PAGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MATL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1935.
Mepford Mail Tribune
"Cvefvene Hi Southern Oreiea
Reedi Uli Hail rrihtiM'
Delly gxrepl aeturdet
pjollthed W
UKUruKII PRINTINU CO.
lt ltm N tit St. flM 10
BUHEI11 BUHL. Editor
As Independent Neeepeper
Holered u eeeooa eliue DitUf it Medforo
Oretoo. under Art ot Mereb 8. 18T.
KIPT10N BATES
Br Hall a Ad.ano
DalU. on (ear
Dalle, 111 mental '
Dally, one mooto -ou
Br Carrier In Adtanee Meoford, AibUnd,
Jeetiontllle. Central Point. Pnoeoll. Talent. Uold
Hill and on ttlntmajm.
mill, one rear ""
Dally, ill montlu "
nillv on mantn
AU term, eesb In adtanee.
orfldai neper of toe City of Medlort
Official paper of Jaetjoo County.
MEMBER OP TOT ASSOCIATED PBE8B
. ... p.. 11 i ...ul aim Rrt1r.
rbe Auoeleled Preee la eirluelielj entitled to
tno use for publication of ell oewe dUpaunea
Credited Ul It ot oinerwue owjiiot ,u v-.
and alao to :bt loeel oewe puhlllhed hereto.
AU rlfbta for puhlleetloo of epedal dlepaubet
Herein er we reeuieo.
HEMHF.II OP UNITED PBEHB
MEMBEB OP AUDI! HUBEAO
OP CIRCULATIONS
Adfertttlni KepreaeoUtlree
la. C MOIIENBEN COMPAMI
Offtcea In Nee tori. CbleafO, Detroit, lal
rrancteeo i Ancelee Heattle Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Pcrrj
.nnnant f tho nroDoaed new
political party In thlB "tale art) re
ported aa aeeklng more ear-tlckl-Ing
and aoul-stlrring name than
"Rep-Dem-So." The name doea aound
considerably like a radio advertised
pill.
in any event, with the right law
yer and a little caah, parolee In many
Btatee are as eaay to get as a, -bad
cold. (Salem Btateaman) Presto
nd there you have ltl
e
Another algn of returning pros
perity la the "bug," an automotive
deed of conveyance that cluttered up
the highways and bywaya no end.
1028-30. They consist of 4 wheels and
engine with a cracker-bol for a seat.
They possess the speed of a sparrow,
and emit more smoke than a vol
csno. The driver, as a rule don't
care What happens, and is disap
pointed If It don't.
e
Raspberries the kind that grow
on bushes will be ready to pick next
week.
e e
VofO. graduates, receiving their
diplomas were advised by the orator
of the day not "to be selfish In their
alms." No doubt the graduates will
follow this advice, and got all they
can, whenever the getting Is good,
e e
T. Carloton, the Flounce Bock
stockman, who blossomed forth aa an
umpire of Prospect ball games, three
weeks ago, towned yesterday. He has
become hardened to the hoot of
hillbillies, when he mskea a bum
decision, and no longer feels like a
kidnaper while umpiring.
e e
'ROBS SLOT MACHINE" ( Hdllne
Journal) Reverse "engllsh."
e e
A transient was arrested In Port
land for begging. He had I42 In his
shoe end In hla pocket. This Illus
trates the need of safety deposit
boxes In federal relief stations.
"LEGAL PENCINO IN PICKETING
CASE" (Hdllne Pendleton East Ore
gonlan) Naturally 1
HOKUM ft HUMOR.
(Cong. Record)
Take this recent march of
fnrmera to Washington: The
Kansaa City Star printed the fact
that of the 40 or so who went
from my own state or Missouri
nearly all were from one cotton
producing county In the south
eastern part of the atate. Yet sea
how Immediately announcements
came out of Washington that the
congress was so Impressed that
now these proposed amendments
to the agricultural adjustment
act would be passed without
much trouble. X read It, and X
Just thought. "I reckon If some
body would turn one swallow
loose In our nation's capltol in
January moat of our congress
men would get out their straw
hate and think It was aummer."
e
It now develops that the new
drunken driving law passed by the
late wonder session of the legisla
ture. Is worse than the old law, and
Just aa bad as the drunken driving.
e
80.000 Italians face arrest, be
cause of objections to marching away
to war with Ethiopia, as proposed by
Mussolini. Mr. Mussolini la horrified
by this lack of patriotism, but Is not
sufficiently mad to go himself.
e
Newa rame yesterday that Greta
Oarbo, the sad Scandinavian sister
of the movies, "Is a shy frightened
fnwn." The diagnosis Is mad by Msy
Robson, actress, who further Inven
tories Greta as "a pale Swedish but
terfly." Being fswn shy. and butter
fly pale, la what mskes Greta "up
stage." Besides, she has anemia, due
to not eating enough liver.
e e e
The prosecution of the Weyer
haeuser kldnnpers continues with
out any sympathetic comment from
ladles who tslk too much. There Is
some scsttered sobbing over the fate
of the young couple, but no senti
ment that the arresting officers get
a good lawyer and plead Insanity.
e
The "Awake and Arise" aoclety
to study the "glorious southern Ore
gon dawns" has been formed, ana
will probsbly meet the fate of a
similar organisation planned two
yeara ago, hoae members were
pledged to srlse. swake, and ride a
horse, to view the local dawns.
Takes lltilne-e Trip O. I. Jackon
returned vesterday from a business
Ulp to Uaxahfleld.
Editorial Correspondence
ROCKFORD, 111., June 17. The weather man is terribly
mixed. Here it is three-thirty in the afternoon and so dark one
can't read without a light. So cold the furnace lias been turned
on. Women, who call, wear furs, and Grandad has his ulster on,
when he starts down town. The sky is black as your hat but the
rain which had fallen steadily for 24 hours has stopped.
Strange, very strange. But a great improvement over a year
ago, when all heat records were broken, and everything was
burnt to a cinder, including the end of Skippy's nose.
In spite of the rain, motored up to Lauderdale Lake for the
week-end. This late wet spring has been great for the grass
and flowers but tough on summer hotels. The old Sterlingworth
quite deserted except for two or three middle-aged women
bundled up to the cars, in the front office, where an open gas
heater was going; and the colored help whiling away their
spare time and wages in the barber shop pool room.
One can't motor about this section of the country, without
understanding perfectly why when the early pioneers strut K
the rolling prairies of the Mississippi Valley they decided to
settle down and go no further. Look at the railway cut, or the
high bank of a river, or the dirt slope of the old swimming
hole, solid, fine, black loam no rocks, no clay, no gravel,
no hard pan nothing but dirt, soil of the finest and richest
kind, as far up, or as far down as you care to go! The forces
that "spread the dirt" over the surface of this cooling cinder,
certainly gave this part of the world more than its share.
e e e e e
That grass roots convention at Springfield must be to blame.
We can't believe all the country is suddenly as politically con
scious, as is Winnebago County, Illinois. Among the older
bqj-s, at least, Roosevelt and the campaign of next year remain
the all absorbing topics of conversation.
AVell, 0. K. by us. In the last analysis, it all depends upon
what you believe in what you want. If you are essentially
conservative, long above everything else for the good old davs,
with as little change as circumstances permit; then you should
be on one side of the political fence; if you are essentially pro
gressive, believe the old days can't be recalled now, are con
vinced there must be and should be certain fundamental changes
in the rules of the game in order to keep the game going,
then you belong on the other. We see no reason to be fighting
about it at this early date. It all depends upon the point of
view upon what you believe or DON'T.
There is more than one way
way to beat the depression. Look at our old friend "Hudge"
for example. Forty years ago Budge was the only grandson
of the town's richest banker and had the things that such
grandsons usually have. We distinctly recall how we envied
him his nickel plated "safety" with the elliptical sprocket
wheel. The crash of 1!)''9 wiped out. everything. But today
Budge is lord and master over five acres of fertile soil west of
the city, where he raises a little bit of everything from garden
truck, bulbs and flowers to Scotty, Sealyham and Cairn puppies.
The latter it seems are. particularly profitable, good times or
bad. Could anything be more attractive than young puppies
of all infant life in the world we believe puppies cxcell and
when you can get from $75 to $100 for one not bad!
e e
Bow and arrow shooting is growing in popularity around
here. The other day at the Rock ford country club they staged
a match between the golfers and the archers. The latter had
an initial advantage for the average archer can shoot an arrow'
300 yards, without much trouble, while the average golfer if
there is such a thing, seldom if ever drives much over 200,
and usually has to be 'content with about hull' that distance
(at least in the direction of the hole). Around the green, how
ever, the golfer has the edge, for the archer must hit the
bulls-eye at short range which isn't an easy thing to do,
whereas every golfer knows, hitting the cup at short range is
as easy as falling off a log! (Well ANYWAY (ho contest was
reported to us in this fnsliinn by n member of the archery team,
so we are passing it on, as a reporter should do, for what it's
worth). The Rockford achers, it seems, won by a huge score,
and the proud team member suggested we introduce the game
in Oregon, golfers, as they grow older it seems, much prefer
it to the ancient and honorable Scotch game. Mebbe so. But let
someone else do it. Think what might happen if Hank I'riugle
or O. Roberts should take up archery and then make a blub
with a quiver of nickel pointed arrows to call upon, and no one
safe within a BOO yard range!
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyrc
NEW YORK, June 30. Probably no
new restaurant in years got away to
such publicity fanfare as the place
on Bast 00th
street opened by
Charles Veenh
man recently. The
salvo were to en
courage a one
time millionaire
and sportsman In
his fifties for a
come-back.
His stand was
the former slt
of an old timer
Daly's and has
been refurbished
In the modern
decor. Werghman Is not new to the
catering business and was originator
of the one-armed lunch. A chain of
them started in Chicago spread to
very large city.
He was reputedly worth r.early 10..
000. OOO. The combination of trying
to start a league In opposition to or
ganlred baseball mid going through
the financial debacle shucked htm
down to the proverbial thin dime.
Indeed, he lost everything save his
courage.
Today, rotund and beaming, he Is
the front man In his latest experiment
peeping over shoulders of waiters to
see that service runs smoothly. He
has started off to a packed business
In an era when everybody who goes
broke seems to grow broker opening
restaurants.
Speaking of nsmes there's the
bonk page of Punch. Acute reviews.
ns a rule. This time it noticed some
thing by Wllla Cather and praised It
without condescension. Then con
cluded: "Wllla Cather? What J.Mly
queer names some of these American
writers choose!" And the next suc
ceeding paragraph noticed something
by a British writer signing himself
Oliver Onions. And not a chamje of
expression. There Is the gift for self
Immersion that ha made England
always great and always funny.
Bugs Baer. attended by a very elr-
giini waitress in a noontime snack at
a Botith Btrert hashery. wa asked:
"Ma? 1 reimburse ymir cnffeev Hr
replied.; "Just a eoupcon. prluceasi"
to skin a cat. More than one
One or the Baer yarns wa a stock
story of Arnold Daly yeara ago. As
It was told. Baer was In the sports
room of a newspaper where at the
time he was a comic artist. One of
his fellows came in limping and all
hunched over. Baer Inquired the
matter. "I'm a little stiff from bowl
Ing. waa the reply. "I don't care
where you're from!" snapped Baer.
"What happened to you?"
The high favorite among the ani
mals at the Central Pnrk Zoo Is the
85-pound roly-poly Asiatic sun bear,
presented by the blonde dancer. Claire
Luce. It Is the clown of the exhibits,
turning somersaults, sliding along
bellywlse and otherwise Indulging
outlandish capers. Incidentally many
of the gift pets to the various toos
are named for celebrities. Among
them are Floyd Gibbons fox. an
Amelia Earhart does and a Frank
Buck gorilla.
Vincent Lopea la one of the most
conspicuous of the in-and-outers i
among the band leaders. He will not '
remain in New York, although hlsi
favorite city, for more than a year. I
Then he takes to the out land, often 1
remaining a year In this place and i
that. Paul Whlteman waa first of
the baton leadrrs to realir the value
of a change of bae. Whenever he
has n feeling he is permanently es
tablished he pulls up stakes, often
almost over night. Once he remain
ed In Chicago for more than a year.
Another hiatus was a year's stay in:
Hollywood. Ben Pernte, too. In one
of the migratory birds who Is alwavs
in tliKht!
Thingumabobs: The mildly bespoke
Grant Mitchell was a hard boiled top
sergeant In the world war. . , . May
De Smisa. famous lending lady of the
nineties. Is married to an American
doctor In Shanghai. . . . Charles Par
rell benn his career as a dressrr for
a midget. . . . Clark and McCnllough '
are known In their home town as
j "Butch" Clark and "Red" McCuU
j louiih. . . . Penny Hovt's doc leaves
i the rvwn when amone coughs. . . .
Joe Weber, whose padded stomach ;
'was a feature of his act. weUhs 9f
pounds. . . . Lou Holti's Mr Lapldus
who says "My Fra-a-an" Is a real life
(character. . . . Helen Menken likes to
'do over old houses. . . . Frank Crumti
Is building a vacation house tn his
home town. Jnckson. O.
A sidewalk meandfrer buried deep
,m his newspaper did a curb step-of.
Into a comic tall ahead of me. wind.
rxpi.vled a Mirt of laughter. Olaritij,
't ins coidiy h inquired; "Ho"i.
Personal Health Service
By William
signed If tten pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease
diagnosis or treutment will he answered by lit. Brady If a stamped self-ad
dressed envelope is enclosed Letters should he brief and written In ink
owing to the large number or letters received only a few can be answered.'
No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr.
William Brady, 2G3 CI Camlno. Beverly mils, CaL
HYSTERIA OK
After all, it is In the grandstand
that the casualties occur. It is th
spectator's arteries, not the player's.
that must bear
the brunt. And
It Is the arteries,
not the nerves,
that are dam
aged by repressed
emotion. With
the excitement
of the spectator
or fan at the
ball game or the
boxing match or
wrestling match
there Is an out
pouring of sdre
nln from the ad
ieu... g.anus iiuo the teood stream.
Ad reni n raises the blood pressure.
It speeds up all the vital functions.
If the individual reacts naturally to
the emotion, well and good; he uses
up the excess energy set free by the
emotion, In fighting, running away.
dancing about or otherwise exerting
himself vigorously. But usually the
Individual under the stress of emo
tion cannot, will not or does not
do any of these primitive things.
He Just sits there and takes it out
in Imagination. The effect Is com
parable with racing your automo
bile engine or throwing the belt ofl
from a flywheel.
A smoke, chew or sniff of cigar
ette, pipe, cigar, or plug of snull
rnlsea blood pressure almost as mark
edly as does atlrenln, and In addi
tion tobacco has a narcotic effect
which helps the effeminate one to
sit out the emotion, to resist the
natural Impulse to DO SOMETHINO,
the Impulse to the overt act. Or, in
the parlance of the new sex, tobacco
enables one to achieve nonchalance.
But all this Is at the expense of the
arteries.
Don't take this too seriously. It 1
only Ol' Doc Brady sounding ofl.
Not an authority on anything. All 1
know Is what real doctors tell me
and what I pick up In my browsings
In ancient and modern medical lit
erature and then once in a while
I give birth to a more or less legiti
mate Idea myself. I am quite fond
of tobacco and a collector of pipes.
I am telling you Just what I think
of It. Take it or leave it. but for
goodness sake don't exasperate me
any more with yarns about how your
Rrampa started chewing as soon as
he cut hla back teeth and Is still
going strong. I fed Tony the Wlrish ,
Terror an lodln ration, vitamins and
everything and yet at the age of la
years he applied for and was granted
euthanasia.
The vicarious thrill of sport Is all
rlfiht for any one who works or plays
hard. It is all wrong for sedentary
folk or for any one who la troubled
with what the new sex calls "nerves." 1
What the sedentary Individual needs
you like to twang a banjo?" And
me a mandollnlst!
(Copyright. 1935. McNaught
Syndicate)
Communications
The Constitution
To the Editor:
The Constitution Is a sacred heri
tage of the American people. Its
guardians must be constantly vigi
lant against avowed and secret ene
mies. Ill-advised men are boasting that
amendments will be made to the
Constitution to limit and awaken Its
power, and to legalize the follies of
demagogues and iconoclasts who
know it all but propose nothing or
a constructive character.
Previous amendments, few in num
ber, have taken from one to four
years to accomplish. Out of more
than three thousand suggested
amendments, only twenty-one re
ceived the necessary ratification.
Since that date when the momen
tous words were written, "We, the
people of the United States ... do
ordnln and establish this Constitu
tion for the United States of Amer
ica," criticism and vituperation have
been unsuccessfully levelled against
the Constitution.
Today, when so many subversive
Influences are cunningly and treach
erously at work, there is need for
0r k '$4l -
' - u
jWPe Dark-Say Seagram's !
PPS V H?flil CC0 f 1-40 P.nt . . No. 265-C i Y V'A f
345!l! vU' vv , f 1 ,i,iifl " ivfv-ili. . i -r-v
Brady, M.D.
THE SPORTS FAX.
is exercise, active play or work. He
needs to DO SOMETHINO by way
of diversion, recreation, vacation,
change, steadying down hla machin
ery, regulating his metabolism, pro
viding the NATURAL OUTLET for
the energy liberated by the emo
tions he has to repress or suppress
In his dally occupation.
Even In hospitals for the Insane
a Job of actual or active participa
tion In a game of baseball, tennis,
plngpong. bowls or exhibition drill
ing practice, has remarkable steady
ing or normalizing Influence.
It Is among the Idle class, the
parasites, the folk who never do
anything Involving physical exertion
If they can possibly avoid tt, that
we encounter alleged "nervousness"
or "nervous exhaustion." People who
do honest work and people who get
their recreation DOING SOMETHING
are rarely troubled with "bad nerves."
This is evolution, friends. Which
way are you going?
Qt'ESTIONS ANI ANSWERS.
Extreme Heat.
I spend much time at work in a
test room where the temperature
ranges from 00 to 100 degrees F
I understand that under such con
ditions there is produced a short
age of salt in the system. C. T.
Answer If there is a profuse
sweating of course there is a rapid
loss of salt as well as water. It Is
wise to Increase the Intake of salt
say a gram ( about 1 5 gral ns ) ot
salt at the time you take each drink
of water. This tends to prevent heat
cramps and heat exhaustion. In ex
tremely hot weather cool beverages
are more refreshing if some salt Is
taken with them.
Escarole.
You stated that escarole has the j
highest vitamin A content of any I
food. Our vegetable market is un
able to get it, and the seed stores
have only endive or chicory seeds.
E. K. S.
Answer Escarole Is sometimes
called chicory greens, and I believe
endive la virtually the same. If you
can grow your own. that would be
better than you can buy in any mar
ket because the vltomin A value
diminishes on standing for hours or
days. According to assays published
by the New York Association for Im
proving the Condition of the Poor,
escarole contains' 6000 units of vita
min A per ounce, carrots 940 units,
cream cheese 1400 units, eggs 55U
units, liver 2800 units, dried whole
milk 500 units, prunes 300 units,
Romalne lettuce 150 units, ordinary
lettuce 50 units per ounce.
(Copyright, 1935, John F. Dille Co.)
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Or.
Wlllliiin Urady, M. D 203 El
Camlno, Beverly Hills. Calif.
greater vlgllarfce than ever In safe
guarding it. Presidents come and go.
parties fluctuate and dissolve, but
the Supreme Court of the United
States still remains a constant and
stabilizing factor.
The rule of tooth and claw in
business and Industry must be aban
doned, but this can be accomplished
only through wise and patient effort.
Thrifty and far-reaching men will
not put their money into any new
ven t ure when bus! ness leaders are
constantly attacked solely on grounds
of Jealousy and the small-minded
hatred of tho successful man.
Government interference has seri
ously retarded business growth. When
the orgy of fantastic and impractical
measures has spent Itself, and ration
al and constructive thought finds
free and full expression, then we may
expect the long-heralded and much
deslrcd national recovery.
Meanwhile let the watch dogs of
the Constitution stand on guard.
GRENVILLE KLEISER,
One West 72nd St..
June 30, 1936. New York, N. Y.
FREDERICKS HELD ON
NON-SUPPORT CHARGE
John H. Fredericks, brlckmason,
charged by his wife with non-support,
in a complaint filed In Jtistloe
court yesterday, waa ordered held to
await the action of the next grand
Jury by Justice of the Peace Wil
liam R. Coleman.
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
THE U. S. senate, by a decisive ma
jor! ty, defeats Huey Long's
scheme to "share the wealth" by con
fiscating all fortunes above a certain
size and using the money so confis
cated to pay pensions.
The senate, fortunate for every
body, holds the Idea that before
wealth can be shared It must be
CREATED.
Confiscation destroys wealth, in
stead of creating It.
H
UEY'S scheme would confiscate
all fortunes above eight million
dollars.
Let's see how that would work.
Suppose you were working for an
,outfit worth $8,000,000 or more and
Huey's "share the wealth" law was
passed and the property belonging to
your boss waa confiscated. What
would happen?
Why. you would LOSE YOUR JOB!
That Is what would have to hap
pen. NLARA PHILLIPS, who beat her
rival in love to. death with a
hammer 13 years ago, thus winning
the nickname of tho "tiger woman,'
walks through the gates of the worn
en's state prison of California to free
dom after serving 12 years and 15
days of a life sentence.
V"OUR first reaction to that news,
A probably, will be something like
this:
"Goodness gracious,' has It been
TWELVE YEARS slnco that happen
ed? "How time does fly!"
" A LA BAM A" PITTS, sentenced to
Sine Sine prison for a tlO
holdup, in which Pitts held the gun
and ttye accomplice took the money.
Is paroled and permitted to play
baseball.
His right to play was first denied
by baseball's minor league czar on
the ground that permitting him to
play would be exploiting an ex-convict
for publicity purposes.
This decision brought protests from
all over the country, and the big boss
of major league baseball, Judge Kene
saw Mountain Landls. over-ruled it.
Pitts made a name for himself
while playing as a convict inside the
walls of Sing Sing.
SHOULD Clara Phillips and Ala
bama Pitts have been paroled?
That Is a hard question to answer.
The only right answer to such a
question that can be given will be
provided by their own records after
their release on parole.
If, after taking their punishmert,
they coineout of prison and lJve use
ful lives, the answer must be that
paroling them was RIOHT.
4
KIDNAPING is a crime that has
held the public's attention
closely for several years, and It has
been shocking to note the number
of kidnapers who are paroled con
victs. In these cases, paroling was
undoubtedly wrong.
We can at least aree that if the
system of paroling prisoners is to do
good instead of harm it must be
administered with infinite wisdom
and with understanding knowledge
of each Individual ensc.
wascoountyTaxes
I 1 i-i i i i i i mm imui
uvtn n ALT TAIL) i
THE DALLES. Ore., June 20. (AP) .
Court house records show that nearly '
50 per cent of the current year's tax
levy has been paid in Wasco county.
Total received is $290,820. The levy
Is $ti54.4t)6.56. In addition, the tax
office reported that about 890.000 in
delinquencies have been cleared up. ,
Meeting Postponed The regular '
meeting of the Women's Relief corps
has been postponed until further notice.
Flight 'o Time
(Medrord and Jackson Count)
History from the riles of the
Mali Tribune of 10 and 0 Yean
Ago).
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
June 30, 1935
(It was Saturday)
New sawmill at Rogue River starts
operations.
Fred Rapp Is elected a member of
the school board at Talent election.
CLIMAX, June 17. A "barn-raising"
was held at Grlssom's ranch last
Wednesday. A large crowd was pres
ent and the barn was raised without
much difficulty. An enormous din
ner crowned the day for all.
Five hundred automobiles bearing
2000 national guardsmen leave for
Crater Lake. It Is the largest caravan
ever to enter a national park.
The Hill lines will build line to
Klamath Falls unless "Oregon ob
jects.' The mercury continues to hover
about the 95 mark, with no relief in
sight. National guardsmen wilt in
the heat.
B. H. Hedrick, new superintendent
of schools, arrives and confers with
the school board'.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
June 20, 1I5
(It was Sunday)
B. J. Palmer, endorsed by the Parent-Teacher
circles, will be a candi
date for school director at the elec
tion tomorrow.
Emmett Nealon is elected president
of the Arrowhead Literary society of
Table Rock.
Death sentence of Leo M. Franks,
convicted of murdering a factory girl
or Atlanta, is commuted to life im
prisonment. Campaign planned to secure sugar
beet acreage In the valley and estab
lishment of sugar plant here.
Ashland plans Llthia Springs book
let for tourists.
(Continued from Page One.)
covery and la not worrying about in
cidentals. 2. The Roosevelt strategists are
convinced he cannot lose in '36 if
business continues to Improve; and
he cannot win. if It does not.
3. No one will remember next year
that there ever was a supreme court
decision on NRA if Industrial pro
duction pass?s 100.
4. They all believe that their pur
poses will best be served, In any
event, by ignoring attacks, maintain
ing a cocksure air and minding their
own business.
The bouquet which Prance hand?d
to Treasury .Secretary Morgenthau was
highly fragrant but unsubstantial.
What Mr. Morgenthau did was to
sell dollars at the request of France
during the last Parisian gold crisis:
but Mr. Morgenthau did not give any
dollars away. , He got gold for them.
He left the gold on deposit in Paris.
To do anything else would have made
him a participant in the attack on
the franc. It helped the French mo
mentarily; It did not hurt us.
What lay behind the almost pro
fuse t ha n ks he rece i ved Irom Par 1 s
was the fact that the French knew
Britain did not do the same thing.
1
i&jNifiiijilWffi
One ginger ah you hwiv is wholesome
, ... of course, it's
CANADA DRY"
The Champagne of Ginger Ales
Expense is never spared to make Canada Dry as pure
and wholesome a drink for the children as you'll find
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British gold balances In Paris were
then too high to permit her to do it.
The reason Mr. Roosevelt did not
send a Memorial day wreath to the
grave of President Garfield la be
cause he has a personal list of ex
presidents for wreath -laying purpose
and Garfield U not en It. The l.st
Includes Lincoln. Wivhinc;ton, Cleve
land, Jefferson. Coolidse. Tift, T. R.
Harding and Wilson. The significant
absentee from this list la not Mr.
GarfleldT who was a Republican, but
Andrew Jackson, the lion-hearted
Democrat.
The great trouble with this new
deal. Its opponents say, Is that there
Is no coordination. These opponents
will be glad to hear that the CCC, in
making its latest clothing purchases,
bought 750.000 woolen trousers, but
only 146.875 belts to hold them.
Confidence in returning prosperity
never was more marked than In an
advertisement published tn "Happy
Days." the magazine circulating only
among CCC boys. It was inserted by
one of the best known Atlantic City
hotels, which wanted the relief boys
to know that it had rooms at 66 a
day.
SflU
rit
By train and by ship, completely around
th scenic circlenew travel thrill
every day, offering an ideal vacation
tour at moderate cost. Board a
"Princess" liner in Seattle for a delight
ful salt-water cruise to Victoria and
Vancouver, where there if plenty to do
and see. Then by trans-continental
train across the Great Divide, through
mi let and milei of th world's finest mountain
icntry...th Canadian Roc kri, where every
type of lummer recreation may be enjoyed.
Arrange your trip to ttial you can spend e few
delightful days at Banff Springs Motel, Chateau
Lake Louise ore comfortable Chalet-Bungalow
Camp located at different scenic points. Then
by train to Calgary and Spokane, and on
.home to complete the circle-
Kfey. glorious travel .
BHftt- experience.
-'-i-.-j: .-
CANADIAN PACIFIC
W. H. Deacon, Gen'l Agent Pais'r Dept., 626
S. W. Brdy., Am. Bank Btdg. BR. o637, Portland
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