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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 14, 1935)
rXGE fotjt?'' MEDFORDTRIBUnE "Every la toatbara Oroa Reads tha Mail Trlbona" Dally Except Saturday. Published by MEBrORD PBINTINO CO. . , ;7-:9 K. Fir St. Paona 71. ... BOBiSBT W. BUHL, Editor. ... . Ad Indapandant Nwipiptr. -i!red aa cond-cli maitar at Mod .1 L. Oregon. undar Act ot March . U i. SUBSCRIPTION BATES i : v Mill Id Advaaea; Mally, on yar Dally, ilx month Ually. ona month .".". 'L r.v carrlar. Id AdrancaMadford. Aah- utnd J cK m villa, Cintril Point. iMiotnls. Talent. Gold Hill and on highway.. Dally, on rar. .'.f.0 Dally, iix month Dally, on month All tirmi, caab Id advaaea. official lipar of th CHy of Mwirrd. Official I'apfT of JarkwiB County. Ut.ttBEH OF THB AStfOUIATUM I'HK&S Keotlrtas ruil Leed Wlft Ifcrvlca. a Aasoelatad Pr I cluivly ...led to th am tor publication of all ,) dlapatcb ordltad to U or othar- credited In thl paper, and alao to no local new publlMhed herein. All rtgo' for publication of pclaJ i.apatchea herein ar alao rerved. MEMBER OF" UNITED PRESS MEMBER OW AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Repreeentatlvea B. C. MOOE.N8KN COMPANt Orficea In New Tortt, Cblcafo Detroit. Sao Prandaco. Loa Angelea, Seattl. Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur 1'rrr) There la th "Roortvelt School ol Th ought," the "Hoover School of Thought" and "The Liberal School of Thought." Then there la. the well - Known School - of - Trying - to Thlnk. . . . Hijacking, of woodpiles t to i the order of the night, in rural area, hacdy nd mad mountaineer re port. . - THE (tAII-AHOlTfl, (Red Bluff News) (Eugene Newj) For the first , SWEET HOME. Auk. 12. (Special) time in 33 years, Mrs. Bertha Fob aen, pioneer real dent, of the Pas kents section for more1, then half 4 century visit ed in this city today. Her first . vtitt to Eugene in her 83 yea re of ,Ufe here .was made last, week by (Mr. L, 8. Watkine. The air sex are now wearlnj out clothes. A a rule they are not out ba much, as when in their regular duds. Once, upon a time there was i for est lire that was started by a care lessly discarded cigar butt, Instead of s similarly thrown cigarette stub. ,.. ..The local father, valiantly en deavoring to cure his son of a light ettack of Communism, contracted While chasing an education at Eu gene ltwt yeur, ni yet hna received no warning from Moscow, as reared. The father Is an old-fashioned soul. Who think hi offspring should i spend his time learning complicated football yells, instead of the official song of the Soviet, NOT M1AMK KNOLUH I-(Ml ALU (eed (Calif.) I'l'eas) . ''With customary effrontery, the Yreka semi-weekly 'Doodle Bug' appropriates, or attempts to, whatever notoriety or glory which emanates from the recent 'lynching bee.' The Doodle-Bug gleefully HAseru the exciting In cident has put Yreka 'on the map.' However, as a matter of cold fact. It would appear that Yreka had about as little to do with our latest 'outdoor sport as did the Inhabitants of Mars. The. 'publication' mentioned is quite carried away over the fact that Siskiyou's county conceit has received a lot ot gratuitous advertising." e e . A gent Just out of the federal prison on Alcntra Island, reports for the papers that 'conditions ere unbearable, and the stern rule causes bitter protests from prisoners." it seems this noose go w Irks Its Inmates. They are not allowed to tHlk, visitor do not run in and out, like It was I hotel lobby, and there Is no chance to buy a reformer end get pardoned. e The price of hogs Is now up, where a ham sandwich don't cost more than a hog. A large number of people have solved the problem of what to do With their leisure. They all around and cum the government. (Mobile (Ala.) Register; They also run home to eat, and for office. An "Invisible touge" la on the market. Its Invisibility ought to be a great help to girls who look all right to start with. . t 1 ST TO ut:i OCT! I have seen enough of that, pro fessional class the sob sisters with some degree of Intimacy to know that there Is no class so skilled in the gentle amusement of giving a listener an earful. It takes all the grain of salt that one can collect . to offset the wily and whimsical adrptnes with which the killer, the payroll robber or the motor car thief will fill the renpecmbie members of society with goose stuf fing. The wal with which an unsott ened offender can be found reading the Bible; the earnpstnees of re formed letter writing, the variety ot Imagination in painting a itfe story to slow music, especially before a parole board, cannot be equaled on any stage. (Exchange ) A Vr ago T. K. McCortl nd E. It. Calloway jvt the Florida atata road department, axt-am the flood water, between the highway and the rail road track, to lla flown a train and prevent a wreck. The other day they receired ,2S each In appreciation from rwti(teT oh the train. Incredible Stupidity! It that death sentence bill against the folding companies isn't revived and passed, it won't be the fault of the holding com pany officials! The spokesmen and big1 wigs' in this branch of the public util ity business are doing everything they ca'ri to lose' the' fen friends they have left. Last Sunday oni of them challenged President Roosevelt to make a campaign issue of the death sentence bill, and boasted 5,000,000 stockholders with 10,000,000 vote's would beat F. D. R. to a frazzle. Yesterday another, fat jowled, bald-headed and gimlet eyed, H. C. Hopsoh, refused to tell an investigating committee what he made out of the holding coftpa'ny racket, clambered up on his high horse, and defied the senate fo serve a subpoena, on such a plutocratic and eialted personage as HIMSELF! 1.V the opinion of this paper, the' so-called death sentence meas ure was needlessly extreme. The conference substitute measure promises to answer every useful service, and be entirely effective in curbing holding company ABUSES. But if at the next session of congress, ah aroused public opin ion DEMANDS this deatl; sentence' bill, the leaders of the public utilities will have no one to blame but themselves. By their arro gance, stupidity, and complete lack of even the rudiments of political sense, they aslced for it and certainly deserve to GET it. IMAGINE a public utility executive' so dumb that he would challenge the President of the United States to make an issue of the holding company racket, and boast that in such an event, he and his associates would emerge victorious. Such a man shouldn't be subpoenaed ag a1 witness; he should bo rushed to the nearest emergency ward and have his head examined. And this utility chieftain, not denying his million dollar lobby; not denying that while his stockholders got nothing, he pulled down his two millions; not denying forged telegrams, "cigar box" gifts, lino" all the shenanigon and flim-ffam that have been frowned upon and discredited, by all the TRUE lead ers of big business in this country for nearly a1 generation'; hav ing the CRUST to tell fhe people of this country, through their representatives in congress, that they had no right to pry into his private business, his record or his methods, and he couldn't remember what his income had been since 1922! He couldn't remember! Remembered it was about $100,000 13 years ago, but couldn't staVe what it had been any single year since! "TVIIS paper has always believed and still believes, that S business in this country, big or little, holding type, operat ing type or any other type, is entitled to what every individual in the country is entitled to, fair treatment and a square deal, nothing more and nothing less. But how can the public utility business expect fair treatment, expect anything but Unfair arid retaliatory treatment, when it is under the control of such a bunch of nit wits, bung lers, and thick-necked bulls in the economic chind shop, as the men who during the past few weeks have appeared as its cham pions and defenders. The holding company, properly administered, we believe has a legitimate place in the modern economic set-up. But in too many instances it hasn't been properly administered the tnsull fiasco for cxairiple. The sensible course obviously is not (o de stroy all holding companies, buf to reform all of them, make them behave. - OUT that will NOT be done extinction, riot reformation, will be the inevitable outcome, t'Nt.ESS the iype of character arid riiind now in control of this branch of the public, utility busi ness, is taken by the scruff of the rir-ri; ,ind kicked into the mid dle of next week, riot by U'riclc Sam but by the powers that ho in the industry itseif. Many amazing things have hapepried in public life during the past decade. But considering the growing public resentment against the light and power utilities the most astounding single phenomenon in all this time has been the revelation during the past few weeks, that those still In control have fofgotton noth ing, learned nothing, are still living, economically, socially and ethically in the middle ages, true spiritual legatees of the ,lim h'isks, the Jay Gouldd, and that founder (if the Vanderbilt fam ily, whose idea of public service and social responsibility was cogently expressed in that familiar phrase, "The public be damned !" NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O.O. Mdntyre NEW YORK. Aug. H. The newest dog ahop. decorated at a cost ol J 0,000, Is Indicative of the change In the merchan dising of mans beat f-Ifnd. The once smelly, clut-tered-up holes In the wall have almoet vanished. Two in the new splendor even have uniformed doormen. Sanltlmtlon has been so perfect ed the usual doggy aroma is now a slight fragrance, suggesting myrrh. Th Tar sal pets are no longer cooped in stuffy, latticed crate and panting from exhaustion, tnstead they are tethered around a spread of rubber carpeted dais, backed by mirrors. Within reach ot all Is a running flow of drinking water. Attendants are In spotless duck and the dogs are exervtiied every three hours. Also combed, powdered and gien a teetn brushing dally. That scourge of the kennel, dtstemper. and the peeKy flea are vanquished. Many of the silkiest offerings are depreaMon virtlms. Once rich owner making a final sacrifice. A fvottie today, garJng wistfully for A nf master, was ow ne! hy A bankrupt staff star. A Rusiian wolf hound, defended from the Czar's pmate kennels, wan alo on the block. Nothing la more touching than XrEDFOTit) AIL restrained masculine grief. Tn a traffic tie-up today, a huge limou sine revealed a pntrlclau Union tague type. A sort of Warren Hard ing In his pontifical prime. One hand clutched a telegram In slight convulsive twitches. But he sat un bowed, with tears oorlng sldwiy down, ft was eajty to see he was suffering stoically aome terrific wrench. After thought: Maybe It wa$ tax news from Washington. Amerlca'a wrltlngeat editor la Pul ton Oursler. Aside from editing sev eral magazines, he writes moat of the edltorlala. reviews the books, turns out special articles and fiction under various pseudonyms and generally managea to author one. sometimes two. full-length novels a year. He does hla editing by teletype, living at Cane Cod and visiting hts city office at Intervals. Hla wife, liraee Perkins, la also successful writer She Is a sister of (he radio's Hay Perkins, another success. Pari had a pathetic little upshoot of Journalism recently. A group ot young correspondent suddenly bearrw ed by the suspension of the foreign edition of an American paper, launched a quixotic and peepy little tab. It was both weekly and weakly, survived g few editions and wa seen no more. There are now more ilian 300 stranded newspapermen from all parts of the world In Pari.-. They have 4 little club room t:ir management of Du Dome has ( apart for them on the third floor Anyone wbo get 4 writing assign ment la pledged lo give 3o pr cent toward sustenance of unemployed brothers. On of the older da? office build ings In the 40 a Is known to grlfter, as "Hocus Pocus Ton er." Its com pletely tenanted hv politely caur.ou fllm-flammers mall order elect ru belt concerns, deep breathing school TRIBUNE; JfEDFORD, Personal Health Service By William Bradyr M. D. Kfgned letters pertaining to personal health und livglene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Rrudy if a stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered. No reply run be made fo queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William BrHdv. 2H3 FA Cam I no. Beverly Hills, Cel. THE SCAR LEFT Blindly following the lead of the Jour, of the American Medical Asso ciation which Is used to promote the editor and his friends, many uneo- phlatlcatod doc tors have tit ken it a true that (d I a thermy) of the tonsils leaves too much scar which Ls likely to cover up Infection and cause trouble in future. Some such thing may have happened in cer- ttln cen. Unfortunately many throat specialists have attempted to employ this method without having received proper clinical Instruction by a inna te r of the method, and Inevitably their work has been bundled. It Is hardly fair to condemn a method because amateurs have done harm with It. The Journal of the Ameri can Medical Association was and Is clearly prejudiced upon this question. The brilliant editor, him.wlf with out knowledge or experience to speak of, undertook to decide the policy and view of the organized profession in the early days of diathermy. I was advocating it to my readers, and that waa the A. M. A. loud speaker's cue to condemn it. Now he can't change his attitude too suddenly, you see, so the dumb doctors in the sticks. Inarticulate In the oligarchy, still think the newfaneled metthod Is "danceroiw" or "doesn't et all the tonsil" or "cause dense scar w'nleh covers over the focua of Infection." I can assure readers that the dia thermy method of extirpating tonsils and adenoids is nnt more likely to leave excessive or troublerOmc scar tissue than la the old Spanish cus tom, the guillotine and snare, or dis section. I challenge any physician, surgeon or specialist to controvert thla statement. I'll produce a case of vicious scar formation following stan dard surgical removal of tonsils for every caw of that sort the bras boys can find following electro-coagulaMon or diathermy extirpation of the ton sils. For that mattei. I'll undertake to produce official report of fatali ties following or In the course of the atandard surgical tonsillectomy for every case of even unsatisfactory re sult from diathermy all from the practice of good reputable specialists. I ask no pardon for dwelling on the scandalously high mortality of surgical tonsillectomy In the hands of the best physicians, surgeons or spe cialists In the country. We ar yet to hear of a fatality fmni dfethermy extirpation of the tonsils. Remember. I warn you agalnat the amateurs and th bunglers who pur port to use the modern metthod. Most quick-selling carnival gadgets and a score or more of cunning caterers to those who seem actually to enjoy gentle humbuggery. Elevator Jobs there are the softest In town. Scarce. ly anyone Is carried up and down .tave the renters, as all business con tacts are made by letter, telephone or telegraph. In the brisk days of Wall Streets mercurial markets the telephone salesman whs the slickest thimble- rlgger of all In consummating a quick -sale.. My name sifted to one or the small fry sucker lists when I lived at a 72d street hotel. W. J. Fields, boarding up the street, who coined "Never give a sucker an even break!" was also listed of all peo ple! Every few mornings the sales man manned to get me on the phone to flush a new rainbow ol promise. At first, feeling yokel conscious. I would bang up in the salesman's ear. Iater on his sporting gllbness became amusing and In the end l swallowed hook, line and slnker. I still don't know how he did It. but for f i so, drawn rrom a staid savings hntik. I got. a lTi-shsre allotment In a hood us that was to revolutionize the bakery business. When the final disillusionment came, I Joined Or Munyon for a hand in the air poe and breathed a fervent never-agaln avownl. I had leu cued my lesson and turned to an established Investment house. No more wildcat stuff. 1 bought only the sturdy bonds ot Peru, of the good old reliable ce ment Industry, of Chicago's btgijesl hotel, of vast Cuban supur com binesdon't we all simply have to have sugar? No sir, they'd never catch me napping I (Copyright. 1P3S. McNaught Syndi cate) Communications He Acrees With I pton Sim-lair To the Editor: Mr. Jenkins' defense of Ford's bil lion, which he believes "grew out of his Idea" (like pos-saincr out of the rear end of a spider l, appearing In your Issue of August 1. was read with interest but without the slightest be lief in most of the points made. Of course It Is no crime, as Mr Jenkins has so ably pointed out, to make a cool billion out of the sweat of his employees, crimes are what the state classes as crimes, Henry's "jtrangle-ho1d" has never been plac ed in that catasory. And it shouldn't. He plays the game "according to Hnyle" and if it allows him thous ands of limes more wealth than he Potato Salad I pet Mnmseh One In J1ff tilth Hell -an- BELIMNS$3p3 fOU INPICISTI0N tHuS r. s OKT.GCyS. WEDSTAY,- 'ATGUST 11. 1935. BY OPERATION of them are more or less shady, near doctors, or without standing, on the fringe of the profession, but some of them are nose and throat special ist of the best standing-. Here I ap prove and commend the method, not the man who uses It. Tf I know of a physician In your vicinity who Is competent I sm always glad to name him, by private letter. But so many good doctor now use diathermy for extirpation of tonsils and adenoids that I have given no trying to keep a list of them all. I feel that dia thermy or electro-co-wulatlon la now firmly established In American prac tice, and aotlsfled patients themselves are lta best advocates. QIKSIONS t ANSWERS Fool wear and Bare Feet How do shoe and stockings inter fere .with the discharge of waste mat ter from aoles of the feet? Is It bet ter to dispense with stockings when ever possible? (O. H. B.) Answer I think it is alwavs health ful to co barefoot whenever possible, with due care about the hazard of contracting foot itch (ring worm) or dew Itch (hook worm.j Footwear does not Interfere with discharge of waste matter. If you are troubled with sweating feet, with or without bad odor, send stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for monograph on Care of the Feet." A Class A Neurol Ic Wish to congratulate you on your clear and helpful articles on "Nerves." I considered myself a neurotic until you opened my eyes. (Mrs. E. H... Answer Fortunately there are more CIhas A neurotics than Class B n my fan mall on that subject is not entirely bitter. If you're a Class B neurotic, don't write, ir you want to find out where you stand, send ten cents coin and a stamped envelope bearing your address, for booklet "Chronic Nervous Imposition." The question Is, are you Imposing on the world or are you imposed on? Hold Your Fire. Citizen Shoot your neighbors' cat and dofi! Tike it back or I'll report you to the Humane Society. A neigh bor shot my rat with a BB gun and It took the wound several months to heal. Are you a veterinarian or a medical doctor? (O. A. S.) Answer Sorry, r did not know an air nrie would make a wound. Thought It only atun. Fort Wayne concern oTfera a dust spray which Is harmless to man, boast or shrub, yet repels cats or dogs, if shaken on flowerbeds or at base of trees or shrubs. Do not be misled by my horse lauffh. I'm a doctor of Medicine. (Copyright 1935, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wUhlnff to rnmminitciitc yltU lr. Hrndy should send letter direct to fir. IINam Kradv, M. 265 EI C'umlno. Beverly HI IK Cal. can use. while others by the mil lions must vegetate as best they can In the twilight zone between life and death. It ls not an unsocial reflection on him. but a sad commentary on our social intelligence responsible for It. Mr. Jenkins holds that Ford makes cars to use. Ford says so himself. Bit it would bo more In keeping with the reality to say that he (or rr.ther his employes) mnke cars (n sell. Their use-value Is unavoidably necessary Incidental. It ls exchange-value that Interests the manufacturer because through Its Instrumentality he real l?es the variable capital In the money form which has cost him nothing. It Is axiomatic that you cannot get anything for nothing. But the profit system Is squarely based on that par adox. What Mr. Jenkins rails to un derstand is the contradiction In cap italist production. Commodities are produced when there is a desire for them by people with money. Their buying number diminishes as the system reaches maturity in propor tion as profits cease to be profitable. Capitalism can produce use values In great abundance but It cannot produce a men led public to buy Its products. It can only destroy such as exists. Like the-parasite that it Is, it kills that off which It lives. All the movements such as Long's, Coiuhlln's. Ton mend's, etc.. calcu lated to prevent Its collapse, are doomed to failure it must be sup planted by production for use. R. HEGNER. Ciold Hill. Aug, 10. Much Hetter, Thank You: To the Editor: Just a word to express my apprec iation of your editorials. We have no Idea what you look like, never hav ing ni you. but I have known for a long lime there Is sotnething ".-uper" about you. wtth that keen Insight Into things political, and ev erything tn general, it Is a gift of Clod. We have read your editorials i these many years and followed you j over the U. S. In your travelogues. I hut your editorial last night on Mr. Hoover was the best ever. "Now put this In your p!pe and smoke It." "A rose to the living Is more than sump tuons wreathes to the dead." j MR. AND MRS. W. M. BARBER. j Convalescent Home. Ashland. Ore- ', gon, August 13. From 18,0 to lgrtO, Wayne and Hardin counties held court In the ancient cave behind Natural bridge In Tennessee. THE MARYLAND FUND is quoted in this nevvspapif dolly. Prospectus may be secured from youf investment dealer. Comment on the Da fs, News By FRANK JENKINS A STRAW In the wind: Voters of the first congressional district of RJiodi Island elect a RE PUBLICAN to fill a vacant seat In the national house of representatives form erly held by a DEMOCRAT. THIS paragraph from an Associated Press dispatch tells the story: "With Roosevelt policies directly at isavie, Charles F. Rtsle, a former Judge. was swept to victory by a margin of more than 10.000 vote's over Demo cratic State Treasurer Antonio Prince. Risk had campaigned on a platform of 'Repudiate the Roosevelt adminis tration. " . . ., . -4- FROM Washington, center of all politics, comes this statement from Senator Hastings, chairman of the REPUBLICAN senatorial cam paign committee: "The election tn Rhode Island shows that when the American peo ple find that American principles and American liberties are In danger, they stand ready to crush those who are responsible for putting them In a dangerous position." THAT Is partisan Political comment, designed to Influence votes, it Isn't literally true. X more accurate statement would run something like this: "When the American people have been promised things that are Im posslDle for ANYBODY to perform, they are pretty sure to go sour on the promlser when they find they have been misled." THE New Deal, and the politicians engineering It, promised every body everything riches without work, security without thrift, pros perity by the simple process of pass ing a law. These promises are Impossible of fulfillment because they run con trary to human nature. People are beginning to" find that out. Thrtt, In this writer's Judgment, is the lesson of the Rhode Island con gressional election. COME things are fundamental Water, for example, won't run up hill of Its own accord. Daylight fol lows darkness. When you drop ttm rock off the roof of your house. It falls DOWN, not up. Everybody, by EXPERIENCE, knows these things to be true. THERE are other things that are equally true. Here are some of them : There ls no such thing as some thing for nothing. You can't spend yourself rich. Wealth Is created by the application of labor to natural resources. You can't share what Isn't produced. There is ample proof, over centuries of human experience, that these things are true, but from genera tion to generation people FORGET thst they are true and listen hope fully to demagogues and Impractical dreamers who ASSERT that they are true. Among the New Dealers are both demagogues and practical dreamer's. TF.OPLE have listened to the New Deal promises of something for nothing, of wealth without tabor, of sharing what Isn't produced, hoping against hope thst this time they MIGHT be true. They are beginning to find out by the sad experience that they aren't trut and CANT be true. The reaction to that experience Is beginning to set in. Senate Will Let Coal BUI Slide WASHINGTON. Aug. 14. (AP) A high Democratic house leader ssld to day he had been Informed that the senate was preparing to adjourn without acting on the GUffet coal stabilization bill . That Information, the leader said privately, was conveyed to him by two New England senators who told him they had reached such an under standing wtth senate Dsmocratlc leaders. Wages Cut, Hours Boosted by Many WASHINGTON. Aug. H.(Ap NRA observers have reported to head quarters that some 13.000 to 13.ono American employer have cut wages or Increased hours or both since the old Blue Fale met Its death. The figures are not official as yet and authorities decline to attach sig nificance to them publicly en the ground that too few companies have been covered and that more time Is needed to develop any trends fully. Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of the Mull Tribune 10 and 20 Veari Ago). TEN TEARS AGO TODAY August .14. lft!S (It was Friday) The breeze of last night blew all the ' smoke from forest fires away, and the air Is clear, and the foot hills visible once more. O. A. Fogg, a fruit picker, was fined $15 on hla plea of guilty In Judge Taylor's court yesterday to a charge of unlawfully passing s horse and buggy on the Pacific highway. State traffic officer. J. J. McMahon, was the complaining officer. The Crater Lake highway In the national park was gone over with a scraper and ls In fine condition for travel. A fire near Immaha In the Pros pect district is still beyond control, and rapidly making It way Into green timber. finvprnnr Pierre, to b ffUest Of Jackson county grangers at meeting to be held at Rogue River tomor row. There la no trace of James WilloS. Ellsworth Kelley. and James Murray, who escaped from the state prison at Salem In a break that cost the life of "Oregon" Jones. TWENTY YEARS A AO TODAY August M. irm (It was Saturday) German drive on eastern front to cut Russian army in two continues, with Russians fighting desperately between retreats. John Austin Hooper, Folsom prison life termer, held In the Josephine county Jail at Grants Pass for robbery of bank of Rogue River, ties up the sheriff and escapes. Forest fire rages on Foots creek. The seventh company will occupy the entire second floor of the Amy As Pottenger building on Main street as an armory. The Elks Temple will be dedicated September 23. with many upstate Elks In attendance. Owing . to the county fair being held the first week In September, the opening of the public schools has been postponed until September 13. (Continued from Page One) Senator Vandenberg as to be Vanden ber himself. Another explanation of Borah's wide appeal is that he Is one of the few men In political life who can be come sincerely wistful about the con stitution. It has always been his favorite subject. Also, he ls the shrewdest of all political-publicity strategists. He knows how to make the headlines. What is helping him most now ls that all the Republican wise men agree that the constitution should be the Issue. It ts the one good Issue on which east and w-est can unite. The only secret which Democratic senators have managed to keep lately Is the one about the row over the anti-lynching bill in their legislative conference. That sore subject was not sup posed to have been touched at the meeting. To this day, no one who attended has disclosed that it was. But as soon as the doors of the gath ering were closed, the question was raised. One senator from the mid- PACIFIC GREYHOUfJD ADDITIONAL SERVICE To CALIFORNIA Leave Medford . . . 10:10p.m. Arrive Sacramento . . 9:00 a.m.; " San Francisco 12:20 p.m.1 " Los Angeles . 10:25 p.m. I in Addition to the 4 OTHER DAILY DEPARTURES ADDITIONAL SERVICE TO PORTLAND I Leave Medford . . . 8:50 p.m.1 Arrive Grants Pass . 9:42 p.m. " Roseburg . . . 12:25 a.m. " Eugene .... 2:40 a m. " Portland . . . 6.15 a.m. In Addition to the A OTHER DAILY DEPARTURES LOW FARES Depot Central and Eighth g , mmtimm mbmm i wmm v ' WL west and another from a border state spoke on It. They demanded that the bill be included In the program of legislation to be enacted before the end of the session. Thla provoked sparkling rejoinders not only from Senator Smith of South Carolina but from Floor Leader Rob inson of Arkansas. To put it inlldty. they saw no reason for tearing the party apart over this issue on the senate floor when it was obvious that the bill could not be passed. The debate was excessively bitter. Perhaps that ls why both sides de cided to forget about the subject. Non-partisan tax technicians asso ciated with the senate finance com mittee are calling the latest version of the tax bill an atrocity. They do not mean from a political or revenue standpoint but strictly pn technical grounds. For Instance, they consider the new estates tax proposal danger ous. If not unworkable. The official off-the-record explana tion why the Democratic committee members voted for a program desired only by Senator La Follette is that they were angry at Treasury Secre tary Morgenthau. He left them In the dark about what the administra tion wanted. A member of the Roosevelt family now says the President will go to Hyde Park for the month of Septeror ber and start the western trip in Oc tober, The basic form In which the bonus bill will be enacted next spring ls provided In the Steiwer-Byrnes bill recently Introduced in the senate. It Is non-Inflationary. White House insiders say the presi dent Is going to Hyde Park this week end for a few conferences, as well as relaxation. When a prominent Republican lead er here was asked to comment about the Hoover statement last Monday, he replied: "Don't quote me, but every Hoover statement has the same effect on me as rain In the fourth In ning.' SPRINGS Straight Whiskey at a LOW PRICE - .::.:.v'li's much of The Talace Hoteft San Francisco... J Expect much of San Francisco's famed Palace Hotel for you will receive much. Expect large, modern, and comfortable guestrooms, for example The Palace covers a city block of two acres, yet it has only 6oo rooms, all of them large, all with bath. Expect, too, courteous forethought ! for your needs; fine food in ' Jistinguiihcd restaurant; beautiful surroundings, and shops, theatres, financial and commercial districts close at hand From pel day (single) up. UJTe PALACE HOTEL SAN FRANCISCO Archibald H. Prce, Manage: 1 otdfanPablol Sflfl MeiOflvf. rfrS9 Calif. s-1 Town IIIL Central A HoMe Away From HoMf Completely Renovated - ' ' and Redecorated KATES With detached bath froml.?5 daily With Bath-.-. fromSI.rida.ly FREE aB,fwioi)fBN 6 RAGE T.cffEE SHf OIRECTIOMS TO HOTEL. jiay on Wlain figrhuay (San Pablo Jtvenue) drecily to 20tkStreet TUvnjBKii" Harry BStranf STOP oier night ai ... ttwMXMBUOtnmtlt (ofh-tMXDESOryilRa , FSSS- f Villi ' ii