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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 22, 1935)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON. MONDAY. 'APRIL 22. 1935 Medford Mail Tribune "Cwfm III s-utlwrn Or Rudi thi Nail Tribune" Dili Except Bttordaf Puti I lifted bf MEDntRD PB1NTINU 00. un 9 h. rtt it no BO BERT W. BUHL, Bdltor An Indtpendtot Niwiptp-r Solved m mcodO clus nitttr tt MJfore. Anton, wA Ad Uueb i. UI. f Mill is Ad.ww Duly, oo r" Z, Dill J, III BOOllH naila- uu mnnlh . ... .......... ."0 lukumtiii. rvninl Point- PbMolx. Talaot. GoW Bill UM 00 tttCDVIJt. Dttly, on ft Dtilr, li awnthi Dalll, OM BOOUl All Urw. cub to wlrt-iea. nil .10 Official puw tin Cll of Medfarl OfflelaJ paper of Jaesaoo Utmoti. UtMBEH OK THB ASSOCIATED PREM . .. . K.H i ... utIm bnlM bcccmiiik rM i 1s aiaodall Pran k nchKlieli entillM u Ui uta (or publleatloa of til n dlipotetttt efodJted to If in owenra. erwuw ii .... .. ,b m ntihllthMl btrdn. All rlgliu for publication of eoeelal dliptutM arrets ar. auo ruerrra. MEMBER 0 UNITED PKE88 MEMBKH OP AUDI1 BUttEAO OK CIRCULATIONS Advertising Kepfeseotaltfee H. C MOCIENSKS COMPANT OfllHi In Nn V'iri. CMuio, Detroit, asl FYaneieeo Antteiee Heattlo Portland. MEMtErV Ye Smudge Pot Be Arthur Perrjr The Governor may have to call an "extraordinary aeaslon" of tha leg islature, but chancea ara good, H won't ba any mora ao than the laat ona. o Then waa a hanging In Kentucky Jfrlday, attended by 1600 people. ho apent the night parading tha treeta, and crowding the lour beer halla," preaa aervlcea report. The Tlctlm, male, 33, mounted the gal Iowa, and In a lengthy addreaa for audi oocaalone, paid hla bitter re apecta to hla accuser, a lady of 3a. who waa also present at the ghastly festivities, accompanied by her hus band. The doomed youth, opined from the scaffold, that he waa upon It, because he did not have 500 to give her. She retorted "not for 1000." Outside of her presence, which waa of doubtful propriety, and exchange of banter between ac cused and accuaer, there waa an other unique feature. The sheriff waa assisted by a "consulting ex pert on hanging." Thle la aomethlng new In the way of high-toned ef ficiency, and there are not many of them. Alter the hanging, the orowd returned to their homes In an orderly manner. OltlMns who up-ended Mother Karth In their backyards, report that radlshea they planted will soon be ready to eat, and the . neighbor's ehlckene big enough for the aama process. 0 0 A "Youth Party" la now proposed, to take the relna of government." This Is a line Idea, If the relna don't ourt up at the end, and look like the steering wheel of an( auto. Kaater waa observed yesterday, with aong and sermon, and none of the Older Cllrla being able to locate an other lady, with an Easter bonnet, exactly like their own. 00- O. Iverson. who ahouldered his lead pencil, and wrote a letter to the President, as yet has re ceived no reply. PANTS 8RA.TS: I'BE tt ABl'SK (Baltimore Sun) Panta may be severiy divided Into seat, waistline and legs. The seat ordinarily Is used In sitting, but on extraordinary oc casion It also serves as a grip or handle for a person who la ambitious to pick up another person and throw him out of doors. In the case of pants worn by a Junior the panta may also act as a convenient buffer for a parent's slipper, clothes brush or palm of the hand, the last lending a certain element of truth to the popular admonltlnn, "This hurta me worse than It doea you." 00 High Democrats have started at tacking the mentality of windy demagogues, who anspplly consign their detractors to eternal fires. Secretary Irkea of tha cabinet, as eerla that Sen. Hury Long of Louis iana has "halitosis of tha . Intel lect" Q pert description, that brief ly and completely covers the sub ject. Another Bourbon chieftain, quoted Scripture Saturday, to pierce the hide of Republicanism with a mell-turned wisecrack. This repartee la not very interesting, but more ao than newa that a movie queen was contemplating her seventh mar riage. 00 In Denver, tha poatoffice had to put on extra help, to handle In creased mall,, caused by people spend ing dimes. In a get-rlch-quick scheme. It beata passing the hat aa a meana or harvesting spare and thin dlmea. Other advantages are. no politician makes a speech, ana there Is no danger of the hat passer absconding with both the hat, and Ita contents. SALKM. April 23. I API Senator Oeorge Altken of Washington coun ty waa a viaitor at tha governor'a of flee here today, lie waa being men tioned as aafely engineer In the In d nef rial accident cDmml-Mon. Cm stall Tribune want a4s 77ie Zero Hour HENRY P. FLETCHER, chairman of the Republican national committee issued a devastating broadside against Presi dent Roosevelt and the Democratic party last night for beinj,' too radical. "The New Deal" he declared, "ia merely a modern applica tion of the principles of Karl Marx." A few houra later Senator Hiiey Long returned from forcing a few more laws through his legislature in Louisiana to lambast President Rooseve.'t and the Demo'-ratia party for not being radical enough. If the Democratic party doesn't adopt Huey'a share-the-wealtb ideas and quit taking ita orders from Wall Street and Big Business, the Kingfish opined, Roosevelt will not get one vote out of five in the next election. SO it looks pretty dark for President Roosevelt in the 1936 campaign. He ia damned if he does, and he is damned if he doesn't. In his efforts to end the depression and secure for all concerned a more "abundant life", the Republicans declare he goes too far; in these same efforts the Huey Longites, the Coglrtnites and the Townsendites declare he doesn't go far enough. What can a man in the president's'position do under such circumstances t Well, probably only what he in doing. Give up trying to please the conservative Republicans, give up trying to please the radical liberals, turn a deaf ear to the threata and warnings from the extremists of both eicles, and stick to the principles in which he believes, in the faith that a majority of the American people, when the essential issues are clearly defined, will follow him in the middle-of-the-road course, and endorse his program. IT is rather superfluous to add that the honeymoon is over. Not only is the honeymoon over, but the inevitable uphill, unromantic trek has begun, with those who were formerly cheering and throwing bouquets, bats. No more easy sailing, under blue skies and with a fair wind, for F. D.'s ship of state. The barometer is falling, the clouds are gathering, the dangerous passage is ahead. So the real acid test for F. D. maintained from the first he is he lacks the fighting heart, that he can't TAKE it, will now either, have their judgment sustained by the events, or be forced forever after to hold their peace. It will be worth watching, few months, and especially the administration. There can be no backing down or compromise, the issues from has been cast, and from now on a fight to the death. Upon the quality of leadership he now displays, and the political course he now charts, will depend the ultimate fate of Franklin D. Roosevelt, as president of this country, and the place he will eventually occupy nation. Gloom Dispellers "PHOUGH Wall Street is busy singing the blues for political effect, almost every important index of the state of business shows steady improvement. Business Week, a New York jour nal of business news and interpretation gives the following sta tistics in its current issue summarizing the first quarter of 1935: Production of autos graateat since 1929. ia percent gain over 1B34. Manufacturing output of all lnduatnea 19 percent greater than In 1034. Consumption of electrle power a percent greater In volume than In 1834. Cteck payments by banks outside New York City up 1 percent. Retail aalea show Increases and mall order houses broke recorda. March residential construction largest alnce March, loa, 38 percent ahead of 1034. - Payrolls Increased and equal those of June, 1014 with 3.000, 000 leaa unemployed than two years ago. Ufa Insurance sales for the first two months of 1P.SS totalled 1,900.000.000. So much for actual accomplishments. As to prospects for the future, B. C. Forbes, editor acknowledged authority on business topics declares in an article in the current Liberty Magazine that the stage is set for the biggest era of prosperity in the nation's history. He lists H billions of pent-up needs requiring the employment of -14 million workers at $1,000 a year. He points out that excess bunk re serves exceed $28 billions and that money can be had at the lowest rates in history and says "with emphatic certaintv": Sooner or later America will regain confidence and will pro ceed to resume normal spending and normal llvlne. When this time cornea, we shall reach heuhu and breadths of prosperity beyond anything and everything enjoyed In 1(138-39 or any earlier period of our history. Salem Capital Journal. AND SALES INCREASE IN NORMS! ZONE SIATTU, Wash.. April 33.(APt Laat week'a lumber production of Sit down and operating nulla, reported to the weat Coaat Lumbermen's as- aociatlon today, topped the previous weeks output; current sales topped the output by more than 13 per rent, and ahlpmenta were over production oy one-tenth of I per cent. The reporting mllla' production ag gregated 07.4Sft.393 board feet the week ending April in. about 6 000,000 more than the week before. Ordera totaled 110 898 031 feet and there were B7.MB.S9S feet ahlpped. The ordera booked were over thoae nf the prevlcua week by about la. 600.000 feet, the aaeoclatton announc ed. The unfilled order file atood at 381.683 000. about 8.000.000 over the week before. A group of 436 mllla whose recorda are complete for both perloda. show total orders for 1933 to date of I.. 319 083 000 compared with I 141 318 - 000 feet for the same period of Ult. now jeering and heaving brick R. has come. Those who have only a fair weather pilot, that the political events of the next course and tactics of the present now, there can be no evasion both sides must be met, the die it must be, politically speaking, in the political history of his of Forbes Magazine and an G. GRANTS PA6. April W (SpU A pUn for tht Immtdtat pTmnt of dllnqunt wtr and adrfclorvm txa tn the Omnt ISlm TrrigAtion t:trlet with llmlnatlon of all pen alty and tntrf.t and a alldtn teal? reduction In the amount of the de linquent taxi thtnutlrta. ap proved today by the RvorMrKM!on Pmatwe Corporation In WaMn;ton. D C. Notioe of approval came in a t team ahovel la belnf mnvM in to off it-era late Saturday and folio- previoua appror.il of the Oncon Rec lamation commtaaion, (tven under date of March 30. It make official the tentative plana of the lociil dti triet board for compromi on de linquent vater taw a. and of the Jcae phine county court for compromise on delinquent d valorem taxfi. Slenderlre with Spenoer IndMdual- I ly teif ned Corsets. Maiaon Jeanne Mi. 4T, Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed lettera pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease dlagnoala or treatment will be answered by Or. Brady If a stamped self-ad-dressed envelope Is enclosed. Utters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of lettera received only a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Addreaa Dr, tVllllam Brady, 26J El Csmlno, Beverly Hills. Cal. TOO Ml'CH eUl.T W There la approilmately a table- poonful of aalt( aodlum chloride) excreted from the body daily. The average man In- geita that much salt dally, al though from one half to one tea- spoonful of salt la enough for good functional health; at least Individual have remained In good condition when the aalt Intake waa reduced 'to half a teaapoon- ful a day. ateel furnace worKera. sicker and others who are subject to extreme heat with great exertion or to ex treme heat alone, are likely to uf fer from what la variously called "water poisoning." "heat cramps" or "stoker's colic." This li a condition of violent muscular cramps occurring when , through excessive sweating the store of salt in the blood and tissues has been depleted, for salt Is the Important substance In the water excreted In sweat. The condition Is prevented by the practice of taking some salt along with each drink of water, either dissolved In the drink ing water, or swallowed in the form of a tablet, or with some highly salted morsel of food. Persons who suffer oppression from extremely hot weather should remember that plen ty of salt as well as plenty of water Is more refreshing than water or any beverage without the salt. Many gourmands acquire the habit of seasoning everything excessively with salt, although the salt natur ally present In such foods as milk, meat, eggs, fish, cheese, butter Is sufficient for all needs of the body If the diet Is not restricted. One who Is following a diet largely vegetarian gets less salt and may advantage ously use more salt as a condiment. The practice of salting butter and cheese In the mnklng Is much over done, whether from perverted tnste or from a desire to sell salt at but ter or cheese price. People who never eat "aweef (unsalted) butter win be pleased with this natural food If they wilt u. it In place of the salted kind for a few days. Too much snlt in or on food masks the reol flavor of the food, though the proper use of salt brings out the zeat of some foods which lack it. The habit of adding salt to everything blunta the finer taste sense and robs the gourmand ol much of the plensure of eating. Some people smother food with snlt, pepper, mustnrd, and other condi ments In a vnln endeavor to cover heinous cooking. The uise of considerable salt is necessary In the curing and preserv ing of meats and fish, but by soak ing such food In water for hours NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, April 33 Diary: Came McClelland Barclay with one of hla newly-wrought ash-trava of brass and with him to a nippy and quaf fed a hot choco late. And ran upon Percy Cros by eyeing win dow haberdash ery with a sport ive gleam. So to mv phrase-hammering and read ing th morning post. And a post card from Frank Buck. Idling on a verandah of the harries In Singa pore, touched off a wanderlust that spun a day dream of a thatched-cot-tage with pebbly roof and Ingle-nook in a far-away land. Thus filled with gluey thoughts, set off to the park with the dogs. Dinner at a Frenchy cafe called Mon Paris, the orchestra muted to a whisper as I like them. Then stop ped to see George and Colette Arms by a moment and puttered along the avenue. To bed reading a sheal of essays and liking an ob.-iervatlon that the only persons who knew about death were young American poet. Jack Dempaey'a continued pollen ing tip Into a sort of Ocntleman Jack la a conMnnt surprise to those who so long thought of him as the beetle-browed Manaaea Mauler. The hobo rode are far away. All the ahlfty uneasiness and tongue-tied awkward ness have vanished. He la Just aa nimble on hla banquet feet aa In the ring, talks via the radio like a skilled speaker and hae become a smooth master of ceremonies. On top of this he hss acquired a flair for sedate and well-selected c:othes. A blood I The luecatte shops was there ever 1 one not hsvlng a sale? have be come air conscious. They feature ac cessories for airplane travel com pact and light packers that will hold all one needs for a fllcht to the coast and within the a.1 pound limit permitted. Will Rogers., who hsa done more flying thsn any American as a passenger, never carries more then a sma'l hand-satchel. He buys the things he needs wherever he Is sa he needa them. Mm. Rocers often haa to use chloroform to shuck him of a long uyd neck-tie. Personal nomination tor the mct unexciting book ever turned out ty an envitins writer William Faulk ner's latMt, "Plon A letter from bloed and ven erable Ena'.:h wrtttng man uxlay a reminder of bow the court) eeji m EAKENS THE BODY and then par-bolllng and throwing away the salt water, much of the salt may be removed and the flavor of the food greatly Improved. More aal t mea na more water re tained In the body cell and tissues. That means overweight, or flabby water-logged state of the body, whether there Is actual dropsy or not. Tht bogging down from too much salt la a common explanation of flab bin ess and weakness. No one should even attempt to subsist on i "salt-free" diet unlea under auper- vision of hla physician, but any one whose health and vigor are not up to par may well give some 'thought to correcting the error of consuming too much salt. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Reconstructs Surgery At the age of S years my arm waa broken above wrist. It was at first mistaken for sprain, and not until the bone had grown together. In volving nerves and tendons, did the doctor find out It was broken . . . I am now 23 years old and while the arm 1 as large and well de veloped as its mate I am handicap ped. How about breaking It over and resetting? (V. A. M.) Answer Unless there is marked body deformity that could do no good. But a doctor skilled In re constructive surgery of nerves and tendons, as after bad burns and lnf3cted wounds of the hands, might restore better function by a series of repair operations. Action of Alcohol Please outline f.r me the action of alcohol on the organs of the body, especially heart, brain, kid ney . . . (M. B.) Answer Briefly it la depressant and narcotic. Hypo I have used your formula, one ounce of photographer's hypo (sod ium thtosulphate or hyposulphite) mixed with four ounces of boric acid, aa a powder for athlete's Itch with fine effect. How about using a small portion In witch hazel as a lotion after shaving? (E. S.) Answer No harm to experiment with it if you wish. Good lotion for use after shaving, and for keeping the hands white and soft Is made ! by boiling slowly and constantly 1 stirring till clear thin Jelly 3 tea epoonfuis boric acid, 80 grains trag acanth shavings, tablc&poonful gly cerin and a pint of rain water or distilled water. This should be ap-' plied, a few drops, after washing and before skin It quite dry. two or three times a day. It Is good for chapping, roughness and Irritation of the skin. Ed Note: Persona wishing to communicate with Di. Brady shojlrt semi letter direct to Di. William Brady, M. U., 365 & Camlno. Beverly Hills, Col. j of old time hand-done correspond ence has passed. The envelope ad dress contained an "Esquire." The salutation was "Esteemed Sir." And the closing wns "with continued assurances of deep respect." There was a brevity, too. In dating that I liked vlr: 28. 4. 35. A statistician of a tobacco com pany haa compiled a Hat of anuff users in greater New York. They number more than 60.000. And range from the dock walloper of the water front to the withered dowager of the upper avenue. Stage hands for some reason, like snuff and there are a few I'd swoon If any are from Vassar girls of fashionable schools who take a pinch now and then to calm their Jitters. Several elderly persons of the theatrical pro fession carry containers and display them proudly. Dlgby Bell was a dainty anuff user to the last. 80. oc casionally, was Wilton Lackeye. Pew knew It. That tiny asphalted plaza facing the Palace la a vesperal hour rooat for the -human aparrows that fell. They hudde In small groups or perch on the curb edge moulting. Last evening I saw four raudevll. Mans performers once gracing bills with Valeska Sliratt. Chic Sale. Julius Tannen and Mable Hlte gat ing dlsoonsolslely into what Elbert Hubbard called "Innocuoua deseu tude." A bench held several seedy booking agcnla whose csrds once admitted them promptly to Albee himself. Also layoff song and dance men. monologlsts. etc. All have be come "dumb acts" In real life. Speechless, staring, wondering and wondering. Bagatelles: Sir James Barrle dined out for the first time In four yesrs In the Ssvoy grill recently . , . Wll llsm Ssroyan waa the young Ameri can author Oertrude Stein most wanted to meet . . . Lulgl rirandello. Italian playwright, carries a vest pocket tube of garlic . . . Just In case! . . . MUton Bronner. famed and traveled European correspondent, still blushes . . . rtebecca West al ways goea to Moneta's when over from England . . . She la a ringer, too. for another West Mae . . , You've probably reached eettled maturity when your breakfast is ruined by news photoa of young whlppersnappera downing cocktails at ja n:ht club table. I'm up to where j my suspenders cross In a tantrum And what business la It of mine? , (Copyright. 1S.1J. McNaught Svndl I cate) DRY LAND DREDGE WILL WORK ON SARDINE CREEK ! -SARDINE CREEK. April 33 Spl ) The California Oregon Power Co. U i ii.Milltn a power line on the 8. A. Divaenberry place to operate a gold t m'.ninaj plant bel: bu'lt there. A 1 te..m shovrl ! mote in to h:iil'.e the gravel and it l epf,-?ed t:i.it the ma -nine will be in operation 1 with. a t month. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS COCIAL Security Bill Win. w So run the big headline af the day these words ara written. So far aa this country 1 concerned, It 1 one of the big headline of all time. (The bill win In the house, tt must now go to the senate.) 117HAT doe the' social security bill propose T Well, primarily It proposes pensions for those who have passed tha age of 65 and benefit payments for a certain period of time to thoae who lose their Jobs. There are other minor features, but these are the big one. IN the way of old age pension, the bill limit the government's con tribution to not more than tlfi a month, to match similar contribu tion from the state on a dollar-for- dollar basis. That la to say, If the bill passes both houses and 1 signed by the president, old-age pension will run somewhere around 30 a month. AS to unemployment benefit, the hnnui hill nrnuMu nairmawi. VT-lT exceeding $1S a week and NOT start ing until 4 week after loss of the Job. and running for 15 weeks plus one week for each six weeks the worker ha been employed, up to 35 week. That 1 (assuming that the bill be comes a law) If you lose your Job, you will have to go four weeks with out pay. Then, for 15 weeks, you can draw up to 15 a week. After that, you will get one week's pay for each six week you had work ed at your Job before you lost It, up to a total of 35 weeks, which Is all you can draw. EXTREME conservatives will shake I tViawlr hgirli anA anrna nf tVi I more extreme among them will assert that If this bill becomes a law the country will be ruined. This writer, who in many ways la a ' conservative, doesn't share that Bloomy view. The conservatives have I shaken their heads many, many times ' since the world began, and still the world ha4 gone on. Broadly speaking. it has gone on getting BETTER and BETTER. i The conservatives have no monop oly on Intelligence. Very, very often Indeed, since history began, the con servatives have been wrong and the liberals have been right. This is probably one of the times. OF these two radical innovations Irarilral that, la en far aa A ma. ica is concerned) the old age pension plan Is by far the sounder. Those who have passed their pro ductive years have to be supported by SOMEBODY. Prom the standpoint of the prosperity of the country aa a whole, It makes little difference whether they are supported by pri vate charity, by the contribution of relatives or by TAXES. The money for their support has to come from SOMEWHERE, and the pension plan U a dignified and rea sonable way to provide it. UNEMPLOYMENT insurance has mnrfl Hanoara WltVi ut-taln i-na of workers, for example, tt will have a tendency to put a premium on un employment. Pear of loss of the Job ia a con stant spur to greater efficiency, and taking away that fear will probably make shiftless workers still more shiftless. But unemployment Is one of the GREAT EVUJ3. and we can't do away with it If we don't try. So, If the bill passea, let's give un employment Insurance an honest trial and take the consequences if It falls. FORMER WIFE ACCUSES E RANCHER OF RE DDI NO. Calif. April 33. (AP) A quarrel artjUnd out of recent divorce proceedings wa. blamed to day by Mrs. Helene O. Browne. 40. for the shot run charge she said m-as fired by her former husband. Charles A. Brown. 45. which killed Prank Raymond Mc Arthur, 43. min ing engineer, and wounded her. A murder charge wi:i be filed against Browne today, county of ficials announced. Mrs. Browne, who was only slight ly wounded by scattering shot from the same charge which klUed Mr- Arthur, told authorities her hus band fired through the glass door of her ranch home near MUlvllle Saturday night. McArthur Jumped in front of her to protect her. she said. Her former husband. Mrs. Browne declared, had been ar.try at the court's recent award to her of the ranch, which she s:d had been left to her by her first husband, brother of the alleged slayer, who waa killed five yean ago In an automobr accident. Home portrait of family groups and children at Special Price ehanjls etudlo. Phone 13C4. Sand-Shoeing Is Newest On Beach Pfr i,rl'''s'' i Si&t' V"" 1 1 """afc ' VJ isJ m , - i JT"'C' J V l& 1 These are not snows hoes they ire tend shoos, an Idea of Dorothy Dare, Hollywood film actress. She is shown wearing her new footgear on the Santj Monica, Cal., beach 'Associated Preaa Photo. Poem Written For Golden Wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Viall The following poem waa sent tn via airmail from Spring Valley, Minn., to be read at the party held in Poenlx, Ore., on April 3. in honor of the golden wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Viall, but arrived the morning after the party; Their Golden Wedding. Tie fifty yeara today Since you. dear sister, were wed. Fifty golden years How fast the time has fled! In memory still I see you, A happy, blushing bride. Your tall bridegroom beside you, Each glance so full of pride. And then, a-down the year. Aa memory shift the lens, I eee you, dearest sister, A little child again. T se the dear old schoolhouse. Where you learned to read and spell, And learned to add and multiply. And did It very well. Oh, those happy days of childhood. Golden every precious hour. And their memory leaves a frag rance Like some grand and glorious flower. Again the vision changes, Aa in dreams there la no rule. And I see you. dearest sister. Queen of all that Jolly school. T see your happy schoolmates, Gilding o'er the frozen snow. Bound for spelling -school or dance, Singing as they go. Next, they're skating on the river. Bonfires burning near the side. Every lsddle with a lassie. See how fast the youngsters glide I Another picture cornea In view. School days hare passed ao fleet. And I see you standing, sister. Where the brook and river meet. I see a brave young man. Coward now m very truth, Bow to thee, a willing prisoner. Captive to thy smiling youth. And scon, you choose him captain. To sail your little brig. While you. aa first mate, steer the craft And keep tt trim and trig. So for fifty golden years. In fair or atormy weather. You've kept your craft afloat. Because you've pulled together. And when earth's Journey's over. You reach the heavenly shore, May you walk the golden streets. With our Savior evermore. (Composed by Mrs. Viall'a sister. Phoebe L. Sample. 84 yeara old.) BIRTHS Born to Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hum phrey of Eagle Point. & baby girl, weighing six pounds. Saturday at the Community hospital. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth WU shire, 87 Granite street. Ashland, a baby girl, weighing e:ht pounds, ten ounces, at the Sacred Heart hospital yesterday. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Donatd Pal well, a babji- ftirl weighing six pounds, seven ounces, today at the Commun ity hospital. Mnlr MipertWnr Meet. BOISE. Idaho, April 23. iAPi With 50 mu-tc supervisors and 500 high school music students here from Idaho. Orecon. tah. Washington and Montana, the fourth biennial meet, ing of the Northwest Music Super- Tiaora conference opened here today Pendleton Water Paid lor PENDLETON. Ore.. April 22 lAP) A warrant for 12050 sianed bv the Pentlleton water commission t1ay cleared the city of all water depart ment debts on IT II .000 00 plant This brind re'.rTrpnt reprrnt thf last of a i: 5C .000 issue of 14 years 0. Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the file of the Mall tribune of 10 and 20 Years Aeo). TEN YEARS AGO TODAY April 22, 1925. (It waa Wednesday.) North Holly street alte Is recom mended aa alte for new senior high school, over P- A E. site, but college experts report "either will be satis factory." State sportsmen threaten recall of Governor Pierce "unless wrecking of game commission 1 halted." Floyd Hall and Joe Tanko. escaped San Quentln convicts, create reign of terror In California. E. H. Hedrick. new superintendent of Medford schools, Is the father ot a baby girl born at Heppner, Ore. The Hedrlcks will move here in June. Mr. Hedrick is a valley girl and for merly resided at Centra Point. Chamber of Commerce directors en dorse airmail sen-ice on Pacific coast. City council raises license for car nivals to 8100 per day. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY April 22, 1015. (It waa Thursday.) Police arrest Jitney driver "for per sistent turning around in the middle of the block." Article lauding Crater Lake scen ery appears in National Geographic magazine. Smudging conducted this morning In orchards of valley. To date there haa been no damage to fruit from frost In this section. William Slerle or Medford came out on his "Ford colt." He waa here to demonstrate that an ordinary bike can be turned into a machine that will run with "no horsey pulley and 7io horsey pushey." It la a simple bike with a gasoline attachment that goes like "Jehu." He spent the night here and took In the show. Engl Point Eaglets.) Allies renew their attack on the Dardanelles; lull comes in great bat tle between Russian and Austrian. (Continued from Page One) tlon as a thorn in Its side, but rather as a pain in the neck. The accepted technique m such cases is not to aggravate it. but to use the scientific method of disregarding It. Wnen last seen, flying more or less Irately through the swinging doors of the senate chamber, Glass carried a long list of the names of wltnesps he Intended to call when hts subcommittee starts hearings shortly. It would be more than a good guess to say that the list doea not contain the names of those who might be called champions of the administration bill. However, tt Is understood Chair man Fletcher of the committee, an administration man, ha worn out three pencils writing an equally long Hat of proposed wltnesce. These, of course, will offset the Glass list. The only thing you may be certain of in this situation Is that life will never be dull at the capltol aa long aa Glass and the new dealers are so subtly at odds. The bank bill provision at Issue is the one creating central credit control in the federal reserve sys tem. This is the only provision con cerning which there Is any dispute, and there Is as yet no open dispute about that. All Glass wants to do ia to delay action on that section and shove through the other sections of the bill. Of course, all the new dealera know that. If they do not get this section now, they will never get It. Tnerefore. the Issue Is clear, even though the participant are not yet ready to concede It. The FERA recently received a novel request from a southern fac tory, which said: "We are about to have a strike. We request that you suspend relief to these on strike. Then the strike win not last long. This will help your relief situation and wa will both benefit." The ans wer, diplomatically expressed, was: "No." There Is one Drovtmon nt thaw bank set which bankers would like to have. This Is the one extending the time for bankers to pay up on iDHns irom meir own banks. Existing law requires them to pay up by this coming June. An observer watched Mr. Roosevelt fend off shrewd questions gocd naturedly at a recent press confer ence, and observed : "Humor is Roosevelt's best shield." COMPETENT WORKMEN FREE ESTIMATES NEW PLAN BOOKS BIG PINES LUMBER CO. 1 1 Bmmnd