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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1934)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, JICCNTDAY, JUNE 18, 1934, Medpord Mail tribune "ErtryBiw hi Southtrn OrigoB Rtiai thi Hail Trlburw'' Dally Except Saturday PubUihed by MEi)K(iK PHIN1INO CO. I5-ST-S0 N. Fir Bt Pbooa fS R0BEI1T W. BUUU MltaC Ad Independent Newipaper Entered aa aecond elan oatttr at Medford, . Oregon, under Act of Miren 8, iBiP. SUBSCMI'TION BATES ft Mnn Ad tint Dally, one year I&.OO . Dally, ill month Dally, one montl) 00 By Carrier tn Adwi Medford, Aibland, ; JiekiontWe, Central Point, Phoenix, Talent, Gold Bill and od B-iRiiwaya. Dally, one year fl-00 " Dally, alx monthi 9.2 Dally, one mooln 60 All terrni, casb in am&nee. Ofriclal caper of the CI IT of Medford. Officii! paper of Jaektoo County. UE.MI1KU OP THE ASSOCIATED PIIE8B Bweivine full Leued Wire fleniee The Associated Prna la eieluslitly entitled M toe use for publication of all neve dlipatcnee credited to it or otherwise credited In tnle paper nA aim th IomI ntn mibllsbed herein. All rlgbU for publication of ipecla) dlipatdus lutein are also resmea. MEMHEB OV UNITED lKE8S aTEMBEH OP AUDIT BUKEATJ OP CIRCULATIONS Adrertlslng KepreMnlatlrei II. C MOGKNBEN ft COM PA NT Offteee In New fori, Chleaw, Detroit, San Pranelseo' Loa Angele Seattle Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Th oranae oropoaal for the estab lishment of a atate bank 1 dandy, and probably baaed on the theory that customer would pay up an NSP check much taster than he does his delinquent taxes, A couple of TJ of O. students, home for the summer, were caught holding hands in the twilight, In the city park Bun. This is encouraging. It was Jearcd all the TJofO. students were J . mm tninr to leave the Imprea- th were Communists and hinvinir nn changes in the estab llshed form of government to indulge in any old-fashioned romanuo wicm. e m. nr . earners heavyweight championship fight was a flnanolal uecMs. Peonle paid close to sooo,- 000 to see It, and bet 100 times that much on the outcome. This Illus trates that the people, when they feel Ilka It, can spend their own money, as freely as they do government cash, Messrs. Hitler of Germany and Mus solini of Italy, "hold the key to war In Burope." This impending war, the press dispatches state, will be the last one, as civilisation will not re tain enough civilisation to stage an other. By placing Mr. Hitler and Mr. Mussolini In the front ranks of the battle, they will let go of the key and the conflict will be averted. How ever, civilization la not civilised enough to do that. WHT LITTLE OIRLS GIGGLE. (Bend Bulletin) LOST 10 bill at carnival grounds. Reported found by little girl who, If honest, will return' to Bentlnel office for reward. Details as to loss will be given. e A number of measures regulating auto freight trucks and auto stages are contemplated for presentation at the next session of the legislature. If same are adopted, the trucks and busses will have no more rights than the railroads. . Tennis, which causes Its devotees to sweat like a hoy-hand Is again the order of the day. The tennis racket la mightier than the pitchfork, and Its hsndle Is nothing to lean upon. . Press sgents for the hen, oommonly known as roosters, have started crow ing in ths residential sreaa, to the great annoyance of sleepers, who do not arise at 4:30 a. m., to see the dawn, go fishing or play golf, Things have come to a pretty pass when a person can't remain on the relief rolls, and possess a permit to buy liquor. There Isn't much practical advice to be given the hopeful young gradu ate this season, except to marry the first girl he finds who hss a steady Job. (Ohio State Journal) Mint to the wise sturf. The Democratic party of Jackson county sssembled Isst week, and adopted resolutions endorsing and ap proving themselves, without mention ing the surplus of postmasters and shortage of postofflees. They fsvored the continuation of the Democratic administration Indefinitely, and de plored the holding of an election In the fall, and wasting the taxpayers' money on a foregone conclusion and Immortal cinch. Thsy further opined that by no stretch of the Imagina tion could a Democratic candidate arise on the morning after, to dis cover that he did not have enough votes. The lack of cheera at the re cent speech of a distinguished Bour bon was explained with the decision that ths Democrats came to absorb knowledge, not to eiorclsi their lungs. The local Democracy was silent on the forecast that msny voters of the nation, who have tolled all their days, and saved M. do not feel like giving aj ss of It to a fellow-msn, who spent his earning years hopping around the country Ilka a grass-hopper, and. In the panic finds the pickings poor. Ths Democrats also pledged them selves to stsnd united behind their own candidate, unless they feel a Republican winner would appoint mora deputies. Editorial Correspondence NEW YORK CITY, June 15. A folossal robot, with a good stabilizer but run-down clockwork, against a gladiator with a quick, shrewd mind, and a punch in either hand, that was the story of the Baer-Carnera fight in Long Island City last night, which will be old news to Medford by the time these lines arc printed, but to New York, is still the big news of today. As luck would have it we secured a ringside seat. For the first time in many years, a big fight was a sellout, and the speculators made a killing. As high as $100 was paid for ring side seats, when it was certain tho night would be a balmy one, and word sifted around via the sport grapevine, that Baer's alleged poor condition was all a stall, and a now world's cham pion would be crowned. As becomes a sport fan from the wide open spaces we were in our seat ahead of time. The sunset was still glowing in the western horizon, and a wispy disk of a new moon hung in space, a whitish-lemon parenthesis in the Heavens. Even so there were probably ten or fifteen thousand people in their seats, when the first preliminary began. In two steel towers on stilts swarms of camera men were busy as ants, pulling up something or other in baskets on long ropes from tunc to time. The first celebrity to arrive was the squat, swarthy Mayor La Guardia of New York, escorted by a blue-coated bodyguard. He looked like a pugilist himself, and bowed right and left to the voters, who gave him scattering applause. As usual no one paid any particular attention to the prelimi naries. They were all heavyweights, stable mates of the two principals, and they put on pretty lively bouts although there was only one knockout. Before the sunset glow faded into night, a swarm of airplanes and illuminated backdrop of the letters which spelled out enticing ads for sport clothes, night clubs, and restaurants in Greater Manhattan. An army of ven dors swarmed over the flat bowl, white coated and raucous, field glasses, cigars and cignrets, air cushions, White Rock, "Beer for Baer and Baer for Beer." Sport sheets with pictures of all the fighters, and programs for only a nickel. Many gay parties in evening dress laughed and staggered in as ten o'clock approached. One young college boy in a white mess jacket, hopped along with a pretty girl on his arm. He couldn't find his seat and didn't seem to care. a mile back to the distant bleachers did care however when the pair stood against the ringside rail and obstructed the view. "Take off that messy jacket and wipe your feet on it" yelled one. "Go on back to your Park Avenuuu" yelled another. The boy waved back good-naturedly and the couple still arm in arm danced on. Many had dined not wisely but too well one hilarious New York club man, who insisted upon twirling his boating straw on his stick, and trying to whistle a marching tune, was finally picked up bodily by his mates and poured into his seat directly behind the press row. But it wasn't rowdy. It wag all in good fun. . When ten o'clock was reached the pugilistic celebrities start ed to crawl thru the ropes, Jack Dempsey and Gene Tunney to gether, shaking handB, posing for the camera boys, laughing, Tunney is huge and towered above the man he defeated, certainly the best looking and best dressed ex-champion of the world, a nice face, fine eyes, the hands of a stevedore, and the brow of a professor 1 Willie Ritchie, Jack Sharkey looking big and soft Lough ran, not as handsome as he used to be, Jack Johnson with his inevitable boret and scores of others. It was the usual thing, but seemed to go off with more tomary. And then the big fight began. the perfect word for this oircus Great Stone face come to life, through all tho motions of a living human being, but at no time giving' one the impression of being one. We had glasses and watched him intently, fascinated. Punched and battered, knocked down eleven or twelve times, bloody nose, cut check, swollen lips, yet never the slightest change in facial expression. One felt one could have taken a knifo and sliced off one ear, and it would not havo affected that mechanical Colossus any more than taking off the tail lamp of a moving truck would have affected that combination of gears, cogs and clutches. He simply wasn't human. Didn't look human, didn't act it. He was very pale when he came in, that huge papicr-maeho face retained the same unearthly pallor throughout. But there was no stopping him. He had been wound up and put in the ring and there he was going to remain, until he completely ran down. As for getting knocked down that was nothing to write home about. That was to be expected. The mechanical stabilizer, the nicely balanced auto-gyro within would see to it that the proper equilibrium would be attained again. And it DID! .... As this is written there is still some doubt as to whether Camera did or did not ask tho referee to stop the fight. That is the sport writers are in doubt. This particular correspondent isn't. Ho is CERTAIN no such request was ever made', or ever would be made. Tho Italian sido show froak isn 't that kind of a person. He would no more ask for quarter than a Pickwick motor bus would ask for it. Ho was, we repeat, in that ring to stay, and navigate, until the clockwork ran down, or some important gadget or other refused to function. And the gadget would havo to be important. Anything as trivial as a right eye, or a set of teeth, or a couplo of fingers would make no differ ence. The difficulty would have to be vital. The fight was unusually interesting for two reasons, with a mammoth like Camera still on his feet and pawing forward, there was always a chaneo ho would really hit his slender oppo nent or step on him in short suspense was sustained until tho fight was over and second, it was such a pretty study in con trasts. No one could be moro alivo, physically, mentally and emo tionally than this combination Satyr and Play Boy,' Max Baer, no one could be more thoroughly DEAD than Da'l'rimo: Baer ras not still a moment, not the he was crouching over until his head was even with his wasp like waist one minute, sti 'cling erect as a London Bobby the next, laughing liko a daiwug Faun when tho round started, then without a warning, suddenly leaping at his foe like a panther from abush, biftl bang! swish I smanhl a shot to the giant's solar plexus that bent him over grunting, then an over hand right literally thrown over his opponent's guard to the side of the eye. Then quiet again, retreating, covering up, circling back, another change Baer with his anna down, a cruel leer on his hiindsomo face, defying the glandular mons trosity and actually taking his shove-like punches without batting an eye then a sudden chargo again. Talk about color, speed, change of paeo and what havo yon. Baer may bo a bum and a show-off and a generally no-good kid as far as moral values arc concerned hut ho is a real fighter, a real champion, in the writer's judgment one of the most dangerous caballoros that ever entered the bull ring. And Da Primo was never anything hut a circus freak and so remains ho shouldn't bo in a ring with boxing gloves, but on tho platform with tho bearded lady on ono side and the snako charmer on the other. Sreaking of snakes, Camera's biceps look exactly like a mid portion of a brown boa constrictor if there ia such a thing I we mean a brown boa. Of course there is such a thing as Camera for we saw "Hcem" thn we feel any hayseed like the undersigned would have been justified in giving one glanoo and agreeing with the hayseed that there ain't no sich auiuiulo, li. Y, R 1 one auto-gyro, flew against the clear sky, trailing streamers of The crowd that stretched half dash and spirit than is cus A robot that seemed to us freak from sunny Italy. The walking, moving, pushing, going samo for two seconds at a time; Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment win be self-addressed envelope Is eurlosed. Ink. Owing to the targe number ot letters received only s rew can be an swered. No reply csn be made to queries not conforming to instructions, address Or. William Brady, 263 El Cumlno, Beverly illlls, Cal. THE WISE ACRES AND TIIEUt FUNNY DIETARY NOTIONS For heaven's sake, mother, forget that meat and potato combination. This in 1934, not the atone age. Fo 1 x?rr''zz?r'i't-tfttoe are all starch and ahould never be . eaten with protein auch as meat, eggs, flah or fowl Neither should bread or other starchy food be eaten with pro teln. Only vego table and acid frul ta ahould be eaten with meat This Is the wav a young daughter colds her ma It seema the daughter haa married and moved Into more pretentious neighborhood and all her new ac quaintances are out of the atone age and In the hands of allele health and diet sharks who know how to give auch persona the complacent Idea that they knew as much or a : bit more than ordinary doctors know about the psyalology of digestion. The stone age mother of this wife acre daughter of 1034 tella me she 1s glad I "cracked down on Dr. and hla wrong food combinations teaching." She saya that under the spell or the charlatan whose name we'll omit this time, her daughter Is trying to subsist on the following diet: Breakfast: Two glasses raw mill:, one glass orange Juice, to be taken one alp of each alternately. Lunch: Lean meat, roast, boiled, but never fried. Acid fruit. Raw salad. . Supper Is starch meal: Baked po tato, one slice brown bread with a little butter, carrot and raisin salad The wiseacre daughter la growing wan and weak on this diet, and :ier reply to mother's remonstrance la "For heaven'a sake mother, who on earth wants to get fat? Only the Turk likes his women fat." Bealdea the Turk no doubt here and there a white man likes hla, well, at least plump, soft, smooth, grace ful, well-groomed, healthy, smiling and feminine. Not necessarily In the Mae West manner, yet not angular, hard, sallow, wrinkled, gaunt, hollow eyed, stringy, skinny, sickly, weak, melancholy and drab. Two glasses of milk (16 ounces, a pint) yield 325 calories. One glass of orange Juice (B ounces) yields 110 calories. This wiseacre young woman's breakfast gives In all lesa than 450 calories. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, June 18. Diary: Up to say Koodbye to Ray Long, Jr., against going to a boys' camp for summer, so breakfasting In Pullerton Weft ver's new open air enfe at the Park Lane. Then at fuddy-duddy-ing until Frank and Agnes Shutts, from Miami, came to sit awhile. This day I ar ticled another an nuity. And by post a gay golf story from Rex beach In Florida and a longer letter from Edison Marshall telling of a thrilling tiger hunt In Indo-Chlna. And I skipped about skirling "Where's that tiger?' until Irvtn Cobb dropped by with tayles of the gang in Houston. To a Broadway cabaret for pow sowdy and watched the lunatic ac tions of Jimmy Savo, foremost panto mlmlst of his day. And on way home fell in with David Wark Orlffith, as youngish and handsome as tn the days he was the deserved doyen of the silent screen. To bed rending again Kipling's "City of Dreadful Night." Word drifts back to literary centers that Raoul Whitfield li on the last pages of his novel written on a New Mexico ranch. Whitfield, once or the Hollywood studio,- married the former Emily Vanderbllt, who sundered all the social lemon-merlnguo for an adobe house In a remotely forlorn and elegiac whisper of the desert. They are miles from a railroad, with out telephone and for domestic pets have two shaggy sheep dogs that sug gest twin Heywood Brouns. The revived circus classic, "The Man on the Flying Trapere," which the movies have worn to a fraaasle re cently, was long the poker table chan son of cartoonist Clare Brlggs. He hummed It In dulcet tenor while Harry Staton provided the baas ob bllgato and H, T. Webster a thin fllc rasp alto from first pot to final roodle. That they were not slain tn cold blood Is a tribute to the toler ance of the noblest gang of poker fiends that ever hailed dawn with hiccups. Personal nomination for the screen actor making greatest strides In his profession the past year Blng Crosby. Among summer Joys la the close hair cut. Especially for that back of the head feel, like running the hand over a plush chair in the parlor car. Years ago, leading Brummrl went completely shave -pate during hot months. My barber tells me that save for a pontifical pedesta of Little Italy he has had only one customer ask for this ministration. He thinks It la because It suggests prison. Paul Armstrong used to stop head-arhea by close clips. And Oeorge M. Cohan went for one at Intervals. Quy Lombaidos fact baa been least Brady, M.D. answered by Dr. Brady U a stamped Letters should be brief end written in It 1 well known that an adult lying abed requires from 1,500 to 1,800 calories a day to prevent actual loss of weight, strength and vitality. An adult man or woman doing the lightest kind of work or play or alt ting about most of the time and getting little or no exercise, requires 2,500 to 3,000 calories dally to pre vent loss of weight, strength and vitality. How can a wiseacre expect to keep well on such & restricted diet? It might have sufficed in the stone age, but hardly today. It might have served In the time when the Turk had his women fat I think that time coincides with the time when the Chinese paid their doctors while they kept well and stopped pay ing the doctors when they were 111. Perhaps the nation that one ahould not mix bread and meat alas for the good old sandwich I or potatoes and meat comes to the great Amer ican diet fakers from some old Chi nese or Turkish legend. Certainly they never found auch an Idea in Physiology or In nature. Nature pro vides protein mixed with starch or sugar In almost every instance. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS .Shoe Itppulr My husband, a very thin man, does shoe repairing. When he does grind ing he breathes considerable dust. I am worried about the effect of this on his health, but he Insists It won't harm him. (Mrs, G. C.) Answer The dust Is comparatlvely harmless. A greater risk In such work Is Inhalation of fumes of carbon di sulphld In cement used for applying Invisible patches, etc. Where this gut ta-percha cement la used the ventil ation should be free. The applica tion of shoe dye Is a hazard to the worker In a poorly ventilated shop. Imperturbability I ask If you will kindly repeat the gist of the suggestion you gave, of something the dentist can use along with a local anesthetic to safeguard . . . (Mrs. A. T.) Answer The suggestion offered by a good physician who has been called repeatedly to help dentists In trou ble, Is that the dentist should ad minister along with the local anes thetic, l'A grains of sodium amytal This tends to prevent untoward ef fects from the novocalne or other local anesthetic and to render the patent Imperturbable. Ed Note: Headers wishing to should send letters direct to Dr. communicate with Dr. Brady William Brady, M. D., 265 E. ta rn I no, Beverly Illlls, Cal. publicized of all band leaders, al though he Is rather handsome In a dnrk Spanish caballero way. Scarcely anyone recognizes him on the street and somehow he has no pronounced characteristic that makes him distinc tive after being seen on the rostrum. Yet, I am told that next to Vallee he receives the most mash-notes and Is the favorite in select finishing schools. For many seasons Larry Anhalt has been cradling drama during the sum mer months In a Connecticut townlet. He introduced Katharine Hepburn to stock when she was quite unknown and la the father of what la now called the Red Barn Circuit. Anhalt, once a prominent figure In the Broad way parade and successful, likes to experiment with raw material of the theater and revive the exquisite works of sometime neglected masters. He is -among the very few producers not swayed by the box office. And a gen tleman and scholar. Bagatelles: Henry Hull swears he will never wear another dresa suit on the stage . . . Mabelle Corey Oilman, who beat vainly at the Parisian social gates for many years, la now hi-de-ho In London's Mayfair . . . Doris Duke has received the highest offer yet for radio social talks . . . Booth Tarklngton's favorite hotel is the St. George at Algiers . , . Tom A. Yawkey, Boston sportsman, blushes meeting strangers . . , Stephen Crane, who wrote the most thrilling of all bat tle descriptions, has never been a soldier . . . Will Rogers never writes letters. If important, he telegraphs. I'm going to quit trying to be folksey. The other day during a driz zle I was caught between traffic sig nals with a group of cops In middle of the street. They were adjusting their rain coats and caps when I edged among them brightly to tell how I once wanted to be a cop. I had Just cleare my throat when one turned, gave me a cold eye and with a thumb Jerk barked : "Come on. you take a walk!" I tried to stroll off indifferently whistling off key, but I must have looked sillier than usual. (Copyright. 1034, McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) (Contlnueo iron. Page One) their leading Investigator more than Mr. Pecora received for his successful i stock market Inquiry. Some California democrats here are ; moaning that the socialist, Upton j S.nclalr, may win the democratic i gubernatorial nomination out there, j Between tho line of the Peek re port on foreign trade you can read the coiKluMon that Mr. Peek does not know what he la going to do about foreign trade or how he is going to do it ! "fcs Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Q PEAK IN Q at the opening aeas'.on u of the 6lst convention of the Oregon State Orange In Rose burg on Tuesday, State Master Ray W. 0111 made two statements that, coming from the state head of the country's leading farm organization, are In teresting. COMMENTING on the agricultural adjustment act and the national recovery act, he said: 'Whlle crop restrictions must be used, the farmers of America cannot be forced to submit to regimentation of their crops. The problem must be approached from a different angle.1 That Is to say. In Mr. Gill's opin ion, rugged Individualism Isn't dead yet among the farmers of America. XHEN he added? 1 "Much can be accomplished by withdrawing marginal and sub-marginal lands from cultivation, but I am convinced we have been thinking too much about crop reduction rather than Increased consumption." - THIS writer, Who disagrees with Mr, Gill frequently, agrees with him absolutely on that point. A11 the talk one hears these days Is of restricting the output, working less, boosting the price. In this hum ble Individual's opinion, prosperity NEVER WAS created In that way, and NEVER WILL BE. The way to have properlty is to work more, produce more, lower the price and HAVE MORE. XTOTJ can't get away from thlt fundamental fact: The more we produce, the more we have. The less we produce, the less we have. You can't have more by producing less. HpHE thing that is out of Joint Is distribution. If we could only learn how to distribute equally what we produce, so that each of us could exchange what he produces for what the other fellow produces at a fair and equal rate of exchange, the bogey of over-production that now frightens us so greatly would dlsapper. AS a regulator of production, es " pecially farm production, old Mother Nature has been a rather outstanding success. Everytlme she has turned her hand to the Job, during the several thous and years of which we have a his torical record, she has got away with it. If you went to Sunday school in the years when you should, you will remember Joseph's lnterpreatlon of the Pharaoh's dream of the seven fat cows and the seven lean cows which. he said, symbolized the seven years of lean production that follow the seven years of fat production. Even away back there, you e they recognized the fact that Nature in time, couree her own over-produc tion. MAN. on the other hand, has been a rather outstanding fizzle it regulating his own production and so boosting his own prices. In recent years, the British tried It In the case of rubber, with dis astrous results, and Brazil tried It Jn the case of coffee, with equally dis astrous results. THE special grain review of the bureau of agriculture economics of the department of agriculture, dated June 1, has this to say: "Prolonged dry weather through out most of the Important wheat producing countries of the Northern Hemisphere haa brought Irreparable and widespread damage to small grains and suggests the shortest wheat crop In recent years." It rather looks aa if Mother Nature might be taking a hand again at SAN FRANCISCO -him N) urn m After conferring with officials of unions In Sin Francisco, Mayor Angelo Rossi believed nromaet. ! wsra nngni ror an early return to worK of striking longshoremen in Pacific coast ports Millions of rini i lars worth of cargo ara tied up In the harbors. Mayor Rossi Is shown with a group of labor le.rt.V. tVx. lowing a discussion. Seated, left to right: Joseph P. Rysn, president of the Internstionsl i .V-V..... Association: Mayor kossi. Jonn F nneoan. I. I a. bkccui vi .nmiii..-.. e. ,: tie district secretary of ths teamsters union; John McLsughlln, San Francisco central labor council'. Wil liam J. Lewis, I. U A. district Dresldent. and Michael Cs.ev. Int.rntin,i ,..,..... . ... .ne"' .wl (Associated presa PhotA hex old Job of reducing over-production, 1 Communications Philosophy of a New Deal. To the Editor: I am addressing an open letter to your paper entitled "Pioneering in the Philosophy of a New Deal." I trust you may see In its content and context a contribution worthy of pub lication in the columns of The Mall Tribune : Pioneering In the Philosophy of New Deal. One of the main tasks before our western civilization Is to rationalize our standards of thought and action. In their relation to the affairs of dally life. Broadly speaking, the Jubilee and Pageant in Medford celebrating the state of Oregon's 75th year of state hood was something tangible, upon which to base the thought "Pioneer ing In the Philosophy of a New Deal' In the light of the fact that the Jubilee and Pageant fully sustained all the truths enunciated tn Secre tary of Agriculture Wallace's address, to the effect that the people of this western country did not know how near they were to the means of a solution for their problems. In the method, 1. e., symbolism and analogies embodied In the presenta tion of Oregon's progress representing 75 years of statehood, lies an ob scure truth. That Truth, brought to light, may well form a base for the solution of many an enigma In western life, as well as giving articu lation to Secretary Wallace's address. Upon such a base there Is ampl ground for a new technic in tho pre sentation and development of a com prehensible Idea, the Idea of a new philosophy of life. The germ of the Idea lies dormant In the peculiar culture of thought forms of the present day. Long ago the western philosophy hid the light of Its truths behind a bushel of speculative thought that dealt only with corporal forms. Metaphysically this created a bar ren and exhausted soil for the opera tive science of the intuitive. This new deal In philosophy would. as Oswald Spengler puts It tn his notable work "The Decline of the West." It would be a philosophy that expands Into the conception cf a morphology of world history, of the world-as-hlstory In contrast to the morphology of the world-aa-nature. The world -as-naturs that has only been the theme of philosophy. It Is with this Idea I am concerned. to call together here In Medford and elsewhere those interested in this 'great work." Those who look upon this task as one of building a new base, upon which the pillars of this new philos ophy will rest and provide and sue- taln a perephery more universal In perspective, to buttress in Its decad ence a philosophy of an era that has passed. This can be done. There Is no renl reason to oppose the proposal to start this movement here in Medford and fulfill the prophecy made long ago that this nation, under God, shall ex perience a new spiritual birth and dedication that government of the people, for the people, by the people shall not perish from the earth. O. I. MAXWELL. 310 Laurel street, Medford, Ore., June 15, 1034. Dizzy Job Washing the windows of the Sky Ride towers, 600 feet above the Chi cago World's Fair, Is a Job so tick lish that not even the professionals appllsd for It, but Joe Hrab, shown here, was one of the two who finally tackled It He doesn't seem to mind the dizzy height WS8.J ,'Sei- jj MAYOR STRIVES FOR STRIKE PEACE r "" Flight o Time (Medford snd Jackson Count) History from tbe Files ot The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Years SO.) TEN YEARS AUO TODAY. June 18, 1924. (It was Friday.) Healing prayers to be offered at Armory evangelistic meeting. William a. McAdoo predicts be will be nominated Democratlo candidate for president at national convention In New York. Bad weather prevails at Crater lake park. Gentle rain falls over; state, benefitting crops. Gov. Pierce mounts Newberg, Ore gon, pulpit and calls cigarettes "beastly." Also says uo employee of the state "la a drinking man." Prink Calllson leavea to attend tha coaching school at Eugene. Harold Lloyd in "Girl Shy" at Rl alto thrills tbe city. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY. June 18, 1014. (It wss Thursday.) Ths year's hottest day comes with the mercury at 97. The Rogue River valley sent a spe cial to Portland today carrying 22S passengera. And this from a com munity that Corvallis conservatives like to tell us has been killed "dead er than a door nail" by boosters. May the good Lord give us more dead ones if they are of the Medford cali bre. Corvallis Gazette Times. Medford merchants vote to close stores evenings during July and Aug ust. Drive started to eradicate weeds from streets and sidewalks. Local fishermen flock to Elk creek with good results. Snapshots From Camp Clatsop CAP CLATSOP, Ore., June 15. Much extended order drill has been given to the First Batalllon, 188th Inf., with Company A taking an ac tive part. Nearly seven hours in two afternoons taken up In that manner, taxing the strength as well as the patience of the men. However, re sponding to the drill with the full est degree of co-operation, the new members of the local command are beginning to understand It. T. O. (Ted) Baker, formerly secre tary of the Medford chamber of com merce, who is now spending his va cation at the summer resort, Sea side, near Camp Clatsop, was a vis itor of the company today, visiting the officers and the enlisted men. Mr. Baker expects to make frequent trips to the camp while It Is In prog ress, and will no doubt receive a hearty welcome from the entire company. The annual brigade field Inspec tion meet, usually slated for the first Saturday In camp, was pushed ahead this year, and as a result extra work was given to the company. Results of the Inspection have not been an nounced but It Is expected that the company will receive a good rating. Exceptional weather haa been the feature so far at the encampment, but no one knows how long It will last. Clatsop Is noted for Its sudden changes In weather conditions. New sentences and fmrases used fre quently by members of the company: "Eugene, you say the funniest things, you hag." Harry Du Doss. "That's the last straw, I'll tender my resignation." Ed Robbins. "Wanne make somethln out of It?1 Jerry Boshears and Ralph Cowglll. "I'm tired, let's rest." Bob Mur phy, Joe Rawhauser, Gene Coats. "Go down to the mess hall and get a yard of skirmish line." All cor porals. Flash! One of the biggest athletio events of the company was staged tonight between "Grandpa" Boyd, the pride of the first squad, and "Tarzan" Goodhtjw, flrey he-man of brawn and muscle, who decided to tangle for the Imaginary champion ship of the first platoon. After many moments of grunts, groans and other undeterminable noises, "Grandpa" Boyd finally emerged from a tangled heap and was proudly dragged off, the winner. WINDOW glass Wo sell window glass and will replace your broken windows reasonably. Trowbridge Cab inet Works.