PAGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1933.
Medford Mail Tribune
"Enrvont in Southern Dreoee
Riidi Ui Mill Tribune"
Dally ttxccpt ftalurdii
Pubilihed Oy
ftWUMJRD PB1NTINU CO.
N. (fir BL
BOH Kit! W. UUUL, Kdlur
All Independent Ntnpatm
Entered aa iMood eliw natur at Utdfonl.
Oregon, anter Act of Uvea t. 18TB.
SlIKaiRIPTlON BATES
R Mill in Atttane
Diibr, oo rur $? 0o
n.ili ill months J.io
Dili, one nooUi
r. rvriM m AdTtnea Medford. Aablaod,
laeboDTUJa, Central Point. PboenU. Taint. Oold
Ulll and oo Bitbwaja.
Daily, one rw 9.W
Diilj. ill nonUM 1-3
Daily, mm moDtb 0
AU Una, tsb to tdraoee.
Orriclai piper of U Clt of Medford.
Official papw of Jackaoo County.
UKMHKH OK Tilt ASSOCIATED PHB58
l lh.il I mmarnA UTIva ImlU
Tb AmdatM) Prni U airlwltaly enUUed u
tbe in for publleatkio of all new dUpatcba
eredllMl to It ottienrtM credited to tnl paper
ADO tlM ID Att IUCI uewp yuKuaiaou uas.
All runts tat puhllcatloo of ipadaJ diipetdw
Derail) ar vw reacneu.
MKMBRK 09 UNITED PHES8
IfEMBKH UK AUDI1 BUW5A0
Oa CIRCULATIONS
AdrertlJlnt KepreenUtlee
ftL C. MOtiKNHEN h COMPANT
Office to N T. Chicago, Dttrott.
FraoeUflO Lm AnttlM RatU Portland.
MEMBER
Ye Smudge Pot
uj Arthur Prnj
Uppubllcana of Oregon are con
templating a "bunch-gram" conven
tion to uphold the Constitution, and
not vote the Democratic ticket next
year.
Exhibiting a aample or what he
preaches a New Jersey cuu.ro-....
the Hon. Fred A. Hartley,
a "re-distribution
Jr.,
pro-
o(
com
mon ne." Thl. 1. fin., but no
balm to cltlwn. lptent on whacking
up Jackson county's lone million
aire. ...
In the lumber itrlke. neither the
employe or the workers won. This
leaves nobody the loser but the
public.
It Is easy to remain irlenda. Just
don't get Interested In the
woman or the same dollar(Clncin
natl Enquirer) Human nature ex
posed, and howl
The "Outdoor Man" Is now dressed
that way. and putting up a great
fight against the Injustice of mowing
the lawn.
"
"This summer hsa been remark
able for IU damness." (Ml. Hebron
litems) Rebuke for the weather.
...
The Dub Watson boy, 10, who has
no faith in Qanta Claus, piled 16
tiers of wood last week, without a
strike, to prove that he doesn't want
any firecrackers.
The forest are now dry enougn
. for a man amoklng a pipe to start
a fire with a cigarette.
...
Funeral services will be held to
morrow for Peter Jackrabblt. who
mistook a d for a tortoise, and
raced It.
Last month 53 couples looked a
preacher In the eye. In the good old
taya this waa sufficient matrimony
to' cause shlvarees until mid-October.
I
... ,
Everybody Is ready to celebrate
Julv 4th the anniversary of the j
birth of the nation, which so many
consider not worth living In.
The Prospect ball team escaped IU
regular Sunday defeat by outwitting
Its opponenta by not playing them.
"PEItPECT MAN BOUGHT" Sis
kiyou News) Just be patient. Next
year four such will be running lor
every office.
Farmers have started threshing
their wheat, and all feel like It
would be some use.
...
The esteemed and sincere WCTU
favors "a national beer - drinking
marathon." It otten looka like that
Is Just what la going on, but lacks
organisation.
The city of Bend la being enter
tained by a lady, who commercialises
her ability to drive "blindfolded,'
with a blindfold.
UKATI1UIIE.
An emaciated man, with a baa
cough, was, one cold alternoon last
spring, discharged from a local hos
pital. He had no overcoat, no money,
no Irleuds, and wandered aimlessly
through the atresia and finally found
himself near the river. Borne smsll
boys were playing about and. in
their amusement one of them stum
bled and fell Into tlx water. There
was no help at hand, but the man
looking on, without hesitation,
plunged In, grasped the boy and II
nally got him back on the dock In
aalety. A crowd had, by that lime,
gathered to receive them. Tbe man
drifted away no one notloed him
cold, weary and sick. Just aa he
turned the corner, he felt a toucn
on h!a arm and a voice said: "Are
you the man who saved that boy?"
"I am," he aald. The voice replied
"Well, I'm his father where a nie
hat?" (Exchange).
Blind Man Loses
$1 in Deft Touch
ST. LOUIS, July 2 (AP) "Wheres
the nearest church?" a feminine
motorist asked John Miller, blind,
as he heard a motor car atop beside
him at the ourb.
"Thanks," the voice replied to his
directions. As the gears meshed Mil
ler felt a deft hand lirt his purse
from his pocket. It contained 11.
BiiilncM Caller According to the
Ashland Tidings. Bob Dodge of that
city mud a buMnee trip to Medford
Monday monuiig.
Editorial Correspondence
NEW YORK CITY, June 28. A ride up Fifth avenue on the
top of a motor bus, skirting Central Park and then over to 90
Riverside Drive, late on a hot afternoon, again impressed us
with the unreality of the New York spectacle. We don't believe
there is anything quite like it in the entire world. The towering
buildings not one or two, not a few score, but literally thou
sands; the stream of motor cars reaching from curb to curb,
barely moving and then only by jerks; the crowds of people
swarming everywhere, in the stores and out, and seeping across
the avenue between the cars regardless of the traffic signals,
to a rank outsider from the Pacific, coast it doesn't seem like a
city, in which people live, and sleep, and eat, fall in love, get
married and raise families, go to market and buy a bunch of
carrots or a leg of iamb, but like something from a book. As
we started, the sun setting behind that soaring skyline of steel
ana stone, to me norm, tower Hiier tower rising to ine ciouus,
we decided it wasn't New York at all, but a page torn out of
one of JIaxfield Parrish's pictorial excursions in the land of
make-believe. The whole thing is too sensational, too theatrical,
too extreme, to be true !
Quite a sensation has been
the charge of Christopher Morley, that 0. 0. Mclntyro is a
plagiarist. In this evening's World Telegram Christopher on
the front page, fires his shaft at
with devastating effect. When
I have an unfailing consolation.
O. O. Sfclntyre likes my stuff
Then he goes on to print extracts from O. 0., in his recent
publication "Tho Big Town"
almost identical phrases from
patiently for the next issue of
Mclntyre's comeback will be.
Uud will be smart enough to
An interesting book could be
York in the last quarter century. Approximately that period
has elapsed since we walked along 14th street, from 7th avenue
to Broadway. Then there were some excellent clion houses and
saloons on J4tli street, one Oennan beer parlor we recall in
particular. There was one respectable theatre, attractive book
stores, also some second-hand stores, pawn shops, and nickelode
ons. Now we could find practically nothing but stores devoted
to bankrupt sales of women's apparel. We figured out the
reason was Klein's who started in one room with a sort of
second-hand dress store for women and now occupies two large
buildings, extending over an entire block, with blue and white
signs painted all over it, and facing on the Bolshevik meeting
place Union Square. "Klein's on the square", "Open Thurs
day and Tuesday to 8:45 p. m." "Smart women now shop
here" "Money back within five days", etc etc.
' Within, summer dresses, and cloaks were hanging row after
row, mile and mile, an army of women milling about, in vari
ous degrees of undress, prices of dresses from 1(3 to $5, and a
surprising scarcity of clerks. Klein, they say, has made a for
tune by buying cheaply in wholesale quantities and selling the
samo way. Opinions differ as to whether ho excels as a buyer
or a salesman the truth probably is he is exceptional in both.
A stroll up 14th street indicates every storekeeper in that part
of tho city is trying to do the same thing. As usual they are
too late. Women interested in this sort of merchandise go to
Klein's and particularly during a depression nine out of ten
women are.
Wo are rather amused to see tho late and unlamented Blue
Eagle plastered all over the place, inside and out. We have no
evidence but it is difficult to sea how women's dresses can be
sold for $3 without sweat-shop labor coming into tho picture at
some stage of the performanoe. For they aren't merely print
dresses, printed aprons and slip-overs, the one clerk we con
tacted assured us they were RKAL dresses selling for no less
than ten or fifteen dollars, some 25 and $.'!0 anvwhere else.
This may or may not be true, but eertainlv there must be real
values there, or the place wouldn't be packed on a hot June
afternoon, with acquisitive, bargain hunting and perspiring
womanhood. An we roamed about we concluded, that if the
ladies place any value upon time and energy expended, the final
investment, may not be such a paltry figure after all. R. W R
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O.O. Mc'jntyre
NEW YORK, July 3. New York's
dressiest lady Is reputedly the exotl
cally dashing Mrs. s. Stnnwood Men
Menken. She Is
the wife of
prominent law
yer and her bl
tarrs costumes
are the inspira
tion for a hun
dred and one
p a r a g rsphs by
the fashion ex
perts and society
chatterers almost
every week.
Her s a r t orlai
metier smacks
something of Eu-
rcpe c once highly prest-sgented lady
the colorful Jean Nash. Luciua
Beebe paragraphs the Idea with:
is famous for
fast horses,
beautiful women
and, . .
Th American Mtdlcinal Spirits Corporation, loultvilla,
caused here in literary circles by
Odd very neatly, gracefully, but
I am low in mind he observes,
At any rate, I say to mvself,
and howl
and in a parallel column prints
his own writings. We wait im
the World Telegram to see what
We have a sneaking suspicion
say nothing.
written on the changes in New
"Mrs. Menken did not wear a single
feather at the Belmont opening. The
day waa warm and she roughed it
In a cape of Imperial Russian sa
bles." Rather dickey, what I
Mrs. Menken, tall, willowy and
middle aged, extends herself at the
big charity costume balls. In almost
every Instance her outfit Is the mont
brilliant brilliant as an electric
light Is brilliant. At many smart
restaurant or night club o;enlngs
she has the choicest table.
Her supply of Jewels Is for every
occasion and add lustre, to the most
eipcrtly lighted room. Her well
timed entrances cause every hesd
to turn toward the doorway. She
la usually escor'.ed by her son. Her
dressmaking bills are ssld to be
larger than Mrs. Harrison Williams'.
New Tork has sudden touches ol
old world air. One may turn Into
33rd street between 8th and 9th
ave-nuea and come upon a French
quarter as Gallic as a small town In
France. There are family pensions,
window-boxed auberges and Malsons
this and that. Mama knlta on the
door-step and bearded Papa smokes
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D.
blgned letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease
diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-ad-dressed
envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink
Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered.
No reply can be made to queries not confirming to Instructions. Address Dr
William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly mill. Cal.
CROWS FEET AND OTH
The iMt year, complains Mis J.
j , i have noticed horrid crows-
ft under my eyes over the cheek
' bone. Can' this
be caused by Im
proper diet or
need of glasses?
How can I get rid
of themV X have
tried- many
creams but to no
avail. Therefore.
I come to you, a
famous doctor
feeling sure you
will help me.
I'd like to learn
the name of the
famous doctor
who iceiA ju re i win help any one.
Could use It as a testimonial.
Wrinkles appearing In the skin
when a woman Is never mind how old
spell one thing, senility. Gosh, girls.
this pains me as much as It does
you. but stay with us a while and
maybe you'll learn something to your
boy friends satisfaction.
Miss J. J . naturally enough,
gives no hint whether she ts 16 or
00. but it doesn't matter at all. I
don't care what a woman's chrono
logical age may be, what concerns me
Is how old she feels. Let me feel of
her artery, you know, take her pulse
In that knowing way a wise doo has,
and while I'm pretending to count
It and judge the tension and force
and so on I'm really determining the
texture and elasticity of her skin and
the condition of her hair and the
presence or absence of the arcus sen
Ills In her lovely eyes, and pretty soon
I have a very good idea how long
she Is likely to live,
A man Is as old as his arteries and
a woman Is as old as her skin. I have
reached the conclusion In my own
mind that arteriosclerosis Is a nu
tritional deficiency. This Is Just my
notion. No one Is compelled to ac
cept It or even to take It seriously.
By the same line of reasoning I Infer
that these crowsfeet and other wrin
kles spearing In the skin before one
Is reaiiy old enough to deserve them,
are likewise a nutritional deficiency.
Especially vitamin G deficiency, but
vitamins never occur singly In nature
and I believe It Is always more effi
cacious to take a good ration of all
the vitamins whenever there Is rea
son to suspect a deficiency of any of
them.
There Is Just as good ground to be
lieve that surh premature wrinkling
and sallowness and dryness and
harshness of the skin of a woman of
say 30 or 40 at which age & woman
his pipe and reads his latest copy
of Figaro. Children in long blacK
gowns play at the curb. On Bleecker
street Is the old-fashioned barber
shop of August Plngpank. Instead
of the usual glitter, the Interior la
pleasantly mellow. Shaving mugs
with gold emblem are racked along
the wall. A pull drawer Is the money
till. The shoe shiner la a veritable
Undo Tom.
Joan .Bennett. Llbby Holman and
Betty Starbuck have the same eye
trouble. None can see a great dis
tance and In the exigency carry
lorgnettes which cause them much
grief. Wearing them, they are ac
cused of never speaking to famil
iars. Oddly enough, all on the stage
and acreen have remarkably beauti
ful eyes and fortunately not one la
sensitive about the difficulty. Indeed
It's a aource of much amusement.
Drnmatic actresses for some reason
ara orten afflicted wth astigma
tism. Nnzimova and Bertha Kallch
had to learn directions all over again
when moving from one theater to
another. Bernhardt once said that
10 feet away everything was a blur.
Lenore Ulrlc is also very near sight
ed. Duse could see well In daylight
but artificial lights dulled her vision
to an opalesque haze. Then, ot
course, t here waa Ben Welch . who,
dirlng his last tragic years In vaude
ville, was led out to bench before
the curtain arose and went througn
his hilarities. Few knew he was stone
blind until his death. The former
Flfl Wldener la also in a fog without
a lorgnon yet is one of the most
prodigious readera In the Social Reg
ister. Likely no Atlantic liner purser has
the "following" of the Normandle's
Henry VUlar. He has been succes- j
slvely on the same Job on the France. ;
Paris. He de France and now in hta
AVAILABLE IN OREGON
No. 164-A $1.75 a Quart
No. 164-C OOaPint
Ky. Baltimore, Md.
ER MARKS OF SENILITY
should be at her very top condition
In every way is due to hypochronlc
anemia In many cases and is rem
edied by larger dosea of Iron than
we formerly deemed necessary In any
case. Still, I am not convinced In
my own mind that the Iron alone
produces all the good results of such
treatment In such cases. I suspect
the gain in health, vitality and ap
pearance may be due to the Increased
Intake of vitamins In the more lib
eral variety and quantity of foods the
patient takes under the effects of the
Iron, or something like that.
Anyway, you Dumb Doras who
monkey with creams and lotions In
the hope of doing anything to in
cipient wrinkles had better buy some
medical advice and save the differ
ence. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Seasickness.
I heartily recommend your method
of preventing seasickness to all my
friends. My wife had always suffer
ed even on a short ride on a lake
boot, but she followed your Instruc
tions strictly when we went to Eu
rope, and never had any trouble go
ing or returning, although there was
some rough weather which upset a
lot of hardened travelers. . . . J. Q.
Answer Thank you. I am glad to
send the Instructions to anyone who
asks for them and Incloses a stamped
envelope bearing his address.
Tough Bimbo.
Have been giving our 10-months-old
baby baked potato, bplnach and
CcUroU. Can you suggest other vege
tables that would be good for him?
At times he gets constipated, but as
babies go he Is some tough bimbo.
. . . A. G. C.
Answer Green peas, sweet potatoes,
squash and turnip, pureed or mashed
or baked or otherwise well cooked,
and run through coarse sieve. Ba
nana, well ripened. Is excellent food
for a baby and a daily ration of it
will prevent constipation. Send 10
cents coin and stamped envelope
bearing your address, for copy of
Brady Baby Book.
Distilled Water.
ts It Injurious In any way to drink
only distilled water? Has distilled
water any virtue or any curative vnlue
that natural water does not possess?
Answer No. No.
(Copyright. 1935, John P. Dllle Co.)
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. O.. 25 El
Camlno, Beverly Hills. Calif.
present post. He was s tnwrlt.lme
avocat In Havre when he took to
sea duty. An exquisite de luxe, his
volco is a silken purr and he haa a
way of bending over a lady's hand
to touch It lightly with his lips that
should be. If it Isn't, In the currl-
PRICES SLASHED
and a
Here 's one of the most sensational bargain offers
ever made to tire buyers. You get the only tire in
the world with Golden Ply Blow-Out, Protection at
10 off, and in addition, absolutely free, a Goodrich
Gold and Black Tube ...
This Gold and Black Tube is the new Goodrich first
quality tube that is specially reinforced to resist
YOU SAVE FROM
$3.00 TO $8.80 PER TIRE
NO
LEWIS SUPER SERVICE STATIC
Complete Automotive Service Wrecker Service We Never Close
8th and Front Streets W. L. LEWIS, Mgr. Phone 1300
culum of charm schools. His greatest
asset Is never forgetting a name or
face, plus h& expertness In bringing
the right people together In the
cocktail lounge while the ship Is on
Its first leg. He is in his early 40's
and very bald. Many seasoned voy
ageurs do not name his liner In
discussing their voyage. They merely
say: "I'm sailing with VUlar."
The seasonal fad for darkly shaded
shirts with collars to match BUI
Corum's Is )et black has made an
all-white shirt almost a curiosity.
The displays are in coffee-brown.
Prussian blue, salmon pink, seal gray
and among gayer sprites a few of
ruby red. The first colored collarlst
I ever beheld was the late Tommy
Gray about 10 years ago. He had Just
hove in from England with a grass
green importation and a pearl derby.
And did I romp to the McCrory
Brothers!
Prom Seattle: "The last time Bob
Davis was here he ordered a stack
of hots, ringed 'em with little pig
sausages, heaped German fried spuds
on top and poured syrup over the
whole works."
Go on. Don't mind me. I like to
sob out loud this way.
(Copyright, 1938, McNaught Syndt
. cate)
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
NEWS from Washington:
The federal deficit at the end
of the present fiscal year fiscal year
meaning financial year Is 28.7 per
cent less than it was expected to be.
It amounts to $3,472,347,894.00.
whereas President Roosevelt estimat
ed in his budget message to congress
last January that It would be 4,
869,418,338.00. pAILURE to spend for emergency
1 purposes at the rate forecast in
the budget message is said by gov
ernment officials to be responsible
for the decreased deficit.
CHEERING news?""
Well, for the present, perhaps.
But dont expect too much of the fu
ture. The deficit is smaller than ex
pected THIS year, because emergency
spending has been slower than esti
mated. Next year, which will be ELEC
TION YEAR, spending will be much
faster. There will be votes to be in
fluenced then.
Nc
OTE, please, that the deficit for
the present fiscal year Is nearly
three and a half BILLION dollars.
Your grandfather can probably re
member, if he Is still alive, when the
entire cost of running the govern
ment of the United States was not
much over a half billion dollars; Your
GOODRICH SILVERTOWN
TUBES
With Every Silvertown Tire
THIS OFFER FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY
DOWN
YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD
w
father will perhaps remember the dis
turbance that waa kicked up In con
gress when the cost of federal gov
ernment rose to a billion dollars.
Now we have DEFICITS of three
and a halt billion dollars and con
gress, Instead of raising a disturbance
about It, goes happily on Increasing
the deficit. ' '
Times are changing, aren't they?
A DEFICIT, It should be added
here, ts the difference between
what you take In and what you put
out. When private Individuals put
out vastly more than they take in
they regard themselves aa BROKE,
but the brain trusters assure us that
the nation can be made prosperous
by spending Immensely more than It
receives.
ELL, maybe It can. But did you
ever see a rain barrel! FILL UP
when more water ran out of the
bunghole than came In by the spout?
THIS writer, who tries to keep up
with the times but finds himself
hopelessly out of date In a lot of
ways, finds It Impossible to believe,
no matter how hard he tries, that
either nations or Individuals can
spend themselves rich.
Editorial Comment
Mr. I.ampman's Book.
Many readers of this page, having
admired and followed the writings
of our colleague, Ben Hur Lampman,
during more than a dozen years, will
welcome the word that he Is author
of a full-length work of fiction,
issued this past week end by the
Metropolitan Press. They will be
eag.:r to know whether he has been
able to sustain through the Intrica
cies and length of a book that
rhythm and richness of Imagery
which characterize his essays and
which make his editorial writings,
we believe, unlaue In America.
Nor will they be disappointed. In
"Here Comes Somebody." the fantasy
of 'Lisbeth and Jumbles, Mr. Lamp
man's rich style has been extended
to the narrative form, and the poetry
of It, while less crowded than in
the essays. In the end becomes even
more effective. It was said of a
great French composer of music that
most composers did what they could
with music, but this one did what
he would. Mr. Lampman is deserving
of the same compliment where words
are concerned. He commands them,
where most of us are commanded
by them.
And In the book the poetry ts
only the covering. The adventures
of 'Lisbeth and Jumbles are as va
ried, with as deep a meaning, as
those of Alice when she went travel
ing in Wonderland. We can think
of no other book with which "Here
Comes Somebody" might rightly be
compared. The rest we must leave
the readers to discover for them
selves. Oregonlan. v
Robinson to Berkeley Gain Robin
son left for Berkeley, Cal., last night
by train-
A
Purchased During
FUSE
tearing even when run flat. It is regularly priced
from $2.20 to $5.45 depending on size.
Dont be confused with other offers. Bear in mind
this is all first-line Goodrich merchandise and not
second or third-line tires or tubes!
Don't miss this opportunity to put real, Blow-Out
Protection on your car at a big saving and get a
free tube in the bargain.
PAYMENT
Flight To Time
(Medford and Jackson County
History from the fUea of the
MaU Tribune of 10 and 20 tears
Ago).
TEN YEARS AUO TODAY
July 2, 1933
(It was Thursday)
Storea of the city will be closed
Saturday. July 4, and not be open
until Monday.
New high school bonds sold at pre
mium by school board.
First apricots of season reach the
market.
Shortage of all kinds of labor re
ported. Orchardlsts threaten to draft
men from street corners to complete
necessary work.
Santa Barbara, Cal., hit again by
slight earthquake with slight damage-
Medford people start hegira for hills
for July 4 holiday.
T WEN TV YEARS AGO TODAY
July 2. 1015
(It was Friday)
Porforio Diaz, long dictator of Mex
ico, dies.
German U-boats sink five British
merchantmen in the North sea; ru
mors rife allies will soon start "great
offensive."
Slightly cooler weather Is prom
ised for the Fourth of July. Yester
day the mercury soared to 102.5 de
grees. The heat Is retarding the sec
ond growth of alfalfa.
Crater Lake lodge was opened for
the season yesterday with 10 guests.
The P. & E. will run an excursion,
to Butte Falls July 4.
WORMS
Threaten All Children
Moil tnoihtr believe their children quite
tafe from Round Worm. Yet ea many
49 out of every 100 children in certain
groupa had wormi. Mid U. S. Government
expert who examined over 2,000 children.
Both dry end country children ere open
to infection, became not only fruit and
vegetable, but Hie, water, pete and pley
ground are aourcea of infection. Preyefts
tion i elmoit imponible.
Many different sign point to Round
Worm i Loi of weight end appetite, pale
net, irritability, itching of note or finger,
grinding of teeth in tleep, vomiting, eu.
Try Jayne's Vermifuge
Mill too of mother ere grateful for thtf '
medicinet e doctor' prescription famoo foi
103 yean. 4) million bottle uaed. jayne'i
femou Vermifuge and Tonics can be bee1
at any drug afore.
The Largeit Bottle for the Montr
Druggits Recommend It
1 0 t
This Sale
n -.nil if-r,-,..,.,;
M
aUKattMaaain