PXGE FOUR
MEDFORD MAIL THTBLTNE, MEDFORD. ' OREGON, MONDXT, JULY 23, 1934.
Medford Mail Tribune
"Cwytnt In South Orttas
Hud tha Mall tilbuM"
Dally Biecpt Saturday
Putallihed bj
MEDKOHD PRINTINU CO.
i6 iT-ie .h. ru it. p&om f
BOBKUT W. BUHL, Bdltor
Ad Indiptndtnt Wwyaptf
littered u iMood elm matter at Uedford.
Ornoa, ondar Aet ot Uieh I, 18T.
flUBSCHlFTlON BATEf
R U aft in IrillDH
Daily, OM ru ,800
Daily, ill months I.f
pallr. om Boolb 00
B r.rlt In ArinneA MMford. ai&Uod,
JaekaooTlUa, Central Polot, Pnoenti, Talent, Gold
Bill and on Ukimifs.
Dailr, dm kv . $9.00
n.llf. alt nnntht
Dally, dm month 60
All ttnaa. sub la adranea
Official paper of tw Clti of Medford,
Ofrielal piper of Jaetrao County.
MZMBKR OF TIH AftlOt'lATKD PKESa
Barjtlrlm Iftill Leased Wirt BerrlC
Tin AMoclated Frew la ielmlly entllled to
in um for publleaUno of all otwt dUpaUhc
credited to It or oUitrwltt vedltod In tht paper
aid alio to Wit local new pubiUhed heraln.
All rlihU for puMlcatloD of ipecla) elipstebs
herein art ai rctmia.
MBMHKH OF UNIUD fUfcHS
MKMBH OP AUDIT BUHEAO
or CIKCUUTIONI
Admtltlng KeprtMtiUtlTOi
U. C. MOtJKNBKN COMPAN1
OfMeea Id New Tori, Cblraso, Detroit, 8u
rraneUeo m Anlti Beat t Is Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
In all the battling spawned by the
longshoremen's strike, it Is signifi
cant that no labor leader has sus
tained a bruised head from a baseball
bat, or Inflamed lungs from tear gas.
The possibility of thla occurring la
aa remote as the Mikado being Jabbed
In the fleshy part of the thigh with
t ayonet, In the event Japan and
Cn.na should do to war. It has been
the theory that the way to stop wars
la to put those who benefit most on
the battlefields, and Industrial peace
might come quicker If all the brains
of a strike were on the docks with
the brawn, when the young civil wars
start.
Press reports reveal that a hungry
man who threatened suicide unless
given a hamburger aandwlch, was
aaved. They evidently did not give
him the hamburger, ,
Borne unscrupulous woman helped
DUUnger escape. She la more danger
ous to society than the desperado
himself. It Is she and her kind who
make him seek a life of crime.
(Klamath Falls Herald) Let's put
the blame right where It belongs. Her
father never took her to one side, and
had a heart-to-heart talk.
Stylea In backgrounds for Oregon
hell raisers have changed. Descend
ant of the recent Jackson county va
riety all arrived on the Mayflower.
In the current crop, all their Grand
paws crossed the plains behind a pair
of oxen. This adds considerable dig- j
nlty, and lends a pioneer atmosphere
to the nonsense. The a rand paws who
arrived on the Mayflower, and by bull
team, were full of sturdy American
Ism, and If among the living today,
their grandchildren would not be en
deavoring to rip the foundation out
from under the Democracy they
helped to establish.
Speaking of bulldog determination,
in the face of 17 brands of beer, and
67 beer-parlors, there Is the cltleen
who never recovered from trying to
be a home-brewer, and continues to
make his neighborhood smell of malt
and hops.
A DOCTOR OF.TS TOLD.
(American Medical Journal)
Bir: When I get him cured
from the effects of that cement
you gave him to drink before
taking that x-ray which ruined
his bowels and he very near lost
his Ufa over It, I will pay you.
The action of the Oovernot in call
ing out the state mtlltla, ao they
would be handy, In case of an out
break of Portland Communlsta, caused
a number of Willamette valley poli
ticians to be careful what they said
for fear they would not be re-elected
to the legislature. It Is hoped no
voter will be Impertinent, and ask
any candidate how he ant on the fence
during the uprising.
Settlement of the Rus I an -American
debt haa rearhed "a stalemate,"
due to "lark of agreement on the ab
sorption." Why not let Russia, how
ever Inhumane, absorb nil the Amerl-ran-born
Bolshevlkls, and forget
about the money.
PLAIN INOKATITTnR.
An Italian barber of Baltimore,
brought up on Verdi, traveled all the
way to Jersey City last week, deter
mined to extirpate a crooner whose
broadcasts In the atudlo there were
not to his liking. He managed some
how to slip into the broadcasting
room and found his enemy busy at
work overloading the ether with sob
stuff. He fell upon him without ex
plaining the nature of his errand and
had bhn half strangled before the
proceedings were unfortunately Inter
rupted by the Intrusion of studio
hirelings.
For some obscure reason or other.
Instead of starting a movement at
once to give the barhrr the freedom
of Jersey City, or a life pension, or a
banquet, or at the very least erect a
monument to him atop of the Pall
aadte, the authorities ruthlessly led
him off to Jail. The rrnoner was let
go. (Boston Transcript.)
I'm atail Tribuu. iui ads.
MSMSaa -9
Editorial Correspondence
CHICAGO, 111., July On this extended eastern pilgrim
age we have heard no man in public life, more bitterly and
universally panned than General Hugh Johnson, major domo
of the NBA. "A martinet and windbag with no more knowledge
of practical business, than a jackrabbit," would be a mild sum
ming up of Big Business opinion.
General Johnson's practical knowledge of business may be
meagre but to our mind, in this industrial crisis on the Pacific
eoast, be has shown high qualities of intelligent leadership and
sound statesmanship.
lie has taken a middle ground, which in this crisis, as in
most crises, is the only right ground. He is alike opposed to
the dictatorship of a radical Or an ultra conservative minority.
He is against the foreign agitator who would incite a clans war;
he is also against the reactionary die hard, who would seize the
present opportunity to crush organized labor, and try to return
this country to a condition of industrial servitude.
He is for the upholding of our democratio institutions, the
securing of industrial and social peace, through a just and fair
settlement of differences, on a basis of the square deal to all,
and Bpccia! privileges to none.
On this program we are behind the somewhat intemperate
general till the cows come home, and believe a vast majority of
the people of this country, arc, or SHOULD be.
....
A score of people in this seething metropolis died from the
heat yesterday, and your correspondent considers himself lucky
that he was not listed among the number. There is only one
word for this Chicago combination of heat and humidity, and
that word is "killing."
That only twenty people succumbed, is a high tribute to the
powers of adjustment and resistance, that the human race has
acquired, under the strains and stresses of a modern civilization.
When the heat was at a maiimum, we undertook another
foray into the Century of 1'rogrcss, and about four o'clock were
packed in with about a hundred other "nuts" before an exhibit
in Ripley's "Believe it or not" Odditorium.
The neurotic appearing "barker" was showing the boobs,
the physiological idiosyncracics
mens, a man and a woman. Just ns some beetle browed and
evil looking female, masquerading in a nurse's costume, pulled
up the body of one exhibit and let it fall, on the operating table,
with a dull thud, and then vibrate, like a grotesque and macabre
tuning fork, someone in front of us dropped to the floor, as if
hit by an invisible sledge hammer.
The crowd fell bark. There a young girl lay prone on her
face, the World's Fair cane she had been carrying clattered
away from her on the wooden floor.
....
An usher forced himself through the crowd, brushed aside
the girl's boy friend, who stood there lookine at the nronc
figure as if he were paralyzed, knelt down and applied what
he no doubt regarded as first aid. This consisted in trvinir to
pull the poor girl to her feet, by main force. FORTUNATELY,
someone with as much sense as a primary-grade boy scout,
interfered, rested the younsr lady's head unon a folded coat.
elevated her feet, and applied
consciousness quickly, but was still dazed and as white as a
pan of milk. Her rescuer, now assisted by the usher, helped her
to her feet, and the nitwit escort, having retrieved the cane,
followed them to the nearest exit.
This incident only consumed perhaps a couple of minutes,
though it seemed to at least one witness as much longer. The
dope addict resumed his "barking" and the crowd packed in a
solid mass again, moved on to see a colored gent who looked ns
though he had just escaped from the chain gnng, push a hatpin
through his nose, and drive a ten penny nail, into one nostril I
....
VERT edifying, particularly with the thermometer at D8,
and the humidity only a fow degrees lower.
Having a pass we were shunted to a side entrance where we
met the great Mr. Ripley, who presented us with a mimeograph
copy of the wonders of his great show, and was no doubt sur
prised to find the Mail Tribune not numbered among his clients.
We wish to throw no asparagus upon his gifts as a sort of
typographical P. T. Barnum nor denv fnr A moment llmr
"Bolieve It Or Not" is an excellent featurebut we are quite
content to forego any more side shows until Ringling's comes
to town, and tho weather is cooler.
....
The "house of the future" is nothing for wnlnrf..
tainly not an Oregonian to enthuse Over. Tt ia mnriA nntiraltr
of steel and glass and combinations of one or the other, without
a pieoe of wood in it. There is nothine in it to rot. or burn.
nothing in it to sweep except with a hose nnrl Wa ilnn 't Ann v
a steel chair rocking on a steel
it sounds. But if we ever get together enough money to build
a new house, we fear we will not order one of these futuristic
contraptions and thus increase the profits of the U. S. Steel
corporation. Wo don't mind havincr Porcelain hth Mn. n
even a kitchen, but when it comes to a porcelain HOUSE we
admit it Ye Editor is hopelessly old fashioned. He likes soft
una nara wooa about mm.
....
The Ford exhibit is worth seeine if onlv to ohsorv. (Wa
young men in white uniforms
tucii luii-nciius wmen iney use at times, swing various aerial
contraptions about and put a new Ford together with three taps
of a hammer. Not a stroke is missed or a false motion made.
It is a perfect demonstration of mnmifnrtiirin,. . 1. m.u k
the greatest automotive genius of all time. To be fair and im
partial we should also have visited the General Motors building
" o ,1? "l le,lst a fect fnrtller on-ond at that stage of the
gnmo, 300 feet looked like 300 miles. Had it been negotiated
it might have been equivalent to 3 million I R. W. R.
ASHLAND. July JS. (Special.)
Motorlit. of Ashland and vicinity
re warned aal!-;; the dangrmue
condition of the undercrosalug north
of the city. Construction haa pro
grcnml to the stage where It haa
been noceuary to build a detour
around the site of the temporary
trestle, and motorists who are tin
wary or who approach the Incline at
a high rate of swed may easily meet
with disaster, cither In the form of
skidding on the loose earth, or
through collision with same eolith
or noith hound automobile.
The temporary trestle la rapidly
neiuiug completion, and ei-avatlon
on the final atnge of the worlt will
begin soon.
INFANT SON ARRIVES FOR
LIEUT. AND MRS. HARRELL
Lieutenant and Mrs. tlen llarrell
are the parrnta of a son, born Bun
flay, July 33. at fwt Warren. Wyom
ing. Mrs. llarrell, the former Har
riet Campbell of Mfdljrd, U the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charlra
Campbell of this city.
Amerlcan-draigurtl alrplanea are
proving to be the moat popular on
many European air Hues bevaut of
their speed.
of a couple of ossified speci
his hat as a fan. She regained
spring is more comfortable than
and behind glass, with eoecles
HERE FROM EAST
Thrr hundred ninety nw CCC
memtwrs arrived !n the Medford dis
trict toclsy from Fort Sterldn. 11!.
The men are replacing thona recent.;
dlchsrjrei at the. expiration of their
enlistment.
The train v accompanied by two
officers, two medical officers and five
enlisted men. Following is the llt of
camps with the number of replace
ment, a-wlftned to each: China Flats.
2fl; MYKtnley, Pfl; Vyee, 72; Steam
boat. 40; Tiller. 33; Rand. 57; Wlne
glUAs, 60; and outh Fork. 38.
Ths train arrived in Medford at
11:40 a. m., after atopplnjt to unload
men at noaebt.Tip. Riddle and Orants
VMM.
More Hike llmnM.
BRISTOL, Conn. Bicycle pro
durtton In the United States In the
flrnt six months of 1jm4 totaled
215.000 units, a pain of (55 per cent
over the same period of last year
according to an announcement from
the Cycle Trades office In Bristol.
Hfmi eat her.
Fair tonight and "Tuesday, but over
Cfist on coaM; rlrine. tempirature in
eiwt portion; moderate northwest wind
offahore,
lt Mail Til buna vaul ads.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D.
Signed lettert pertaining to personal health and hyr,irn not to du
eaaa dlainoili or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brad; U a stamped
self-addressed envelop la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In
Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received onl; few can be an
swered. No reply can be made to querlee not conforming to Instructions.
Address Dr. William Brad;, 65 El Cumlno, Beverly Hills, Cat.
IS Tim GOKMAND t'OMI'AKA BLE WITH THE INEBRIATEr
Heretofore It has been Just a little'
shameful to admit that one habitu
ally overeat. It seems a weak and
ib- a sinful Indulgence.
gorging so much
food all the time.
Nearly as bad as
the drlnksr who
boasta he can
take It or let It
alone, but leu It
alone only when
he can find no
good excuse to
lake It.
In one respect
it Is not quite
fair to compare
t.-.c g.uuci. with the drunkard. One
who craves alcohol has deliberately
cultivated a taste for liquor, In spite
of all warnings against resorting to
It In the first place. One who eats
too much good food la merely striv
ing to satisfy a demand of the body
for nutriment, a demand Jie certainly
did not cultivate. However, It ap
pears that what U good for the glut
ton Is good for the sot. There is
some similarity between the craving
for alcohol and the craving for exces
sive food, and perhaps by removing
or satisfying the latter we can cor
rect the latter. Mind, I don't know
anything specific about this. It's Just
one of those crazy notions that pop
into my head sometimes.
Years ago I conceived the theory,
and broached it here any of you old
timers remember? that the boiling
of coffee for breakfast must be what
drives a lot of men to drink. I had
observed that the men In homes or
boarding houses where you can smell
the coffee boiling before you get down
to stop the outrage were likely to be
confirmed drinkers, and I sympa
thized with them and thought by
Jingo if I ever marry wife who
treats the coffee like ' flat I'll take
to drink myself. I evet ventured to
Interfere with the domestic economy
In a few Instances, but did not boost
my stock with the cook and In some
cases the poor fish I waa trying to
help blurted out that blled waa the
way he liked tt ... so I said to my
self to . . .
But I manage to keep calm and un
flabbcrgasted when I smell the coffee
being ruined nowadays. I've revised
my earlier theory about the relation
between the foul concoction left after
you have driven the aroma off from
a pot of coffee and the craving for
strong drink. You see, we hadn't
heard about vitamins when I formu
lated my theory.
Now I believe the dissipation of the
aroma of the coffee Into the air is
only an earnest, so to speak, of what
the housewife or cook Is doing to the
rest of the food. She would put soda
In the peas or beans to make 'em
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK, July 23. Diary: Be
ttmf for a anack at a sidewalk cafe.
And to the draper s and home read
ing the mall.
there being halls
from Frank Buck,
Bill C o r u m.
Charles Q. Nor
rls, Louolla Par
sons, Arthur
Samuels and Ir
vin Cobb. Also
a telegram from
Rosle Dolly. So
at my chore,
knocking it off
quick time.
In the after
noon through
town, stopping a
moment with Ornntlnnd Rice, and
came upon Cholly Knickerbocker, too.
Along the Library wall a Cockney
fellow selling suspenders had tne most
comical spiel ever I heard. So much
so I gave him a billet to Max Gor
don of the theaters.
Squiring my wife and Genevieve
Cooper to the Casino and spoke to
the Post master-General Farley and
"Duke" Herrlck and Joe Moore camo
to the table awhile. Afterward, dnv
Ing through the produce district.
Jostling with trucks and cwite and
aromatic with many lrults.
Peddlers of suburban real estAte
have hit upon a novel sales Idea. In
stead of ftaddlng their prospects all
over the countrywide, they Invite them
to their skyscraper offices and show
miniature films of caIaU'S they have
to sell.
Just one summer road-house. Is do
ing anything like tu-n-away business.
Tills Is a carnival-like spot a short
spin over Washington bridge, where
nmadway gathers In the hope of
catching the Introductory eye of a
master of ceremony. The roof gar
dens, too, have had tough going be
cause of Imitation Cafes de la Pa x
that sprout In every crevice. Mid
town now has 29.
Personal nomination for the most
expert toucher-off of literary discus
sions Burton Raeeoe.
Now another autograph era
leftover from the fleet. Youngster,
ere areklng algnaturea for their white
!tob can... now ao popular. A fat little
raaoal came waddling in today with
one Inscribed witrt a loni list ranst
inu from Babe Ruth to Joe Penner
I told him Sinclair 1-ewla was lunch
ing at the Waldorf and he. left with
a daniroua aleam. He looked a
though he'd (ret his men
1 went to the Po'.o Grounds the
other afternoon to see a prore!onsl
ball game the first time In e:::t
rears, ran., haven't the firvor t:ia
vwed to fountain Into a slower cf
pop lottlea. So one called the u:n
pipe a ao-and Nor wa. tin re a
euile svrap In tlie bleachers. Tcr-
soft and ahe should worry about the
vitamin value destroyed by the soda.
She would pare the potatoes and
throw the parings away Instead of
cooking and serving them with their
Jackets on. And wherever there Is the
alternative she would select the nice
refined, pure bleaohed sugar, rice, flour
or other staple when she might Just
as well get crude brown sugar or old
fashioned molasses (without sulphur
ous acid) or wild or brown rice or
whole wheat flour or undoctored
wheat Itself.
It Is my present theory mind It Is
not a thing X can prove scientifi
cally that the robbing of the vita
mins and minerals by these wrong
habits of manufacturing, cooking and
serving food has something to do with
Inebriety. I feel certain it Is an Im
portant factor, perhaps the chief fac
tor of oversize, and any regimen de
signed to reduce obesity or to prevent
It must take Into consideration this
general deficiency in our food.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Ivy Poison.
Troubled with poison ivy and su
mac. Have tried hypo soda, sugar of
lead, potassium permanganate, gaso
line and two prescriptions from doc
tors. It keeps coming back every
year. I have heard of taking fluid
extract of Ivy or eating a leaf In the
spring . , . B. O. H.
Answer Many persons subject to
recurring ivy poisoning believe they
gain Immunity by eating, not a whole
leaf, but a wee portion of a leaf of
poison ivy In the early spring, aay a
portion the size of a rice grain. If
this causes no Irritation of the mouth
or stomach, a week later eat half a
leaf. Then if no unpleasant reac
tion; after another week chew a
whole leaf. Or the same effect may
be obtained by eating the Ivy berry.
Send stamped envelope bearing your
address and ask for monograph on
ivy poisoning. It- gives directions for
taking a homeopathic dose progres
sively increased to develop Immunity.
Any of these methods may be of par
ticular value In cases of chronic der
matitis following Ivy poisoning.
Rational Reduction.
In 1020 my sister reduced 30 pounds
In about two months by following
the Carol diet, I think It was, that
you suggested . . . (Mrs. A. P.)
Answer We have more rational
methods now. I no longer recom
mend the Karell regimen. Send 10
cents and s.a.e. for booklet, "Design
for Dwindling."
(Copyright. 1934, John F. DUle Co.)
Gd. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letters direct to Dr.
Will In in Brady. M. D., 265 El ea
rn I no, Beverly Hills, Cal.
haps Imagination, but there was none
of the enthusiasm of the days when
Mike Don 1 In slapped the apples over
the garden wall and Matthewson fan
ned three In a row. Also players,
as policemen do after 40, seemed so
amazingly boyish. Only hot dog sell
ers a nd p rogra m p assers we re un
chnnged. There's a wrench for me in those
umbrellaed perambulating Iced drink
stands near ball parks and other pub
lie amusements. So often they are
the sole assets of men who speak
little English valiants who snatched
at the big opportunity and missed
and are trying to renr families catch
penny fashion. They are eager and
fluttery over a sudden Jet of trade.
Some day I'm going to round up a
gang of hungry kids around one, give
them carte blanche and have a nor
ton or ao myself.
The collar ad. pugilist, Enzo Fler
monte, is already crowding Max Haer
for first place among the feminine
heart pumpers. His plunge Into the
social pool and subsequent salvaging
gives him a social glow almost as
mirror-slick m his marcelle. A hand
klaslng prize-fighter Is something en
tirely new. As first page stuff it
equal Gene Tunney's Intellectual
rambles with George Bernard Shaw
in Brlone.
Bagatelles: George White haa fes
tured eight stars of his vaudeville
days . . . Robert O. Sherwood is turn
in? out a Reno play , . . Pauline
Fredericks la reported doing an auto
biography that will atartle Holly
wood , . Hervey Allen's "Anthony
Adverse" royalties have gone Into a
steel-riveted annuity , . . Max Baer
has proved the most disappointing
tipper among champions . . . The
Mill Hayi are off for Hawaii.
I was bragging a mite after din
ner tonight about the generosity of
readers how letters and often cable
grama cams from Europe, Australia
and even Africa. "And don't forget."
called a feminine voice from the next
room, "that post-card from Scotland!"
Copyright, 1934. McNaught Syndi
cate, Ine )
Gold Beach Tides
rime at mouth of Rogue River:
Hlh Mate',
A. M.
P.M.
34 Tue... ..
35 Wed.
35 Wed. ...
2o Thurs.
a7 m
3 Sat
39 8un ....
11:17 5S
10:31 87
13:11
1 39
13 00
1:39
3:30
3:00
13:34
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a 8
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Low Ytatcr.
A M
50 -0 7
5 44 -1 3
8:52 -1 4
P M
4 31 11
34 Tuea ...
i 35 Wed
I 3A Thurs.
1 37 m.
I 38 Sit.
: 3d eTun.
3 27
28
7:31
8:14
9:07
t:19 -1 J
8 00 -1 3
8:40 -0 8
The firei cabin built in Utah. In
IS41, and Inter lined as the slate s first
.v-stoffioe. is pte.erved on the 0$.1en
tabernacle gvcunds.
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS.
YOU may be tired of the strike, as
a subject for reading and con
versation, but you can't fall to be in
terested In this dispatch from San
Francisco:
The loss to business and commerce
from Paclflo Coast strikes since the
longshoremen started the walkout
movement on May 9 exceeds TWO
HUNDRED MILLION dollars, esti
mates obtained by the Associated
Press today Indicated.
"This doea not Include San Fran
cisco bay general strike losses, which
were Incalculable."
WHO will pay this two hundred
million dollar loss, do you ask?
Why, we ALL will, of course. In
one way or another, each of us will
dig down Into his pocket and pay his
share of this two and a half months
of Industrial warfare Just as each of
us, In one way an another, has paid
his share of the cost of the world
war.
No one can escape paying his share
of losses that affect the entire com
munity. YOU read In this volumn the other
day that the tax bill for the
United States last year amounted to
the enormous sum of nine billion
dollars- -approximately a 1 ,500,000,000
more than was spent for food In the
same period.
You may have chuckled, and aald
to yourself: "Aha, somebody ELSE
paid that bill, for X pay no taxes.'
Don't fool yourself. You paid your
share of that nine billion dollar tax
bill, whether or not you put up a
cent directly to the tax collector. It
entered into the cost of doing busi
ness, si- jad to jt added to the price
of EVERYTHING you bought.
Because of that staggeringly heavy
tax load, the burden YOU carried was
heavier than It would otherwise have
been.
IN ALMOST every issue of the news
papers and the magazines we read
and In practically every release of
newsreels we see, we are told of the
damage that is being wrought by
drouth In the Middle West.
Here on the Pacific coast, our
crops are uniformly good and because
of drouth damage in the Middle West
prices for what we will harvest this
fall are higher than they would other,
wise have been.
So we may say to ourselves: "The
drouth In the Mississippi valley is
helping us, Instead of hurting us.
What Is their loss back there is OUR
GAIN."
AGAIN, don't fool yourself.
Whatever hurts any considerable
part of this great country hurts ALL
OF US in the long run.
We may think at the moment that
because of the drouth In the Middle
West, which reduces production there
and ao Increases the price of what
we have to sell, we are better off.
But, In the long run, we WON'T
be.
THE MIDDLE WEST eats our fruit
and uses our lumber. When crope
are good and the great Mississippi
Valley la prosperous. It has the money
with which to buy what we have to
sell.
But when crops are bad and the
Mississippi Valley ISN'T prosperous,
we suffer along with It through loss
of markets for what we have to sell.
ALL OF WHICH brings us back to
the strike, and the losses suf
fered on the Pacific Coast as a re
sult of it. These losses will be shared
by everybody capital and labor and
the great neutral body known as the
public.
It's a pity we can't all get together
and settle our differences in a lf
costly way.
Communications
Thinks 40 Cents Reasonable.
To the Editor:
On Thursday night, July 19, the
Cannery and Agricultural Workers"
Industrial Union held Its wage con
ference, where they voted by the rank
and file that 40 cents per nour would
be their demand. Now we think this
a reasonable demand for which we
hereby present our figures.
According to figures gathered from
various farmers show that the cost of
producing one ton of pears, all labor,
water and material used for spray
figured, also delivery charges to pack
ing shed, ranges from 110 to 120 pe
ton, leaving the grower a profit of
13 50 at the maximum cost, If he
receives 133 50 for hta peart. Other
figures have been received as to pears
packed in boxes at the plant, where
the figures show that the cost is
about tl 35 per box. For such pears
the grower will receive at least t2 50
or $3 75 pr box, leaving him a mini
mum profit of II 35 per be x. or about
30 00 per ton. orchard run. We are
klng the grower, are cur demands
too much?
C. A. BARNETT.
Projects affiliated with Boulder dam
will ultimately use more than 30.
000.000 pounds cf copper, according
to figures of the Arizona copper tar
iff toluol.
Feared Kidnaped
Pre 'wii
A ' ' '
v " y
Bobby Connor, 21 months old, wal
believed kidnaped from his home at
Hartsdale, N.N. He Is the son ol
Charlea H. Connor, employed by the
state Insurance department. Blood
hounds failed to pick up the ohild'a
Irall and posses, aided by boy scouts,
beat through dense woods around
Hartsdale In search of him. An
ccentrio drug peddler was sought
'Aaaoclated Press Photo)
(Continued irbm Page one)
tratlon are full of bustle and serious
thinking.
The bustle Is produced not only by
the coming and going of messengers,
but also by the scores of candidates
for positions. Staifs for both of these
bodies have to be created and, besides
that, particularly In the case of the
stock exchange committee, an ex
haustive set of regulations has to be
worked out. It will be some time be
fore the machinery will be completed
and In smooth working order.
Incidentally, In regard to the stock
exchange committee, Joseph P. Ken
nedy, the chairman, red-headed and
father of nine children, appears to
have overcome entirely the suspicion
with which he was at first regarded
in anti-Wall street quarters. Because
he had been a speculator and opera
tor of several lucrative pools, the so
called liberal crowd was very frosty
toward his appointment and readv to
snarl when he appeared to take up
his duties. But this did not happen.
K-enneoy has such a ready, cordial
and engaging manner that he soon
had even the critical warming up to
him.
Card or Thanks.
We wish to thank our many friends
for the beautiful floral nffrintj u
kindness and sympathy they extended
to us in our saa bereavement. Mrs.
Elmlra Vinson. Mra. fltani-v vinrh.
Alle Vinson, Reuben Vinson, Annie
Vinson.
Notice.
After this date I shilt no I-.nger be
responsible for deDt incurred by my
wife. Mrs. L, R. Chandler.
(Signed) LE ROY CHANDLER.
In the first half of 1934. 265 new
oil wells were drilled In California
fields, compared with 199 for the
same period of 1933.
Los Angeles school districts will
spend nearly 111.000.000 this year re
habilitating buildings damaged by
earthquake.
American tourists bulnem In Oir-
many this year Is estimated by tour-
isi agencies ai to per cent oi last
year. 1
MEMBER. 1HE ORDER
Indeed! We Are!
Is the Perl Funeral Home prepared
to give a service to any person in
this areat Unquestionably I It makes
no difference who a person is or
what his means; we can serve him.
Should anyone care to learn the
facts about our service in advance
of need, one may have the informa
tion for the askinir.
PERL FUNERAL HOME
Mo,zticicuti
3 OP COUNTY CORONER. P
SIXTH AT OAKDALE -PHONE. 47
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson Conntj
History from the Wee 91 fbe
Mall Tribune of tl) and 10 Year,
Ao)
TEN YEARS AOO TODAY
July 13. 1924.
(It use Tuesday.)
New drive launched for construction
of railroad to Creeeent City.
Dry officer, seeking a still In tne
Sieltlyoue come upon a cache Of mor
phine, and other drugs,
j. prank wortman of Phoenix denies
report that he hoe deserted the Demo
cratic party "because of blow to pride
of William Jennings Bryan.'
Rate of Interest to farmers to be
lowered.
Mra. Darwin a. Tyree return, from
trip to San Francisco.
E. M. Wilson, aocountsnt, injured
In an auto wreck a month ago, la
able to be downtown.
Tax Centralization" meeting to be
called.
TTTENTY YEAR9 AGO TODAY
July 23, 19U.
(It was Wednesday.)
Mount Lassen erupts for the 18th
time.
Huerta resigns as president of Mex
ico. War and rumors of var fill the
European air.
Farmers and Fruitgrowers league
adopts a constitution.
John Cochran plans a summer cot
tage at Fish lake.
Two months after it occurred, war
rants are Issued for the "Prospect
dance battle."
plans arrive for new Federal build
ing here, and work will start soon.
THE GRANGE
Lake Creek,
For lecture hour at the next meet
ing of Lake Creek Grange, July 37,
Lecturer Julia Sldley asks all mem
bers to respond to roll-call with some
form of entertainment to be selected
by themselves. A vote will be taken
to determine which number was most
enjoyed and a prize awarded the win
ner. At the last meeting, Alma Meyer
was unanimously elected Flora, to fill
the vacancy left when Donna Brown
was married to Donald Young and
moved to California to make her
home.
An enjoyable program was present
ed, as follows: Vocal solo with guitar
accompaniment, "Hobo Yodel," by
Wallace R&gsdale; current event,
"Slash Pine Newsprint," by Myrtie
Charley; sketch of life of Alfred Lord
Tennyson and reading "Crossing the
Bar," by Alma Meyer; vocal solos,
"When Irish Eyes Are Smiling" and
"Slumber Boat," by Lillian Bates of
Portland, accompanied by Do roth a
Ragsdale; sketch of life of Samuel
Taylor Coleridge and reading "Rhyme
of the Ancient Mariner," by Beth
Zundel; reading, "In the Usual Way."
by Lillian Bates; story by Mary Moore;
vomI duet, "Pagan Love Song," by
Lillian Bates and Wallace Ragsdale,
with guitar accompaniment by Wal
lace Ragsdale.
Use Mall Tribune want ads.
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Large Stocks
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