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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 16, 1935)
PAGE FOUR MEDFOUD MAIL TRTBUSE. BEDFORD. OREGON. TUESDAY. !APRTL IS. 193J5. Medpord Mail Tribune "fwvts. to Sdutlurn Orataa (imi tha Mill TrlSum'1 Dili! Eie.pt BaturiUl HEPrOBD rilNTlNO 00. t1.3r.1a n. rii ac ftm ft ROBERT . BUHL. HIM Ad IndcpeodeBt Nenpapw Esurtd u weood eltra mister it Mtfor4. Ontos, under Art of Hard! , lt. (lll'.8l mrnoN RATU J fW'-i tH?" tS.OO nail' montla... 3T6 PUiS. ewnta p By Carrier Id ArinnM MMfori, AjdIsco, JsrsssarlUs, Ctntrt) Paint, Pboeotx, Talaot. told B.1U tno oo iHjEnwifi. Dillr, ont jrar ;; Daily, ill month! RaJlv. oni month 9Q All tertu, eitta Id sdfanes. Official pijxr or tba City of Medford. Official paper of Jaekfoo County. MEMBER Of TIIB ASSOCIATED fKKM i. r..u i,..4 a Ira flwilrt Tba AModated Proa (a eieluiltelj ctitlUad le tha uh for proi-ranon nm .!: haul hMain tM moo hi i" w AU rifbU for publication of (pedal dlipatdm Mrdo ar uao round. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS" MEMBER OP AUDIT BUKEAU OiT CIRCULATIONS AdtertUlng KepreacnUtlttf M. C MOliENBCN A COMPANY OfTleea In Ne Chirao, Detroit, laa rraocleo Lot Antt'w Sttttla Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur I'srry A "retreat" for pnrolod convict l proposed as a crime) preventative. It It feared If the crlmlnala don't, the publlo will. e Crooner Blng Crosby of the air way., and the movlee, ! battltns; fat, and, la fretting about hie helt. In the mlnda of many unfeeling malea, thl aervea him right. The newt from Hollywood further reveals Crooner Croaby haa cut out every thing but hit crooning, In an effort to retain hit figure. Accounts of their convention In Portland Indlcat that the Young Democrat! are alto the Lung Demo era tt. The weather contlnuat eubjeot K change without notice, and the rain falleth like all the Eaater bonnett were a tacked In alfalfa field.. Bamum knew that ont wat born every eecond, but he had no way to realm how they might be reached over the radio. (Pontlac (Mich.) Praia) Sad and tolemn truth Item. A major-general of the United States army opine that the anti war demonstrations, by colleglana last Friday, were not Inspired by Communist, but due to the male students desiring to thow off In front of the pretty co-eds. Tht major-general blames beauty and not Bolahvlklam, for the widespread cam pua nonsense. It will be no balm of Ollead for the he-men of the. In stitutions of learning to allege they are actuated by the same trait that Impels th small boy to atand on his head In the front yard of the pret tiest lata In the block, or atage all hla fight when she It looking. It It a logical and plausible theory, though the publlo haa been lead to believe the rampageovia youthe wanted to rip the government apart not take a stroll In tht gloaming with t fair lady. A aoourge of upstate professional frlenda of the farmer Is due, Inaa much aa spring chickens are big enough to fry. One of tht Older Olrla Is walking lame from apadlng In the garden, and a new pair of ehoes. A lawyer won the national laaak Walton fish lying contest, without the aid of a client, or benefit of a Jury. An unktiown traveling photographer wat In our midst last week and took Tone Mosrley'a picture and his mule. (Hndaon (Utah) Courier) Haa a kick coming. The m-ell-drrssed man will wear "Jlua fours" the coming summer, fashion tailors decree. The "plus four" Is an ovcrslned pair of golf pant that mnke the wearer look like he was not going to make It to alley. Dear Mlsa Orey: I see where some one asked If true love can be for gotten. When I waa a young fellow I had 100 or more sweeties to hug. kiss and Inve. I waa good at It. (Portland News-Telegram) A mod est aelf-hater spesks up. Bolshviklsm. for the widespresd cam "pitta fours" the coming summer. HI'MAN IIVKNAN. In this day of rlvlllutlon the common people of all countries are In opposition to war that Is, until auch time aa they are whipped Into a rage and fury that knows no rea son and destroya every semblance of sound Judgment, lashed Into a raged anlmal'a destructive fury that over rides the sense and restraint of prudence. There are. however. In ail countries and at all times those pe culiar type of humanity, both male and female, who seem only to be able to ewlm when the waters are turbulent agitators; esgle-plurkers; patrloteera: profiteers: flag filers; bombastic, self-seeking, and pom pous country savers; polltlclsns of every color and every hue whose laat recourse to arlf-aggrandlicment Is to try to walk up the ladder of Importance hv hurdlng It out of the bleaching bones of their dead broth ers. (Con. Record,. Record Tourist Travel WITH drought in the summer, blizzards in the winter and dust storms in the Spring and Fall, thousands of people of the Middlewest, have decided to pull up stakes and go West this summer. Some of them plan a round trip journey; they intend to look over the Taeifie Coast, before deciding to settle in it. Others pln to put their belongings in a trailer, and "stake a claim" somewhere the other side of the Rockies. Still others. intend to take advantage of marginal lands, and establish rural homes in Oregon and Wash ington. There will be many, also, who attracted by low railroad fares, will come west to see the San Diego Exposition, and before returning will visit Oregon. In other words, everything points to a record breaking tourist travel and eastern migration to the Pacific Coast this summer. It is not too early for the state chamber of commerce and the local chambers of commerce to prepare for meeting the situation, and gaining the maximum benefits for Oregon, from it. A Tip to WE BELIEVE the Southern Pacific can render a real service tn this section of Southern Oreoron. and also increase passenger traffic on its Siskiyou line. People coming to the coast via the railroad will.not be as much interested in speed as in seeing the country. But under the present S. P. schedule and see nothing of Oregon outside of of the Natron cut-off! A change in train schedules enjoy the glorious Siskiyou panorama, from an observation platform in tha daylight, and tha slanting rays of the rising or setting sun, would interest every tourist, and give them some idea of the character, the scenic and natural attractions of this section of the coast, in stead of none at all. FOR THE advantage of few trip over the Eastern Oregon plateau, to the climb through the Siskiyous, the views of Mt. Shasta from a thousand different angles, and the beauties of the Cow Creek canyon and the Umprpia Divide. With Crater Lake as an added the S. P. could, by FLAYING UP THE ATTRACTIONS OF THE SHASTA ROUTE, treble the passenger traffic over the Siskiyou grade, and thus be justified in running, between Med ford and San Francisco, something more than a spur line "accommodation." which can only crawl through some of the finest country on the coast, after the shades of night have fallen. AT LEAST it seems only proper, that the S. P. give its patrons a FAIR chance to CHOOSE between the two routes provide accommodations reasonably decent on BOTH let them know and LET THE WORLD KNOW, there are two routes, and that aa far as seeing the country and enjoying the western scenery is concerned, the Shasta has it over the Cascade line like a tent I A Mental THE present situation, economically, ia pretty accurately summed up in the statement that business is much better, than business sentiment. For months now, practically every statistical service in the country has presented facts and figures showing steady im provement. There is plenty of money, there is no absence of credit. In some lines new prosperity records have been estab lished. In a majority, conditions are vastly better; in none are they WORSE, and yet, No accurate observer can deny that psychologically the country as a whole is still in the doldrums, dissatisfied with the present and fearful of the future. The true Big Business optimists like Henry Ford, can be counted on the fingers of one hand. In the matter of morale, the average business man, as the cash register chatters and tingles, continues to lean against the wailing wall and weep. There are prohahly as many explanations for this strange condition as there are experts to make them. Some say it's the currency; others, international trade; others, (he basic industries; others, politics, and still others, claim there is no concrete cause, the whole thing is merely psychological. HPO OUR way of thinking, the last named have the best of it. The PRESENT situation strikes us as being largely a case of shell-shock. It ia not what we are ACTUALLY suffering, or enduring NOW, but the alter effects of what we have suffered, and above all, what we FEAR we may suffer in the future. In other words, American business at the moment, is essen tially a "mental case." The great need is not this panacea or that, hut a clearing of the national mind, of the debris of th late catastrophe, and a more wholesome, more courageous and more sanguine point of view. Communications From (torf to Prnnklln. To the Editor: I havt? Just written tha following lttr to PrrAidtnt Hoov?H, so now you run iprt immHiiU action on the Townnend plan Juat na soon as the president get my letter. OKO. lVMflON, Vice-President. Pre. F. D. Roosevelt, White Houne, Waehtngton. D. C. lar President: The financial economic system of our country seems to have a ten dency toward the migration of cur rency hack to the place from mhlch It started: therehy causing a reom retire nf depression muh a. c arc In the rnidnt of at the preecnt time Tliii piatent depression fata caused government aid, abandon their the S. P. its advertising policy, they will Portland, and the scrub pines so the eastern traveller could view impressive Mt. Shasta, in hours in time, few travellers attraction, we are convinced Case a loaa to our national Income of about 176 billion dollars during the past five years, which sum would have kept business going at Its top peak. Do you not think that the fact that th McQroarty bill calls for a return back Into business of 3 per cent of the amount of all transac tions would counteract this ten dency, thus stabilizing buslnew so that wt would not have three de pressions? Twenty-five, million of the ctilnena of thia nation think that this is the fact and art asking you to please allow the Townsend recovery p an to become the law of th land. I am sure thnt If you do thia our name will go down In history along with that of Washington and Lin coln. Respectfully. (irO IVERHON tOo:s .fU 18. Personal Health Service By William Brady, Mi). mined letters pertaining to personal health and hyglena not to disease dlagnotit or treatment trill be answered by Dr. Brady If stamped self-addressed envelope It enclosed. Letters should be brief tnd written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letter! received only few can be ansirtred. ro reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Addreta Dr. William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. A LOT Or OAS ABOUT X am paat 38 years old and for many years paat an ardent, even rabid Doe Brady disciple. Eleven years ago by fol lowing your ad vice I managed to put on some 14 pounds weight in s very abort time much needed, weight, (Other aklnny readera who want to put on weight end stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for free m o n o g raph on How to Oaln Weight.) As a second Instance, I used the ointment yu suggested on a 6-year-old case of Athlete's Foot. Result, complete and permanent cure In 2 weeks. I had seen many cases, but mine would have taken a prize any where. If you're at 111 listening, here comes Case Vo. 3. My dad, 61, had. s very stiff knee from bowling. I happened to read of a cure from taking your lodin ration. After much persuasion dad tried It. Very soon he felt a general "pepping up" and complete recovery from the atlff knee. (Other oldish ones who are a bit atale and beginning to creak In the Joints, send a dime and a stamped envelope bearing the correct address and we'll mall a copy of the booklet "Regene ration Regimen" which contains in structions) . Case No, 4 waa a stubborn case of dandruff cured by your simple formula. (Others send a atamped ad dressed envelope for free copy of monograph on Care of the Hair and Treatment of Dandruff). Case No. 6. J suffered greatly from armpit perspiration, or rather my companions did. I tried your alumi num chloride formula, but It proved too Irritating. So I switched to the alternative treatment you suggested, boric acid, and this hag given entire satisfaction. ( Ho-hum, folks, It's free, the monograph on control of ; excessive sweating, provided you in- j close a atamped envelope bearing j your correct add res which la never "City" or "Local," remember dunder heads). Z now have a new problem . . . (I knew It. The reader would never In the world bother his head to tell me aU those things If h were not hoping for something.) After every evening meal I get full NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntvre NEW YORK, April 18. The New lork stage, more than any time in Its history, went utterly British the past season, quite naturally inciting much muttering among f X I lay-offs in the g r l 1 1 a or me Lambs and Play ers. For many theater-goers are actually in throea of destitu tion. The British histrionic flourish was accentuated by the withdrawal from Hollywood's high salaried list of Leslie Howard to Ur tn one of the stage's outstanding hits. Not a difficult ml. But fat pay. Probably more publicity was pro voked for the mercurial didoes of the temperamental brat. Ellrabeth Berg ner. than for any female star of th year. Dame Sybil Thorndyke also re turned for another engagement. And Yorkshire bred Philip Merrlvale got the George Washington role In "Val ley Forge." Fancy I The astute historian Percy Ham mond finds that the Rialto's choicest niches were filled by such perfidious Albtonlsts as Robert Loralne, Rex O' Malley, O. P. Heggle. Ernest Casaort, A. P. Kaye, Lionel Pape. Lynn Fon tanne. Dudley Digues. Brian Ahem. Ernest Law ford and Basil Rath bone My word, my wordt But in the smother of British suf focation, one gallant and heartening flare-up of a vanquished cinema atir haa hwn scored by the statue. This waa the triumph of Blanche Sweet In one of the dramatic smashes. Miss Sweet rode the Hollywood top wave and. suffering the fate of all stars, waa eventually beached. But she re fused to be a beach-comber. Instead, she beijan the torturing grind of amall-blt parte in yokel touring com panies. She played obscurely In flre-a-day movie houses. Her build -up was not a waste. She Is firmly established in a new field. New York la becoming a strictly Saturday night town. Jersey subur banites once made it their night for caper and gallant sortie and the es tablished New Yorker staved home Tucsdav was Mnnhattan ntght at the theatre and rhuraday at exclusive cafes. But for a year the Saturday night ont custom hvs been growing. I-Vwhlonablea who once thought It bourgeois now Join the rabble. Mi chael Arlen'a "terrifying pandemon ium." The widow of Roy K. Moulton, who at the time of his passing had be come a well known columnist both In the mid-west and New York, is now conducting an antique shop in Ann Arbor, Mich. Two daughters have shown Ittery leanings and write for .o'.lfwe newspaper When Xt.Miltnn fame to the cttv ne lived in the sua- 5s P5- .Tj dlatlngulahed ao- pO,Tj t are casting t 1 Jl ovatoui glances StJrt ' ll at hall milk bot- le- U tl thsae days YJ Namea that -s would surprise ler oO ft O CtjpiMfv I 4J3 v3- NOTHING MICH. of gas, quite uncomfortably dis tended. I try to eat slowly and spar ingly but this accumulation of gas trouble m for hours afterward. I get plenty of oxygen on the hoof every day, exercise a good deal and do not drink or smoke. Lately, how ever, I am almost afraid of eating my evening meal because of the Inevitable gas. I do not get along very well with certain members ot my family and sometimes think these evening meals are eaten under a strain or tension which may be bad for me. Also at supper at my house there are usually seven or eight per sons and the noise la terrific, every body talking at once except myself I say nothing. More than once I've spilled a forkful of peaa by striking my teeth or mouth with the fork In other words nervousness. E. McA. B. All that Is not a composite, but a bona fide letter from one indi vidual. He'd better slip u a dime and a stamped envelope bearing his address for the booklet "Nervous Imposition." Not that I can assure him the gas Isn't from a bad ap pendix or gallbladder, but certainly annoyance, anger, hatred and simi lar bad emotions can do just that to the victim. Qt-F.fiTIONH AND ANSWERS. Tinny Berries. Is it safe to eat home canned strawberries that have a metallic, tinny taste. I preserved them, using a pall lined with zinc galvanized. Mrs. E. R. Answer Better throw them away and next time use enameled ware or other vessel which prevents con tact of the acid fruit with metal. White Lotion. Please Inform me where I can get "White Lotion" which you recom mended for acne pimples on cheeka and nose. F. 6. Answer Any druggist can prepare it: Potasaa sulphurs ta one dram, zinc sulphate one dram, rose water four ounces. Shake It up and dab on the skin once dally, at bedtime, washing off next morning. Continue It for a week or so. then rest for a few weeks, and another course. Send stamped envelope bearing your ad dress, for monograph on acne blackheads and pimples. (Copyright, 1935, John F. DWe Co.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr Wllllam Brady, M. p.. 385 & Camlno. Beverly Hills, CaL panlon on his first walk through brightly lit Broadway. He went to his room and with frolleaome hand wrote a first Impression satire. At mid night he took It to Bill Lewis at the. Sunday Telegraph and sold It for 32. It stands as the greatert 24-hour con quering of a city by strange writer I ever heard of. At the time of Moulton's. to me. unusual conquest, I was riding the see-saw of theatrical ad soliciting for a prospective throw-away to be placed on hotel desks. The Job last ed one month. Leander Richardson, my only client, ont of sheer sym pathy I suspect, slurned for a $50 page, netting me 5. But I did not collect. The maraaln was never pub lished. All I collected was a violent dislike for the peculiar type of New York office boys. They atill blossom a red-faced fury. There wasn't one from the Circle to Herald Square who did not bestow a what-you-here again look. Or a Grand Canyon yawn. And they continue doing It to the baffled stranger. As a push-over for squelching, mv admiration Is aJzable for those who take it with a Jaunty shrug. The 120 pound SJd Solomon, for Instance. He gains the headlines almost weekly in the long concentrated effort to boot him out of the Central Park Casino. But next day at 1 p. m. his entrance Is somewhat a production nattily hao lted. barbered to a gloss, gardeniaed, swinging a malacca and beaming. They may hole him in one from his sweep of gTeenery. but It has taken many swings. His bsntsm bravado is accentuated, too. by his off the rec ord and out of the side of the mouth blasta of anger at what he calls hla persecution. It's pure vitriol. They trapped me In one of those hellish parlor games at the Kent Coopers and I'm not going to play any more. Each guest was supposedly told to Imitate at a given signal an animal whispered in hlsear. Actually everybody, save your favorite Idiot, was told to keep quiet. So at the sig nal he brayed loudly, he-haw. like a donkey. (Copyright. 1H35. McNaught Syndi cate) TO BE SENT WEST PORTLAND. Ore.. April 18 (API Plans for the transfer to the green fietds and hills of western Oreron and western Washington of 25.000 famine in the parched and dusty mid-west drouth area, were revealed here today by D O Hood, state budget director for Oregon, upon hts return from Washington. D. C. 1 The task, he said, will be undertaken by the federal relief administration It will be underway within a month State-owned property in Orecon and Washington wilt first be taken up. federal money being used for the purchase. Later property in the two states will be bought. Only the most desirable of the available land will be plaoed at the disposal of the newcomers. DROUGHT VICTIMS For HvW that Wear buy NOLL) I. A HORS1 Oelwyo B. Hoffinana Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS A CTION on Oregon'a road program ts la slowed, th headlines tell us. Lack of Information regarding federal grants to th states under th new work-relief program Is said to b re sponsible for th delay. Too bad. Still, we muat remem ber that FIVE BILLION dollars Is a lot of money. Knowing Immediately whereaU of It is to be spent, and how, Is probably beyond the capacity of any set of men on earth. So let's be patient. DELEGATIONS from all over Ore gon attend the first meeting of the new highway commission, all In tent on finding out what can be done for their sections In the way of road building. That la proof, If any were needed, of the keen Interest In highways, even after all these years of highway building. The whole five billion dollars of federal relief money could be spent for roads and still we wouldn't have anywhere near the roads we still wsnt and need. THIS Insignificant writer, for one, wishes the whole five billions were to be spent on rosds, thus pro viding needed employment for labor and marketa for building materials, as well as providing ua with some thing tremendously useful In return for the money. But if wishes were horses all beg gars would ride. A CUBAN boy a civilian, not a soldier dies before a firing equad; the first civilian thus to die since Cuba, with the aid of the Unit ed States, threw off Spanish rule. In aU this welter of complaint about the Yankee Imperialist, let's at least remember that when America went to war with Spain back In 1808, she DID at least end the hundreds of years of bloody misrule In Cuba and give the Cubans something better than they had ever known before. That Is something. SAD headline: , "Schoolboy Quarrel Leads to Shotgun Slaying at Burns." Two boys, aged 12 or 13, fought, one using a knife and the other a rock. The father of the boy who used the knife refused hotly to believe his son would do such a thing, and in the ensuing quarrel hla anger rose so high he seized a shotgun and killed the man he was arguing with. When a fight, of ANY sort, starts, nobody can tell where It. will lead to. Ye Poet's Comei Life's Storms Once I found & beautiful lily, On a bright morning In May. Its head erect, Its perfume sweet, It smiled In the brightness of dsy. But low, the storm clouds gathered. They bent Its stately head. When I passed again tn the evening The beautiful lily was dead. Then I met a fir young maiden amlllng With th dreams of youth. Her eyes were like the starry heav ens. Her heart was the hearth of truth. But the storms of life swept o'er her. Leaving her lonely and spent. Till her heart was crushed like th lily Her form with life's storms was bent. So the Illy and the maiden which God had made so pure; Had lost their sweetness and beauty. With the storms they could not en dure. Then I prayed to the Ood In Heaven. That the maid and the lily fair. Might dwell again in the lend eternal. Where no storms are over there. By Mary O. Carey. Wild Engine Hops Track At Cheyenne CHEYENNE. Wyo.. April 18. (AP) After a wild two-mile run with no one at the controls, following a head on collision with a freight train, a Union pacific switch engine and two coal cars hurtled off the track and crashed In a heap of wreckage at the edce of Cheyenne at noon today. The switch engine crew Jumped to safety and escaped Injtiry after th two locomotives had crashed into each other near Fort Francis. LAND PLASTER CAR WILL ARRIVE HERE ABOUT APRIL 18TH 1 et m figure with inu on a delivered prlre on MND Pl.lMl.R delivered to lour ranch. w carry a complete atork or all kind of FFRTIMZFR on hand right price. SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY F. E. SAMSON CO. 229 N. Riverside Flight 'o Time (Medrord nd Jarkeon County History from the filet of tht Situ Tribune of 10 tnd 10 (tart Ago). TEN YEARS AGO TODAY. April 18, 1925 (It was Thursday) Two-cent rat for mailing postal carda goes Into effect and hundreds of local patrons of th postoffte for get It and have cards returned "for lack of postage. George W. Dunn of Ashland Is elected grand warden of the Knights Templar Comma ndery of the state. Chautauqua to be June. held her In Dry enforcement expenses of coun ty below receipts. Sportsmen hold banquet and de plore removal of fish commissioner. Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Oore expected to return soon from visit to San Francisco. First moving pictures of Crater Lake In the winter time to be shown at the Crater! an next week. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY. April 16, lfilS (It waa Friday) Four bad boys rounded up by po lice and charged with hitting Cecil Brown over the head with a billiard cue In a robbery attempt. Petty thieving of the paat six months Is laid to the gang. BllEzard halts Russian advance In the Carpathians, now the -main cen ter of European war operations. All quiet on the western front. Barefooted boys made their appear ance today on Main street. The warm sunshine has caused the snow In the hills to melt rapidly. Mrs. W. B. Blddle of Chicago Is visiting her son here. "Victory, Death or Fair Lulu," at the Isls; second and final chapter of Jask London's "Burning Daylight," at the Star; "The Gentleman Burglar, a Bellg Drama," at the Page. 4 (Continued from Page One) the annual meeting la be'd here in May. Thia decision Is at least par tially based on an unwritten tradi tion of the chamber that no presi dent shall sefve more than three terms. Harriman Is serving his third one-year term. Two eminent Journalists are to meet this week tn the office of Cor r'.igton Gill at FERA and fight out their conflicting contentions about the new deal. The contestants are Walter Lippmann and Frank Ktn. The bout probably will last one round without a decision. Kent is arguing the whole new deal la a bust and points to the FERA relief figures aa proof. Lippmann says the relief figures are not a true indication and. there muat be other explanations of the increase in relief rolls, aside from Increasing unemployment. Lipp mann is right, as usual. The referee will be Gill. No sensible men could care to um pire the Hopklns-Dsvey row. Ohio's Governor Davey Is technically accu rate when he aays that only one man has been indicted, and this In dictment waa based on a charge of plain grafting, not shaking down firms that sell to the relief adminis tration, as FERA-er Hopkins charged. On the other hand, the FERA gang here insists the grand Jury received affidavits showing complicity of state officials In a shakedown racket, but the grand Jury decided there was no law against this. It seems to be a case of much excitement and little action. The best authorities believe Hopkins prob ably spoke out of turn, but they also have their ftngera crossed about the Ohio relief administration. The FERA crowd Insists you have not heard the last of the forgotten sensation, but you probably have. A confidential reoort drawn tin K the state department rrnmmnri tht following course of action to keep us out of the next war: a) An im mediate embargo on munitions, (b) roroid American citizens to travel on any ship carrying munitions. c) pro hibit loans and credits to belliger ents, id) bar armed vs fmm mi. ports, lei make it a crime for Ameri can citlwns to enlist In belligerent armies, f make It a penal offense for anyone to sympathize publicly wttn any beniperent. These suggestions will be toned down plenty before the final draft is submitted to the president. The pending nronosai tn renmi Pickwick dam In the Tennessee vsl- ley la causing considerable inner commotion. There are some who want to call it "Qulnn" dam la honor of the late representative. This is opposed by Senator McKel lar's friends, who wish It to be known as McKeilar dam. 8EC-er Kennedy has no Idea of quitting any time soon, despite stories current in Wall street. The stories started when a nweman misinterpreted something Kennedy said In an Interview. Assistant Treasury Secretary Gib bons takes notes of telephone con versations In shorthand. If you consider the change la purchasing; power, an ounce of silver now la worth about 95 cents, based on the 1928 price level. Ex -Representative West may ulti mately get Louis Howe's secretarial job. He is doing half of It now. There will be no change la th existing securities set until the SEO hsa a chance to ascertain whether financing may be resumed under the existing act. If it falls, a change will be recommended. KtK til K XKIV PLAN BOOKS PHONE ONE . BIG PINES LUMBER CO. BURK'S 314 E. Main. Tel. 443 SEAT COVERS for all cars, 95c up NASH HOTEL 2045 University Berkeley, Calif. A STRICTLI modem estab lishment with a charming home en vironment appeal ing to the tourist or residential guest. Centrally and conveniently located. Reasonable rates by the day or term. 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