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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1935)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON. THURSDAY. MARCH 7, 1935. Medford Mail Tribune "Cmvont lfl Southern Ortgoe Read, thi Hail Tribunt' Daili Eicfpt Saturday l'iih!ttid by MEDKOIII) 1'HINTINO CO. N. Kir 8L Phoot tl BOBKHT W. BLHL, Editor An lndfpnd(Dt Ntppf Ectwtd u iccnDd rlui milter at Medford, Orgn. under Art irf March 8, 18T0. Sl'USt KIl'TION RATES Br Mail in Adtance Dally, on year 5.00 Pally, lis motiUu 8- Pilly. one monlb 60 By farrier In Advance MMford. Aabland, JaebonviUe. Central Toll. Pboenli, Talent, Cold Bill and on Hiliaji. Tally, one year SS.00 Daily, ail nwnthi 3-25 Dally, one month 0 All term, cash In idtanct. Official piper of the Cltj of Medford. orricial paper of Jacktoo County. MEM K Kit OK TUB ASSOCIATED PRBBfl itM-Kiiint ifuli laied Wire Serrica Tie Atwciated Preu la eiclutltely entitled to the um for public Moo of all nni aiipatcnee credited to It w otherwise credited In trtii paper nd alto to 'he lal ners published hrreln. All richti for (Mihlkatioo of apedal dlapatchat herein are i1m menrd. MKMBEB OF UNITED PRESS MEM Br. R OF AUDIT RUKEAD OF CIRCULATIONS AdiertltlnB Repreientatltei M. C. M 01 ; ENS EN k CO MP A NT Offirei In Ne York, Clilcago, Detroit, San Kranrftro Loa Angflea Seattle Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Terry Spring "viewing with alarm," and alarming with vlewa, baa started In this vicinity. The Oakland Development league of Oakland; Douglaa county, an nounces it will "course coyotea" to exterminate the varmints. It la an tic I pa ted that the coyotes will bt adroit In evading the "couraera" aa In the past they eluded hunters, trappers, and other enemies. The Oakland Development league, how ever, ta to be congratulated lor try Ing to make the killing of a coyote a civic duty, and a aoclal aucceaa. LEU ANO LANGUAGE FRACTURED, (lola (Kiui.) Register. Mr. and Mrs. Chris Ounn, who la a aon of the Qunna In our neighborhood, wont to Hastings last week to see her niece by her first husband, who' slipped on the runntng board of her new Dodgo so badly that one of the la tier's limb may bt out of Joint, near McCook. Sen. Robinson suggests that Ben. Euey Long and Oen. Hugh Johnaon, whose long-distance exchange of com pliments caused oratorical outbreaks on the floor of congress, settled their differences with their flats. This meets public approval, If It can be accomplished without voting Mo 678,334. IB for boxing gloves. Making friends with mountain lions, deer and rattlesnakes Is Just part of the day's work, Jean Parker (right), motion picture star, told local clubwomen, who greeted her here today. Picture caption. SP. Cnll-Bulletln) Not mentioning any acquaintance with the bull. . ' The. measure to hold the primary lection In September, lnatead of May. passed the legislature. It con flicts with harvesting, deer hunting, and the early fall fishing, but short ens the time a candidate looks sad and honest, EYOIXTIOX A SO ON. (Iu m pn (Tex.) Legal News) IUrs make paper, paper makes money, money makes banks, banks make poverty, poverty makes rags, rags make paper, pnprr makea money, money makes banks, banks make poverty. Pictures or Mrs. Hnuptmann. wife of the convicted slayer and kid naper of the Lindbergh baby, dressed much better than during the New Jersey trial collecting funds from audiences. She uses a cylinder shaped tin can aa a depository Instead of the traditional hat. Into which emo. tlonal Americans have dropped their nickels and dlmra since the founding of the republic. There may be con siderable wisdom In using a recep table that nerds a can-opener, be fore an audit uf the receipts can be made. It also precludes the possl blllty of a ptitrlot officiating aa the Grand Parser or the Hat while bat tling for Honesty in Government and Justice, absconding with both the hat and the contents. The present weather Is "unusual," but the right time of the year for It. 5(l KAM1SIINKMS: THE t'.U MR But Instead of this bring a speech on citizenship. It la to be a political -ech. and I must talk about my party and Its achievement- I like to do this. I am like the maiden lady who read a wild newspaper story to the errrct that kissing waa a dangerous practice, and If allowed to continue that great pestllen might sweep over the land, claiming thousands of lives. Immediately op reading this the lady hurried away to her family physician. "Why did you feme to me?" "Well, a man kiwrt me," she rrplied. "When were you kled?" drmnnded the physic ian. The Isdy knit her brows In deep t .ought for a moment and aald. "Some this next spring, It will hare been 14 years.' "Madame," roared the doctor, "you are In no danger, and It Is foolish for you to come to me abcut this." "Well. said the lady, -really I didn't think I wsa In any danger, but don't you know I Just love to talk shout iCong. Record) Will Huey Be President? VKS, Huey Long is out to "GET' President Koosevelt. He is only attacking the outworks now, for he considers the President too strong for an immediate frontal attack. But when he disposes of Farlpy, Robinson and Johnson, he will tackle the President himself. Huey is smart. He senses the increasing unrest, the inevit able reaction against the New Deal. With a presidential cam paign only a year off, he clearly realizes now is the time to strike. To publicly discredit any of these three men, will greatly weaken Roosevelt in the coming campaign. Farley is the practi cal politician and campaign executive par excellence. Robinson is the party leader in the senate. On the stump General Johnson would be invaluable to the President in 1936. So why not kill two birds with one stone! Enjoy the fruits of sweet revenge, for Huey personally hates all three of these men with a malignant, uncompromising hatred and at the same time, prepare the way for his rabble-rousing assault upon the White House. That is clearly Huey's plan. And when Huey makes up his mind to do a thing, he sets about to do it, if he can. WE realize under present confused conditions, the hazards of prophecy particularly where a "political outlaw" like Huey Long is Concerned ; nevertheless we predict that Huey will come a cropper this time, as far as his main purpose is con cerned. For his main purpose of course is to be president himself. His nomination as a Third party candidate in 3936 is not incon ceivable; but that he will ever be President, we regard as so unlikely, as to be fantastic. No the American people may be discontented, disappointed, and in some cases resentful, but by and large they have not completely lost their sense or sense of humor. THERE have been other periods of depression and social un rest in this country. There have been other table thumping demagogues, of the Huey Long type, who have capitalized dis content to their own political advantage. But the American people have never elected a demagogue for President and in our judgment they never will. The reason goes back to Abraham Lincoln's sound doctrine, that you can fool all the people, some of the time; and some of the people all the time; but not all the people all the time In other words time works months go by, the severity of the depression which has been so favorable to Huey 'a technique,- will become steadily less so. But even more important, the demagogue always has a fatal weak ness in his armor, when his aspirations for high office are con cerned. .... HE can appeal to avarice and class envy; he can point with nrtHft to, hilt hntrerl nf Yl'Pfllth. nrA lnvA fnr Vn AAmmr.n man; he can incite the mob and alarm the timid; but he can't at long last disguise the fact, that all these virtuous protesta tions are merely a smoke screen, to cover up the fact that "He, the demagogue", is first, last and all the time, REALLY inter ested in no ONE, and no THING but himself.- That is inevitably the demagogue's Achilles heel. And polit ical history from the days of ancient Greece to the present time, demonstrates it. Sooner or later, even the people to whom the demagogue most appeals, get wise to the fact, and his brief span of power and glory ends as suddenly as it started. "PHIS would be partioularly true in this country, and where the highest office in the land is eonoerned. For there is one quality which the American people have always demanded in a President and we believe always will, that is INTEGRITY of character. He may hold to this political theory or to that, but he must ring true, he must be esscnutially sinoere, and be dependable, in tho most comprehensive definition of that term. Huey Long is none of these do anything, compromise anything, if such tactics promise to bring him votes. He is the perfect demagogue, the perennial opportunist ; in his own mind the man of destiny, but in reality only the man of the hour. . COME people who have observed Huey's meteoric rise to Gov ernor, U. S. senator, and now absolute dictator of his home state, believe that with his sound trucks, his high-powered radio station, his keen sense of mob psychology, and his plea of share-the-woalth, nothing can stop him from taking over the White House. Such a fear we believe is based upon an imperfect knowledge of the peculiar political conditions that existed in Louisiana, the abuses that had been going on there so many years, the unbelievable social and economic conditions that prevailed, and also an imperfect kuowledge of the man himself. Probably no one will "get" Huey. But sooner or later, our prediction is Huey will get HIMSELF. As long as the present unrest continues we predict Huey will remain a power in Wash ington and in his own state; he will be a thorn in the flesh of the democratic party, and will therefore be able to trade politi cally with GREAT profit to himself, Hut under no circumstances will he ever realize his great and all absorbing ambition, which is of the I'nited States. Steiwer Seeking PWA Amendment WASH1NOTON. March 7. (API Stnator Sl.lw.r R, Or.) Introduced today an amendment to tht new public worka bill to Include river and harbor development, and bridges within Ita acope. He explained development or rlvera and harlwra waa one of the chief needa of the Pacific northwest and. aa the bill was reported out of com mittee. It would be ImpoeMble to obtain public worka funds tor such work. The same ta true of hrtritr the senator said. ALYCE JANE McHENRY CONTINUES IMPROVE FALL RIVER. Mass.. March 7. (API Alyce Jane McHenry. 10-year-old Omaha, Neb., girl, operated upon Monday at Truesdale hospital to cor rect her Inverted stomach, "appeared brighter today" and "has retained food for to past 34 hours." against the "Kingfish." As the things. He will say anything, to be President (and dictator-! PORTLAND, March 7. (AP) Wil liam J. Bush, 38, died today from In juries suffered last night In an acci dent Involving two automobiles and a motor stage. Pie Mall Tribune want ads. WEAK WOMEN V young women suffer from periodic pains in side ot hack, they shoutc take that VfRe UMe tonic favor ably known foi sixty years as Dr Pierce's Favorite Prescription Then. too. ih woimm of middle te, svinit ihtuihf "chincf f liff" nmli Ihu drndiMe Ionic Mti Jof lltm.fr d lh Ave. S. F, IVrtlind Orrg , Mid: "1 fflt H:fd t:id .vn out mmi of the lime. I tiid frequent heiU:hri ind everv effort htmt a burden tn me 1 ue.l ttr. Pierre' Fvonte Pre npn r and it ItuiU me up and I hid no more head Slhr ' .Ml dnntitU INw inf. uMtli SO Ctl , li juid 11,00, Personal Health Service By William binned letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be a lowered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-ad-dresed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. On Ing: to the iarjje number of letters received only a few ran be answered. No reply ran be made to queries not conforming to Instructions, Address Dr. William Brady, 265 El (amino, Beverly Hills, cel. LIFE IN A LE Many who read this will recall the heartless way In which the authori ties of this country, some of them health officers, hounded the leper Early from one Jurlfidlc 1 1 o n to another not so many years ago. The unfortunate victim o f this vicious persecu tlon might have been Public En emy A-l. from the way his pur suit by our offi cers waa featur ed In the head lines. In the last fiscal year (ending June 30, 1934) 64 new patients were admitted to tha National Leprosar ium, Carvllle, Louisiana. Of these, SO had not previously been In the In stitution, three were former patients who had been paroled but whose leprosy had again become active, and five were previously released patients who returned for treatment of secon dary conditions, but whose leprosy showed no signs of clinical or bac teriological reactivation. , Seventeen patients absconded dur ing the year; six of there were read mitted. Nine aliens were deported as not entitled to hospitalization at the expense of the United States govern ment. Twenty patients were paroled, of whom two elected to remain In the hospital. Bead that last statement over again, you good citizens who get all excited at the very suggestion of lep rosy. Two of the twenty patients who were paroled elected to remain In the hospital. Is there anything .trange about that? The answer depend? on how much you know about the disease recog nized aa leprosy today, probably a number of diseases, an we know them now, were Included In the ancient conception of leprosy, especially syph ilis and tuberculosis. Some people know that a tubercu losis hospital or snnltorlum is the safest place one can live, so far as the risk of contracting tuberculosis Is concerned. The reason Is that ever body In such an Institution or community knows and conscienti ously practices the simple rules of asepsis. For much the same reason a lepro sarium as a safe place to live so far aa the risk of contracting leprosy Is concerned. Patients who have spent a year or two In a tuberculosis sanltorlum of ten regret the necessity of leaving the place to return to their former home when the disease becomes ar rosted. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntvre . NEW YORK, March 7. Jack Demp aey's new shrine of pink brick on the old Morning Telegraph alte haa be come the most discussed restau rant of the day The refrigerated sirloin street window displays gleam almost as red as the Domp aey name in lights. Eve r y thing Is gaudily meatiah. Likely no eat ing place ever wrung auch a hallchnn t r i m m e t r o p o 1 Itan Journals. Because It la directly op posite Madison Square Garden and Dempsey is so popular witn sports men, the town wondera the effect on the established he-food spots auch a Dlnty Moore a. Gallagher's, Doyle's and Lahlffa. Paul Galileo Inquires: "Will the gangs desert and go to Dempsey'a or will the moochers eat him Into bank ruptcy?" The new venture la spacious enough if filled to drain many of the old timers. The advantage of being a few step from the fight, hockey, six-day races, etc., ts Incal culable. THK KIN N('I Al. END OK THE HOME IMIKO EMENT PROIH.EM IS t !( KFIt . . . And We'll I.Uk the Rrt of It For You. Home ltnirii,imtMit niicltt have hern something tn ponder ncv tn.tt year even a few inuntht ;ignt but today thine nrr dltferrnt. I M IT SIM S Federal Hmilnc Ad mlnW ration hn placed ea ntone at the dUp''' f rer householder the fhmtcliil end l the problem Is 1 It hi U. The only problem left In that t getting the rlRht people to itijccrM Hittl estimate on necf.ir Im provements thiit'n I S. Woods Lumber Co. l.ttkon al t.eneer I'bonf lo RE I ' .-e we - . Brady, M.D. PROSARIl M. At Carvllle. where there are gener ally 360 or more resident patients, as well aa a staff of physicians, nurses and employees, there la quite the same pleasant atmosphere that pa tients In the turebculosla sanltorlum grow to love. Social activities, enter tainments, games. lectures, holiday celebrations, meala served al fresco, special menus, all combine to main tain a happy spirit. During the year 66 new volumes were placed in the patients' library, and 28 magazines subscribed for and 6 newspawers all paid for out of the patients' own benefit fund. Leprosy la rather lesa likely to spread than Is tuberculosis, and no Intelligent person worries If he dis covers somebody llvirg next door has tuberculosis. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Pampered Child Does an 8-year-old school boy re quire cod liver oil? He la of the wiry outdoor type, no fat on him. and we have very cold weather In the winter season. Several other mothers have asked mo If I never read Dr. Brady . . . (Mrs. C. 8.) Answer No, I think It Is not nec essary to give a child cod liver oil after tho age of one year, unless the physician prescribes it for some ill ness or other. Normally children get their vitamin D and vitamin A from milk, eggs, butter, cream, cheese, etc. Infanta too young to receive auch foods require a cod liver oil ration. Cryptorchidism We have Just discovered that our 3-year-old son haa one undescended gland . , . (D. W. M.) Answer Generally the condition spontaneously corrects itself by the time the boy reaches the age of 14 years. Sometimes a few doses of pitu itary hormone hypodermlcally ad ministered by the family physician, will bring about normal descent of the testicle. Nervous? If newspaper readers would only pay close attention to what Dr. Brady tries to teach about "nervousness." I believe thousands of "nervous wrecks" would be restored to health . . . (A. T. L.) Answer Of the few who do pay at tention, now and then one assures me he or she haa been restored to health, and that's enough for me. Send dime and stamped self-addressed envelope for copy of booklet "Chronic Nervous Imposition." (Copyright, 1933, John P. Dille Co.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Or. Brmty a ho j Id send letter direct to Or. William Hnidy. M. O., 2(5 & Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cul. Those who know the army of Broad way restaurant chlselers say Demp sey'a problem will be to stifle hla generous Impulses. He is a sucker for the panhandler, having neared that fringe himself in his hobo days. Now he la right at the front door, where again he must not "forget to duck." New York's most conspicuous chew er of the weed la Babe Ruth, and out side of longshoremen seems the only one left. The habit haa been so abandoned for cigarettes that there are many tobacconists who do not carry a plug stock. When Ruth tears off a "chaw" It Is' no sliver. It Is something for a whippet to hurdle Lou Gehrig once said It would tire a mouse to run around it. In the magazine shops they are called "Impulse writers." The phrase refers to many of extraordinary lit erary talent who can write only when the spirit moves. As a rule their out put haa dazzling spontaneity. Am brose Bierce was one of them. He ccstld sit at his writing table all dny and not winnow the thinnest of para graphs. Then at precious Intervals the words would fairly tumble from his pencil. He was fortunate in that a publisher recognizing his talents kept him on a 50-a-week payroll. There are "deallne writers," too TRAVEL ECONOMIES - IMf ft J: 1 1 from PORTLAND ONE-WAY CHICAGO Comfortable COACH 7 Aw Save Time Cost Worry by Train Regardless of weather, the train gets you there com fortably, safely and on schedule. No highway haz ards, delays, dotours or stops for meals. Cheaper than driving your own cor. The PORTLAND ROSE Beginning with the summer isason thit famout train wilt be completely air-conditioned, from coaehe ond sleeping cars to dining and observation cars the utmost in cool, clean, comfortable travel. (iKNTH AI. PASSKNOI'.R VM Itttm-k Hlotk. Portland. Orr. UNION They putter about until there la only the narrowest margin for them to turn in their copy and not upaet the printing schedule. Then in an un believable burst of speed they cross the finish line. About 10 years ago one of Peter B. Kyne'a Jlra-dandleat aerial part waa sent by telegraph as It was yanked page by page from the typewriter. So far but two su:cld-x from the Empire's amazing spire. Every ob servatory tower lobby haa an elevator operator spotter who watches passen gers for any ahow of suaplcloua nerv ousness. This is immediately phoned upward to guards who stand by to see that no lovcloms lean too far over the parapet. Or no harried. Jobless soul decides, like the child suicide in Jude the Obscure, "Done because there are too many of us," to hurtle through apace. A diversion of a recent hoop-de-doo In what Lucius Beebe calls the "mink and monocle crowd" waa a symbol game, one of Identifying people by gadgeta spread on a long table. Among the obvious were: A monocle George Arlias; a new dime the elder Rocke feller; large-sized lady a shoe Garbo; a plate of vegetables George Bernard Shaw; a megaphone Rudy Vallee; a pineapple Al Capone; and a lariat Will Rogers. One that stumbled sev eral waa a row of five kid gloves. Give up? The Dlonne qiUntupleta. Thing mil ma bobs: Mrs. Will Rogers and daughter Mary are cn a Medi terranean cruise . . . Sinclair Lewis Is in Jamaica absorbing atmosphere and things for a novel . . . Edwin C. Hill has become America's moat highly paid reporter . . . oordon Sinclair, after a visit, declares a hundred or more prisoners escape yearly from the famous unescapable Devil's Isl and . . . The Jimmy Walkers are to be guests of the Michael A r lens in their new Austrian sen loss . . . Flor ence Walton's Jewels are adding es pecial glint to the first night dazzle . . . The Jockey lnslgne of Ben Bernie'a new racing stable will be a musical note . . . Dorothy Dickson's daughter has become one of London's seasonal stage rages. Comment on the Day's Ne ws By FRANK JENKINS ON SATURDAY night Congressman Hamilton Fish, of New York. Republican, fires a volley at the Roosevelt administration, declaring in a speech that the "new deal honeymoon has cracked up." On Monday, Congressman Knutson, of Minnesota, also a Republican, calls for Fish's nomination for the Presi dency by the Republican party In 1936, asserting: "I know of no one who has a broader appeal to all ele ments than Mr. Fish, and with him aa our standard bearer in 1936 I am satisfied we can SWEEP THE COUN TRY." N THE humble opinion of this In- 1 significant writer, neither Con gressman Fish nor any other Re publican can "sweep the country" In 1936. The new deal honeymoon Is over most shrewd observers will agree aa to that. The President and the Democratic majority in congress are Indulging In vigorous spats about every day. But anyone who thinks this ts evl dence that the Republican party will sweep the country In 1936 which Is only next year Is either a crazy op timist or a mere wishful thinker. ' THE Republican party Is hopelessly divided in Its counsels, and bank rupt as to leadership that can com mand sufficient confidence through out the country to win. On one hand, in its ranks, Is a considerable, but not particularly vo cal, element that has no confidence In the new deal aa a vehicle for the return of prosperity. It believes that conservatives, both Republican and J J p0llTlAND floNEWAY JCs"KCHI(?G0 iiJl'M TOURIST v v v Miaastv? '.1 CI CEDED A oLctPcR nt TT., PACIFIC Democratic, will have to get together ultimately and save the country. On the other hand, there la In the Republican party an element, com posed for the most part of ex-offlce holders and professional politicians, that yearns above all else to be back in power and whose Idea of getting back is to out-promlse the Demo- craU and so beat the new deal at lta own game. f THESE two elements are as far apart as the poles. Then can no more be mixed than oil and water. But they would have to be got to gether rolled Into some sort of hodge-podge mass If tha Republican party were to stand any chance of carrying the next election. . It ts this writer's opinion that It can't be done. SOONER or later, there will be a reversal of political opinion In this country. We will quit believing In Santa Claus, and will get back to wholesome belief In the effective ness of hard, honest work. That will Involve a general re alignment of political belief, with conservative thinkers on one side and believers In Santa Claus on the other If tha Republican party has the courape to take the leadership In this movement by championship of sound principles, It will win not next year, for that la too soon, but in time. If it lacks necessary courage to do this, the Republican party Is prob ably done for. Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County . History from the files of the Mall Tribune of 10 and 20 Years Ago). March 7, 195. (It was Saturday) Blanche Sweet, the movie queen, la cause of fight In Culver City cafe. Cloudy and rainy weather predicted for week-end Cause several early spring picnics to be called off. Merrill basketball team challenges winner of southern Oregon title to night, and If Medford wins, game will be played here Monday after noon. Henry Burke, wrestler, will be one of the athletes to appear at the monthly show here. Revival mpptlmrs In thi cltv and Ashland attract large crowds. Oregon and O. A. C. basketball teams to meet Monday night at Salem to decide tie in northern di vision race. . Man h 7, 1915. (It waa Sunday) Great battle near Warsaw looms between Germans . and Russians. The Vistula river "runs red from the car nage on both banks." The southern Oregon exhibits are Mum Gram oovmxry ttUmrmrod MBiab r There must be more quality far your money in Crab Orchard, because .more people choose it and buy it. TKa Am. titan Madtdnol Spirits CotporoHon, LoulivtU.,Ky. taltijnsra,Md. SNIDER'S ICE CREAM Phone 203 Snider Dairy & Produce Co. "WE LEAD OTHERS FOLLOW" not aatisfactory. according ta Seeley Hall, who has recently returned from a fortnight's visit in San Francisco. Mr. Hall states that it ia pitiful to note how far southern Oregon has been left behind. Ashland defeats Medford, 22 to 17, to win the Southern Oregon dis trict title. Harry K. Thaw. New York million aire slayer, goes on trial for plotting escape from Insane asylum. on the BIG Ships TO NEW YORK ONLY 120 T0URIST $180 ROUNDTRIP Excellent meals and accommo dations included. All outside rooms outdoor swimming pool -dancing. Spacious decks, lounge, smoking rooms, S. S CaJifornia,Virginia, Penn sylvania, largest liners in inter coastal service, sail every other Saturday. 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