PAGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON, THURSDAY. MAY. 23. 1935.
Medford Mail Tribune
"Cfttvonc m Sotithtrn OrtgM
Rdi th MM rrlbunt'
Daily Hxetpt Btturday
Pjbhsbnl tn
HKUKdKD PKlNTINti CO.
1b--21-i N Fir HI
ROBKKT W HUHL, Editor
Ad Independent Nenptpef
entered ta trtnoi etui mitttr at Medford
Oregon, under Act of Mareb 8. 1879.
HimSCHtPTION BATES
Br Mall is AdtaiK
Dally. od rwr ;
Dslly, ill month
Dallj, one month 8U
Bj Carrier in Atones Medford, Aihlwd.
JicksonnUe, Central Point, Pboaoti. Went. Oold
Bill and 00 tighwm.
Dally. o r'ar ja.uv
Dally, Aoe month
All trmi, usb Id atom.
Offlrln paper of the CtU of Medford.
Official paper of Jaeafoo County.
MKMBKH Or THE ASSOCIATED VHEM
Tbt Associated Pren la exelitfltaly anllUed U
tha um tor publlMtinn of all Den dUpatehea
credited u It itt otherUe credited Id tbl pape?
trn IIM W IK local nrw vrunu-
All rlgriU fy pijhllMtloo of iptclal dtepatcb
OereiD W 1IK resenwi.
MKMKEH OF UNITED PKE8B
&rKM HKii OF aimmi HUKEAO
OF CIKCUUTIONB
Adwrttilnt Hepresentalim
It. C MOliENSEN COM KANT
Orrieea in Sum York, Chicago. Detroit. ftu
Kranclien l 4nKc'e Reattl Pnrlland.
OH
wt oooua fur
Ye Smudge Pot
l(y Arthur Perry
The Governor continue to act
like reel one. He hai called upon
eherlftB In strike area to do their
duty instead ot grinning at law vio
lator, let the voters In the next
primary election go where they will.
Farmers report wild oate plentiful
In their fields. They do not know
who aowed them.
...
Implication has been thrown out
through some of the press that Mr.
Baer la a Communist. When as a
matter of fact he la a Republican
and haa held the position of local
committeeman. tuorvaiua
Times.) The some thing; many hold. .
though different.
H Is now as much too hot aa It
was formerly too cool.
Eplgrnma of Mark Twsln, famed
humorist, dot the editorial pages
these daya. There Is one missing,
vli: "Man Is the only animal that
can be skinned more than once."
A Spokane. Wash., reverend, ad
dressing a Portland audience, de
clared "lllloglcal thinking" la now
at Its peak among the people. It
has not occurred to the Spokane
divine that "Illogical thinking" is
better than no thinking at all.
rilKATINO HANTA (LAI'S
((alrinrll, Ida., Trlhllne)
No good American begrudges
relief to persona who. after hav
ing honestly endeavored to main
tain themselves, alio faced with
destitution. But It Is clear that
an Increasing number of Im
provident tricksters have learned
to regard a place at the public
trough as their American right.
This mentsl attitude has become
little less thsn a national dls
esse. rormer Congresamsn Hswley vis
ited In the city yesterday. He Is
thinking some of seeking another
term In the lower house, but atstea
he has "not come to a definite con
clusion." There la no doubt about
this. local Journalists experienced
more difficulty In catching him for
sn Interview on the state of the
union thsn a private citizen Involved
In an auto accclrient on the wrong
side of the road.
...
By way of pleassnt change. In the
field of romance, a California soctsl
Ite hes married sn ex-convlct. ln
stesd of a European count.
...
"Pop" Gates has trimmed his mus
tache to a shadow of Its former
bristling self, for whlrh his brother.
"Peons Bin." Is blamed by the un
informed. ...
"Mschlne Oun Found In Baby'
Carriage." iHdllne Burbank. Cal..
Review. 1 Mama was going to get
through the economic conference on
the street corner or know the reason
why.
A windmill hss been Invented for
ferm use that will function, even
If no wind Is blowing. It Is sn Im
provement on the old windmill, In
cluding the type that eats up all
the fried chicken, mskes a speech,
pssses-the-hat and catchea the eve
ning train for Portland.
The long pleasant evenings cause
golfers to remain on the links until
it Is too dark to mow the lawn.
MltMNS AND I1I.1KS.
And now srlentlsts ssy thst brains
and blues go together. In sn Intelli
gence test the score of the opti
mists was much lower thsn the score
of the pe.vslmlsts. ss reported by Dr.
Oburn. sociologist. The pessimistic,
who worried over their grsde and
thoucht they were going to flunk,
won out. The optimistic were too
much so. The average score of the
latter was 180. aa compared with 233
for the former. Maybe the Inferiority
complex la not so bad after all.
The grnuch. who la blue about the
future, may sometimes give a better
sccount of himself thsn the msn
with a grin. And If hard tunes make
pesMmws. ne may e-e-l a Miner- j
generation. ( "Column Review").
.NEIA
Roosevelt Versus Hoover
HUEY LONG doesn't let a day go by, without lambasting
President Roosevelt. No matter w hat he talks about in the
senate, and Iluey talks most of the time, the president gets
his broadside of billingsgate, before the Kingfish sits down.
During one of his table thumping tirades about a week ago,
Huey, no doubt, gave the underlying reason for this virulent
outbreak of Rooseveltphobia.
Huey castigated the administration for withholding from
him federal paronage in Louisiana, and concluded by declaring
that President Roosevelt is today as unpopular in the country at
large as ex-President Hoover had ever been.
THE Kingfish is first, last, and all the time an opportunist.
As his mouth is always open so his car is always on the
ground. When Roosevelt was on the top of the wave, Huey was
with him, with sound truck and brass band; but when as inevit
ably happens, the president's popularity started to decline, Huey
"jumped" the pack, to bring about his downfall, and is deter
mined to be in at the "kill."
The Kingfish 's conviction that such action will be popular
with the people, was undoubtedly the mainspring of his change
of front. This and the fact that Huey is always for Huey he is
in politics for what he personally can get out of it, and anyone
who dares to place an obstacle in Huey's march to patronage
and power, must feel the force of his royal displeasure, and his
political opposition to the bitter end.
BUT is the Kingfish correct in his analysis of the situation, as
far as the president's unpopularity is concerned? That the
president's popularity has declined no one questions. That the
"honeymoon" is not only over, but gone never 'to return, no
informed person would deny.
But is it as bad as Huey makes out? Is it true, that a poli
tician like the Kingfish is as safe in turning the vials of his
venom and wrath on Roosevelt, as it is, and for so long a time
has been, to throw the, bench and the water bucket at Hard
hearted "Herbert", the sage of Palo Alto?
WE think not. We believe Huey is about as right in this
contention as he is in most of his others, which is from
ten to fifteen percent. Huey not only loves to take a half-truth
and dress it up as the whole truth; but he loves to take ONE
little grain of truth, plant it in the soil of unrest and discontent,
water it with his glittering generalities and empty promises,
fertilize it with his Kickapoo hocus pocus, and bring it forth as
sort of Arabian hanging garden.
This legerdemain we believe,
assuming of course he believes what he says which is always
doubtful. If Huey really believes President Roosevelt is as un
popular as his predecessor, or ever will be, he has for once,
fallen a victim of his own technique deceived himself, along
with his deluded followers.
OUCH a transformation as Huey envisions is, as we sec it,
simply not in the cards. It isn't a matter of political issues
or beliefs, of what is best for the country or what isn't, it is
a matter of temperament anil personality.
Our own belief is, that if President Roosevelt lives long
enough, he will not escape the unpopularity, the suffering,
mental and physical, that for so many years, has been the in
escapable fate of practically all our presidents particularly the
greater ones. We the people for some reason INSIST upon
placing our national leaders on the greatest heights and then,
sooner or later, smashing them down again. We don't expect
FDJt to escape this fate entirely.
But we do expect him to have and to hold a certain degree
of personal prestige and popularity, which President Hoover,
through no fault of his own never enjoyed, and never will.
It has nothing to tlo with polities, it is, we repeat, tempera
ment and personality. In short, right or wrong, FDR draws
people to him ; and also wrong or right, Mr. Hoover, doesn't,
never did, and never will. One HAS it, the other HASN'T.
That's all.
Jane Addams Christian
JISS JANE ADDAMS who died on Tuesday, had the unusual
" distinction of being a true Christian. She was filled with
the milk of human kindness; with pity for the lowly and sym
pathy for the unfortunate. She saw much of evil and always
returned it with good; she disliked violence and hated war, she
loved tolerance and peace.
A college graduate, the daughter of indulgent and well to do
parents, Jane Addams turned her back upon a social life;
DELIBERATELY gave up all ideas of a husband, a home and
family and at a time when the course she pursued was taken as
a sure sign of an unbalanced mind,
life work.
Establishing the now famous
only set the standard for practical and constructive settlement
work in this country, but by the force of her example made it,
for many years, the fashionable thing for nice young ladies to do.
'T'llERE was nothing of the dilletante, however, about Jane
Addams. Kindly, tolerant and understanding in her rela
tions with others, particularly toward those less fortunate than
herself, she was a force to be reckoned with when it came to
political corruption, hypocrisy or sham.
Several bocks could be filled with the fights she led at
times almost single handed, to make Chicago a better place in
which to live.
And with the spurious, patronizing, smart society type ol
benevolence she had no patience at all.
IT would be nice to record that Miss Addams won her fight for
belter social and political conditions in Chicago and this
country, all down the line. But she didn't. She did great good,
and the example she set and the principles she established, will
continue to do Knnd through the years.
Hut .she failed in many of her major undertakings, just as
she failed to make anything but a dinner table joke out of the
famous Ford Peace Ship during the World war.
That peace ship incident, however, was after all, character
istic of Jane Add.niK and i 0ne sense might be accepted as
the yiiiliti of her life. Not that her life was a failure as
that Ford venture, iar l'mru it. It was a full life and a glon
he has followed in this case,
adopted social service as her
Hull House Miss Addams, not
ously successful one. But Jane Addams was always shooting at
the stars. Her reach always exceeded her grasp. She didn't
care whether a thing was impractical or practical, feasible or
not feasible, she was for it if she believed it was RIGHT!
Well that peace ship was right in principle. In a truly
Christian world or in an entirely rational world, it would never
have failed.
But it did fail, just as many of Jane Addams' political and
social reforms failed, and for the same reason.
Jane Addams had one of the finest faces and the saddest pair
of eyes mortal has ever gazed upon. There was something almost
Lincolneque about them. For this there was a reason.
Her tragedy was the inevitable tragedy of a TRUE Christian
living and working in a NOT-YET Christian world.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady. M.D.
feigned leltert pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease
diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self -addressed
envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink
Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered.
No reply can he made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr.
William lira fly. 2os E! Cam I no. Beverly Hills, Cal.
REVIVAL OF TONY
Two weeks after you had announc
ed that Tony the W Irish Terror had
gone to the hannv hunting grounds.
we were delight
ed to read in
your column that
:.e was revived
and frisking
.bout, bounding
onto his favorite
jhalr. etc. Th
3 nip of lodin Is
i not so potent a
I all that, is It?
i (Mm. h. 8.)
Madam, you
c cruel. Your
tter caught me
niuu noma tiiiiLj ijr?akfast and with
the prospect of waiting another hour
for dinner, and at such a time it Is
easy for a man of my extraction to
burst into tears. Furthermore, I
have become almost resigned to the
dreary atmosphere around here. Then,
too, lately there have been so sounds
of tosnnils digging into the slippery
stairs at 1 or 2 a. m. right up to
the last Tony negotiated those stairs
at least once every night to see
whether by any chance I might have
any little tidbit for him.
If young Dr. Cornish, the Berkeley
wientlst who brings 'em back alive,
can revive all those mere dogs why
can't I have Tony back again Just
for a brief visit? What have I done
that you begrudge me this little so
lace? To be honest, I must confess that
neither the nip of iodln nor the vita
min ration actually restored Tony to
life. What happened was a mlx-up
of copy. I wrote the second item to
which you refer a month or two be
fore Tony's sudden demise. But in
shuffling It over it got Into print
ahead of the item telling of the old
fellow's passing and the atmosphere
of gloom that had come over us all
when Tony was gone.
I still urge that everybody who
keeps a dog or a cat should see to
It that the pet receives a suitable sup
ply of iodln with Tony put a drop
of the ordinary tincture of Iodln
(iodine to you, old fossils) in a glass
of water for myself once a week 01
so, and another drop In Tony's di$h
of water once a week or so.
It Is a kindness to animals, too. to
see that they get their vitamins. Re
member the case of the prize dog
that became practically paralyzed in
the hind quarters and got no relief
from the various "experts" consulted,
until finally a medical man doing
nutrition research suggested vitamin
B. and that soon restored the dog to
health. Share your vitamins, as well
as your Iodln. with your pet.
While we are off the beat tho the
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntvre
NEW YORK, May 23. I saw what
began as a mild curb argument over
parking space reach the climax of a
street riot on 7th
avenue In the
SO's last evening
It was the first
real fist fight,
toe to toe slug
ging. I've seen
since Cincinnati's
Over - the -Rhine
days, and I en
joyed It thor
oughly. Two h a 1 1 e a
and well propor
tioned young men
arrived at a spa-'o
the same time ano scraped fenders
There were a few snarling epithets
exchanged, then a long wordy wran
gle and the two stepped from their
113
1 1-:
mumtluumimmiumtmMmt n niMaaM j w in an f i Mum mnmamntM
CLIFF GODDARD'S
eito Racketeers
Popularly Known as the ORIGINAL
WESTERN BARN DANCE ORCHESTRA
Old and Modern Dance Plavers Radio Entertainers of RADIOLAND arr1
KTFI, Twin Falls, Idaho
Featuring
VELMA or BUTTERMILK BESS
POPULAR VOCALIST
and UNCLE JOSH, Comedian
EVERY ONE AN ENTERTAINER
Will
for one solid
FRIED CHIC'KEN -
tZL
THE WIRISH TERROR
keeping of a dog or a cat or a bird
or a horse or a cow or almost any
animal is a health question often
enough let me put -in a word for ah
the maltreated animals that are fed
and cared for aa directed by self-constituted
experts or fanciers or breed
ers. Don't subject your animal to
nostrume and quackery. Follow the
advice of a competent Veterinary.
Don't Inflict "worm medicine" on
your animal unless your veterinary
prescribes it. Don't confine the ani
mal to a freak diet on the suggestion
of some untrained "expert."
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Formaldehyde Fumes.
I work where formaldehyde 1b used
iVi the process of making paper. The
paper Is put through a tank contain
ing formaldehyde and this causes m
eyes to water and smart. C. F. T.
Answer It Is Injurious to the eyes,
nose and bronchi, and to genera,
health. Keep a bottle of plain am
monia water on hand and ex post
some In a dish so you can get a mod
erate whiff of it whenever you art
exposed to the formaldehyde. Or keep
a vial of aromatic spirits of am
monia and sniff at a few drops In the
palm of your hand whenever exposed
to formaldehyde.
Secret of Happiness.
Every few days it seems I get un
usually cheerful, bright and happy for
several hours. Then I bounce back to
normal again. Could this result from
any particular food or food combina
tion, or the amount of sleep I've had,
or is it some peculiar chemical
changes in my system? J. B.
Answer If we only knew the ans
wer to that we could make the whole
world happy. Your doctor, making
health examination or survey, might
find the explanation.
Amalgam.
Friend sent my young son some
amalgam picked up at an old mine.
To try to separate the mercury the
boy put the crushed amalgam on the
hot stove. The vapor left a quick
silver coating on the shelf of the
range and next day two of the family
had terrific bronchial coughs and
sore throats and felt wretched. Mrs.
M. B.
Answer Inhalation of the vapor
ized mercury may have produced the
trouble. Most accidental or industrial
mercury poisoning is by inhalation
of the mercury vaporized or volatil
ized by heat, even the heat of th:
body.
(Copyright. 1935. John F. DUle Co.)
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. ilrady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. I).. ZH!i El
(amino, Beverly Hills, Calif.
oars, removed their coats and shadoA
boxed a bit.
Finally one put over a healtny
punch and closed in. They rained
blow after blow on each other until
each face was puffed and gory. Then
they rested a moment and without a
word sprang into action. An enor
mous crowd blocked the street and
polcee had difficulty breaking hrd
the police had difficulty breaking
through.
When they did the battle had be
come so ferocious they had to use
their clubs. Soon the slrening riot
cars roared up. An entire block vns
impassable. The belligerents, who
had been rather splffily dressed, we.e
led bleeding and in shreds to a patrol
wagon. It was quite a show.
Jack's all night restJiumnt some
how incubated fist fighta nightly Sn
its day. There was scarcely a dawn
that several were not carried out feet
up aa the result of healthy swings.
Bmtanony's on 39th street was an
other generating ground for slug
fest. xisually college boys. At Jack's
a waiter named "Red" separated com
batants by giving them what was
known ss "the thumb" cruel but
-,ws at PINE
week Starting Wednesday, May 22
STEAKS - SANDWICHES. DRINKS CLEAN FUN
ADMISSION FREE
effective. He would dip his thumb
In a mustard pot and Jab It In their
eyes.
There In a legend that many of the
famous Hilly Baxter Letters, teeming
with the sophistications and bmk
humors of another decade, were writ
ten at a table In Jack's. Down-etala
wa the Battling Nelson Grill, usu
ally in an indignant twirl of fist,
where Hype Igoe strummed his clar
box ukulele and the beloved car
toonist Tad got so many of his car
toon Ideas and laughed himself out
of a thousand trains for Great Keck.
Good old Tad! No passing in news
paperdom left a greater void.
Grandma, confusing the pool nail
and- bowjtng alley, used to call out
as we started forth in the evenine:
"Stay away from that polln alley!"
So it Is nice to hear that the Wal
dorf has snatched the pool table from
lta Joe's two-and-a-half -cents-a-cue
stigma for a little dudlng up. The
hotel has set aside a cream and gold
suite on the 17th floor for several
pocket billiard pool to most of us
tables. It is called The Carom club
and the board of governors Includes
such blgglttea as the Walter P.
Chryslers. John Jacob Astors. Mr
Duke Blddle, Madame Jerltza and
Princew what a pip for gangling!
Dolly Oololensky.
I have been reading an essay by
WInnifred King Rugg on the wonder
and welter of worda. She finds so
many unlovely words begin with sn
Such a snag, snarl, sneer, sneeze,
snicker, snivel, snoop and snort. She
loves the word chalcedony but has
never found a place to use It. A
more beautiful word In my opinion
ia hyacinth. Ford Mad ox Ford thinks
one of the attractive words Is trou
badour. One of the Powys so many
I forget which la a constant user
of nutrient. Christopher Morley is
fond of lrrev'lant. Tho elder Pu
litzer dragged in paradoxical when
ever he got the chance. Shakespeare
was especially fond of sullen and
Dickens of lustre. Chesterton thinks
the word that best expresses what it
means is radiate.
Thingumabobs: Charles and Kath
leen Norris will leave California If
the 15 per cent state tax on In
comes is passed . . . Damon Runyon
is 55 years old . . . Cornelius Van
derbllt always rides in an uppjr
Pullman berth . . ; A gesture to
democracy . . . Paul Whiteman has
taken up flying and vice versa . . .
Tony Sarg has quit Greenwich Vil
lage for the artist colony on Wes'
67th street . . . Clare Booth Brokaw'e
apartment has a room of mirror
covered furniture . . . Percy Crosby,
with four studios in his Potomac
home, works with a drawing board
against the piano in the living room
. . . The Kent Coopers are building
a mansion in Miami.
Texans have many odd ejaculations
that so olten hit the mark. Such as
"hoot nanny on the hlckey" for som.'
inconsequential. Rounding a turn
In the park with a long horn as the
dying sun glinted the lay skylire
of mosques, minarets and towers, he
exclaimed: "Sweet cookie!" That
sums it up a cookie with icing!
IAN
Li
PORTLAND. May 23. (AP) De
spite the herculean efforts of Casey
KazanJIan. ex-Stanford athlete, Jim
Londos still ruled the heavyweight
wrestling roost -today.
Londos took the first fall In 42
minutes. 24 seconds after punishing
Kazanjlan with a back wrenching
double stepover toe, or crab hold.
The Californian asked for an addi
tional five minutes, which was grant
ed. Referee Verne Harrington stopped
the bout when It was apparent Kaz
anjlan was In no condition to with
stand the Greek's attacks, and award
ed the match to Londos.
In the seml-wlndup Jaggat Singh.
Hindu, gained one fall and a decision
in the third round over Prank Speers.
Speers gave up when the Indian ap
plied his Indian deathlock.
Harry Dcmetral. slugged and wrest
led his way to a two-round victory
over Glenn Stone. Tony Catalino
pinned John Mc Woods In the thl-d
round when Mc Woods was injured as
the ring posts broke.
SAN FRANCISCO. May 23. (API
Frederick Waener. former vice-presi
dent of Paul Block and associates.
today became publisher of the San
Francisco Call-Bulletin, succeeding
Robert P. Holllday.
MEDFORD VETERINARY
HOSPITAL
IS years experience tn InrRe
and small animal practice
Dr. J. W. Waters
225 N. Riverside
Phone 363
CONE IBM
Flight 'o Time
(Medford and Jackson Count
Hlstury from the fllra of the
Mall Tribune of IU and 20 Year
Ago).
TEN VEARS 10 TODAY
May TA. 1B35.
(It Was Saturday)
Still no word of Amundsen
aides on plane to North Pole.
People advised to procure dog li
cense, or face arrest. There were three
dog fights In front of the Chamber
of Commerce yesterday afternoon, and
a baby buggy was knocked over.
Salvation Army requests
truck
to carry on relief work.
Paving of the Crater Lake road to
start July 1.
Irate subscriber writes letter to
editor: "In reply to the Chamber of
Commerce plaint, "what will the
tourist think." "I do not care what
the tourist thinks, and don't believe
anybody else does."
TWENTY YEARS AfiO TODAY
May 23. Miff.
(It Was Sunday)
Funds being collected here for "re
habilitation of London slums."
Mt. Lassen, Calif., continues to
emit mud and smoke, and "a ten
foot boulder was thrown two miles.''
Italy formally declares war on Aus
tria, Germany declares war on Italy.
Austrian warships' shell Italian towns
along Adriatic shores.
Schools of city to close next Fri
day. The graduation exercises will be
held at the Page theater.
There Is an unconfirmed rumor
circulating over the Little Applegate
telephone line to the effect that Mr.
and Mrs. Jeanette have had a ma
terial increase in their family. (Bun
com Brevities.)
Ye Poet's Cornei
THE CHAIN LETTER CRAZE
The little town of Medford,
At the foot of Roxy Ann.
Lay happy and contented.
As only a small town can.
Till up Jumped the devil.
With loud and Joyful cries.
And socked this little town
Right square between the eyes.
Tt Is chain this and chain that,
And chaining all the time;
A five, a dollar, quarter.
Or even Mlstet, spare a dime.
You get so sick and tired
Of letters In your box,
Not to break the chain,
Please don't let it stop.
Some are getting rich and wealthy:
Others do not get a dime;
But all are neglecting home and
Mother,
Typing copies all the time.
Your neighbor hardly knows you.
So intent is he to write.
Sending out chain letters
Far into the night.
The pos-al clerks are tired and hag
gard, And worn to the bone.
Sorting letters that come
From Mexico to Nome.
Now hold tight, my fellow men.
The worst Is yet to come, I fear.
And don't give up the ship, old boy.
But hang onto your landing gear
M. D.
LIFE BEtilNS AT fl5
Cheer up. grandpa, don't you cry!
You'll wear diamonds by and by.
Uncle Sam has money mills
.Made to grind out new bills.
He will help you in your cause,
Sentinels who never fail ' s , -I
: 7 ' IPI V
i I- H -TV 1 :
-J
'CANADA DRY"
The Champagne of Ginger Ales
With his old-age pension laws.
No more worry over bills.
Butcher' duns, or doctor' pills.
No more psnlc over rent.
Leave that all to government.
Dine on squab and caviar.
Sport a streamline motor car.
When the blizzards bliz a bit.
Off to Plm Beach gaily flit.
Lead a life on pleasure bent.
But you must spend every cent!
Whoopee, grandpa! Stay alive!
Life begins at sixty-five!
(Selected.)
.
ComHiunications
2 Bun-; 1 Hits: 1 Error.
To the Editor:
I have heard you being criticized
quite severely for your Sollnsky
'whitewash" editorial: but no on
could have anything but the lushest
praise for your editorial on "Law
rence of Arabia." It was absolutely
superb: In fact, to me It la only com
parable to an edlto-lal you wrote,
some years sffl about Doiuherty. it
the dedication of the Hardinit me.
morial. That cne was miRnlflcent.
You'll never write one as fine as that
again.
In your editorial about Lawrence
you brought out so clearly the very
facts that he himself tried so hard
to Ret over to the mnssea. but
couldn't.
Guess I appreciated your artu-le so
much because to me Lawrence, of al
the thousand and one war heroes,
was the greatest and most interest
ing. JACK WILLS.
Medford. May 21st.
Squirrel Hit Hoy
COLUMBUS. O. (UPI Harold
t u nlnvlnc 1,, his bark-
vnrrt hers when a squirrel ran up his
trouser leg and nlpp:d Dim sharply.
PLANNING
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