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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 5, 1935)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGOX. WEDNESDAY, .TUNE 5. 1935. Medford Mail Tribune tit)rt in Southern OrtfM Rtadt U11 Mail Tribunt' Dallf Kierpl 8turdi MKDHUtUl HRINTINU CO. aa -it aw n Kir ut. n ft. RDHKltl tt. BUHL, Editor Ad independent Mmpaptr Entered u wennd clue suttar Medford Oregun. under Act of Mirrb 8. 18TB. slIitBCHIPTlON RATES Br Mall Id Adtince Oiliy- on- rear Dally, ill ooDtht Daily, one mootb Br Carrie Id Arhance Medford, Abll, JacUomllle, Centra) Point, PtoenU. TeJeot. Gold Bill and on dJtfivaya. Oallr. or frtr.: ,..$8.00 nll month 16 Dill, one moDtb -80 All termi. wb Id edftnea, Official oaPCT of the City of Medford, Official Hper of Jacaioo Count. MEUHEK W THE ASSOCIATED PHEflS Uecetrtr Kull Leased Wire Berrte n.. a .. ..i. i Prm ipimitflt entitled (he u for DUbllcatloo of all oew dlipetenea credited U) It u) ot hem i eredltrt to tal paper and awo to 'at ioeai mn pun i mi All rlRtiU tw putillratloo of epeela) dlipatdiei serein ar also reemed. ilKMHEW OF UNITED PHE88 MttlKKK OK AIIDI1 HUHEAD OF C1UCULA110NS Advertising HeprieeriUllret u. c. mouesbes t company Offleet in Nff Ynrk. Chlrago, Detrott, tea KranfiUm f Ance'ee Seattle Portland. M EMBErV Ye Smudge Pot llT Arthur Perry Yesterday was the ftrat day ot mmmrr, causing citizen to broil, tnslc, and swelter, and. the same citizen to permit his Humdlngerlem to get the beet of him, and aver be "enjoys the heat." and "slept under three blankets last night." The en joyment or the heat Is a personal matter, but subject to doubt. Sta tistics show that the moat ardent enthusiast of solar heat enjoy It moat, when tn the shade from which they are harder to remove than a back tooth. The same type Is always catching a leg of Its Ice-cream suit In an electric fnn. Daring young men, who posses no trapeze, arid unable to pack them selves Into the front seat of an auto, contrary to the statute, made and provided, are showing their con tempt of consequences by reclining full length on the running board ol speeding vehicles. It Is the concensus of opinion that such dare-deviltry while more or leas entertaining, should not be exhibited outside of a circus tent. In case of an accident. It would make the highway quite mussy. It Is further felt, that if ad venturous youth must dangle on the running-board, he does so, standing up, and not bend In the middle when an auto 1 passing the one upon which he Is risking his neck, and other vital and handy organs. Alvln Karpis, No. 1 Rattlesnake. suspected as the leader of the Weyerhaeuser kidnap gang, when about 14 years old, was the cham pion marble player of Topeka, Han sen, his biography reveals, incident' ally, Mr. Karpis was captured In Salt Lake City yesterday noon oj permanent resident of the BUI Gore bank corner. SALEM. Ore, June S. (UP) "A fortune In health, happlneaa and longevity Is frozen by man's unrea sonable lack of concern for himself," commented Dr. Frederick D. Strieker, state health officer. (Press Dispatch)- For Instance: When Man jabs a toothpick Into his 1,000,000 ear. "For Bale Stone Jars, suitable for cucumber pickles. Phone 87fl-R." (Chlco (Calif.) Enterprise! What the home-brewer used to allege he was going to use them for. Melon growers met yesterday and discussed the code. The code covers everything but the amount of rock salt to be used In a shotgun to re pel the Share-the-Watermelon In vaders. B I.I M-OI T THE PHOKESSOR! But 'vhat can be .ild in Justifica tion of the chirping satellites who hope to win favor and make sure of their salaries by decrying the handiwork of Washington, Jefferson and Madison, who because they have not the patience or the ability o frame a statute within the terms of the Constitution seek to cover their failure by talking loud and con stantly about an outmoded constltu t: n and inadequate Institutions? (From a radio address by Senator Borah). The first caheless cigarette In Ne vada to set the woods afire, was given three years, in a place where there are no brush piles or dry grass. More eitlrens are wearing hat that make them look like they are ready for a canoe trip up the Congo, Into the heart of Africa. Pie -in.) ioc Rahhlt Hunters. BETHANY. Mo. UPl Ed Ent land pirf that goes rabbit hunting with his dog Is matched by Ardsn Price's lamb hich runs wlt-.i a pact of fox hounds unless penned un. England's do? seldom starts for th" Held without the pig running alone; with it The dog holes up the rab bit and the pig root them cut. "KICKEHNICK" Undergarment that fit at Etiir w vnn B Hoffmann's Lawumuer: Sharpened Phuus 261, MecUord Cciary, 21 4, fir. Those Campaign Pledges WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST is all burned up over the Roosevelt menace. Heartened by the Supreme Court de cision, he sees an end to true Americanism, democracy and con stitutional government unless F. D. R. and the New Deal are knocked into a cocked hat. Some people may be surprised at Hearst's desertion of his party and the man in whose nomination he took such an active part. But these people are afflicted with short memories. In showering the president with bouquets, during the first of his administration, and replacing them with brickbats toward the end, W. R. H. is merely running true to form. It has been the fired Hearst policy for at least two decades. Boosting presidents when they are popular and then batting them down when that popularity starU to wane, has always been one of Hearst's fa vorite indoor sports. His record as a president "maker" has only been exceeded as a president "breaker." And this course, from the standpoint of newspaper popular ity, has been smart. For the traditional graph of the presiden tial market is the one followed by that volatile element known as public opinion. The newspaper that wishes to be popular is foolish to stick to any president, after the inevitable reaction start; just as a man is foolish to remain a bull when the bear market begins. The path to popularity is a curve. SO while this turn against the administration by Hearst did not surprise us, the chief count he brings against F. D. R. did. For this is the charge that Franklin Roosevelt has committed the unpardonable sin of not carrying out his campaign pledges or the pledges of his party platform. This of course is true. But WHAT president ever has! Theodore Roosevelt pledged himself to carry out the princi ples of McKinley; but he reversed McKinley on everything he did. Taft pledged himself to T. R.'s policies, he violated most of them. Wilson pledged himself to keep the country out of war, and he plunged this country into the most terrible war in history. Hoover pledged himself to secure an enlarged and augmented prosperity, that would make poverty unknown, and plunged this country into the worst, depression that America has ever seen. So Roosevelt promised to stop federal borrowing, halt con tinuing deficits, abandon bureaucracy and balance the budget; he has not only failed to do these things, but has gone further along directions he deplored than his predecessor ever dared or dreamed. QUITE true. But what OF it! We have no doubt that when President Theodore Roosevelt at the bier of McKinley gave that solemn pledge to carry out the policies of his former "chief", he was perfectly sincere and meant every word he said. That was his intention and his desire. . But conditions changed, administration, no longer faced the other. What a president's duty was BEFORK the Spanish-American war was not a presi dent's duty AFTER; just as what a president's duty was before the World War, was not a president's duty after. Times change and whether ive like it or don't like it, the WORLD MOVES ON I Could President Hoover be blamed for not foreseeing the crash of 192!); blamed for not foreseeing the need for more federal relief rather than less, or could President Wilson be blamed for not foresee ing that, try as he would, neither he nor any other man, could keep this country out of the world war. have no quarrel with William Ritiulolph Hearst or an.v- one else who onnoses the the principles of the New Deal. There are two sides to every two aides to this one. But we do regard it as rather childish to make a point of the fact that President Roosevelt has not carried out his cam paign pledges and the provisions of his party platform to the letter, when practically all presidents like Roosevelt, have been forced by circumstances over which they had no control to do the same. Ijet Franklin Roosevelt like his predecessors, stand or fall on the record he has made SINCE he became president; not upon what he or his party platform may have said BEFORE. Kill It AS to the underground but persistent agitation, by forces of radicalism and discontent, to discredit Governor Martin, and if possible secure his recall, we heartily agree with the state ment of H. C. Boyer, president of the Oregon Producers and Shippers association, made public yesterday. Mr. Boyer is a Republican and therefore can be accused of no partisan bias in what he has to say. He feels that to further disorganize this state by a recall election, would be nothing short of a calamity and while he is certain such an effort would be overwhelmingly defeated, he believes public opinion in this state should, in the interest of the state, scotch it before it starts. We quote his statement in part : "A, a cltlwn of Oregon, and without regard to partisan pontic. 1 urs th thlnklnj people of thla atat to aland to jettier In atamplnj out thla pendlnj political racketeering. It U a aerloua menace to the economic, aoclal and political life of thla atate. The recall campaign will be baed on the fllm.T and dlahoneat pretext that Oovemor Martin 1 not In aympatliT with the great maaa of people. That la the smoke-acreen alwaya employed by loud-mouthed opportuntat to hide their own hidden motive. "There la ona laiue. and only one laaue In thla recall agita tion It la law and order and decency In atate government aa agalnat the domination of a radical and lll-tetnpered few who are dlaaatlafled at not being able to control tha office of gover nor for their own aelflah purpceee. "It ao happena that I am a life-long republican, but I plac, the welfare of my atate far above the horlron of party politic,. In common with many thouaanda of republlcana and democrat, and followers of other polltleal thought In every part of the atate. I have a profound admiration for the courage and notind Judg ment of Oovemor Martin. To remove him from office at thla time would be a dire calamity." Air Corpe Ilea "(lliolo " WASHINGTON. (UP) T.ie Arnn Air corpe ha a "gigolo." Vthougi not a fit partner for a vo'irvg ladv, the air corpe' gigolo haa Vfn d fined unofficially In atatle teat cir cle aa 'a dar.cing dvice n-hlch ex cite, reapona In the body to whi.-U It la attached.' The derlce la being uaed in vibration test on a new ma- tril diYjaioa motor mount. the problems that faced one could President Roosevelt be nolieies nf the nresidnnt. nml question. There are certainly Now! Horae "Struck" for Old Hat WHITES. Wash. (UPl Hm Ho.'k i faithful 18-year-old farm horse own d by Ed Blsekburne, White farmer refused to budge from his "tail. For 10 years he m-ore an old s:aw M' to ahade hi eye. Someone sle It and Ham Hock called a trk . "Ham my will not wear any oth-r cover Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treutment will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-ad dressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters Owing to the large number of letters No reply can be made to queries not William Brady, 265 El Camlno. Beverly THE SPEED AND People who live fast should expect to die young. Poor heredity (bad material tn arterlea) syphilis. alcoholism, over eating, chronic lead poisoning, and severe Infec tions such as ty phoid fever, In fluenza and p n e u monla are causes of arterl- o s c 1 e rosls. Au thorlttes differ about tobacco, Now let ua get the authorities out of the way and 1 11 chatter away aa Just Ol' Doc Brady. Recall, If your memory la not fall ing, what we pointed out earlier first, that arteriosclerosis Is a NU TRITIONAL condition, second that it BEGINS IN THE INTIMA or lining of the blood vessels, and third that tn nearly all cases of cardiovascular degeneration there Is a period ol hypertension ( elevated blood pres sure) which precede the fully de veloped symptoms of arteriosclerosis. Now, then, Jot this down In your little book : A smoke elevates the blood pressure more certainly - than any other drug except adrenln Itself, anc the pressure remains high for a considerable period. Mainly on this physiological observation I base my belief that abuse of tobacco la a cause of arteriosclerosis, cardlovas cular degeneration, premature se nility. I am quite fond of tobacco. I know that one derives far greater enjoy ment from It If he uses It temper ately than he can possibly get from abuse of tobacco. What constitutes excess or abuse perhaps varies with circumstances, For moat of us, any indulgence at all In the course 01 the day's work or play is excessive, In my opinion. Tobacco is least in jurious and most enjoyable In the after-dinner hour of relaxation when the day Is over. I am speaking ol adults. I believe tobacco Is Invari ably Injurious to children, and In the sense of physiological develop ment we are all children until we attain the age of 22 to 25 years. So far as I know, it Is immaterial whether the tobneco Is used in the form of cigarette, cigar, pipe, chew ing or snuff. Hard work or overwork has been held responsible for premature de cline or waning vitality In some in stances. I believe the excesses and poisonings nlrrady mentioned are the real factors In such cases. Worry, stress, anxiety, fear, hatred. envy. Jealousy and anger may in deed be hard on the arterlea, for these emotions cause an outpouring of excessive adrenln from the adre nal glands Into the blood stream, and adrenln raises the blood pres sure. With any such emotion there Is repression or suppression of the impulse to overt action, and that Is why It does harm. The adrenln speeds up all the vital functions, and the effect la comparable with racing an nutomobile engine or throwing a belt NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, June S. The French Riviera's last literary stand-by has fled from the economic blight of the franc. Word comes to his American friends that the m a a t e r mys t e r y spinner. E. Phillips Op penhelm. has sold his famous "Villa Devereaux " at Cannes. His establish ment with Its all glass studio, where to his sec retary he dictat ed his more than 500 tales of international intrigue, was long a rendezvom for writers from America. Oppenhelm's yacht tugged In the Mediterranean at his doorstep and the Monte Carlo casino was a few minute by motor. Nearly all Oppenhelm's plots began with a Monte Carlo backpround the worldly fellow with the Homberg hat sipping his apertlf along the prome nade, the haughty adveutTire.o who debouched from her fiacre, a cry of distress somewhere. And the chase for the Jewels was onl "Oppy." as Intimates knew him. Is in his "70 s, a vlgorois and as rest ful for the rich thing of life as a man of 35. His new home will be a re- j furbished old Tudor house on Quern- ; sey. one of the British Channel I Islands, l-outa Bromfleld. too . is' leaving Penlls. France, for America this fall for gixd. A Broadway sentimentalist writes that the eventual passing of the Oay White Way la foretold In a descrip tive romani" by Ford Maddox Ford of Hsydn'a I8th century symphony. It ; is a piece tha begins with a full orchesira. each player having beside him a candle to light the score. They . play a lively strain that has. however. n note of cloo:Ti. As thy play the cellist takes his candle and on tip , toe steals out of the orchestra: then the flutist takes his candle and de- ' parts. The music goes on and the drum Is gone and the bassoon , , . and the hautbols, and the second vio lin. Then they are all gone . . . and It Is dark . . . Billy Bryant, last of the romantic show boa t era Ed na Ferber 1 mmortal -ired. Is turning out for a New York publisher his ssga of the mud-flats to be called "The River and I." Bry ant as Wfll as his father and mother have been river troupers all their ve. His daughter at 10 sin and St: should be brief and written In Ink received only a few can be answered. conforming to Instruction. Address Or. Hills. Cat. THE DISTANCE, off the flywheel. The excitement of the spectator at a football or base ball game has a similar effect. It is the spectator's arteries, not the play er's, that must bear the brunt. It la In the grandstand that the gravest casualties occur. Action, exercise, muscular work of one kind or an other is the antidote for the poison of these emotions. DO SOMETHING. If you can't fight or run away, you can at least go Into a dance or chin yourself or run upstairs or take a walk or move the piano. Oive your arteries a break. Don't Just sit there and take it. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Toper's Pimples. Besides drinking a few glasses of beer each week I generally consume about a pint of liquor one evening each week. Now I am decked out with a crop of ugly pimples, almost resembling bolls, over my cheeks and nose, and considerable redness of the skin . . . (W. M.) Answer Well, well, at last we find a toper with a rum blossom. Nine times out of ten the victim of acne rosacea, toper's pimples, rum blos som. Is a teetotaler. Send stamped addressed envelope and mention your trouble acne rosacea or rum blos som. Calcium lactate. Following your suggestion of cal cium lactate for migraine headacheB and hay fever. I began taking the tablets early in February, and have had no headaches and no sign of hay fever so far. Other years I was always sneeislng and miserable the latter part of March . . , Mrs. B. J. M. Answer Thank you for the report. I am glad to send any reader who asks for it and Incloses stamped en velope bearing his address a mono graph on hay fever, or one on mi graine headache, and I am always grateful to receive brief reports ol the experience readers have, whether favorable or not. fioll re. r What causes goitre? How can It be prevented? Is an operation the only method of eliminating goitre? Will operation leave a scar? Miss E. R. Answer Deficiency of lodln In the soli and hence In food and water. Is the principal cause of the goitre which Is so common In girls, less common in boys. This Is probably a factor In the causation of exophth almic goitre too, tho other factors are concerned In this type of goitre. for which operation Is more likely 1 to be advised. A suitable lodln ra tion for children and young adults la the best preventive. Rest cure, similar to the regime used for pul monary tuberculosis. Is the best treatment In many cases of exo phthalmic goitre. Operation leaves a scar, but If the incision Is care fully placed the scar will be scarcely visible. (Copyright, 1936. John F. Dille Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. linidv should send letler direct to Dr. Wllllum Brady, M. I)., El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Cullf. dances for the levee audiences and his father, mother and wife play roles In the various mellers. Billy, a bland self kidder of his shows and talents, had a run in New York, also Chicago, and every season he ties up at Cln? cinnatl for several weeks of caper. The ancient Three card Monte has been worked several times and with success on Broadway and 14th street corners recently. The shifty opera tors must work fast, be certain of po lice patrol timings. With the stage clear and several smart shllls. they make quick killings. The usual take is 60 per crowd. All this on the street of slickers with a game that was a bilk when the '49-ers swarmed the Yukon. Jewelers say the star sapphire Is again inching up the slopes of popu larity. The gem was once a high fa vorite In the day of Lillian Russell's reign, but somehow It lost caste and diamonds took top rating. There are stirring legends about the sapphire. It was the stone coveted by the great courtesans Cleopatra, DuBarry and Nell Gwynne. The sapphire Is sup posed to give off heat, a heat phy clslsts say Is "pressure electricity." Incidentally, the ruby leads all stones In preclousneaa. Ernet Lubttsch is another of the chain cigar smokers, whose tobacco bill is reputed around 20 a day. He begins puffing away upon arising and keeps it up until a few minutes be fore he drops off to sleep. J. P. Mor gan is said to nave the biggest cigar bill of any American, not all for his own use but includes those he gives sway. They are made especially for him In Cuba and. at wholesale, cost slightly more than a dollar each. In a dispirited world with so many pinery over bolshevik bugaboos It's heartening to rub elbows with those established, white mustached gentle men who suggest the desslcated sheen of a vanished era. They walk to their club every late afternoon and home at dusk. Their world, too. has crum pled in the economic whirlwind. Many do not know, with things as they are. if they can squeere through another winter. But they put up an elaborate pretense of cheerfulness. They still refvise to believe that our constitution should be scrapped and they have faith In the governmental authority at Washington. They have tradition and. more important, pride and faith. (Copyright. 1935. McNaught Syndicate! g-J-Poiind "tat" causM, HrNTSVIUE. AU il'P. -A cat fish weijENrvg 83 pounds as l:o.I Into ste..ks and ?ld to h. ..sewives here recently. Ca wht In IMe Te netviee ri .er near Whi'esMir -. e of the "'"a!" brought oen-nio 1 1 i expressions of wonderment t. H;mt vi He citueruv Comment on the Day's News Br FRANK JENKINS ITTLE GEORGE WEYERHAEUSER a- is saie at nome, and a wnoie na tlon breathes easier. His curly head and hi frank, boy ish face, aa pictured tn the news papers, had won their way Into the hearts everywhere, and his safe re turn Is hailed with Joy by all of us. This Isn't really such a big, cold, cruel world, after all, and warm, hu man sympathy la more abundant than the cynics would have ua be lleve. ON the face of what little Is known aa these words are writ tent It appears that tha ransom money was probably paid, a demand ed, on Tuesday, while the kidnaped boy wasn't released until early Sat urday morning. The reason for that Is fairly obvi ous. As soon as the money waa paid. the kidnapers skipped, leaving the actual release of the child to minor agents. Thus the principals were given several days' start In their get away. It Is too bad, of course, to see them get ANY of the breaks, but most of us will agree that the safety of the boy came first, and that other considerations wer elf minor impor tance. That Is the way any of ua would feel about It If his child were kid naped. ITTLE GEORGE was delivered safely, and apparently was reas onably well treated during his cap tlvity. For that, give the kidnapers no credlit for kind hearts, nor let it weigh with a Jury If and when they are captured. They merely realized cold-bloodedly that he was worth more to them alive and well treated than dead or Ill-treated. Kidnapers are the scum of the earth, and are entitled to no credit whatever. If they were anything short of the cruel beast they are. they would not be kidnapers. SPEAKINO of breaks, consider the one that came to John H. Dreher. veteran reporter of the Seattle Times. For a couple of hours on Saturday morning, he was the big gest -newspaper man In America. A kidnaped boy whose curly head and winning face had won their way Into every heart In the country had Just been released. The fact of his release wa known, but NOTHING ELSE. Every newspaper in this coun try and Canada practically every newspaper In the world was frantic for details. At this Journalistic crisis Dreher's taxicab blundered blissfully Into the battered flivver in which little George Weyerhaeuser was being taken back to his parents, and for an hour Dreher had the biggest story in the world right In his own hands, with nobody around to bother him. UNLESS you are a real newspaper man. with a resl newspaper man's hunger for EXCLUSIVE NEWS In your blood, you simply can't under stand the glory that is DTeher's to day, or the exultation that was his during that hour or more Saturday morning. The story of Dreher's luck will be told and retold In newsrooms for years and years to come, and thou sands of cubs Just starting Into the business will He awake nights and yearn for a miracle like that to hap pen to them. - THE essence of a great editor's greatness la to have a man on the spot when big news breaks, and that Joy Ineffable came to the news editor of the Seattle Times on Satur day morning. So excuse him if his hatband Is little swelled today. Bu give most of the credit to the reporter who was on the Job. THE boy is home esfe. and every body is rejoicing. The arm of the law has been Impotent so far, for little could be done for fear of endangering the kidnaped child's life. But the law's Job no begins. It Is the Job of the law to track down and capture the kidnaper with as little delay as possible, so that kid naping may be sternly discouraged in the future. It Is a big Job. ta;e Coach Freltht 1 a Mile. SAN FRANCISCO I XTP OU reoorda of the Pioneer tftvre Un. operating from Hanitown (row PIa' j ervtlle) tn California in 1861 to Oa son City. Nev., show It coat tt a ton mile to srry freight. Now, i:h god roads and trucks, the cost ras bevi cut to three rent, according to Cs'. fornta hhway department iatlstlci j Collie Aid Mailman. GREEN BAY. Wis. (UP1 K Colle named "Cal" meets Al Meyer, a cly mall carrier, and covers t:-. routs witah him dally and makes The trip alone. b.v-kln lonely for .. mai. man. on Sundays and holldvs. The dcy has followed this routln for four veara. For Good Buys !j. Cued Cars ARM.? PRONG MOTORS. WC Lot on Et 6th St. lei. 13 Best Student Midshipman Lewie L. 8choek, Jr., of York, Pa., who with a standing of 910.84 out of a possible 1.0O0, was declared by the Annapolis Naval Academy the 1935 honor man. He ted hts class through the four year course. (Associated Press Photo. make an effort to revive its prestige It Is not expected that Adminis trator Jimmy Moffett will return When he left. 17 candidate for h job showed up on the Wh'.te Hou.e doorstep, sponsored bv viricv s cabr net officers and new dealers. Rathtii than ma'ie a choice, the i-retdsnt promoted Stewart MacDona'd. Mo. fett's prnolpal aide, who U reform Ing inner FHA lines. This agency indulged in 'Vmost as much ballyhoo a NRA. yet has staggering result to show for it. work. Loans on home repairs totalet: 76.000.0,:.0 until recently. Actual loans disbursed on mortgager were a the ridiculous total of 1 1.603 .oou most of which went to one law1 apartment houf. An additional $26,000,000 n morr- $me loanh ha been "commit, ed" ann the money Is to be advan"d when titles are cleared or other necessary red tap-j unraveled Officials esti mate that, for every dollar 'if repair loans actually Insured by .he gov ernment, an equal, or larger, mnou it was spent In cash Thla would tn dlctae a total of perhaps $1V).000.00U for repairs. There I a staggering deferred cop structlon demand, possibly . mucii $15.000.0OD.0OO. which rema.tr . virtu ally untapped so far by FHA effort An efficiency expert at the Nation al Emerfiency Council gave order about 4 p. m.. last Wednesday, tint all employes would be req llrcd to work all day Memorial day (8:30 m. to 6 p. m.. 30 minutes for lunch) This provoked hissing amitv: the em ployes. who had planned a r-oliday. NEC Administrator Frank Walker did not .arn of the order until lat-; that nl'.it All employes re or ted In the rain next mornlns an started work. They were called lntj assem bly at 9 a. m.. and told tha. the or der had been misunderstood that Mr Walker wanted no one to rork cn the holldiy. and that some taxicnb; were lln- l up outside to tike non motorln,; employes back to the r homes. Walker paid the taxi fares from hii. own pocket. The remnant of what usvd to oi the brain trust appears to be sp'lt Just ftboit 50-50 on whether -he ne.v deal should fight out the NRA Issur now or try to laugh It off. S tor tea persist that the President wa intemperate and off-balance lr his famois "hore and bugrv" talk. It la true his tone was stronger thmti his wordj. He was frequently v oastlc, but moat of his hearers d'd not believe him intemperate, though he had complete control of hlmseit The NRA fared better r lowr court than In the supreme court A tabulation to date show it win 30 case, lost nearly 70. Associate of Attorney General Cummin.i have been dropp'r a f v phrases here and there about the manner In which Donald Richbrrr General Johnson and othe-s are non- presumed to be the resl lecil Influ ence in the new deal. Skim MMk Plant Conldeied. RENO. Nev. (UP i A sk'm m'.'k processing piant may be estnoltshed in Nereda to enable ranche- tc dU- pes of tt.elr surplus milk, accord trw to local relief officials. The plar would prov:d an outlet for :he pro posed purchAses of sk:m ml'. In Un with the government's policy of tak ing surp'us commodities off .he mar ket. rialm Rat Record fr,r i.ot. LOTIS CORNERS. Wis. TP Helmut h D-ake claims a vrld rec ord for his dog. when '.t r-mes to killing r it. Tne dog. ne -rpor:ei. recently Hied 60 re: in an nour the Drake farm. Drake d'.sp yed the rat to prove the record. Grid Star to Re Janitor. ' BERKELEY. Cel. (UPl Howard "Red" Cr.r'.stle. former vary foot ball cento.-. cla:ms the dtsU-.tlon the first nemfcer of the Uni-ersitv ol California cl.s of 35 to jet a Jo1? j He go -o work the day aft -i gradu ation fo: the c:ty of B--'?y as jan:tor in the city hall, to r off , traJIic f:ae, i , . . . J? 1 (Continued from Page One.) Flight 'o Time (Mrdford and Jarkson Count) tllitur; from the tllt-a ol tne Mall Tribune ol IU and au en AS") TBS YI.AHS AOO TODAY June 5. 1!25 (It Was Friday) The new Stutz pumper of the fire department, squirts water over the Hotel Medford, In a test. Special trains of Shriners return ing to east, from convention at S3n Francisco pass through city. Tents and offices erected at Camp Jackson, for encampment of state na tional guard here June 13 to 25. "Efficiency engineer" offers to "analyze" the Chamber of Commerce, and suggest new "community tonics." at a reduced fee of 92500. The League of Nations passes reso lution opposing poisoning of wells in the next war. TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY June 5. I!)IA (It Was Saturday) Council decides to leave proposed enlargement of city hall to a vote of the people. Mrs. J. T. Conrad gave a birthday party for her son Warren last Mon day, the occasion being hts tenth birthday. "The Skinflint of Hearts" at the Isls; "Exploits of Elaine" at the Star; "The Fir and the Pansy" at the Page. Water Users League Is formed to conduct a campaign for Irrigation in the valley. The first grass fire of the season broke out on the Espee right-of-way near Jackson street and was exting uished by the section crew. DELINQUENCIES TO BE FORECLOSED ON (Continued from Tage One.) Townsend chib No. 1. ha been given every consideration by the commit tee. He stated that some municipal bodies have approved the plan hy resolution, and that others have dis approved of it. and that the plan has not met with favorable action by congress. "The question has caused friction and strife among members of city councils In other communities, and It would be most unfortunate to in ject anything before this body that would tend to create any discord, which naturally would later reflect in other matters." Fliegel reported. Other matters to come before the e uncil included an application for a package store class "A" license, submitted by Fred C. Bortz. for a lunch room owned by Al Meusel. at 1512 North Riverside. The applica tion was approved. I.irrnve. Approved An application was also approved for a package store class "B" licence submitted by Dorothy Jennings for a restaurant and lunch -room at the corner of Main and Front streets. The license committee reported that a check-up has been underway on violations of the ordjnance pro viding that Jewelers be required o secure licenses for handling electric al appliances, and that many have not yet paid. It was also reported that all "pin-ball" machines in the city have not yet been licensed. Police Chief Clatous McCredte stat ed that all complaints will be follow ed by Immediate arrest, and that a thorough check-up of the pin-ball machines will be completed this week. WE SHOl l.n BE THAMilLL Floods are raging. Dust still blowing, In the Middle West. Congratulations to The Coxinty Court And Medford City Councl'. For T'.icir Campaign Against Dlseo.se-Carryinsr Oust. FARMERS AND FRUITGROWER? BANK Community Builders. Deposits Insured. Huge Popples nt Canvon. BAKERSFIELD. Cal. (UP) CaM fornla poppies six Inches crcae the bloom, with stem three f'.vt long, are attracting visitors to Kern Rivr canyon i.ear here. Unprecedented rains wh.ch have broken rex-rds Uh the past-50 years and more are creu Ited with causing the growth. Robin Left Money Cache. EUSTI.S. Neb. (UPt thrifty robin left a dollar bill neatly fold'Ni in a Iat year nest, a w ding t j Miss Mar.e Gengenbach. tN finder The bill wa covered with Jurt but otherwise quite spendable. Mla Gen genbach said Widow, ifto. Miarrd Cake RICHMOND. Va. (UP) When Mrs. Sarah Frances Grady, widow of a captain of the Civil war. reached her 100th birthday at the Home for Con federate Women here, she shared birthday cake with two "girl friends" Mrs. W. M. Claiborne. 83. and Miss Jennie Cooke. 95. Holland Cof'ee Shp Home-cooked meals Resonab'.e prices Evt chick en dinner Sundsr Phone 543. Well haul away y?ur refuse. City Sanitarv Service. Now I Eat CUCUMBERS t pet Stomach (loe. in Jiffy with Bell-an. BELL-ANSSa FOR INDIGESTION .iVa-.E.-.S;