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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 26, 1935)
FSCTE IT5TJR 'BEDFORD' SGE TRTBUNTE, MEDFORD, OREGON1, MONDAY, AUGUST 26, 1935. MedfordTribune frrrjoom Is Southern Orecoa Bead Uie Mail Tribune" Dally Except ftatorday. Publlihcd by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. fMT-29 N. Fir St. Pboaa Tl. ROBERT W. RUHU E it tor. AD Indeptndent Nwpapr. ntr4 econdelaM matter at MM iord, Oregon, under Act of March t, 18 19. SUBSCRIPTION BATES 9f Mall In Advance: Dally, one year Dally, six nionthe Dally, one month By Carrier, In Advance Med ford. An . land. Jacksonville, Central Point, Phoenix. Talent. Gold Hill and os hifhwaye. Dally, one year Dally. Hi nionthe -26 Dally, one month All term, cash In advance. Official Paper of the City of Mcdford. Official Paper of Jakion County. fcTXMHKK OF THE AHSOCIATBU ei.fc.S8 Becelvln Pull lnrd Hire Hervlc. The Aaeoclated Pre l excluelvely en titled to the use for publication of all ewe dlspttcbee credited to It or other vie credited In thla paper, and alao to the local newi published herein. AH right for publication of apeetal dlapatche herein are aleo reaerved. MEMBER OP UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT RUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertlntng Rflpreaentiitlvea M. C. MOOKNNEN A COMPANY Office In New York. Chicago Detroit an FranclMO, Loe Angelca, Seattle. Portland. MEMBER. Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur I'rrry rnmrnnnutie Hsltatori of Sonoma ounty, calif., ordered to leave after two of their Ilk had been tarred and feathered by vlRllantea," announce they will depart but not for Russia. e It la now charged that congressmen. at al, broke meat and bread and drank cocktails with the power trust offic ial they denounced for the benefit of their constituents. This la a re modeled prohibition era trick, when statesmen In need of votes got drunk vnd made stem-winding dry speeches, e A correspondent of the Oregon City Enterprise reports he has been In vited to learn to write and get rich, by remitting 50 for a literary course. The main thing. In plain or fancy scribbling. Is to be able to say Shucks!" In less than 750 words, e e e In anticipation of winter, everybody n the rural ariuw. Is busier sawing wood than the ex-Kalser doing the Dame thing at Doom, Holland. e e Legal moves have been renewed to ay the governor but 1600 per year. There are plenty of good men who will take the Job for 1B00, but they would only bo por year gov ernors, e ' There will be a bumper crop of nuts to provide nutshells to sum things up in this fall. The ladles of the local Red Cross fchapter have discarded clothes of all kinds. Call at their headquarters to Inspect them. (Santa Mnrla (Cnl.) Times) Nice weather for It. The Prospect Married Men ball team lost twice yesterday. They were beaten by the Prospect single Men, and when they got home. e The suggestion of thla col. that peace be maintained In the Old World by sending Mussolini to the front as far out in front as they can get Elm Is now approved by the esteemed fialem Capital-Journal. e A Willamette valley parrot of the male persuasion, Is sllegM to have laid an egg apparently on the editor's desk. e e Country kids are being slicked up for the opening of school next Mon- e e e Quit a number Journeyed to the country yesterday, and returned with a load of blackberries, etc. e e Claims Practically all the unem ployed have Joba now, except the 10,000,000 who haven't read the work-relief administrations an nouncements yet. (San Diego (Cal.) Union) The blunt and bitter truth. e e A number of far-seeing editors and observers predict, "the 1036 cam paign will see scant mud-throwtng." Thla la cheering news, and means that the mud-throwing will be no worse than that produced by a Ford hind-wheel without a fender. e HOME TOWN PAPER. (By Will Rogers.) "Take my ham away, take away my eggs, even my chill, but leave my newspaper. Even If It Just has such purely local news aa 'Jim Jones came home unexpectedly last night and bloodshed ensued,' or Jesse Bushyheart our local M.D, la having one of his best yenra of his career, practically speaking but they Just won't pay him when they get well.' 'The county seat was packed yesterday with prominent visitors from out of town attempting to renew their notes,' and 'Election ain't far off and everybody is up for office that can Mgn an application blank.' Now all that don't mean much news to you. But It is news to you, especially when you know the people and they are your own folks. So no matter how punk you might think your local paper is getting, why Just take It away from you and see how you feel. The old newspaper. I think. Is Just about our bluest blessing. So let's all read and be merry, for tomorrow the paper may not have enough ads In It to come out." Wool Prlrrs I'p PENTOJrrON. Ore.. Aiw. 38 (API Blackfaces brought hifilier prices than last year while whltefaces were lower when one of the largest and finest offerings In hlMory of the Oregon Wool Growers' annual sales was auction hera yesterday. DI 0N Why Borah? f f ERE in another surprise. Hobert H. Lucas, former executive director of the Republican national committee, recently conducted a national straw vote, on the Q. 0. P. presidential candidate for 1936. 2400 Republican county chairmen and 800 other prominent Republicans, were sent ballots. Only about half of the ballots were returned. In other words 50 of the Re publican leaders, had no definite opinions, or if they had, for some reason did not care to express them. The results were announced as follows: Senator Borah, 347. Col. Knox, 167, Governor Land on, 137. Senator Vandenberg. 97. Prank O. Lowden. 63. Herbert Hoover, 53. The surprise is that in such a poll, confined to orthodox, conservative Republicans, Senator Borah of Idaho should run so far ahead of the field. . , WHAT docs it meant Borah has never been popular with the powers that be in the Republican party. He has never been "regular" except on election day. During the past 15 or 20 years, he has been pretty much a pain in the neck to ALL administrations regardless of the party label. Sentiment for Borah among the Republican rank and file, particularly in pro gressive quarters might be expected. But in the ranks of the Old Guard I How comet IN a search for the answer we believe the conscientious inquirer would eventually end up at the front steps of the White House. This country has gone a long way since the last Republi can administration. Not so long in time, perhaps, but in politi cal change, we have encompassed an epoch. The G. O. P. old guard would be the first to deny it, but the fact remains, that they TOO have advanced, with the general advance of the country. They but the Hoover base has long since been abandoned, and the -lephant has progressed, willy nilly, into fields that are strange. In other words the answer D. Roosevelt. OOOSKVELT has stirred up nnd economically as it hasn't been stirred up since the Bull Moose uprising over two decades ago. In fact, as far as actual political results are concerned, one might even go back to the civil war. IT has been in short a revolution, a peaceful revolution, but nevertheless a REAL revolution. Now all revolutions have this much in common. Things after them are never the same, as they were before. The advance may be followed by retreat, but the net result is inevitably pro gress. This poll among prominent Republicans clearly demonstrates, we believe, that while the Democratic party has been given the ride of its life, with F. D, R. at the wheel, the Republican party has neither been going backward nor standing still. At a slower pace, but unquestionably in the same direction, the G. 0. P. has been progressing also. Consciously or subconsciously, the leuders of the Republican party as a whole realize, that the old deal has passed never to return; they realize, that if they wish to get anywhere in 19;lb', llioy can't do so by trying to do business at the same old slaml. Tliey too must have a new deal. And I hey prefer lionih of Idaho to any other candidate because he would represent a new deal, a new deal in party control, in party outlook, in party methods and principles. IN other words, they are tired of the old setup ami want a change, realizing they can't do anything or get anywhere unless they have a change. The lone wolf of Idaho, silverite, isolationist, constitutional ist, unlike the Hoovers, and Lowdens, and Mills and Wads worths, represents that change. Had Franklin Roosevelt never been president, Senator Borah of Idaho would never have been considered a candidate for the presidency, aa far as the Republican party is concerned. Man is an imitative animal. Borah represents the Republican new deal in answer to the New Deal of the Democrats. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyrc NEW YORK, Aug. 38. Dairy: A cheery note from Dr. Plnley of The Timee ana Ben Hut Lampman'a a u tog ra p h d tome, "Here C o m e i Some bod jr." So to breakfast on Ra Florentine with Albert Keller at the Rita. And In 49th street I talk ed to a romantic who roRma the land In a clock -mender'a wagon. In mldat of my tint, the dop begun furiously to bark and run from room to room cruelly. And a moment later the tun vanished and a fierce thunder atorm broke. By post a letter from my sla ter who had motored from Missouri to Ohio to aee the home my wife refurbished by correspondence. To dinner with I.ucy Virginia Imfl. dropping her at the Deao Ai?s worths and stopped a minute to talk to Major Bowes. And he showed me some letters from Mark Twain to Margaret Illlngton. so tenderly poig nant I wept. Then to see a Mickey Mouse at the Rlvoll and to bed. Few actors have been so local to their straggling home town as Alfred Lunt to a wide place In the road called Genesee Depot. Although Mil waukee born. Lunt spent early data In the hamlet 30 odd miles away. Thrre he acquired that gonfakm of boyhood ffrestneA his first stone brut se, and made the grasshopper "spit tobacco Juice." Every summer he;has (rone back. Even when he mar ried the glamorous Lynn Fontanr.e he struck out for there on his honey moon. When their brilliant stane car- Theodore Roosevelt, 41. Ogden Mill. 40. 4 Hamilton Flan. 38. Senator Dickinson. 38. Rep. Wadsworth, 17. Scattered, 04. are not abreast with the leaders, to Borah of Idaho is Franklin this country, politically, socially eer ends, there they will spend the twilight years. A correspondent In london writes that Oeorgs Bernard Shaw In a pri vate conversation regarded Richard Watt, a New York moving picture reviewer, as one of the most pro mising of America's younger crop of writers. Watt. In early 30 'a. blue col lared but studious looking. Is a nat ive of Charleston, W. Va. and tn the past few years has dons much travel ing In Russia and the Fsr Bast. Personal nomination for the chlrk lest smirk among the movie comic that of Ted Healy. Mark Helllnger recently completed ten years of Broadway cohunntng. His style la In direct variance to the accepted formula, the staccato gos sip and chronicling of smart say ings. In most Instances he does not use a name and a single theme may fill his entire space. He li adept at portraying the plttV.U and subse quent trsgedle of those wise-eyed innocents from the pralr.e cottage and vlllaire street who teem tu be continually ensnared. Brooklyn born, he la the most widely traveled of his guild. The parsing of John Barnes Weill, the tenor, removes still another pop ular member of the Dutch Treat club in the wake of Karl K. Kitchen's de mise. Wells hsd sung and acted in the Dutch Treat annuals for years. He popularl7ed "Peggy O'Hoolignn." the song Arthur Samuels wrote for him. Also "Sylvia." written by Oley Speaks, composer of "On the Road to Mandalay." They are recalling a gesture, now believed prophetic. Well made as the curtain fell on the most recent show. He went around rry gravely and shook hands with mem bers of the cast. "I'll prohahly be away for the next show," he ex plained. The moat popular open-fronted drink stand of the moment la a Sloppy Joe's on the corner of the former Columbia burlesque houe along Seventh avenue. The rental is reputedly top for tlilrat dutches Personal Health Service By William 'Brady, M. D. Slrned letters pertaining to personal health and hjrrlena not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brad; If a stamped self-sd-dressed envelope la 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, S6S El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. HOW TOBACCO AFFIX Some recent laboratory observations would seem to Indicate that smoking raises the blood sugar level, probably aaflffw,t"J'"ii as a consequence of stimulation of the sympathetic nerve. This im mediate but brief rise In the blood sugar may . ac count for the momentary 11 f; or relief of fa tlgue the smoker derives from i few puffs or In halations, or the snuff taker from a sniff, or the tobacco eatr from a chew. The effects are the same", by whatever route the drug Is absorbed Other laboratory studies show that the smoking of a cigarette causes a sudden marked peripheral vasocon striction which lasta for sixty seconds, Don't go way, girls, for this has ea much to do with your complexion as It does with your health, or maybe your limb, and when I ay limb I mean limb. Thro mo-angiitis obliter ans (Buerger's disease) has made am putation of many a leg imperative, and smoking is certainly a factor of this disease of the peripheral vessel, whether other factors are concerned or not. So you girls had better know about these penalties of Indulgence, which heretofore were paid chiefly by males, by males of weak will who overindulged In tobacco. When not Inhaled, cigarette smoke still produces , vaso-constrlction, but the vasoconstriction lasta only 15 minutes. ' Difference between simple puffing of a mouthful and expelling it at once and drawing the amoke deeply Into the breathing passages or In haling and expelling It Mowly or through the nose, la merely a mat ter of greater exposure larger area of mucous membrane gassed, greater amount of tobacco, nicotine or what ever the active substance may bo absorbed. Larger dose. . Peripheral vasoconstrictions means contraction or narrowing of the art erioles or smallest branches of the arteries farthest from the heart trie vessels which regulate the supply of blood to the skin and to the' ex treme ties. Cigar and pipe smoking produces the same peripheral vasoconstriction as cigarettes. By scientific instruments the rate of blood flow In the akin or In the hands or feet was measured, and the smoking of cigarette, pipe or cigar was found to slow the flow from 60 to 80 per cent. As n rule thla re $60,000 a year. Cm Its two sides It can Rcommodate about 60 simultaneously and In rush. hours between 4:00 and 6:00 p. m. there are nine drink mix ers. In the past six months, the soft drink appeal has had such a sway that five of the most prominent cor ners between the Circle and Herild Square are given over to catering orange, apple and pineapple Juices. Bagatelles: Jules Olacnzer was not ified he wna divorced by his ex in a postcard from Reno . . . Harold Bell Wright writes three days at a stretch and rests three ... J. P. Morgan's favorite winter breakfast is fried sausage and apple rings . . . Donald Hendoraon Clarke once turned out a full length novel In ten days . . . Erskine Gwynn may launch a week ly In Hollywood like his "Boulevar dier" In Paris . . . Laurel nnd Hardy sre the movie favorites of Prince Michael of Roumanla. Tliey got to harking back over the coffee. Recalling everything from free caps with the box of baking soda to the pin-the-tatl-on-t he-donkey game. Then up spoke Maury Paul, who up to that time had aatd prac tically nothing, remembering wistful ly when thrift was supposed to be honorable. CHRIST'S ADVENT TO SAVE FROM 1 SAYS PASTOR OF NAZARENE Fred M. Weatherford. Nazarone pastor -evanecllst, spoke last night from the topic "The Casualties of Neglected Life." drawing his text from John !0:10. "I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.". He also touched upon the text Heb. 3:3. "How shall we e.:ape if we neglect?" "From the text before us no one would assume that Christ came to give physical life," said , the pastor, "for He was addressing people who already animated beings physically. Then It Is left for us to conclude that the purpose of His coming was and is to give spiritual lif "Universally sin has separated man from Ood and brought with It the Inevitable wages of death as hla pay check. But for the coming of Christ the world ca.ii not have life In the spiritual sense. There Is no otner reason of f e red for t he romln g of Christ into the world except for this life-giving mission. "The announced purpose of Chr'st's advent was 'to save His people from their sins.' 'The merciful refuge Christ Offers to sinful" man Is salvation from n impending merciless tempest. It is sin that brings one to the worat of Ufe conclusion." There were two professions of fv.th at the conclusion of the service. I .lints tntr Hates r OR PLAN D. Ore. Aug. 26 lAP Additional floodlights are being installed at various points around the track for the Oregon .Vvkey club's racing series starting at oresn am Tuedav. general manager A -ny U Lewis said today. TS THE CIRCULATION tarded blood flow In the peripheral circulation accompanies a rise of blood pressure of from 10 to 20 milli meters of mercury, and an Increase In the heart rate of from 0 to 30 pulse beats per minute. Prom these observations it la reas onable to assume that anyone who smokea from half a pack to a pack of clggrettea a day Is on the road to well, it will make a good deal of interesting and more or less profitable work for the doctors of to morrow. Yeah, and it betokens better times for the beauty business, for a girl who Is good looking when she begins smoking naturally wants to keep her good looks or the best Imi tation she can contrive. qrKSTIONfl AM) ANSWERS Outbreak Son, 20, haa outbreak of acne, troubled a lot, also has bad ton sils . . . (c. e. a.) Answer Send stamped envelope bearing his address, for monograph on acne (blackheads and pimples). Focus or Infection In tonsils may be one factor. Simplest and aafest way to clear up the septic focus Is dia thermy (electrocoagulation) , which good physicians everywhere now em ploy. Iron In Cherries Have Just learned that eherrlea contain iron. If you would broadcast this fact It might help cherry grow ers to dispose of their crops. . , . (Mrs. A. T. F.) Answer so many fruits and vege tables contain more Iron than cher ries, that the fact la not significant. But cherries compare favorably with other sources of vitamins A, B and C. Ilrlght and Brave In giving first aid as a life guard I have found that the only meana of stopping the back flow of fluid Into the windpipe la by using the sub ject's hand aa a pillow for his head. You must remember that when ap plying artificial respiration the pat ients usually vomit, and what Is to stop thla vomited matter from back ing up . . . Answer If I caught you putting the hand under the head, I'd com mand you to correct the m 'stake In stantly, or I'd put a fish under the Jaw. Anyone who wishes to know the correct method of resuscitation (Schafer method) tn contradistinc tion to the erratic Red Cross method, send ten cents In coin and sji.e. for booklet "Resuscitation." Ed. Note: Persons nlshlnc to c-mumuiifcate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. l., 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Cat. Comment on the Days News By FIIANK JENKINS WILL ROGERS, who began his working life as a simple cowboy and ended It as one of the world's best-known figures, Is probably miss ed more by all kinds of people than any man who has died In the past half century. He lacked any touch of the spec tacular. Instead, he was simple, kind ly, tolerant of the faults of others, sympathetic, good-humored and fair. It Is men like that who are genu inely missed. f -f THE Idea has grown up that men who make a great deal of money must be hard, sharp, shrewd, ruth leas. Remember, please, the next time you hear that Idea expressed, that Will Rogers estate Is estimated at somewhere In the neighborhood of six million dollars, and he made It all himself. It Is NOT necessary, you see, to be hard, sharp, shrewd and ruthless even to make money. MOST sensiblepeople will agree that It Is better to be poor and liked by everybody than to be rich and universally hated. Will Rogers proved beyond all doubt that It Is possible to be both rich and univer sally loved. It Is worth something to the world to have that proved. HERE are someinteresting figures: Oregon has a million acres of land under Irrigation. The acreage of irrigated land Is only two per cent of the state's total farm area, but irrigated farms are ao per cent of the total number of farms, and the value of Irrigated land Is 35 per cent of the total farm land value. Irrigation Is showing up pretty well. THERE was a time, back tn the daya of surpluses, when It was feared that Irrigation would ruin the country by producing TOO MUCH food. We're getting ovr that fear. In fact, a lot of us are coming to be lieve firmly that It s far better to have to much food than too little. ft. U.EM. Aug 26. (API W. How ard Bern hard. ?6. died at a locai hospital Sunday, and his body was taken to Newport. Wash., today tor I burial He had been seriously ill tor a month. Hp is survived by a sister. Mrs. William Si won of Sunnyside. ! Wash . and a brother. Clayton V j iVrnhsrd, associated press staff writer at Salem "Strange As It Seems Creator Started Young Th auccesa story of John Hix, ere-, ator of "Strang Aa It Seems." reads like the proverbial Horatio Alger, Jr.. romance. "From Rags to Riches." or "Main Street to Broadway, would be a fitting title for his autobiography. John Hlx started his life, aa did ao many successful Americans, in a small town, and his first Job was that of newsboy on the local paper. Hlx had talent, Ideaa, and faith In hla ability. Thla combination was enough to start him right. Hla first Job waa on the Greenville, 8. C, News. There he got 110 t week and experi ence that was worth a million to him. Then, with his heart In his mouth and about 9,30 In hla pocket, he struck out for Washington. D. O. At tyis time he was 19 years old, and looked like a high school freshman. Luck was with him for he landed a Job on the Washington Herald at $16 a week. Things were looking up. On the Herald he found that he waa not nearly so good an artist as he had supposed and none of hla stuff waa published for a year. But he stuck to It and worked steadily In hla epare time, showing marvelous Improvement in technique from week to week. At the end of the year, the Herald started publishing his draw ings and raised him to (25 a week. Tpen he got the syndicate idea. He borrowed 140 and went to New York. He visited every syndicate In the city, OBEDIENCE STRESSED BY PASTOR DAIS IN FIRST BAPTIST TALK Rev. Wolford A. Dawes, of the First Baptist church. In his second sermon on "Laborers Together With Ood." emphasized "obedience.' The scrip ture lesson waa John 3:1-11. The story of the wedding at Can a. of Galilee. Jesus. Hla mother and His disciples were there. "A great calamity occurred at the wedding feast," said the pastor. "The refreshments ran short. Mary came to Jesus and told him. Let us team to tell Jesus about our needa tem poral and spiritual. He can supply all our needa. "Mary had confidence in Jesus and told the servants to do whatsoever He commands. The servants were active, trying to meet the situation." Rev. Dawes then told the story of the husbandman who saw men ready to work and gave them work even at the eleventh hour with the promise to pay whatever It was worth. "Talk la not enough. Definite activity la needed If our crop of fruit is to be saved. "If we want souls saved talk will not save them. There must be activ ity. "The church la made up of Indi viduals. They sometimes feel there Is not enough for them and the world. How Ions will a man last If not busy on the Job? The servants were busy, they were directed by Jesus. What kind of leadership will save the church? "Peter and the disciples went fish ing, labored all night long and caught nothing. At daybreak Jesus on the shore ,told them to cast the net on the right side of the boat and the neta were filled. Directed by Jesus Christ, work Is a success. "Christian living Is simply know ing and doing the will of Ood under the leadership of Jesus Christ. We cannot always see the reason our part Is to do what Jesus asks." S.P. INCOME DURING JULY SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 3fl (AP Decline of nearly $450,000 in net op erating Income Tor July. In contrast with last year, was reported today by the Southern Pacific lines. For the month ending July 31. the railroad showed net Income of (tl. 433.199.10. aa compared with 1,876, 453.45 In 934. Revenues for the seven-month per iod, however, exceed last year's total by nearly $4,450,000. Ose Mall mount want aAa. WIFE MAKES LAST In The widow of Wilsy Post (center) often traveled with the famous flier, but she accompanied htm for the last time when the broken body wst taken to a mausoleum in Oklahoma City, Okla. Mrs. Post shown leaving the First Baptist church after services for the noted viator. On the right Is Mrs. Luthtr Grey, a clot, friend of the family (Associated Priss Photo) John Hlx with his samples under his arm, and finally succeeded in Interesting one of the major syndicate in "Strange As It Seems. The rest la history. The feature caught on Immediately and is now being published In more than a hun dred American newspapers, Including the Medford Mail Tribune. II (Continued from Page One) administration did to alleviate suf fering In Its closing daya. In reply, Mr. Hoover sent long rec ords and date tn support of this theory. The letter-writer Is now look ing for an outstanding Republican spokesman to present them. Note Volunteer outstanding spokesmen will please apply to C. Bascom Slemp. formerly secretary to President Coolldge. The 1936 presidential campaign re ally opened last Wednesday night. Instead of Saturday night, as adver tised. On Wednesday the president addressed the people of Sainte Gene vieve, Mo., by telephone, commemor ating their bl-centennlal celebration. When presidents start making spec ial long distance addresses to towns the size of Sainte Genevieve, baby kissing time cannot be far away. There was a heavy demand for pens with which the president sign ed the bank bill. About six Interested parties put in applications, including Senator Glass. As the president hand ed a pen to Glass, one of the assem bled legislators whispered to another: "Roosevelt should have given him an eraser Instead." The Virginian Is supposed to have worn out six erasers rubbing out the original Eocles bill provisions. Incidentally, Glass does not believe there Is enough of the bill left for Eccles "to light a cigarette with." Southern senators were wild about the new cotton loan plan because they had been promised privately that the twelve-cent loan would be continued. They thought the AAA crowd let them down. The build-up for Governor Landon of Kansas Is proceeding without en couragement from him. The two largest weekly magazines and a large monthly have lately sent men to write him up. They will eoon be out with stories about "the Coolldge of Kansas." Mr. Roosevelt has tut -tutted con gressional hesitancies about the con stitution. Consequently, three con gressmen nearly fainted the other day when he told them the original Plttman neutrality legislation would be an unconstitutional Interference with his right to conduct foreign re lations. f NEW YORK. Aug. 36 (API Gratz M. Scott, 63, president of the Cavendish (contract bridge) club, and one of the country's leading bridge players, died at his Park avenue residence last night. TRIP WITH POST mm. Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson Countj history from the files of the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 Year, Ato). TEN YEARS AGO TODAY August T. mis (It wsa Thursday) Rail ahlppera of state, headed by Hood River apple growers, form asso ciation for lower freight rates. Pear ahipments from 'the Rogue River valley total S39 cars. The first car of apples wsa shipped east yes terday. The Lamport store is robbed aa!n. The burglars crawled through a hole left by the first culprits. Pop Gates named hesd of Lake of Woods Recreation compsny. Local klansmen receive notice to pay their duea. or "be kaat out." Four autos in accident mix-up on Pacific highway near fairgrounds. TVTE.NTV YEARS AOO TOUAt AufCUrt 2B. 1115 (It waa Thursday) Electrification of the Jacksonville railroad to start at once. Espee will run a special train from the Gold Hill dance next Saturday night. Russian army retreats from Port Ollta. to make stand on Nlcmen river. German troops penetrate deep Into Old Russia. East and mid-west shiver In a cold wave. Mercury reaches 93 decrees here. Hop picking to start next week In Clute yard In Applegate district. First carload of 1016 Maxwells ar rive In city. Bondholders reject paving refund proposition. SOMEHOW I C0ULDNT PLEASE MY PATIENTS. TIME AFTER TIME I WOULD BE DISMISSED FROM A CASE AFTER A FEW DAYS THEN I TOOK CARE OF A DOCTORS WIFE WITH A BROKEN HIP. SHE ALWAYS INSISTED ON LIFEBUOY FOR HER BATH. WHEN I LEFT SHE GAVE ME A MYSTERIOUS PACKAGE- I OPENED IT AND FOUND A CAKE OF LIFEBUOY I MY FACE FLAMED. IN A FLASH I REALIZED MY TROUBLE BO. OF COURSE I BEGAN USING LIFEBUOY AT ONCE. NEVER AGAIN HAVE I BEEN DISMISSED FROM A CASE. NOW I HAVE A FINE POSITION IN A DOCTORS OFFICE THANKS TO UFEBUOYl A heal nurse wrote us this moving let ter. Wrote frankly and freely of hef own distressing experience because she knew we would never tell her name. Wife, sweetheart, business or profes sional man or woman no one can af ford to take chances with "B.O." (W) Mto.Playsafe bathe regularlywith Life buoy. Its rich, penetrating lather cleanses intr. purifies pores,stops"B.O."Alwsvi lathers sLuudantly even in cold or hard water. Its own pleasant, hygienic scent that vanishes as you rinse tells you Lifebuoy s refreshing lather pntKtil "Agree$ with my skin" tay millions Lifebuoy's deep-cleansing lather gently nds pores of clogged impurities thai dull the skin's nirural clearness. Vet sa- entitle tests on hundreds of women shr. i Mi i it is more than 20 pet cent milder than many so-called "beauty soaps". LIFEBUOY HEALTH SOAP f (10 JV 033S1