Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1935)
Pl'GE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, JIEDFORD, OREGON". MONDAY. .TTNE 3. 1935. Medford Mail Tribune "KttrysM IB loulhirn Origan Rtidi Uii ll TrlbuM' Dallj Kictpt Saturday PabihhwJ hr MIDFORn PRINTING 00. tt-Sr-30 ti. fit 8L P T6 ROBERT W. RUBU aVllWr Ad iDdepwdcot Nenpapcr bitarrt m Hmod elan outur at Medord. ftwfoo, ander Art of tUrcb , 18T9. 8UH8CKIPT.0N BATT8 Br MaJl to Adtaoca Duly. oo rr IJ-on Dally, rti oooUm Dallf, on month d. r.rw m A rfanr Medford. Aabtand, JtrkUDTiUa, Central Potot. Pboealx, Talent. Cold Hill and on Ugniaia. Dally, one lv Dally, its months Dally, oh montb All tarnu, eun w toi-unc. Offldal oapat of tha City ot Madford. Offldtl paper of JteUon County. MEMBKII 09 THE ASSOCIATED PHEM uMrm ruU Lcued Wlra tkrriw Tb Ajwdattd Praaa li aidusltely anUUad to tha uta for puollcilloo of all otwt dUpatcbea rrfrdlttv) to tt otherals credited tn thin paper ad also to 'iw local (ten PiiblliMd tterelo. All rifhtt tot publication of ipeclaJ dlipatdjaa strato ua auo tutnta. MEMHEfc Of UNITED PKE88 MEMRKK OB1 AUDIT H (IKE AO 0? C1KTULATIONB Adtartlilnc Keprcaentattm U. C MO-iENSKN COMPANY Offleat In Stw Virt. Chicago, Detroit, Sal rranelcco I'M Aneetra ttoitlr Portland. Ye Smudge Pot II? Arthur I'rrrj Th 'removal of Intrlmie from poll, ileum' Is advocated, as a meana of raatorlng 'economic penen' In Oregon. Under tha plan, even If the operation waa a aucceea. the politician would v left, in china, civil war waa the WIMOWMOT vomie for several yeara. The china- puppet to have the full confidence of the university, and past ''&Mvrn,r' "" Ri,natinn M " dpnn s,a,p ndlh ner continued the civil war. 0f a younger man. His retention miht have so stimulated the 'The cunlvMha.'dvP.rW. a num-1 type of politics mentioned above that irreparable (Uniace to the bar of Investor will be eating short- j onnM nf (.rluefttion would have been unavoidable. yiOB OI KCWIJJT uuni bill "CORRKCTNFSa CI BEAT ASSUR ANCE IN PLANS FOR 10.18 WED- enanies the eociety editrena to de-1 serine nil detatla, down to the groom, a exqulatte. An OreRon City minister has dis covered a new ailment 'Mlcrobus 8ab batlcus (Sunday alekneas), which he describes, aa follows,. In the Oregon City Enter prise The attack cornea on suddenly on Sunday no symptoms felt on Saturday and la usually first noticed about 0:30 a. m. H con tinues until after the morning worship services are over. Then the patient feels easy and eats a hearty dinner. In the afternoon j he Is able to drive the car. or have visitors, and sometimes feels strong enough to play ball or go fishing. The nation Is now threatened with an auto costing hut 1R0 a price that will. It Is claimed, place It In the hands of all. Its "economic value has not yet been appraised." It will mean this: the autolst now advertis ing his willingness to trade a sedan for a cow. will be willing to swap his transportation for a ham sandwich. The highways and byways were crowded Saturday night with Barney Oldflelds. only travelling 30 miles an hour with Just two (3) beers under their belts. Young man, single, hard worker, sell auto accessories from truck. With hard continuous efforts can earn meager living. (Phoenix (AHr.) Oa rtte) Opportunity sneaks up. The Pronpect ball team the dust at Rogue River yesterday. They also felt like biting the umpire. Thomas Csrleton of their own neck of woodr who rides a horse well. Oeorge Weyerhaeuser has been re turned to his anguished parents, up on their payment of nano.ooo. Oeome was a prisoner for eight days. The kidnapers inflicted no undue cruelty upon him. However, en route to his home In a taxi, with a veteran re porter, he was a.-Oced fof a kiss. The scribe describes the near-harrowing event, towtt: And at this point this darned old grav head went soft as he said: "Oeonte. would you give me a kis?" The Prince of wale visited Cmw, Vales. Iset week. Cmw Is pronounced "Room " They should have said so In the first place, Another Hollywood romance has hit the locks The lady, seeking a di vorce, will have to touch it out on $1000 pr month In a 42-room house MFK IN M MI I Prtmitlva de 1 Cruc had profound faith In Lily a dog of hers, fema'e over three montlut old and terrtbi' Tain. Se let her 1 we nienn I.ilv roam tii world with tlie freedom oi the new woman, and as Alwnvs pen In Mich caxa when you give a el enough rope Lily g-?t tdesa lnt her hes.1 a nd bit aometxvv nm -vhere. ( Manilla (P I) T-ti'ine ) Or rc nit Uetither. Fair lonUht end Tie.dT N fhanfe in temperature. Oentle chan(reab wind off the coast For Good Buys :n l'.ed Cars aee ARMsrnoNO mo tors inc lot on T.ASX (I'M St Tei IB Dm Mall Tribune want ade. Politics and Higher Education THERE is a good deal of loose thinking about politics. Strictly speaking politics is the art and science of government. In common usage, however, polities is frequently employed in a disparaging and derogatory sense. A correspondent in the Oregonian this morning, for example, pings his Corona in righteous wrath, to demand that politics be taken from the realm of higher education in this state. By the term politics, we assume, he means the pulling and hauling of self interested individuals and factions, for this sdvantage or that, to the injury and detriment, of the cause bf education itself. Would that correspondent's prayer might be answered. Every true friend of education would like to see it divorced completely and entirely from polities. But nothing is more certain, than that it can't he. The state university and the state college, are public institutions, sup ported by the tax payers, and as long as this is true, the elimina tion of politics in their administration is utterly impossible. We don't of course mean partisan politics. Political issues and party labels, the irrepressible and semi comic conflict between Republicans and Democrats, have no place in higher education and, we trust never will have. But personal politics, factional politics, the reactions, the impulses and prejudices, of both individuals and vox populi in the mass, HAVE, and as long as the college and university, arc PU'BrjC, rather than private institutions of learning, such a condition is unavoidable. SO in our judgment, all this talk about ELIMINATING this type of politics from the administration of higher education in this state, might as well he abandoned, for it expresses an ideal that can never be reached. Far more sensible to realistij ally face the facts as they are, and start from the premise, that politics in the popular sense, have never been eliminated from public education and never will be. For that is the truth. HAVING disposed of that, matter, and ceased crying for the moon, then, as we see it, the thing to do is, to so readjust the system of higher education, that the destructive force of such politics may be reduced to a minimum, and as far as is humanly possible, reasonable peace and harmony be restored, t the realm of education throughout the state. Toward this end, the resignation of C'hiuiccUor Kerr, was a step in the right direction. He had done his job and an excel lent job too. As leader of a rival institution, he never could IN another up state comment on note the hope expressed, that be "something more than a masterful politician. ' Amen to that of course. We hope he will he Ml'C'H more, an cducntor, capable and progressive, a gentleman and a scholar, the best man for the job that can be secured, but We hope too he will be a good politician, and by good we mean just that GOOD! We hope he will understand that a knowledge of human nature, an ability to get. along with people all sorts and types of people. a clear grasp of the cross currents and purposes, the petty differences and selfish aims, which motivate and often mislead, the people in the mass. are almost as necessary to success in his position, as sound scholarship or executive ability. For, as above stated, there is no way of eliminating this type of politics from the administration of our institutions of higher learning or for that matter, from the administration of ANY public institutions. Dr. Kerr may have been too much a politician. But let thi fact not be forgotten. No one can make a success as chancellor of higher education in this state who is NO politician. And the better politician he is in this PROFKR sense of the term, the better for him, the better for the institutions of higher education and the better for the state. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY Ry O. O. Mclntyre NRW YORK. June 3 In the man ner of Arnold Brnett'a Journal: I saw her at Chatham Walk laat night with a complete oumster. One of those rare, fairy girls witii an elf sn.lle a Marie Poro In The Admirable Crlchton- whose entrance made vow axhsmed at taring w fixed ly. But she did n't mlnri. The ad :t. I ratter, of men wmt her rock iU. An1 w.icn she fades cet thee to a nun nery or a leap out of a I3h atcy window ... or "James, the Foe Utt er in West 4Sth atreet. and don't spare the horses!" Then there was the Bernard Shaw fellow on the side walk bench opposite Otto Kshn'a or the uper avenue. F.lderly with a white hearf.. digni fied, though seedy. He had an un couth brown paper ps-kime all hi worldly effects, He waa "lvlns a crosa-word purle. He had Plenty X time Plenty He had all the time there wsa I'm crary. but dasse-.t to use in- words edacloua. gular, wr tol. catoptric and xanthous. People lniAiine an author, ha. h lust nanus his book and that' tha A'as he haa to p!e.s the sa.es forve LiKklee he who s-.unreM seve- nsmea. of whwh e really like on'., one I"- a- pieced to svlecl (h.i one he hats. Title for esAtr : V. known tv.oks of wvM -known author Ove of the hardest working author. tn the business the late and mono, ted loms Joeph Vance H bHvsvb Aorkd at n'sht tvst titiv of h 1 1 fo; cream e work He was a flat IiffUter and a fine friend. Reai'y 1 iyi J the educational situation, we the successor to Dr. Kerr will started the Authors' League But a lonely aa hla Lone Wolf and died alone horribly. He lived at one time at the for-men-only Benedick In Wahlnj!ton Square EaM. Nearly all whosewhoeere In art and literature seem to have lived there. Ike Mi -coason. Hendrik VanLoon. Jaok Lon don. Charlie Norria and many others A year In Waahlnffton Sqiare uausll, removes the last traoes of Amall town, ishnewi. Or so It la believed The most fun at amateur the rioals la the offside humor Suc.i as the fellow Arthur McVeigh. 1 be lieve at the Dutch Treat Jinks who. after a lon$ delay of the first cur tain stood up and yawned: "Well anyway I' And that first, time Jame. Montoniery FIsci; yelled: "Loudei and funnier!" Then Broadway" pick ed It up and ot aimed it. a usual The forthright frsnknesa ,n mod ern Uteri ture make it difficult t. believe ths restrictions of a 'cw ye- ago There was the publisher who wouldn't permit Oelett Burgess to in' 'silk stockings" tn his first noe A bit too risque ! And it was th Indies Home .Journal, aa I recall. tht forbade Bert Terhune s hero to leaw the heroines house at 11 o'clo- Must be 10 o'clock l Metropolitan mystery: Hi.w ttuw tired waitreeva in little rea'auranr, on their feet all dav can smile i good-nlht. And that Awful Minute of auapense fo- heavy smokers Won dering if they rill (ret their clga. -immedtavlv after coffee. T waa nuitnj todav about 'he mod em boy when Rav tontf. Jr. calico If he forms secret socle tiet befoi." college or prep school frat As .i youngster I a member o an o der callel the Foul Fiends nf H:i I w A-vh F-.end W.ll Or pert w trie RloodThirMy Drst :mt? honors make the Oonnp.xio:isl Meo al or the R.wtte of the Lv: n se v paltry today. And are t;ie:e anv bov . who have printing p-esva. or bea.i blowers, the two-cent kind, two f- lo iv . t h w h ! t h of s n e v, n ; r ii i June -.Mi- .wtld nrt'w fr-t'iten ;rl to acvuid Morv window' ttiena was that greatest tartU Ufc- Personal Health Service By William Brady, MD. mgned letters pertaining to personal bealtb and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment wllj 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. So reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. IN Hi lam Brady, 269 El Camlno. Beverly Bills. Cal. BEAUTIFUL, EH? Health Is the eance of ocauty. All cosmetic artlfrlco attempts to counterfeit the appenrtmce of perfect health. The Intelligent woman's make-up does not advertise the picture as a take to .h casual be holder. The mo ron, the feeble minded, the de llnquent well, she will always be a child. "I am the av erage woman." says a reader. "I am net pretend ing to be Intelli gent, but, at fiKy-flve I have learned . . . I love beauty In all things, and If 1 can create the Illusion of beau ty for my friends, especially for my children, I will do so even to the sacrifice of many other things say even to the spending of money for cosmetics that should be spent for taxes , , . ." By all means, Every woman who has friends, children, parents, bro thers, sisters, employees or employ ers should feel It her duty to "cre ate the illusion of beauty," and no woman can afford to be unconcerned about her beauty. The overpainted underwashed moron la no more amus ing a caricature than la the unmiti gated frump whose conceit Is so ob vious. "I use lip rouge like any other girl." complalna another reader, "but when I eat anything a little of It gets on the food. Is there any harm? I have heard that some rouge has lead In It, also some powder." Still another wrltea that she hear tily agrees with what this column teaches about cosmetic art and com mends A book which gives consider able Information about cosmetics. "Skin Dcepvby- M. C. Phillips. She says she has used material In this book for a succesful pnper read oe fore a club mpptlng In her state. Now I'd better get in a few quick punches before the bell. For younger kin. that is, skins that atlll have enough or even too much sebum, na tural skin oil. at least one diily scrubbing with plain soap and hot water, followed by repeated rlnsipgs with tepid, then cool and finally cold water, is the ideal care of the com plexion. For older skins, where the secretion of sebum or natural oil Is deficient and there la a tendency to ward dryness, harshness. Irritability and sallowness, the leas soap and the less water the better; Instead, plain bland oil should be tised for cleans ing the skin. For this purpose there are several suitable preparations. Perhaps the most convenient and satisfactory is the ntnndnrd "cold crenm" made by any good pharma cist after the formula for Ung. Aquae ing oxygon yourself in the cellar and burning magnesium In It. Or hv d rotfen and f !1 1! ng bal loon . Toj. there waa llfe'a great problem: Shall I put "Mr." on my first engraved card? Eureka! I can float on my back. The ennrmoua Normandle. with Its floating grandeur, will send several crest liners of a year sro to the Junk heap. I'm glfcd will Hays nad the ood tast to make no denials of the constant stories that Jamea Gerald. Al Smith. Jo Kennedy and Farley would take hla place. He knew al! the while he waa secure and could have the Job a long aa he wante-i Denying false statements is a I way a waste of effort. Someone was sav ing Frank Crowninshield Is the et.ir of the salad mixing experts. Supe.'- sti tut Ion la not confined to Illiter ates, It's the belief of two intel lectuals that Edwin Booth's ghost hov ers about The Players. But what upaeta me Is my upsetting of a bo tle of red Ink on a new study nig two days ago. So far M. has not discovered it. But when he comes around I am in the grip of that sol emn, hush Just before the captain oi the execution squad yella "Fire!" Te dry throAt. numb bewilderment. The last glimpse of the cold grev dawn? (Copyn.Tht. 1M5. McNaucht Syndi cate ) COURT OF HONOR FOR The B'v Scout court of h--nr w ,1 j he held tonight In the comv'l ham- he-s of the city hall, at 9 ocKx-k t. i was learned todav. t Don Nehury a.'ting as Jud e of t': court, wiv make a.vsrcis t, member I of Medforrl troops 3. 5. 7 H and 19 and to troop 17 of Oold H 'l troot) 18 of F.:le Point, snd troop 35 o: Jacksonville The public Is invited to afend r S0N,G0 DANCE WITH MILDRED. SHE'S BECN ALONE AU EVENING MIL0RD$ PRETTY 9UT MOTHER CAN V VOy GIVE HER AT1P ABOUT "B0 AND USING LIFEBUOY ? .."DAee UV y "9 GIRLS, THE SECRET I H.V 15 LIFEBUOY fee Rosae (Ointment of Rose Water) In the Pharmacopoeia. Olive oil, In which Is dissolved an ounce of boric acid to the pint (while the oil Is hot) is good; also sweet almond oil sim ilarly borated. Sesame oil, if fresh, makes an Ideal akin oil, and does not clog the skin as some oils do; It may be similarly borated to preserve It It from rancidity, and the boric acid Is h armies to the akin. Persons with excessively dry skin should anoint the skin with a few droys of oil dally, especially after washing. Plain toilet soap, unmedicated. un scented. Is the best for the akin. Don't be goofy about soap. , QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Iron and Ammonium Citrate I think the reader who complained that the druggist sold her green scales or powder of Iron and ammon ium citrate got the ferrous com pound, which Is green, and not well borne. You probably meant the ferric compound, which is garnet red and should be dispensed when Iron-ammonium citrate Is called for. (J. Q., Ph. a.) Answer Thank you, brother. That Is correct. I mean only the official U.S. P. iron-and-ammonium citrate, which should be garnet red scales. Full directions for preparing the blood tonic for simple anemia In book let "Blood and Health" send 10 cents coin and stamped addressed en velope for a copy. Cleaning Hair Bru"h How can I clean a hair brush? What solution or preparation shall I use? (L. A. C.) Answer I believe a thorough wash ing of the brush with hot water and ordinary soap, then drying In direct sunlight, Is the best way to clean or disinfect a hair brush. Soaking bris tles for a period of 24 to 48 hours in a solution of one part of standard Liquor Formaldehyde with four parts water, la a good way to destroy pos sible anthrax baclll or other disease germs on new brushes. Reppated rins ing is necessary to get all the formal dehyde out of the brush before you use It. Rome brushes with metal backs stand boiling for a minute or two. and that Is the best way to aterlllze anything. Smoking Mothers Every morning my baby 6 months old haa small red blotches on her fingers and arms. Could It be due to my smoking as I nurse her? I smoke only two or three cigarettes a day. i Mrs. H. M.t Answer Probably not. Does she get her daily ration of tomato Juice or fruit Juice, and of cod liver oil? (Copyright 1035. John F. Dille Co) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D.. 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Calif. SEEN BY HOOVER (Continued from Page One.) centlves and your opportunities." "The exponents of the new social order would dim some of your hopes by telling you that hope, new adventure and new opportunity have departed. "I don't agree to that. "Such assertions are an a.ssump tion that you will have no intelli gence, no energy, no ambitions, no new Ideas and no new Intentions. Old Desere Protection "It is true old agt and misfortune deserve protection and that the haunting fear of poverty should be driven from among us. It may be that there are some who. fearing com petltltlon In life, wish for assurance from government oi a routine Job where they advance by political fa vor or seniority and get a pension at the end. "There are some who really need that sheltered life and should hav it. But that sort of people did not make Tows or make America. "Our forbears wiio settled this state inherited Itttle from their forebears but a covered wagon, and od, their character, their relicion. .self-government and the freedoms enumerated tn the bills of rights." he declared "These God-fearing people build rd this state under freedom, not tinder a political bureaucracy that coded their dally actions, limited the pro ducts of their factories and their farms that told them they could o could not start n new enterprtse They fought the enemies of freedom from both the right and the left." HEAVENS. SHE WS RIGHT BEHIND us! she must gosh.i HAVE HEaap WONDER VVNaT SHELL DO if8 II v ft f .1ll:V LtlDT mm OUu hcwiW for your smooth, clear 1 skio hen vou use Lifebuoy. For Life buoy Uther penetrates deep inro pores, ftnth urses out closed m ure. Scient-fic skin tens show it is more rhin 20 per cent an Met than many $o-viicd bciutysoipa," ONLY Comment on the Day's News By PRANK JENKINS TIO news In the papers lately. " NBA dies at banda of supreme court, liberals of that august body Joining with conservative tn admin istering death blow. Kidnapers, believed soared out by government's determined and success ful campaign against them come to life again. myiUCH talk in the papers and " among tha big ahota especially big shots drawing New Deal salaries regarding the scrapping of NRA and what Is to be done about It. NOT MUCH TALK among ordinary, everyday people, who had already dis covered for themselves that for every dollar added to their Incomes by NRA and Its policies at least a dollar. If not considerably more, had been TAKEN AWAT by the higher prices that followed NRA. One learns quickly enough by EX PERIENCE that It lan't so much what he gets that counts aa what he can BUY with what he gets. e QPEAKINO of kidnapers. Governor Park, of Missouri, beeda the plea of Miss Mary McElroy, who waa kid naped by Waltr McOee, and com mutes to life Imprisonment McGee's death sentence. Two silly sentimentalists got to gether there Miss McElroy, who urg ed mercy for the beast who kidnaped her, and Governor Park, who listened ! tn Vif ranitMt. nH thnvtrf mr-v. Miss McElroy may possibly be ex cused on the ground that her ter rible experiences may have unbal anced her Judgment and given her a neurotic turn, but there la no excuse for the governor who did the com muting. He la a full-grown man, and should have known better. 117E read In the papers that the French franc Is In danger and that the government wants dictatorial powers in order to "protect th franc." ' How la the franc In danger? Well, France la still on the gold standard, which means that anybody who want to trade hla paper money for gold can do so. It la probable that too many people are wanting French gold. yHE fact that too many people want French gold. If It IS a fact. is what la significant, for people want gold only when they become afraid they CAN'T GET IT. INTERESTING not in the news: A referendum vot. Just held, ahows that wheat farmers In the United States are overwhelmingly in favor of continued effort tn the di rection of government control of wheat production. Why? Well, suppose you are a wheat grower and are offered a choice be tween getting paid for NOT GROW ING WHEAT and letting the govern ment take all the ohances and taking all the chancea yourself and NOT GETTING PAID If something goes wrong. Which way will you vote? Communications How To End Kidnaping I To the Editor: ' With reference to your timely editorial on the Weyerhaeuser ktd- naping I am taking the liberty to j call your attention to the fact that ! there is no kidnaping In England , or in those European countlea where the law holds the payor equally guilty with the payee in the matter i of ransom money and blackmail, j If the state of Washington had had such a law George Weyerhaeus er would never have been kldnsp 1 ed. for the men guilty of that crime . are smart enough to have1 seen the futility of such an undertaking in j the face of such a law. i The Lindbergh cae will have cost ' the tJndbergh's. the state of New .lersev and the government a atsc- cenng sum when its history is com- pleted. I have been advised by a fed- I ' eral aeent that the government ha 1 i spent over three dollars for every I dollar of the ursehel money recover- "B.O.' I WAS LUCKY TO OVERHEAR THEM. LIFEBUOY IS GRAND NO ONE CAN SAY I OFFEND NOW MILDF HIT EVE rUthinjj with Lifebuof leaves one not only grandly, gloriously fresh snd clean but Wir. too! For Lifebuoy purifies, dec-domes stops "B. 0."(fri aa). Its own clean scent vinishes as you rinse. ed. The cost of the Bremer case is still wide-open with some of the per petrators at large, and the Weyer haeuser case with the same status may exceed them all. England and Europe must get a kick out of a situation where hun dreds of our officers are forced to mark time for days while racketeers in their very midst mulct a soverign cltiren out of the price of a princi pality, and yet that is s situation that they endured a half century ago In southern Europe until laws were passed that deprived the banditti of an Incentive. FRED KELLY. Medford, June 8. (Continued Irom Page One.) identical minimum wage-maximum hour provisions. It would require weeks. If not months, to obtain such state action. No new dealer Is very proud of these two ideas. They have been ac cepted because there Is nothing else to do immediately. It la recognized on the Inside that the voluntary as sociations will only pretend to be ef fective. They will merely provide some semblance of order In the reorgani zation of business after the collapse of the NRA. With no centralized au thority, each business will naturally do as It sees fit. Also the proposed state minimum wage-maximum hour set-up Is a long way from being adopted. In two or three years. It might provide a feasible substitute for the new deal reform method. If energetically pushed through con gress and through the state legisla tures. What all this heads up to is a drive by the new deal to amend the inter state commerce clause of the consti tution. This Is the only way In which the new deal can be saved. The fore most men among the new dealers now confess it privately. , What has happened In the past week Is that the president has dis covered that the supreme court has given him an Issue, it knocked the legal props our from under his whole show. He had built nearly all of It on the ground that the federal gov ernment haa the power to regulate anything affecting interstate com merce. The court said that Interstate commerce regulation applies only to goods actually in transit: that la, ac tual Interstate commerce, not treo retlcal interstate commerce. This bundled the whole question of a new deal Into one composite is sue. It swept aside all the formidable natural objections to some phases of the new deal Issue. It implied the whole thing, the good parts and the bad, was not constitutional. This Is conceded to be strictly correct. The court merely gave the constitution a proper literal interpretation. Instead of winking at the Issue, as it did In the gold case. A constitutional amendment giv ing the government authority to con trol anything affecting interstate commerce would present the Issue in the best possible broad light from his standpoint. The strategic advantage of that course would make the plcayunlsh. fly-swatting administration of the NRA comparatively unimportant. Nei ther would the questions whether Tugwell knows his business, whether subsistence homesteads are worth while, whether stocks should be reg ulated or any of the other questions have to be met on their merits alone. The question would simply be: "Do you want our new deal? Take It or leave it." Any political student will recog ni?e the advantage of this. The desirability of this method de pends entirely on public opinion fol lowing the court decision. This Is being permitted to develop fully. The thousands of telegrams received bv the president indicate a sufficient 1 basis for the movement. If strikes i should develop later, if business be- i comes Involved in price cutting. If 1 the deflationary potentialities of the result are realized, the surge for the movement would increase. The way the issue has played into Mr. Roosevelt's hands has caused a rumor to be circulated .here that he knew of It in advance and was glad to get it. Also another rumor that Supreme Court Justice Hughes con ferred with the president about it, There is nothing In either of thesr tales. First new dealer: "There's nothing nw m that supreme court decision.'" Second new dalr: "That's prect-e-ly the trouble with it." A harptongued republican now refers to the new deal as "a corpse standine up." He borrowed the phrase from Federal Reserve Boarder Adolph Miller, who used tt to describe ihe gold standard, which is Just about In the same fix. GONE - ffxxt times firAfilJrnf! IED OF NIK that's an old story now. the men are six deep around her at every dance ! Flight 'o Time (Mtiirord nd Jackson Conntj lllstorj from the file, of the Mall Tribune of 10 and to lean ARO- TFN VI.AKS AGO TODAV June 3. 1!JS. (It wa WednejKiay.t Ejrly nomlng fire guta tt.c Qra-i utreet building occupied by the Mei ford Business college and te Val.ey Candy company, causing a loea o 5000. Origin of lire unanwn. Work on A.hland Norm' aohod to start next month. Equipment starta arriving for Ka ttonal Guard encampment here. Hmt 10 Intense In New York City stores ckwe: entire east awelters; 17 die from heat prostrations. Aviators fly over Ice flelt1 In af fort to locate Amundsen, mlsalnj North Pole filer. Plot tj blow up King r-f Span during visit to Barcelona, la nipped. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY June 3. 1!1S. City la without gaa for entire morn. Ing. when employe falls to -how up for worlc at the local gaa plant ofl time. Second band concert of season will be given 'his evening In the city par. Parenta are warned "police will take In hand all children who run and scream v hlle a aolo Is being executed by one of the musicians, as happened last week " English coast again raided by Ger man Z?ppelins; Winston Churchill chancellor of British cabinet, reporia "the Allies are within a few miles o a great victory." The swimming season haa been fo mally opened by the amall boya. and, bear creek la the Mecca for youthi. The police have warned all awlmmea that they must not appear entirely without covering other than the akin because of the Jar to tha senslbllltlef of people living near the atreBm. A New Contract -3 t-fl ... Sybil Jason, going on six, signed a new contract that may lead tc stardom with a Hollywood motion picture film company. Associated Press Photol Threatened Banker Herbert, D. Ivey (above), wealthy Southern California banker, receiv ed numerous threats of violence unless h-i paid $72,000 to extortion ists. Orje alleged member of the "aqueez" plot was seriously shot in a surprise move made by San Marine Calif., police. (Associated Press Photo KEXJF0RD VETERINARY HOSPITAL IS vfiir. pvpertmre id large and .moll unlmal practice Dr. J. natera 325 N Riverside Phone 363 How Able To Eat Any thing Says Traveling Salesman From C E Jeffries, traveur-g sales man. Neosho. Mo. come thr follow inc letter: "I aufered all !a.t year from sto.r.ach trouble and tr'ed msnT well-kno-vn preparations. I !eW very cra:ef:jl to Mr. Wilson at Neosho Or reoommendiiv will. am SLR. Form u'.a to me The relief tnia medicine ha .ven me h5 rvn rncerful I no lor. 3r have sv-y pm md ao if Momvh. and -Jrlirrens I fT-rnrlv UveH on h i;q i d diet. I nnw en)ov a wfie ?c:!oti M foort dn!ei rne before" Your dr-.w:r.?t vour fr:--.d Art him iNv.it V:r.:irr.s SLK Fom'il Yo-.:. too. should fee: xrateful for this w":'dr:-i doctor ;.--re(t-"'.p'.lon f w a'omsch. ;:--er and dnv disorder" W:.::,mi L K. FnviU oV an"! recommended by Het'! Dr!c St or snd thev xi i! ref'ind Tie pu-ohi p-'.e :t ;-. ,mi r nt K.itl.'f.cl wita tze xesulu ailer a L-iAl. iAdv.) o ITT