing, except human nature,
Intense activity can't be indefinitely sustained. Nor can intense
interest. Sooner or later there must come a time for rest,'
complete letting down, when both the body and the mind
sleep, and Nature sets to work to recharge the exhausted bat
teries.
Such a time is now. As before observed the Roosevelt honey
moon is over. C, W. A. work has stopped. The N. R. A. is still
functioning, but no one knows in precisely what fashion, and no
one much cares. The novelty of the entire set-up has worn off.
Business is better, but not sufficiently to wake up the cheer
leaders. They are asleep too.
The Nourmahal is becalmed. So is the country. So it ap
pears, is the world. In a figurative sense everyone and every
thing, is treading water, content to do nothing until the presi
dent disjoints his fishing pole and comes home.
r
N a word the New Deal needs a new deal! It needs clarifi
cation, unification, it needs a definite, clear cut plan, which
it hasn't now,
A few days ago it was charged the brain trust had a definite
plan designed to overthrow our present government and replace
it with a communistio form of government. As pointed out,
I that was a lot of piffle. The brain trust as a brain trust is out,
of I already scattered to the four winds. But the rather stnrtline
ST coliev who invited him to ' truth is that not even the brain trust, nor. the administrnion
partake of a Presbyterian church i oijtside of the president, HAS a definite plan regarding ANY
chicken dinner. While tha pioneer I npHINO
ahlek was getting his hat upstairs, in 1 "-
the host walked off without him, and I ,
Doctor was terribly mortified. This TO illustrate. During the past few weeks, Secretary of Agri-
r ntranlisrohv.!' 1 edture Wallace has clarified his farm relief program tc
pain, and no chicken dinner pends. this extent he has reiterated that the basic cause of agricul
tural collapse is overproduction, and that curtailment of pro-
i no wroBwiiiH mttwiii inure. iiiKiib .. , ,. , . . , irr, , i 11 1
was a keen disappointment, as One'd"ctlon 18 essential to recovery. Wheat lands, corn lands must
pair of wrestlers actually wrestled, be withdrawn; pigs must be slaughtered, the mass production
wiSTEr 1118 l8Ud ml,St be redllCed- bef0re t,,e PHceS f farm PWdUCta
Its way home regusted, can rise.
, ' , ... ,, That's clear enough.
The Volney Dixon kid and girl ,
iriend had a spat downtown Thurs. I But no w what does Secretary of State Hull favor t If he
p.m. The little beauty wsnted a ride j lag Deen correctly reported, he f avors free trade, personally,
home on the handle-bars of young , " ' , , ,
Dixon's wheel aa she was late to sup-1 "xt doesn t expect to get it. He DOES favor, however, drastic
per. The young fellow was firm, and" roduotion of all protective tariffs, reciprocal trade arrnuge
announced that "no girl was going ... .. . ' , , nn 1
to chisel a ride off him." The lassie menta with other countries, So there may be a FREE exchange
left in high dudgeon, and said sho 0f goods between the United States and the rest of the world.
. would iix mm.
Bright sunshine the last of the
week brought out the baby buggies,
and their chauffeurs took the right
of way over orators cussing capital
ism, at the BUI Qore corner,
Tho cthse lawn Is being sowed to
grass, which will provide something
soft to lie down on, between riots on
the courthouse steps, In the next
revolution.
...
Candidates are getting ready to
test the wind resistance of the voters.
...
The fishing season opened Thurs.
Several caught a fish, but the gen
eral public remained cool and calm,
and did not cheer all night.
...
A. Moore Hamilton, the Young
Democrat aallled forth as a candidate
for the legislature last week. This
puts htm In a precarious spot, aa by
1038 he will be standing like Table
Rock In a sea of Republicans. The
sentiment throughout the nation Is
that a Democrat should be opposed
at the polls, no matter what the in
dividual Democrat's private opinion
on a contest happens to be. Demo
cratic congressmen have started to
bawl that the Republicans are trying
to liefeat them, and It avalleth them
r-t.
Doesn't the fact stand out like a movie star's fingernails,
that these two programs are inherently antagonistic contra
dictory that they both can't be adopted that if one is accept
ed the other must be rejected t "
It seems perfectly obvious to us. Certainly the farmers of
this country can't be told they must raise only so much wheat,
lot us say, presumably what the market will consume at a
profit now and then allow foreign wheat to be shipped into
this country at whatever it will bring. The same principle ap
plies to corn, pigs, cattle, cotton, or what have you.
TT7E bring this forward merely as an illustration of tho point
we are trying to make-namely that not only the Roose
velt but the Now Deal honeymoon is over and the time lias
arrived to get back to earth to praotical business and brass
tacks.
And the first step in that program is to get the administra
tion agreed on its basic principles just what .it shall be, just
how far it will go just when it will stop to get its breath,
And just when it will push on full steam ahead.
We very much hope that is precisely what President Roose
velt plans to do when after this long vacation entirely at sea,
he, greatly refreshed and invigorated, returns to Washington,
D. C, and the White House.
Personal Health Service
By William Unidy, M.U.
Signed letten pert a In In to personal health and hygiene oot to dis
ease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady It a tamped
ielf-addresed euvetope li miclosed. Letters should be brief and written in
Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be an
swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions.
Address Dr. William Brady. ?t5 El Camlno, Beverly 111 Us, Cal.
Comment
on the
Day's News
ADVANCED LADIES, MEET THROMBO
ANGIITIS OBLITERANS.
rs
Thrombo -angiitis obliterans Is
rare but interesting condition, even if
you name It In English. Inflammation
of the main artery with clotting and
shutting off of
circulation. It
happens usually
In the legs. In the
past It has been
almost exclusive
ly confined t o
young Russian
Jews In this
country, tho now
and then ft case
la reported In a
man who Is not
Jewish. Also It Is
probably due to
excesslre smoking. Is nearly every
case on record the victim has been
an Inveterate cigarette smoker.
Put that In your pipe end I mean,
advanced ladlea beware. It Is not nice
to lose a leg or even a part of a foot
just to be nonchalant.
Not that I am at all prejudiced
about the use of tobacco. If a lady
cares to chew she Is Just as well Jus
tified In taking a chew as a gentle-
man Is, provided one ever does. So
far as I know, tobacco In any form
does no more harm to a woman than
It does to a man.
But there Is no argument at all
about the Injurious effects of tobacco
In youth, that Is, any form or amount
of tobacco used by a person who has
not yet attained full adult growth
and developed. (This doesn't mean
merely stature, for stature Is scarcely
true gauge of physical, organic,
mental end moral development.)
Then, too. I must insist that girls
who experiment with cigarette amok
lng or with cocktail drinking are i
bit on the weak or gullible side ob
vlously, and being weak In character
or personality or spirit they are quite
likely to carry the thing to excess.
Anyway they. do.
Far be It from me to wish to
frighten anybody unless there Is good
and eufflcient reason for It. I have
already lnttlmated that in my opinion
the temperate or moderate use of
tobacco by an adult does not neces
sarily Injure health, and In any event
It Is not more harmful to a woman
than It Is to a man. Now I warn young
women smokers to look to their legs.
Even If the legs are not of the kind
that give your portrait front page
position, Just think what a bore It
would be to have one of em cut off
above the ankle.
The victim of thrombo-anglltls ob
literans, after a few years of excessive
smoking begins to complain of cold
ness In the feet or legs, Intermittent
claudication (limping), then blueness,
swelling, and Increasing pain. In some
cases this goes on to actual gangrene,
necessitating amputation.
Modern medical treatment, however.
saves the leg from amputation In
many cases. The treatment which han
proved most effective consists of (I)
prohibition of all smoking, (2) rest In
bed, (3) dally Injection Into a vein
of a large quantity of salt solution
(normal salt solution or Rlager's solu
tion), and (4) rigid asepsis, surgical
cleanliness, of the feet and legs, es
pecially any abrasion, sore or ulcer.
Such care about cleanliness la like
wise Important for the prevention of
gangrene In cases of diabetes).
There you are, ladles. I hare neither
exaggerated nor minimized the men
ace. In my judgment thrombo
angiitis obliterans la likely to appear
more frequently among women of
thirty to forty In the next decade,
QUESTIONS AND ANSWER
A Lot of Pigs.
If you have read or are familiar
with the book "100,000,000 Guinea
Pigs" will you please give your opin
ion of It? (Mrs. Q. R. T.)
Answer I found nothing In It I
could criticise. It Is scientifically ac
curate and a valuable book for any
confused consumer to read.
A Girl's Muscle
Would a girl be able to show her
muscle on her arm as a man can If
she did the same kind of work? (H. R.
E.)
Answer Would she want to? A
thicker layer of fat under the skin
gives the feminine form that round
ness and softness which Is part of
beauty. But all factors being equal
age, height, weight a girl would de
velop the same muscles a boy has, if
they did the eame work, play or exe
cise.
Raynaud's Affection.
Like to have you send me some In
formation on Raynaud's affection
which I saw mentioned in your col
umn some time ago. (M. K.)
Answer I have no morbid Informa
tion to give indiscriminately. Descrlte
your trouble briefly and If I can offer
any advice or lnsturctlon I will be
glad to do so. Be sure to Inclose
stamped envelope bearing your correct
address, if you expect a reply by let
ter.
(Copyright 1934, John P. Dille Co.)
Ed Note: Readers wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letters direct to Dr.
William Brady, M. D.. 265 E. ca
mlno, Beverly Hills, Cal.
lifting the lid, the host cried: "Don't
take one of those cigars. They are
very special." Ho made no apologies,
but went on talking. Possibly rude.
but I'd almost swap my hope of
heaven for such magnificent forth-
rlghtnesa.
All the ex-speaks are deflating like
the slowly sagging balloon save
No. 31." which rode through the
raiding years with only one breaker.
It attained Its high popularity be
ing no better than hundreds and not
so good as many through appealing
to New York's terrene taste for be
ing snubbed. The more It gave this
Impression of excluslveness, the more
opulent It became. Yet an Idea of
Its real society patina may be gath
ered from the fact regulars Included
Libby Holman, the Prince . Mike
Romanoff and others of such head
line quality.
I - never see that noble old Roman
sports promoter Jack Curley, his
white cockatoo crest flung high.
without recalling the time he Jock
eyed Bugs Baer and Robert Ripley
together In a wrestling Joust at the
Lexlnton Opera House. Baer waa on
the Evening World and Ripley
the Globe. They met dally at a gym
for a Umbering up and Curley, who
waa three -sheeting a wrestling bout
thought of them for a prelim match,
Neither understood wrestling, but
the 250 Curley dangled before them
In those days., of coy coin overcame
all obstacles. I forget how It came
out but the wisecracks from the press
pit at the two gladiators were worth
the admission price.
! Communications
.
on tha mat.
and (ear they
Green onions are
Older Olrls eat them,
will meet somebody.
...
The law I: lied to catch Bandit
John Dlllingcr last week. Neither
did Wall Street catch any of the far
mers it has been chasing and annoy
ing, they say,
...
The Oil Stewart steam shovel was
crltlclaed severely by a number of
critics Inspecting Its hole digging,
for the new gas silo. One spectator
awora he could do better with a pick
and shovel. Mr. Stewart still relies
on the steam shovel, ho'vver, though
not doubting the ability of the
critic to make the dirt fly.
...
Several young men have started
acting like they were going to cause
...
J. Kort Hall, orchardlst, enjoyed
fine fret the 1st of the wk. over the
first frost.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
BY O.O.Mclntyre
NEW YORK,
7. One of
April
those desperately glossy young men
called today. Ha waa a monotone of
tagaM (ray, mi.ou
Sr"'-!-' 1 onl' bir nouno'
dewlap or deep
purple cravat,
and eluding rare
nectars of Cath
ay. He wanted to
Interest me In
something or
other. An annu
ity, I think.
But he made
me feel so much
like last week's
bag of soiled
a
Peoria Bill Clates bested and out-1 IwrwT-SbjaJaf laundry I could
yelled C. Gottlieb. T. Waterman, and not concentrate. All I couid think of
a stranger In a bridge game Tues. WM W"J to Jocaey him Into a con-
. j fesslon as to where he acquired such
Steps have been taken for a New surprising habiliments. But I never
Turmoil, In which the hellralslng will AM nnrt 'H to wondering why,
be orderly, and everybody will fur- Cerlalnly I might hate asked:
nish their own gasoline. "Where In the world did you get
... that smart turnout?" It would doubt-
rnuii. oi- v.e win nam . yvui 'es nsve nattered Mm. but I have , waved them awsy and walked
muM. uit paoiiari peryloa, blundered through His wllb torn
accusative fixation that to Inquire
about tha almple trolloplng things
that fascinate brands one as nlbby.
Although my nlbblnesa la concern
ed only with the trivial and Irrevel
ant. My Inhibition came to a dead
atop years ago. X aat a seat removed
from the husbsnd of a stage star
being embraced with such ardor on
the stage. Leaning toward him I In
quired: "Do you mind?" He never
spoke to me again.
Such repression Is probably why
t never asked Otto Kshn If he uses
mustache wa: Al Smith If he really
likes a brown derby: Clifton Webb
what he really says nightly tc Mar
ilyn Miller when tliey are supposed
to be talking off to one side while
others occupy the spot; Amos and
Andy If their close association doesn't
get on their nerves: Kllrabeth Arden
If she really enjoys a facial: Lind
bergh If he prayed crossing the At
Isntle: Lily Pons If she liked a touch
of garlic In her sslad: Sinclair Lewis
If he subscribes to a press clipping
bureau and Charles Irans Hughes If
he ever talked baby talk.
A few days ago at a dinner the
host, next to Will Hogg, was the
frankest person I've ever known.
With coffee, cigars and clgarets were
passed. A gentlemen on my right
to a
Humidor pq the mantle. At be
d'untinuea iron) Page One)
treaty with us before grasping slip
pery Ssm. They acted outside the
treaty, under a law of their own,
which ssys they can nab any foreign
fugitive as "a gesture of friendship."
The state department was still at
a lose to know how to proceed of
ficially when the Turks suddenly
told them Insull was awaiting their
disposal. Insull's attorneys tried to
sppeal. but the court held that Ita
decision was not a verdlclt. but a
ststement of fact, and therefore
could not be appealed.
Turkey will get prime considera
tion when the tariff bargaining be
gins. VtUHv win, a simt
PKNDI.FTON. Ore., Aplrl 7. I API
A federal court Jury today returned
a verdict for the defendants In the
No Taxpayer Complains
To the Editor:
I own on real estate. Therefore,
according to the proponents of the
sales tax I pay no taxes. I under
stand, however, that the California
Oregon Power company pays around
54 cents out of every dollar Income
for taxes. I suppose the same pro
portion will equally apply for the
Southern Pacific company and the
telephone company. My gross contri
bution to these companies .for serv
ices last year was about two hundred
dollars. A little over half of this or
one hundred dollara was a psrt of
my last year's tsx bill. I psy 133.50
per month rent or 9402.00 a year.
Figuring only 20 per cent of this
for taxes that would amount to eighty
dollara a year, my part of this tax
Add to this five dollara a year for a
car license, one dollar for a permit
to run It, five centa on every gallon
of fuel bought for it, and still more
monev for state Income tax and it
amounts to quite a nice little sum
It Is going to take a fairly good
argument to convince me that I
should vote for a nuisance tax that
will coat ma from twenty to fifty
dollars a year In additional taxes.
There has to be a halt somewhere
and It mlffht as welt be now.
Very truly yours.
DALE FLOWERS.
April 7, 1834.
The Last Laugh
To the Editor:
I had a laugh at your correspon
dent who wrote that President Roose
velt opposes the sales tax principle.
How about these processing tsxes In
his New Deal. He not only favors
one sales tsx but a dozen of them.
He also favors the federal sales tax
on' gas!" And who pays these ssles
taxes? The consumer. President
Roosevelt wouldn't favor a ssles tax
under normal conditions, no doubt,
but he does under conditions which
prevail and aren't normal. That's
what we face in Oregon. I used to
live in Orange county. California.
The biggest booster down there for
the California sales tax is head of
the Roosevelt Farmers club and he
is a real farmer too.
Another thing. I saw a letter aome
where condemning the president for
killing that veterans' psy bill, when
he favors hanging out millions and
millions for publio works and so
forth. Tes, but what clsss Is favored
for this relief? The war veteran. I
know a lot of deserving men that
couldn't get work because ex-service
men had to be served first. And they
ssy the president hea no sympathy
with the war veterans.
I don't always sgree with your
paper but I think on the sales tax
and bonus bills it's Just about right.
Keep It up.
A. D. HOMES
Medford. April th.
rellln locks rinsed
THE DALLES. Ore.. April 7 (API
By FRANK JENKINS
IS BUSINESS improving?
Henry Morgenthau, secretary of
the treasury, says It Is Improving to
such an extent that It will not be
necessary to live up to the govern
ment's huge spending program,
That's good news. The more the
government spends, the more taxes
we'll have to pay In the future.
DON'T forget thlsj
The more taxes we have to pay,
the greater will be the burden on
business.
If the burden on business It too
great, It will be Impossible to earn
ttu profits with which to pay HIGH
WAGES. '
1
NITWITS and crackpots can talk
until they are black in the face,
but the fact remains that the only
way In which high wages can be paid
is out of the profits of business.
If there are no profits, there can
be no hlg, wages.
JESSE H. JONES, head of the Re
construction Finance Corporation
which seems In these days to have
aU the money there la agrees that
business la picking up.
Because of the Improvement that
Is taking place, he adds, RFC will
lend and spend 500 million dollars
les than was expected.
THAT, also, is good.
It Isn't government lending and
apendlng we need It la PRIVATE
lending and spending. i
Government lending and apendlng,
at best, are only Intended to PRIME
THE PUMP.
It Is private lending and spending
that must keep the pump going after
it Is primed.
-
MYRON O. TAYLOR, chairman of
the board of the United States
Steel Corporation, Joins the chorus
of optimism, saying:
"A year ago we thought we had
turned the corner and could see signs
of revival. Today we KNOW we can."
Well, at any rate, we HOPE we
know we can. Hope Is still a part of
the picture.
IT ALL depends on whether PRI
VATE ENTERPRISE again revives.
We can't base prosperity in this
country on a program of the gov
ernment going everything.
There maye be places where that
will work, but It won't work in
America.
-
A WORD of explanation:
What Is here said is not meant
aa criticism of what the government
has been doing during the past year
of emergency. When nobody else
will do anythln, the government
HAS TO.
But the quicker the government
can quit doing everything, and shift
the burden back onto the shoulders
of PRIVATE ENTERPRISE, the bet
ter It will be for everybody the gov
ernment Included.
Government In this country, you
kndw, Is ALL OF US.
Believe It or not.
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson Counlj
History From the Files of The
Mali Tribune of to and 10 Vear.
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
April 8, 1924
(It Waa Tuesday)
Y. W. C. A. drive Is opened with
a parade and a banquet.
Ticket clerk at Espeo depot Is abolished.
New high school Issue to come be
fore voters soon.
Theodore Roberts, famed film fig
ure, recovers from serious illness.
Prance rejects the Dawes plan.
' Orchardlsts Implore street loafers
to accept Jobs In orchards with scant
success.
Local merchanta report brisk sales
of bathing suits and straw hats.
TWENTY YEAR SAGO TODAY
April 8, 1914
(It Was Wednesday)
Shiftless citizens told by county
court to "go to work, at 12.25 per day
on the Pacific Highway." Eight non
resident loafers roundsd up by police
and marched to city limits.
The new minister at Butte Falls la
delayed, and the opening aervloe 1
postponed.
The socialist party of Jackson
county puts a full ticket In the field.
"The poverty evil Is worse then the
liquor evil," Is one plank of the platform.
Japanese fsrmer of tha Coleman
creek district la killed when a whiffle
tree breaks and atrlkes him above the
heart.
Christine B. Beaver of Ashlsnd and
Bert G. Harr of the Applegate are
wed.
City council refuses to pay any
rent for hitching racks at tha Nat.
3 Midget Photos lOo Peasley Studio.
YOU
CAN'T
AFFORD
TO OVERLOOK
THESE TWO
POINTS WHEN
BUyiNG FIRE
INSURANCE
Oregon Mutual Fire Insurance
Company is stronger financially
than ever before.
A year ago, Oregon Mutual Fire Insurance
had assets of $727,815.45. Those assets have
increased to $744,120.11 during a period
when most insurance companies have faced
reductions. Oregon Mutual offers you the
safest, strongest of fire protection possible to
buy.
Oregon Mutual offers you a saving
of 25 in premium costs.
This strong legal reserve Mutual is one of the few
companies operating in Oregon which has NOT
raised premium rates. By strict aelection of
risks, by economy of operation, this com
pany offers you the
very strongest of Fire
Protection at a saving
of 25.
Don't overlook these
factors when buying
fire insurance. Ask the
Oregon Mutual agent
in your community for
costs od Fire Protec
tion on your property,
or write to the address
below.
Th Oldmtt gtneral urttlng Mutual Firm
Insurance Company wt oj thm MiMi$ippl
10 SAVE NATION
OREGON MUTUAL FIRE
INSURANCE COMPANY
LELAIID CLARK, Agent
19 N. Bartlett Street. Phone 1496
Fire, Auto and Truck Insurance and Bondi
KENT, Ohio. April 7. (API The
time Is near. Prof. 8. A. Harbourt of ,
Kent State college bellevea, when the
people of thla country must choose :
a new type of government. i
Professor Harbourt Das a plan all 1
of hla own, the moat radical feature 1
of which Is abolition of the present
setup of congress and the formation
of a new congress to represent nro. i
portionately various Industries and
professions. j
"The road we are traveling leads
straight to disaster," he said; and. i
like Thomaa Jefferson, he holds that
the American people ought to have
revolution every generation for
their own good.
He called hla plan an "Industrial
and professional democracy." It
would do away with the two housea
of congress now representing the
country by sections and would place
In their atesd a congress of 100 men I
proportionately representing the va
rious trades and professions.
In a way. every interest would be
j represented according to Its own
numbers.
The president would be elected by
a direct vote of the people and the
supreme court would consist of five
Judges to be In session ten months
of the year.
Astoria York Celebration'
ASTORIA, Ore., April 7 (API
Plans were completed today for the
entertainment of several hundred del
egates to the snnusl four-day conven
tion of the York Rite Masonic bodies
of Oregon, which will atart tomor
row. 1
10.000 damage suit brought against j The Celllo canal on the Columbia
the city or Hermiston and the Her-
mlston Light A Power Co. by Sylvia
educational Director R. H. South.
wick, foreman at South Fork of thei
Rogue CCC camp, was yesterday no-,
Bruce.
The name of Cumberland state
park in Kentucky has been changed
to Pine Mountain park to avoid con
fusing it with Cumberland Falls
aa stat nark.
river was closed todav. the result of "" DT tne department of Interior
the third major break within a year. I ln"' n" "PPllcatlon for the position
The latest break occurred this morn-! ' f"mP educational sdvlso- had been
lng near Dlilon. accepted. Mr. Southwlok. who trained
4 and msnsed the basketball team at
Ktcavatlona near Ssnta Clara. Cal . South Fork, has requested the edu
unlrerslty have unearthed ruins of-cations! director for the Ninth cotm'
a mission believed to have been de- area, to assign him to the South Fork
euovea b an tarthjuaki Is 151a. camp.
3 Days Starting
TODAY
A itory
that makes
your happiest
dreams come
true
OA
lH4 V ft
n n TV'!
They climbed tha
golden staircase to
the land of heart's
desire and love
that was born In
heaven was cnulled
In (heir hearts , , ,
on
ALSO
Hollywood On Parade Gonf.itnne wa
Continuous ho Sunday 1:.1 tn II p. m.