Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 10, 1935, Page 4, Image 4

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    rXQE FOUR
IifEDFOItD MJtlL TRIBUNE, JfEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY. JTJLT 10. 1935.'
Medford Mail Tribune
BTrren Southern Oregoa
i to nu ifioun
Piilly Jtit-ept ttoturdar.
Publihd by
IIEDrORD pniNTINO CO.
:S.ST-2 N. Kir St. Phone 71.
ROBERT W. RUKL, Editor.
An Independent Newepaper.
t:ier4 aa MMnd-eliii matter a !
ford, Oregon, under Art of March I.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
Ry Mall In Advance:
Deily, ona yeu-
Dally, tlx month
fiaily, on month fI
Bv Carrier, in A-lvanr Medfnrd, ApH
Und, Jbnvlll, Central Point.
Phfn1, Talent, Oola HU1 an4 on
Dally, en yar 'J?!1
pilly, six mom ha
Dally, en month
All lirmi, eaan IB iinn.
OfffHal Paper of tha City of Mrdford.
Offlrlal ripw of ilitrkiioii County.
MBMRKR Or TUB AHKOf'1 ATKII PHfcHft
Keremni- run i-Miem w.r- P-r,.,-.
The AMoelaltd l"re la olnlvly en
rilled to tha ma for publication of all
nmm rfl.n tdhn credited to It or ether
nlM credited in thli paper, and alao to
tha local newa pijbiielieij Herein.
All rl lita for publication of epeelal
Iteratehea herein art alao reatrvad.
MEMBER OF UNITED PUKSB
MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU
or CIRCULATIONS
Advartlalna- Representative
V. C. MOUKNHKN COMTANT
Offtf.f In New York, Chicago Detroit,
(an FranelacoI-oa Anjalaa, Seattle,
Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By' Arthur I'urt?
.. .w. l.rfv ..uratartan 01
no aouwv .--
K.w Torn Otty. who will aubmlt
tha blta of rattleanaka next rrlday,
to prova veritable owt lmmunlto
her from anake poison, hss msda
arrsngementa with th. rattlesnake,
to ba bit, where It won't show line
vaccination mark.
...
Halli Selassie, empsror of Ithlopla.
land Premier Muaaollnl of Italy
threatens with war, spoke a nifty
mouth-full racantly, aa followa, ana
In part;
"I ahall lead my troopa In peraon
nto tha battlefield, and I do not
xpeel to meat there Premier Musso-
""There la no chance that II Due,
busy at home making speeches and
looking fierce, will keep any aucn
a date.
. .
rail hate for tha Older Girls and
tha Oslshevikla will be on dlaplay
Aujust 1. Advance reporta Indicate
they will look leu like the dlckena,
than aoma recent atylea. te., the
ahort.llvad Eugenia hat. The new
headgear la built to aet straight on
the head. Instead of raklshly over
an eye.
...
Bandits, operating aa pirate,, rob
bed a gambling hlp anchored olt
Long Beach, Calif., of $33,000. flral
putting the crew In chalna. "Appar
ently," press dlspatchee state, "the
existence of the floating gambling
pulate escaped the eyea of the au
thorities." Thla faulty vlalon ahouio
aoften the crltlclam of Oregon edit
or,, who complain their chief of po
lice and aherlff can t aw a slot-ma-chlne,
or a poker gume.
...
A boy, 14. wna caught leading nie
bicycle down a tiulet residential
atreet yesterday. He waa all wore out
from riding his transportation in
business district auto traffic.
...
A poot announces pluns to Journey
to the Matanuaka, valley of Alaska
to write a poem about the plush
bottom pioneers, transplanted there
by the government. The 1854 pio
neers csn no longer scoff at tha lack
of fortitude of their 1036 compat
riots. Their artistic aggravations were
confined to a dude with a banjo,
who sang "Susannah" all night,
keeping both the Indians and the
trail blajwre awake. Veteran covered
wagon heroes mlorm that generally
an olf-ox, accidentally stepped on
the banjo the morning alter crossing
the Platte river.
...
"BUYING HELPS BUSINESS."
(BP Call-Bulletin) Just Ilka eating
atopa hunger.
...
Beared Democrats have atarted re
turning from Chicago, where they
found the farmers all happy and
strong for a ra-shut fling ol the
new deal.
...
A report on California earthquakes
for the past 60 yeara, reveals that
only two were deatructlva at San
Krauclaco and Banta Barbara. Tha
remainder were Just novel and in
teresting events, thet accomplished
nothing, outside of lossenlng up the
earth around ths orange trees.
...
TUB IIINOSAl K.
BehoUi l lie mighty Dinosaur,
Famous In prehistoric lore,
Not only for his weight and atrength
But fnt his lutellectusl length.
You will observe by these remstnt
The creature had two aria of brains
One In the head (tha usual place)
The other at hi, spinal ba,a.
Thus he could reason a priori
As well as a posunorl.
No problem bothered him a bit:
Ha made both head and tall of It.
flo wue he was, so wise and solemn.
Each thought filled jutt a epinai
column.
If one brain found ths preseurs
strong
It passed a few Idesa slong.
If something slipped his forwsrd
mind
Twss rescued by tha one behind;
And If In error ha was csught
He hsd a saving sfterthought.
As he thought twlca before he spoke
He hsd no judgments to revoke.
For he could think, without con
gest Ion.
Upon both sides of every question.
Oh, gaze upon this model besst,
Deluncl ten million yeara at least.
(Poems of BI.T 1
M'lllng In I Hill - F.irl Mellli. I
leaving eliorth for an Indefinite
la fforo, Uua, it ass leaxued today.
Editorial Correspondence
WASHINGTON, July 4. Thankf to Johnny Rally of hi
Oregoninn horned in on a press conference with Administrator
Hopkins, the major domo of federal relief expenditures.
The conference had started when we entered, and the little
room was pretty well crowded with the newspaper boys, and
girls most, of the former standinf,
Hopkins was seated at his desk, smokinp; a cigaret. His keen
appraising black eyes, and his slightly obtruding, pugnacious
chin, impressed us as his most noticeable characteristics.
He was answering questions about the new set-up between
him and Ickes and "Walker, with the main purpose of speeding
up and coordinating relief, and continued to answer them for
nearly an hour. He impressed us as being a very capable, deter
mined and forthright person, inclined perhaps to be rather
impatient with those whose minds might not work as quickly,
or in the same direction, as his.
No important news came out of th conference, in fact in
the morning papers we could find no report of the meeting at.
nil it wag more a clarification of the revamped scheme of relief
administration than anything else.
Wa liked Hopkins' candor and entire absence of side. Unc
of the boys complained because ha had been unable to secure the
number of men actually employed on various relief projects.
Walker it seems would say nothing refuses to hold press con
ferences and from the president who has the final word as to
what should and should not be done, no such information had
been available.
"I will gee you get those figures" said Hopkins, "they are
news. it is the' vital feature of all relief work don't worry
you'll get them."
And so on to snother question. With no attempt to be "one
of the boys" or play up to the press in any way, Hopkins,
nevertheless, did give a distinct impression of being in sympnthy
with the news ifien, completely devoted to the "cause", in which
he ia engaged, above evasion or quibbling of any sort, a very
likeable chap.
In the matter of extending government aid to cities for ex
ample that can't do their part financially, their credit is gone.
"Yeg tha government will aid them" said Hopkins, "if they
can't help themselves, but we must know first they CtAN'T."
"How about the criticism that such a policy rewards in effic
iency" one of the reporters asked, "a well mapaged city must
pay more relatively than a city that isn'tt"
"There is no answer to that" was the prompt reply, "the
government is engsged in relief. Where relief is needed, and
tha community is unable to do its part financially, relief will
be given. It is not always inefficiency. One city may simply
be fortunate, and another unfortunate. It may not be a matter
of efficiency at all."
One remark made by Mr. Hopkins was the basis of our im
pression that he may be too hasty and impatient at times not
as fair-minded and judicial as ona in bis position should be.
There has been some criticism of federal relief in Colorado it
seems by the governor of that
the governor of Colorado inquired what qualitications tne leci-
eral director of relief in that state
"What would you say to that, Mr. Hopkins?
Quick as a flash the relief administrator enma back "I would
ask what qualifications the governor of Colorado has for the
job HE holds!"
That, waa that. So another question was popped.
Ohviously that wasn't an answer, it was merely a rejoinder.
We should have thought Mr. Hopkins would either have brushed
the question aside, as unworthy of notice, or pointed out the
qualifications of the man he had named , and then if he wished
go on to pay his respects to the critic.
s t
However one view of a man and one peek at. a relatively
unimportant, press conference, gives no proper basis for definite
inclement.. It was interesting us a sidelight on what is going on
in Washington, and we were interested to see one of the "big
men" of the Roosevelt administration in action.
Had we contacted Jolinnv
might have gotten in on the conference with the president, held
the same day, too had we missed it, too bad we must he on
our way.
It was at this conference the president quoted that famous
line from Soulhey about the battle of Blenheim being a great
victory, but in answer to Petcrkin's inquiry as to what its real
value had been the answer was he didn't know Rl.'T it wns n
"grcHt. victory!"
This referred to the alleged triumph of the power companies
in the defeat of the holding company death sentence measure.
It was "a great victory" but WHY was it!
In our judgment the quotation was extremely apt. We have
failed to find anyone here in Washington who can explain what
tho cheering is all about. The bill approved by the House will
undoubtedly be accepted by the Senate and passed. It won't
wipe out all holding companies by 1910 but the Senate measure
rcnllv didn't do that. It will give the government through the
security commission the authority
ABUSH into a cocked hat. What
racket wanta more than that!
lobby big shots DO want it t
(Continued from Pgt Ona)
XXV(00 (not S40.000.0OO aa Harrison
Crtntandad, or 110.000,000, u aoma
of the houM mambara havt eatlmat-
d). They did not ohjtrt to break
ing up big fortune or eonruvrtttng
big Income. But they ballavtd
more logtrel revenue exruae (or aurh
a itcp nhould be daviaad. They knew
that the only place to rale more ray
em. In th lower cla of t-
paror. th middle-man. the atirraaa
fvil bmlneM wuttvM. dootora. law
yer, th parpl who Tecette good '
arl.
Thrfor thar demanded an exten-
alon nf Pree!d4nt Roovlti plan to
Include theee.
It Is aald th president wa cool to
thla URftation. Aa they underatood
It. what he wanted waa to break up
th big fortune, to trt talng blg
ne among corporation. Apparently
he did not hv revenue in mind at
all. and did not care particularly
about it Neither did h car about
oAMugtVeucceAful more heavily.
Hia poaltlon waa th umi In hi
mKMge.
But th congreasmcn Intlated there
had to be more aoctai reform in the
naw tax program. For one they won
an argument with th praldent. At
leaat they now think they have
won It.
All thev bits thflr eonthmoiis on
ia tht fact Uit the president ball-
nimul
state. One of the boys remarked
had for the job.
Kelly a few hours earlier, we
to knock the holding company
enemy of the holding company
And how many of the Power
R. W. R.
ralaed both hand to a lrl of hla
ihouidera and ahrugged a If to say:
"All right. If you Inaint." but he act
ually ld nothing. Th only thing
h 1nltd on waa that congreaa do
nothing to th bill to destroy the
popular bllf that It la an adminis
tration meaaiir.
Mr. Margenthau'a recalcitrance aa a
wltnea fit into thl picture right
her: He mat prevent at the confer
nc and naturally shared th preal
dntlal viewpoint rather than th
rongreaalonal Tlwpolnt. H wnt even
further and declined outright to ap
pear before th way and meana com
mute. Hla reluctance 1 eaMly underatand
able bcaue th committee waa tak
ing th matter out of Whit Houae
and treasury hand. In view or thla
situation, he pointed out he could
not aey anything. If he did testify.
Commltt member would not
aland for that. They ald It wa the
custom for th treasury secretary to
appear. Ha must appear. They prom
ised to fend oft any embarrassing
question If h would Jut com up
and offer a few ragu observations.
That I what happened.
Thus endeth the second chapter.
Chapter thre probably will b writ
ten when th congressmen get them
selves Into uch a mesa trying to
writ their own tax bill that they
glv it up for the tlm being
Th light which haa been burning
lata at night In President Roosevelt a
bedroom lately ts supposed to supgett
that h la praying for euch a way out.
Th matter ha ellpped from his
grasp, what with Huey Long tugging
In one direction. Senator La Pellet te
In another, and the conservative Ptn
ocrata sitting on their haunches,
whittling and cussing to themselves,
FVr the writing of this chapter. It
is understood that. Plrav and Owffy
will h borrowed from the S:. touls.
hs-hall t-am. No one else could do
It Just jeU
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and byglene not to disease
diagnosi, or treatment wlU be answered by Dr. Brady (f a stamped self-sd-dressed
envelope ts 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 conforming to Instructions Address Dr.
William Brady, 266 El Caralno. Beverly mils, Cal.
grrroRT r
Tt m tell you, wrltwi Mr. J. H.,
that If any mother haa a child with a
rupture and will mak a band exactly
at you described,
th child win
not nd any op
eration. Laat March, my
son, aged 7 years,
cam horn from
c h o o 1 with a
ruptured appen
dix. He was green
and vomiting- H
waa rushed to
hospital.
After four wck
they sent him to
... Jiop:t-M
with meaalea. Whi5 there he got
blood poisoning from a hypodermic
needle. He had pneumonia and mas
toiditis as soon m he came home, and
wa operated on for the mastoiditis
at . - hospital. When he was well
enough to come home he had a bad
rupture and they sld I should bring
him back later. But I made the belt
exactly ea you described. I made a
pocket In th bandage and sewed the
top from a tomato can inside thi
pocket. I covered the tin with lamb's
wool, punched holes all round the
edge and sewed binding tap around,
which does away with adhesive plas
ter. On th outside of the pocket
I sewed three small steels from en
old corset, then thre longer ones
down the front. In the back I put
four strap of the stronaest elastic
webbing and fastened with safety
pins. You se I had two ruptures to
hold back, one of them a sliding rup
ture. At the end of three weeks I look
him back to the hospital. The doc
tors there decided he was too weak
for operation. They saw the belt
and seld It waa a wonderful Idea..
They told me to brln$ him back In
a month, but he mlffht outgrow It
with that belt on. When I reported
this to my family doctor he ssld they
were kidding, that no one ever wna
cured without an operation.
Well, about two months later mv
fafn had bronchitis. When th do.: tor
came he could not believe his eyes,
wild the rupture had healed complete
ly. And o It hd. for the boy hd
no further a!rn of It, and we dis
carded th belt some tlm ago.
Som year ago I said In this col
umn: "As for alleged cure of rup
ture by trusses. Injections and sim
ilar novelties, the less said the bet
ter." My position then was about
what the correspondent's family doc
tor's position la now. But I have
learnrd something since then. I know
now that Injection treatment Is hitih
ly satisfactory in most cases of her
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK. July 10. Douglas Gil
bert recently wrote: "He's a wraith
darting Into the Plavera for his mail.
thumbing a note
or two and . as
silently slipping
out and furtively
finding his way
back to his apart
ment." He was
speaking of Oli
ver Herford. the
fthye.st yet most
stinging wit the
town ha ever
known.
Herford is 73
years old now
and It is likelv that 50 ot them have
been spent In deflating borea and
pests. He preceded the era of wise
cracking and his suddenly murmured
bursts had the wisdom of Socrntcs.
Dullards caught their moaning only
on the second or third bounce.
Not only Is Herford n Jester in light
verse and a ptiraerapher whose pun
gency has lnplrtd critical raves from
th English and European pres.-.. but
he Is srT expert delinentor with a
drawtnc pen. His conception of cats
is treasured by feline lovers the
world over.
Herford l English born, ns Is his
buoyant wife, Peggy, also a poet and
essayist. Their teas during the Rich
ard Watson Glider era Included the
cream of the Intelligentsia. To be
invited to the Herford was "to be
long" Like most wits. Herford has
long been a victim of "borrowers
without crdlt." He merely shrugs'
Many stay-out in the Rortng 40 s
knew beautiful Dorothea Lee. who
served as a wajtre In her mother s
red and black all night chili parlor
niched In West 49th street. Among
the patrons who dropped In to hear
her chatter and Broadwaywlse philos
ophies were Irvtn Cobb. Joe Cook, nob
Ripley, Ed Wynn, Rum West over and
Meredith Nfcholt-on. She fat-ed the
barrage of smart talk with answers
for everone some serene, some cut
ting. And many young swains daw
dled over after midnight coffee, hop
Ing Dorothea might git cafeing with
them. But ah never did. Instead
she married an elderly mvstery man
The other morning they found Doro
thea and her huseband lifeless In
their pent -house from accidental as
phyxiation after a year of June-December
romance.
The famous old Itlian restaurant,
Guffsntr. Is still open for trade on
a bleak atretch of lower Seventh ave- ;
nue. Through a window the check- ,
red table clotha and bread straws
sprouting from colored glass holders
are Just as they were when a Sundav
dollar dinner, vin comprls. at Out
funtl's was something almost every
body Indulged at least once. Every
raliau restaurant boasted Caruso as -a
customer, but he was a frequent
visitor tct auffantl's, Marnnellt ustvj
to go there, too. And Antonio Scott I
The CUrcmont Inn on a delightful
nural of R!veride i"nve 1ms go g.i.
ir a.:,.tn .!Tar insin Mcisi i',es
Much of its austerity is gone in a
Vsji
Brady, M.D.
or hi uma
nia., in the hands of a qualified phy
sician. I know, too. that sometimes
hernia (rupture, breach) will heal
spontaneously If It la, properly sup
ported and never permitted to be
without support while the patient Is
on his feet.
For navel rupture, or for post-opens
tlve ventrsl rupture, the pad
should be ol the same dismeter aa
the bulslng. well padded with wool
or rubber sponaje. firmly backed and
by one meana or another retained
alwAy firmly pressed against the
rupture. To bark the pad use a large
button, poker chip or round wooden
disk the alze of th protrusion. Pad
ded and covered with linen or fine
muslin the pad should be the shape
of half an oraruz. Apply It with
padded side against skin, hold In
place with hand while you attich
double crlsscrons adhesive plaster
atrip to it and surrounding 'ln
puckered up agelnst the rupture with
your fingers. Then the belt or bon
dage or binder.
Qt F.STION AND ANMV.'.ltK
Airing the Kali v.
Is It necessary to take a three-weeks-old
baby out for a dally air
ing? Pleaae suggest a good book lor
me to read on the care of babies.
(A. M l
Answer Write to Children's Bu
reau, U. S. Dept. of Labor, Washing
ton, D. C, and ask for a copy of
the free booklet on Infant Care. The
flame bureau has excellent booklets on
"Prenatal Care" and on "Child Car "
In my opinion it la necessary and
advisable to take every baby out for
an airing every day, and on fine days
the baby should be out for a regular
nap in the open air every afternoon,
of course protected from wind. In
sects. InteiiAe sunlight In eye and
handling by other children.
Lemon Juice Versus Vlnegnr,
Please give your opinion on the
con t ro ve rs y be t wee n ad voce te of
lemon Juice and advocates of vinegar.
. . . (Mrs. A. W. fl.)
Answer Lemon Juice Is a food.
Vinegar ts not. Lemon juice mik1
sn ideal condiment to use In place
of vinegar In some dishes or on some
foods, but paa me the vinegar for
my bean. Lemon Juice contains con
siderable vitamin C and when cxt
dtzed In the body it leaves alkaline
Kwa ;i emu su pillion JtiSattiA U
vitamin and cannot be oxldled the
acetic acid nets as an acid In the
system.
(Copyright, 1035, John F. DUle Co)
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send tetter direct to Pr.
William Brady. M. D.. 205 El
Caiiitno. itevcrly Hills, Calif.
civic ambition to make It folk&cy, but
at any of Its windows overlooking the
river at sundown there Is more beauty
than wilt be glimpsed at any other
point of the Island. Imperially since
the spanning of the Washington
bridge in a single stretch. On clear
evening a sky flushing rose surrounds
a bonfire of sullen red that Is the dy
ing sun. The purple paltsnries are es
pecially entrancing In the deathbed
scene. John Drtnkwater discovered
the Claremont vista ten days before
his laat sailing, and went every day
until he embarked.
I wab among the fortunate to re
ceive an invitation to one of the fa
mous buffet dinners that William F.
Carey and Hex Cole give to a group
nf friends before each Important prlrc
fight. The gang collects at 6' p. m.
for a spread that is the combined
artistry of the three most noted chefa
of the day. For two hours everybody
gorges and then piles Into a bus for
the ringside.
The Algonquin Thanatopsis poker
sessions are no more. The strain to
top in wise-cracks evidently was too
great. At these .Saturday night games
were spawned many of the salty gags
that were hung on Dorothy Parker.
Not that she hasn't a fund of flash
ing retorts. The Thanatopsts boast
ed such deft punsters as George S.
Kaufman. Alexmider Woollcott and
Marc Connelly, all of whose wit has
yielded them sizeable balances.
Many have a favorite Kaufman
yarn. A story illustrating his skilled
ennui concerns a cMd mine salesman
bubbly about his find. "Why there's
so much gold around you can shovel
It In a wheelbarrow." he enthused.
Exclaimed Kaufman: "Do you mean
you have to stoop for It?"
(Copyright. 10:5. McNaucht
Syndicate)
PIONEER PENDLETON
PENDLETON. Ore. July 20, AP)
- Stephen Arthur Lowell, T8. one of
i astern Oregon's best known cltlrens
and a resident of Pendleton for i
years, died here last night.
A former president of the Oregon
bar association, he was appointed bv
Governor Lord in 185 to the circuit
bench for t'nlon Morrow And Uma
ttlls counties It wa his only political
office although he later was candi
date for governor, and. In the primsr
lea. for United States aenator. h was
a republican.
THE
MARYLAND FUND
t5 quoted in this newspaper daily.
Prospectus may be secured from your investment dealer.
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
HERE la an encouraging headline:
"34 Mill Re sum on Monday.
Industry In Pacific Northwest Rapidly
Approaching Normal Status After
Strlk."
IT IS an encouraging headline for
thl reason:
Only OPERATING mill pay wages.
Those that are elosed. by strike or
for some other reason, PAT NONI
If we are to hav prosperity out her
In th lumber country, we must have
wage payment.
Reopening of the mill will bring
back the payroll.
NOW that the 'lumber strike ap
pears to be nearlng its end, v
can take stock of Its gain and losses.
Among th gains must b listed,
from the standpoint of th communi
ties that draw the bulk of thlr living
from th lumber industry, an In
crease In the minimum wag of ap
proximately 7',i cents an hour.
Whether this increas would have
been secured without th strlk can
not at thl moment be aald with any
authority. At any rate, it has come
about sine th strlk began.
It 1 certainly a temporary gain,
and if the northwest mills can meet
competition and get business enough
under the new scale te keep on ope
rating it will be a permanent gain
to the communities where th pay.
roll are spent.
CHIEF .among the losses are the
wages that WERE NOT PAID
while the strike waa en. This ts a di
rect loss, and from th standpoint of
the whole Northwest region will go
far to offset th benefit of th in
creased minimum wage.
Of practically equal Importance Is
loan of markets due to Inability to
make deliveries while th mill war
closed by the strike. Thla Is a loe
that wtl) be felt for som time to
come, for markets that are enc lost
are hard to regain.
AS TO these lost markets, th Tim
ber Trade Journal ef London, th
leading lumber trade paper In Eu
rope, says:
"Douglas fir plywood 1 no longer
available en account ef th strlk,
and large Importers have taken th
necessary atepa to substitute EURO
PEAN plywood. Importer In other
European countries have already no
tified their Pacific Coaat contacts
that European softwoods and hard
woods have gained a SOLID FOOT
HOLD in the markets formerly held
by the Pacific coast wood products."
f
IN OTHER words, the strike stopped
deliveries of Pacific cosst eods
to European markets, and while de
liveries were stopped European com
petitor of th Pacific Coast mill
stepped Into the market and grabbed
the business.
If they hold It, there will be Just
that much less amployment here en
the Pacific Coaat.
THE Southern lumber industry has
benefited by the strike on th
Pacific Coast, which held up produc
tlon and stopped deliveries of lumber.
There was no strike In the South, al
though wages there are only about
HALF the wages paid on the Pacific
Coast, which even before the strike
paid to its timber workers the high
est wages paid In any lumber district
IN THE WORLD.
Whatever business the South I
able to take away from the Pacific
Coast means Just that much lees em
ployment out here.
ANT honest effort to sum up th
gains and losses of the lumber
strike must lead to th conclusion
that the losses, present and pros
pective, offset the gains, leaving th
Pacific Northwest as a whole no bet
ter off than It waa before.
About the most hopeful view that
can be taken Is that the lumber strike
sppesrs to be water already over the
dam and that her In the Pacific
Northwest we are paying the highest
lumber wages paid ANYWHERE IN
THE WORLD.
Since we are paying the HIGHEST
WAGES IN THE WORLD, we ought
to be able to look forward to a period
of peace In th Industry during which
we can make up our losses and con
centrate on regaining the markets for
Pacific Ceat lumber that were lost
during the strike.
Malaria Control Artvnnced.
ATI .A NT A. Oa. (UPl Use of Piss-moe-hm
and Atabrlne in maJarl con
trol ha shown satisfactory results.
Dr. T F. Abererombl. director of
the Oeorgia public health department
announces.
vv i r w
T ,
MRS. WARREN WILLIAM
Mrs. Warren William refuses to
live on a scale which would have
to be lowered if her husband lett
the films, to return to th less lu
cratlve stage . . . She has ared
with him the usual ups and downs
of the theatrical life, and she la red
headed and practical. They have
fteen married since the World 'r
. . . When Warren gets a new hobby.
Mrs, William's enthusiasm matches
hla . . . Fencing, archery, sailing,
dogs, each In turn has captured her
fancy happily at the same time
Warren took them up. She also at
tends to her husband's fan mail
. , , Like many other film actors'
wives, Mrs. William Is "her husband's
closest friend and adviser in things
professional, reading his scripts and
talking over with him parts he is
to play. She runs the William house,
hold comfortably, efficiently, simply.
Often Invited, they are seldom seen
at Hollywood parties , . . They are
one of the movie colony's thor
oughly normal couples In their in
terests and in their home life.
LOGGERS READY
10
PORTLAND. July 10. ipi The an
nouncement that "several hundred"
Portland loggers have agreed upon a
plan of re-employment aijd are reody
to return to their camps as soon as
more Portland lumber mills resume
operations, waa made today by Wil
liam Wedel, president of the .Sawmill
and T-mber Workers' union here.
For more than two months lumbe.
companies have been tied up by the
strike of Pacific northwest lumber
workers.
Another bright spot In the gloomy
trlke picture was the announcement
that the Multnomah Lumber and Box
company here has reached an agree
ment with workers and will resume
operations tomorrow with about 200
employes returning to their Jobs after
nine week of idleness.
NAVY'S BUILDING
WASHINGTON. July 10 (API
Secretary Svvanson announced today
that tha navy, building prosram for
the fiscal year beRlnntni: July 1. 1B36.
would Include 12 destroyers and six
submarines, and possibly a battle
ship. He explained st a press conference
that under ths Vinson act 54 war.
ships 36 destroyers snd lg subms
rlnes u-nuld be required to bring the
fleet to treaty strength by 1043.
Swanson reltersted thst no decl.
slon hsd been reached on a proposal
to replace one of the seven battle
ships which will be over site on ex
plrstlon of the Washington treaty De
cember 31. 1936.
Construction could stsrt on It Jan
uary 1. 1937, he added, but emphs
sl7d that the navy was "not starting
sny competition."
Klnt Honor, tted Indian.
ORILLIA. Ont. (UP) Believed to
be the only Canadian Indian so hon
ored, Chief John Big Wig. 09-year-old
patriarch of the Rama OJibway
Indians, ha-s been swarded one of His
Majesty's special Jubilee medals In
dian .Vent A. S. Anderson made the
presentation.
Ose Mall rrlbuue want ada.
on
your summer trip
I o include Califorms cotti
W CO directly East snd back on
ft (to most points). Literally a
it .Cisco 'rid Los Angeles: 1 he
inciuaea as an inexpensive
atom all types ot accommodations are air-conditioned on our
i leading trains. Example, of low lummer roundtrm.
KimdtTip: asch Tourist SUnJirJ
CHICAGO . 57.35 68.80 86.00
NEW YORK 95.75 U07.20 MaOO
45-arv rean, limit. Octther ) limit slightly kifhtr.
CMchfmsfKntn mekSdnJcluircn. fearti jirn
'av"v J
.leAus-V
mm,t .rrvFMrwaarwfj vptus fkllmmn rltrgesj.
SouthernPacific
I. C, CARLE. Arent
W aw"....
?SSffa
1
Flight 'o Time
(Medfnrd and Jackson Count,
HUNir. from the files or the
Mall Tribune of 10 snd M Van
Asul.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
July 10. IK1.
(It was rrlday.)
Hay crop of the ralley below nor
mal, say farmers.
Epidemic of minor auto accidents
In central Point.
Double wedding i aoclsl event on
Sardlns creelt. Ths contracting par
ties vera E. S. Diutenbury snd Mrs.
Pose Brlgss, and Ralph Duasnbury
and May Brings.
Oram harvesting Is in full blast In
the Sams Valley section.
E! Point Orange will held a bar
becue July 10.
John D. Rockefeller, the all kin,
announces hla Intentions to dts
poor man.
Psvine of highway In Crater Lake
park starts.
TVYKNTY YEARS AGO TODAY
July in. ltilfl.
(It wsa Saturday.)
Mann's Department stora stars
annual clearance as'.e.
Germany. In diplomatic nota to
America, upholds the sinking of tha
'Lusltsnla and refuses to disavow tha
act. '
' The ladles of the Country club hold
a tea-
Scores of Medford families leave for
hills on camping trips.
The Elks will hold their annual
picnic at Colestln. Sundsy. August 1.
Local cherries make s hit at Ssn
FrancleVo fair, Attorney W. E. Phtpps
Is informed.
TIE UP TRAFFIC
MILES citt. Mont.. July 10.
(A I Psil and highway travel east
from Miles City was at a standstill
today as continued sever disturb
ances In eastern Montana brought
damaging wind, hail and rain storms.
Several hundred passenger on two
Northern Pacific trains and one Mil
waukee eastbound were awaiting res
toration of flections of right-of-way
washed out early today.
The cloudburst, third In Montana
in three days struck the eastern and
southern section of the state. Water
fell In sheets east of here and the
storm was intensified beyond Terry.
Ironically enough the most recent
downpour covered a region which last
year was burned barren by th
drought. Others were In northeastern
Montana near the Flrt Peck federal
construction project.
Silver.
NEW YORK, July 10. VP) Bar sil
ver firm, i higher t 68.
4PT. SO4
pt. 90
.1 rvrtf IK
KOVV
Phone
1300
for Towing or
Wrecker Service
Anywhere Anytime
Lewis Super Service
exit
not 1 r more fsre than to
von. ,mm.,
fret ticket thru Sao Fran.
5an Diego Expoiitioo can b
-
rsJtTVP
?r .A SI
sidetrip. You 11 gc
t nu ll .n in maI
Ml 1
m jr a
Tel. 31 jJT I