Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 28, 1935, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
MEBFORD MAIL TRIBUTE, MTCDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1935
PRICE SL
JUNKi
OF RESTRICTIONS
(Continued from Page One.)
officials, no attempt would be made
in the codes to define unfair trade
practices, but they would be subject
to "ceaae and desist" orders from the
trade commission.
Harrison conceded the court's de
cision that the federal government
could regulate only industries direct
ly affecting Interstate commerce lim
ited the scope of compulsory legisla
tion, and made the problem difficult.
He contended buslnens and Ubor
were overwhelmingly In favor of some
continued regulation of hours and
wage, adding "something of that
kind could be put through congress.
I don't think the great majority
want to go back to the old system.
Thta structure that business says Is
good and labor wants should be re
tained. We have got to salvage the
thing from the wreckage."
The senator left for a White House
conference with President Roosevelt
Immediately after expressing these
views to newspapermen at the capltol.
He stipulated he wax sprnklng his
own views and that no program had
been determined upon by the admin
istration. Social Security tn touched
In his opinion, the court decision
won't affect the social security pro
gram. He natd that view wu con
curred in by experts at the Justice
department.
HarrlAon also expressed the view
the decision had not hurt the admin
istration politically.
"Everybody realizes," he said, "that
When we took possession of the gov
ernment we were in an economic
quagmire and under President Roose
velt's leadership we were courageously
trying to do something."
Meanwhile, the new deal was at a
lrtual standstill as the President and
hi aides proceeded with study o'
way to return to the path from
which the supreme court thrust it.
Aside from the question of resto--ing
VRA principles Insofar as poo
Ible under the court's dictum, such
key legislation as the AAA amend
ments, social security, the banking
the utility holding company bill was
deferred for examination In the lUrhL
of yesterday's ruling. x
In the senate. Senator Robinson,
Democratic leader, contended congresn
could no longer regulate hours and
wagea In lntra-state commerce.
He was challenged at once by Sena
tor Black (D., Ala.), who insisted h'.i
90-hour week bill was "untouched'
by the court decision.
Confer on Future.
Conferences on the future program
went on at the White House, the Jus
tice and other department as well as
at the capltol. Business, Industrial
and labor executives also gathered to
plan their course.
In New York, President Harper alb
ley of the chamber of commerce of
the United States appealed for busi
ness to uphold the wage and hour
agreements of the voided codes. i
Donald Rlchberg. NBA chief, con
ferred at length with Attorney-On-real
Qummlngs, Solicitor - General
Stanley Heed and Charlmnn Harrison
of the state finance committee; but
no strategy was agreed on.
Asked whether the decision meant
the recovery administration would
fold up entirely. Rlchberg said "We'll
go on at least until June 1Q Whbt
we will do from then on depends on
what acMon Is taken by congress."
Senator Hartaon and Ch airmail
Dough ton of the house ways and
means committee were summoned to
confer with the President in late
afternoon. Labor leaders also werw
on the White House calling list.
House Units Dispute.
The house adjourned to halt dis
pute over the decision: but the sen
ate met regardless. There the debate
was touched off by a speech by Sena
tor Lewis of Illinois. Democratic
whip, pointing out the administra
tion was not protesting the court de
cision. He hailed the reception of
the decision as new evidence that the :
United states is a "constitutional re
public." Senator Robinson, the Democratic
leader, rising from his front row spat
near Vice-President Darner, conceded
STAMPS FOR SAN DIEGO EXPOSITION STARTED
rr: z
: Sft - Him iIm p-y4
I - to? X J f , JJ
&1A.j& JhrWt T5?Z ?itp , , ,$ , 'Ai asa jsl
Postmaster General Jamea A. Farley and members of the California congreaalonal delegation at
the bureau of engraving In Washington, D. C, aa the first run of the California International Expos!'
tion atamps was started. The exposition will open In San Diego May 29. (Associated Press Photo)
that the court's decision would "Im
pair and embarrass the administra
tion" of the recovery law. but do
nled it would "destroy" the act.
"It is entirely practicable," he said,
"to revise the statute so as to con
form to the decision."
On virtually all sldca, these words
of Donald R. Rlchberg last night were
taken to show no surrender of broarl
objectives:
Must Mitintnln fin Ins.
"We face now the question of main
taining the gains which have been
mode In the lost two years and re
taining the values which have been
created under the national recover
administration."
Whether thla meant an Immediate
pressure for legislation within th
bounds of the supreme court's unani
mous ruling, and possibly a move to
amend the constitution eventually,
none could say for sure.
While It appeared Mr. Roosevelt
was going to move carefully, the Im
pression at the White House also was
that he was determined to iQ-estab-llsh
In some legal way the principle
of collective bargaining by labor, for
minimum wagea and for maximum
hours of work, as well as abolishment
of child labor.
He waa expected to speak out
possibly over the radio- by the week
end. The status of the 73 1 codeti was
that they were simply voided and
hence non-operative. The adminis
tration waa unable to say yet what
fruit would come of Its appeal for
business and Industry to co-operate
for voluntary code maintenance.
Hectlon 7-A Impotent
Section 7-A. the much-fought over
collective bargaining part of the re
covery act, waa considered Impotent
because it had force only Insofar as
embodied In the codes. Senator
Bhtck (D., Ala.) took the decision as
a signal to push his 30-hour bill.
Joining the Rlchberg appeal for
voluntary observance of the codes,
Charles Fahy, chairman of the petro
leum administrative board, appealed
for passage of the Thomas bill to
regulate the oil Industry.
All federal control of oil produc
tion, which extended to gnsollne re
fining and other operations, was
wiped out by the supreme court NRA
decision.
A continuation of substantially the
same course now being followed by
the automobile manufacturers with
regnrd to wages, hours and working
conditions, was expected In the trnde.
John Russell of tho retail food and
grocery code authority wired Us dis
trict officials: "Stand by. We are
trying to map out something."
At Concord. N. C., Thomas H. Webb,
president of the American Cotton
Manufacturers' assocltlon, said senti
ment among southern textile manu
facturers waa in favor of continuing
the hours and wages provided for in
the industry's NRA code.
Liquor Industry Calm
Predictions of chaos In the liquor
Industry as the code foundation for
rigid federal control 'waa swept away
Economical Ub on LEVEL teaspoonfrul
to a cup of flour for most recipes.
Dependable Scientifically made by baking
powder SPECIALISTS to produce bast results.
KG BAKING POWDER
Same Price Today as 44 Years Ago
25 ounces lor 2So
You can also buy
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Ninth nnri Khrrtlrtt.
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were met by a calm assertion at the
federal alcohol control administra
tion that "thla will soon straighten
out."
Anticipating Republican gloating
over the NRA collapse, the great Dem
ocratic house majority shortened its
session to a brief span. The vote was
230 to 00 to adjourn.
At the capltol some new deal lead
ers expressed doubt that various
pending new deal legislation, such as
the AAA amendments, the utilities
holding company and the banking
bills and the social security legisla
tion, could withstand the force of the
supreme court's unanimous ruling.
Several members of the national
Industrial recovery board were con
sidering recommending the creation
of a government commission to study
the problem with a view to, legisla
tion at the next session of congress.
The natlonul labor relations board
vlrtunlly suspended operations "pend
ing determination of some future
policy" In the light of the Invalida
tion of the 31 NRA codes.
Labor .Maps Policy
American Federation of Labor offi
cials and their counsel gathered with
President William Green to map a
policy. There was some talk of
strikes.
Representative Snell of New York,
the Republican leader, told newspaper
men: "The whole new deal Is out of
the window."
"If President Roosevelt now would
forget all this experimenting and go
back to the beginning aa he did when
he set up the economy act, and put
things back on a business basis," he
snld, "the country would come back."
A complete rewriting of tho AAA
V'-iT II mi
It's Time Now To Get
Screen Doors
and
Window Screen
For comfort anil hi'iiltll'fi snke,
keep fllr. nml Inserts out nf YOl'U
htiiilt1. I.t'l ii, limv oii Just how
rcoiioiiilciilly till rnn be dune!
Woods Lumber Co.
JiirkMin nt (irnrvre Phone 10K
JH.'UMMH II limm III., Ml
C
tew
... alt the benefits of
country estate in town.
Tonnit, nding, oo!f. dAifi, 4uit
eight to tourd tlp. Ew
C'lnt cdit fmih
pnc. Largo OwU-do oom 4t
bth I J DO and tlJO ldl fee
t0 Overlooking o'd &at,
comtmtnt to all 8a (iti Writ
tfvli (o dfcript booklet
amendments to conform to the su
preme court decision waa decided
upon today by senate and house lead
era together with Secretary Wallace
of agriculture.
Attorney Oeneral Cumralngs, Solici
tor General Stanley Reed, Donald
Rlchberg, NRA head, and Senator Pat
Harrison selected the justice depart
ment for another of the many con
ferences under way.
nriWMM
IHffll
Si
(Continued from Psge One.)
If you look up the soup's history
you will find that Mr. Roosevelt hat
put 60 new governmental organiza
tions Into It since he started. Tne
actual figure Is 60, but there la some
duplication.
Thla trend away from soup enlarge
ment can be noted In the new relief
set-up. In It, Mr. Roosevelt Is using
about do existing government agen
cies, but Is creating only three new
ones Dr. Tug well's resettlement rem
edy administration, the rural electri
fication administration, and the ad
visory committee on allotments.
Mr. Ickes la writing a new book. It
la not Just another book explaining
how good the new deal Is. His as
sociates predict It will be a scorcher,
telling the Inside story of the PWA.
If it tells all, it will be. but that is
too much to expect Just yet.
For one thing, the hook Is supposed
to lay a lath rather roughly across
the bock of Lew Douglas, the former
budget director of the new deal, whose
speeches lately have been getting un
der a few hides here. If those persons
who have been reading copy over Mr
Ickes' shoulder Are to be believed,
the book will say that Douglas was
so dead set against government ex
pendlturee, he once urged the Presi
dent not to spend any of the orig
inal relief funds appropriated by con
gress. The law appropreting the money
did not bpeclflcally require the Presi
dent to spend it.
Labor It-aders have cooled off some
what since they discovered that the
new relief wage rate schedule la nut
exactly what It was announced to be.
The cooling waa accomplished when
Miss Perkins and Harry Hopkins pri
vately explained the published an
nouncement in a private session with
bulldng trades labor leaders. The wide
exemptions, the guarantee of year
around work, and the application of
lowest rates to only a remote special
class of unskilled labor was then
pointed cut.
Labor Secretary Per kin la supposed
to have received a pledge that there
will be no strikes due to that situ
ation. .
Current Washington unrest la not
in labor circles but In Mr. Roper's
business advisory council. A few res
lg nations are In the making. Some
of the business members are tired o;
trying to bore the new deal from
within and are ready to give It up.
Menus of the Day
4 tablespoons flour
2-3 cup water
2 tablespoons fat.
Have chops cut H Inch thick.
o uu ., lr and DeDDer. COVCT
half chops with stuffing, cover with
remaining chops. Hold in pisco "
. v..,.v. mt into baking Pan-
Sprinkle with flour, add water ana
fat. Cover and Dane 14 D
moderate oven. Baste frequently.
Stuffing,
z 3 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons onlona
3 tablespoons celery
1 cupe bread (crumbled)
H teaspoon salt
i, teaspoon poultry seasoning
i egg yolk.
Melt butter, brown onlona and
. k.AA t nt ingredients. Cook
slowly, stirring constantly with fork
until ingredients are wu nuw.
Spread on chops.
Use Mall Tribune want ads.
By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE.
Stuffed Veal Chop Recipe. ,
Dinner for Rainy Day.
Stuffed Veal Chops .
Esc a 1 1 oped Po t a toes
Buttered Spinach
Bread Strawberry Preserves
Head Lettuce Russian Dressing
Baked Pineapple Pudding
Coffee
Milk for Children Daily
Stuffed Veal Chops.
8 thin loin chops
teaspoon salt
yA teaspoon pepper
BIRTHS
Born to Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Good of
Phoenix a 6 3i -pound girl, Saturday.
May 30, at the Purucker maternity
home.
For Hose that Wear buy
NOLDE At HORST
Ethelwyn B. Hoffmann.
Because of the high farm Income
In North Carolina, mules sell for an
average price of (140 In that state in
contraat to an (80 average for the
nation as a whole. 1
To Los Angeles Mrs. H. E. Woody
left last night by train for Los Angeles.
MOW OPEM!
GEORGE'S
CASH STORE
60S East Main Street
Popular Priced Groceries, arranged for the convenience of
Medford shoppers . . . Plenty of parking space . . . Shop
here and avoid traffic! Open evenings until 8:00 o'clock
and holidays from 8:00 a. m. to 10:00 a. m. and from 4.00
p. m. to 6:00 p. m. You'll like to shop here . . . friendly,
personal service and genuine savings. George Witters, prop.
Above all, when the children enjoy ginger ak
... of course, it's
CANADA DKV
"The Champagne of Ginger Ales"
No wonder Canadt Dry Is o
pure and wholesome. It is man
ufactured from the 6nest ingre
dients under constant, rigid,
laboratory control. It's the one
ginger ale with water clearer
than distilled water and the full,
gentle flavor of real Jamaica
ginger.
MONTGOMERY WARD.
For Town For Country For Vacation
Garden
Party Brim
fi. -WVSHiK Thrilling new wash frocks I Piques I Pic
jh I vV XyV ons' Voilesl Basket Weaves! Suzana
' ' t"T W7.)k" Kfcvr" Checks! Flock Dots! Broadcloths! Seer-
sWvj v j! yjl suckers! Colors and patterns galore and
x f ' US? plenty of white and pastels. All beautiful-
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S8 Mf'-
AW FT'
irv i-vciy mnu ot
its. hummpK Hat
Mm
Casual for Sportt
at Wards low price . . ,
69c
Air-Cooled Straw
You're mre to find your hat ia
this grand new group. Linena,
straws, crepes, piques, fabric
novelties-even Toyo panama.
And typei for everyone, from
casual vacation hats to flattering
dress-up hats for important datea.
White, paatels, dark colors.
You'll hardly believe that 98c
could buy so much! Striking prints
nd sheers in guaranteed washable
colors! Dressy and shirtmaker
styles in plaids, stripes, checks, and
florals! Models for sports, for
shopping, for afternoon, for street
wear! Women's and misses. 14 to 52.
BUY NOW!
An Event You
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Missf
Toyo Panamas
Hand-woven imported strawl New stylesl
69
117 SOUTH CJjNTlAL
TELEPHONE 2&
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- iB omthi, meaium Dnms, Dretons, swaggers-even
very smart new creased crowns to choose from.
Toyos are featherlight and cool on scorching dayi.
Toyos are as right with sports dresses as wiOi
sott flowered chiffons and tailored town frocks.
iftroKDain ribbon or noveity bands on eveiy nat!