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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1935)
PAGE TEN MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1935. MEDFORDtTRIBUWE Eieryone ID BoutbarB Oresos Bwdi the UtOl TrlbDD." Dully Excapt Batordar. Published by ' MEDFORD PBINTINO CO. tS.Zf-2 N. Fir St. Pbopa la. ROBERT W. BUHU Editor. AD lodapandant Nawapapar. Znl.r.d aa awond-claa. matter "' ford. Oraion. onl.r Act of Uargb I. II i SUBSCRIPTION BATES , Mall-Io Advauo: Bally, on year Daily, elx mootbe '? Daily. one moatb v.'V'y . jZ By Carrier. In Adraoce Medford. Ash- land. Jaokaonvlll. Ceotrel Point. Fboeoii. Talent, Oolo B1U and on Dally, on. year. "? Dally, ala montae Dally, on rnontb w All terma. caab In advance. Official Paper of tlia Clly of Mcdford. Official raper 01 MEMBER OF THE AB8p IA TKU PBKBg Becel'lns roll La..d lr. '", Tba Aaioclat.d Preee la aieluamly an tltUd to tha uaa for publication of all .... dl.patebo. credited to It or other vita credited In thla papar, and alao to tba local newa publlaha-1 herein. All right, for publication of epeclal cHepetohee h.raln ar alto r.arv.d. MEMBEB OF UNITED PRESS VIEUBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Adv.rtltlri Representative U. c alO.GE.N8EN COMPANY Otflc. In N vork. chl!aio Detroit. San Franelaco. Lo. Angalee, Seattle. Portland. ON Ye Smudge Pot by Arthur Pfrr " The Initiative bill proposing that recall election be held every two yean for all public officials, whether or not they need recalling, 1 mas terpiece of Oregon political thinking, but should be kept where the squir rels can't find It. a . . The wealth of the lata Huey Long dictator of Iniutlana, Is esti mated at "upwards of 5,000,000." This Indicates the valiant battler lor the "common people" put In a few profitable licks for himself oc casionally. ... The "artistic sense" of several hss been Jarred by the gondola of coal parked within a chunk of coal throw from the CofO. building, the archi tectural contour of which, Is also spt to rub the artlatlo fur the wrong way. Besides. Its Inartlstlc ness, the load of coal Is not harmo nious with the weather. A load ot coal never looks like anything, ex cept near the end of a bleak and melancholy winter's day. Then place It on a sidetrack, with a lonely de pot in the background. Over the heaping high load of coal, scatter skiffs of snow, In liberal splotches. Then It la a magnificent study In black and white, with no artist to paint It. . ... It now develops that a number of victims of economic pressure, m various sections of the land, are well on the way to a new auto, by shrewdly remaining on both rellei. and a Job. ... This Is Friday the 13th a very ominous day to the superstitious. A number of outstanding pessimists, with their usual luck, will survive It. ... Communities once severely plagued by, hellralsers, cannot understand the solicitude of communities, never thus afflicted, lest the hellratsera be punished with some of their own product. They object vehemently to the use of goose-down end roofing material as a means of restoring peace, and start fretting about the "Constitutional Rights" of the sgl tator. It should be remembered It Is the hide of the hellralser. not the Constitution, that la besmirched. . llYfilF.SF. IS TMF, BISKIYOIM. , (Yroka (Pallf.) Journal) Oeorge soya It appears to so thcroughly cleanse the body and pores, as can be asserted when you look at the tub of water when you get out. It la clear as crystal when you gpt In: and O. dear, lets not talk about It when you get out. for It Is a sort or dirty reddish grey, and you feel like a million dollars. P. Calllaon. grid mentor of Old Oregon was In town yesterday. He sees no hope for any football team, least of all "Old Oregon's." He re tslns the charming disaster complex of his high school coaching days. ... Itsly announces the opening date of her war against Ethiopia for September 24. No s,teps will t.e neces sary to prevent Premier Mussolini from rushing to the firing line, all by himself, before or after aforesild date. ... An Oklahoma youth, IS, drsnk 66 glasses of wster. In a contest, without starting a drouth, and reach ed home without causing a wrecr. . Nick Klme of Orlffen Crk left the key in his csr yesterday, and found It right where the other fellow left It. ... Press reporu state that Herbert Hoover la "the most logical Repub lican candidate for President."' Such being the case. It would be logical for the Republican parly to have no candidate at alt, and dispense with the bother of an election. Young Rogers fared none too welt under the will of hla father, who died In July. The provision made for him under the will was the in come for a iSOO.000 trust fund. iPresa Dlspstch) With a little scrimping, and some help from WPA. he ought to be able to tough It out the coming winter. DENISON. la (UP) It was a long time coming, but Mr. and Mrs. Ed ward Balr of Euglewood, Cal . g.-t ineir cnarivail In the end Ma. tied 1J years ago In Denlaon. the Blr returned from Cslifornia for a visit with friends, who promptly aMged SB old-fashioned cliailvajl. ' Gilded Youth HENRY H. Rogers, Jr., was very drunk. His chauffeur wasn't entirely sober. About the third member of the party, torch singer Evelyn Hoey, not much ib known, except she lay dead, in an upstairs room with a bullet through her head. Certainly a sordid, unsavory spectacle. But one of those things that bob up, all too frequently in the American scene, The rich young man, the pretty chorus girl, the primrose path, the gin-fizz trail, and DEATH! rllS young man's grandfather made millions in oil. His father made more. The grandfather left him several mil lions. , The father who was smarter, left him only the income from half a million. But it was too much money far too much to leave to any young man of Junior's character and propensities. He didn't have to work. He didn't have to do anything but have a good time. He had it or thought he did. And now a pretty youns; girl is dead and Henry, Jr., is suspected oi' the murder! ALREADY high priced lawyers are assembling from all direc tions to defend the vountr man. The district attorney at West Chester, Pennsylvania, near the scene of the crime, appears to be amiable and accommodating. He has agreed to release Henry on $2500 bail which is about what Henry would blow in at a cross-roads night club, over the week end. Unless this case proves to be the exception to the rule, there will be no conviction, there may even be no trial, when money is no object, both public and legal interest in such affairs, have a strange way of gradually dying out. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT's program provides for sharp in creases in inheritance taxes. Huge fortunes would not be prevented, but it would be impossible to pass them along INTACT to second, third and fourth generations. A large pro portion would be turned into the national treasury. Incidents like thisRogers scandal, provide talking points for such a policy vrhich are difficult to refute. The young man born to great wealth who is of use to society or to himself, is the ex ception that proves the rule. Large fortunes which are inherited, not earned, 9 times out of 10 do far more harm than good, to the boys and girls who get them... And in the case oMoys like young Rogers they do far more harm to society. IN a few cases notably the Rockefeller family, "great wealth has been usefully employed, more usefully no doubt than if it had NOT been in private hands, but this has been far. from the general rule. Not the accumulation, nor the proper use, but the ABUSES of wealth as exemplified by the jeunesse dore of this country, is responsible for the new attitude toward great fortunes in this country. And our prediction is, it is an attitude that has come to stay, and a new principle of taxation with it. Let There Be Light A CONGRESSIONAL, inquiry into tbe assassination of Huey Long is demanded. By all men 1.8. The more the people of the country can know about this case, in all its phases, the better for all concerned. But let AAj the facts be known, not merely a portion of thein. Let the probe be historirnl, not political ; let it be impar tial, not partisan. . t WE venture to say wheu the TRUTH about the Louisiana fWftsttCtr is Iriinwn TTnnv M ill hr unit). 01 tYta nn i .itaj 1 lilt ardent followers arc trying to make him ; nor the devil with hoofs and horns, that his enemies insist upon. Huey will land, like most mortals, somewhere in between. JUST where is the important matter. All the facts must be secured to determine that. "flTE arc certain a true history of this extraordinary man, " from the time he first entered public life, to the time he so tragically departed would serve as a very valuable object lesson to the people of the United States. Such a history, we predict, would show two things: the crying need for political and social reformation below the Mason and Dixon line, and : The datigers to America, its people and its institutions, that lie in the disposition of the rank and file, to fall for the arts and wiles, of the self-seeking and unscruplous demagogues. ! Editorial Comment Where In (he Fair Hearted? The Joivephlne county fair la final ly underway, with booths and ex hibits practically all In place tmd everjthlnp net for two good daya of the four daya awlRned. The delay In netting started, the difficulty in plainn exhibit, and the fact that aome communities are not represented at all are subjects tor vm attention. Ia the day of county fairs past? Or la something wrong with the procedure In Josephine eouny? Those questions might well be an swered, for hundreds of dollars yes. thousands of dollars are expended each year bv private and public agen cies to prepare and place exhibits and entertainment attractions. We can hardly believe that the day of the county fair has passed It Is true that Jackson county has no fair, hut the demand la being filled to a large extent by the Northwest Jack son county fair at Oold Hill, which has been promoted and grown because of a real public demand. It Is also true that the tate fair showed a decrease in attendance thla year. But exhibitors blame the de crease on the fact that the fair date was too early this year, and urged that It be set later. If a real public demand exists In Josephine county for a fair, then some steps ought to be Utten to make It a more worthwhile venture. The county" produce is worthy of exhibition, the public likes to see the dlsp'.ayi. and apparently the fair make expenses each vear. But at the same time the fair Is not so good as1 it should be If the first two of the j tour days art wasted, 1 The fair board and manager and the county court could well study the whole fair set-up. see If some thing la wrong with the present meth ods, and take steps to correct any faulta that might be found. Grants Pass Courier. Personal Health Service . By William Brady, M. D. Sighed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number ot letters received only a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 263 El Cam! no. Beverly Hills. taJ. MORE VITAMINS, LESS INSULTS This message la for all who are aub- Ject to df&betes or who have relative or frlenda with this functional defect. It may bo of practical-Interest, too, for a great many persons who receive or contemplate re- celvlng insulin of treatment for other conditions than diabetes. Insulin Is ad ministered as a remedy for in numerable states of under nutri tion or inanition which have nothing to do with diabetes. This will em barrass a. few backwoods doctors In the metropolitan communities, who have brazenly assxired patients that Insulin la employed exclusively In the treatment of d la bete, but that can't be helped now. It la high time the medical profession learned that things medical are not so Just be cause some poh-bah pronounces them so. These days you have to take Into consideration the rising level of popular intelligence. Here are data from a clinical case record, indicating the effect of sup plementing the regular prescribed diet with duly rations of vitamins. Whan the vitamin ration was started the patient was receiving 20 units of Insulin eah morning and 15"unlts at night, and the demonstration of sugar in the urine required 9 drops of test solution. Two weeks later the patient received only 10 and 5 units of insulin, and 26 drops of test solution was required to demonstrate any sugar. After three weeks of plurtvitamln therapy (the vitamin ra tion Included all of the vltimlns in their natural proportions, that Is, as vitamins occur in nature) the pati ent received onlv one dose of 5 units of Insulin d&ilv. and it leant red 3d! drops of test solution to show sugar in the urine. That brings the record up to the present date. The vitamin ration in this instance effected a saving of 30 units of In sulin daily, to say nothing of the marked improvement in general well being and resiliency. Theoretically, It Is mainly vitamin B or B complex (B and G) which promot better carbohydrate metab olism, better utilization of sugars and starohes in the body, but practically it seems that when given sl:igly or In artificial mixtures of two or three vitamins they are less effective than when Riven in well-balanced com binations, perhaps because that's the way they grow. One authority (Kuh nau) comparea the interaction of the vitamins to the interlocking of the cog wheela of a watch. Numerous in vestigators and clinicians (such as Takahashi, Harris, Kollath. Jusatz, Redelwlll never mind the names, folks, I Just want to make It clear these are not merely my peculiar no tion) have shown the overlapping of the functions of the vitamins and how each is dependent more orMets on othera to perform its work in the economy. As doctors say. the vita mins are synergistic: or as biologists say. they are symbiotic: and as I say. we should use 'em as nature provide? them. I have repeatedly recommended in sulin treatment for Individuals who are underweight and low In vlrality. N"pw I wish to amend that. I believe such persons should have an optimal vitamin ration for at least a month before they resort to insulin. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Diabetes and Menstruation. Does diabetes have anything to do with failure of the menses to appear In a girl 15 years of age? (R. T.) Answer Very likely It has. Any serious nutritional disorder may ac count for failure of menstruation. Send stamped envelope bearing your address, for monograph on diabetes. Chlorinated Drinking Wuter. What effect would change frem or dinary water to chlorinated water for drinking purposes have on the health of a person migrating to a tropica country? (P. J. W.) Answer No ill effect. Chlorlna tion of water make it safe to drink. Cure for Ringworm. Take an axe or stove lid or any piece of steel, wipe clean, burn some paper on the cold steel, preferably paper without print. This will form a dark sticky swe.it, tar residua which haidens quickly, so you must quickly rub it into the patch of ringworm. It will burn and sting for a second, but it seems to penetrate the akin and kill Mr. Ringworm, so It la "sel dom that a second application Is r.sc essary. (Mrs. A..C.) Answer Thank you. If this home treatment should fall, readers may still write O' Doc Brady, inclosing a three-cent stamped envelope bear ing the correct address, and ask for monograph on ringworm. (Copyright, 1935, John F. DiUe Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady .lion Id send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D., 265 El Canilno. Beverly Hills. Cal. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre BIG SCOPE OFFERS CLOSE-UP OF MOON One of the laret portable tel. scope In the United States, belong ing to Whitman university at Walla Walla, Wash., will be set up a.-ross from the Chamber of Commerce buildings for several day, accord lr to Harry O. Johnson, connected with extension work in astronomy at the school, he said today Joh nson t ated t hat for a s.na II charge the public may lok at the moon through the big 'scope, whicii brin the planet down to 310 miles All the craters and cracks on t:ie surface of the moon are visible, he Mil. The moon is now full, and tak ing advantage of that fa.-t. the tele scope will be set up from 7 until 11 p, m, for several nights. 1 J MA NEW VORK, Sept. 13. Thoughts while strolling: Sign above & Lexing ton avenue tailor shop: "Confidential Tailors." Probably whisper as they measure instead M of yelling one's girth around the block. Anyway Its better than "Reliable." They say the better rireiwd medicos i are brain spe-j i cialists and pay-1 i chlatrlsts. There's the perfectly tailored author and alien ist. Dr. Louis Berg. Also the Perk avenue medico. Dr. Emmanuel Josephson. who pays his calls afoot, ha f less and In polo shirt. Quietest place in town these days: That sec ond floor office In Vcscy street with the sign, "Slelghbells." Oscar Hnmmerstetn II. Debonaire, grave and striding. He's back from Hollywood where he wrote a movie opera of fisher folk. But found more Sorrento air at Snn Franclsco'a fish erman's wharf than In Italy. There's Arthur Ilornblow too. displaying a sunMirn acquired In Sudan. They think New York torrid this summei. But in the Sudan the mer cury hits 115 in the shade. And in the papers the other day was a few line notice of the fall of Khartoum and the death of Oeneral Gordon. That's forgotten everywhere except in the Sudan. Sic transit gloria mundit" Admiral Byrd in Times Square. Out of the cocoon of furs, he is the ul timate punctilio of Naragansett ele gance. In white with radiant tie and shirt. Al Bedell's smokt stack collar. Pretty Jean Dalrymple. Crack from Spokane: "If radio Is such good ad vertising, why can't Joe Pehner sell his duck?" dense white tobacco smoke and hairy Mahatmas of the game. They pray rapt, world less, as aloof as spirits on distant mountain peaks, and In the cold realm of pure brain. Or maybe in an intellectual fijjrvana. Silent fu gues on the board, brilliant attacks worthy of Foch done In one slow move of the hand.- or a Waterloo achieved In an hour. Your real adept leaves this world entirely. Napoleon played at chess all his lite but never got to master it. Coolidge was a good player. So Is Otis Skinner. Flight fo Time Med ford and Jackson County history from the riles of tne Mall Tribune 10 and 20 Year Ago). New fad: Going In for unusual drinks. The teetotaler George Buckley has a decanter of old English perry, stronger than schnapps, Welsh mead and made of black honey. Greek May rodaphne Is again corning Into Its own. Also Scotch heather wine and Davon crack made of plums Billy Seamon has a wierd collection In cluding a Chinese brandy made of legs of mutton. It comes in stone jars and smells like Japanese sake. Sake, by the way. Is served warm". There's Mexican tequllla. too. with a lick of lemon and salt. Arak, the aniseed liquer. Is not the same as arrack, the East Indian drink made of pineap ple trimmings. Fanny Hurst brought back from Honolulu to Carl Van Vechten a gallipot of okolehau. liquid TNT. Put into milk shake over there it's fittingly called: "O holy cowl" The most difficult wine to get is Im perial Tokay from Hungary. Hardly more than three gallons are available. Thick, not pressed from, the grape but exuded, It has more vitamins than punch. Outdoor dining that has so seized mid-town New York is old hat to patrohs of several Gotham cafes. For 19 years second Avenue's Cafe Royal has prided itself on lta latticed and tub-treed terrace a la Paree. H'a the rendezvous of llon-maned Jewish Journalists and musicians, who ar gue with arms folded on their canes, chiefly on Aeur, mathematics and the philosophy of Lenin. Then there are the quiet, cccl. cel lars on Washington street In the Ar menian quarter. Of Rembrandtesquc gloom, with a stove at one end and catering exotic provender. Coffee thick enough to hold a spoon up right and delicately flavored with or ange and cinnamon. Several were haunts of the exiled poet, Kahili Gl brftii. who wrote an illustrated "Tho Madman" on the damp tables. For dessert: Shlsh-kebab and the many layered honey and flakey nut pastry. Baklava. rolled out with wooden pins two yards long. Armenians are the greatest novel readers in the world. And the sole-eyed, gracious children in the quarter are the handsomest In Manhattan. Most of the more than one hundred chess clubs in Manhattan flourish on the lower East Side, Some official, some social but all esoteric And Chain letters 1Vu.pt Australians SYDNEY (APv Despite police warning, the chain letter craw, re cently popular in the United States 1 enjoying considerable vogue ana Australian government lottery offic ials fear that money will be diverted from their department which raises thousands of pounds annually for hospitals throughput New South Wales. 4 - Use Mail Tribuua aut ads; HEATH'S DRUG STORE Finger Cots. 2 for 50 Fountain Pens (made by Conklin and guaranteed) 91. OO Sun Glasses (Close Out) 250 Lifebuoy Soap 60 Johnson's Instant Fudge 29r 1000 Sheet Toilet Tissue, 4 for .....100 Quart Hand Lotions . 500 Fitch's Dandruff Remover Shampoo 500 Him ki mil r sr.u.r MASMr.r.n Guaranteed Watches S00 Gum and Life Savers, 3 for 10c Cotv Face Powder . 600 $1.00 Coty Hand Lotion (Close Out) .!) Vicks Nose Drops - 37f 40c Castoria 2 1 C 1 lb Geo. Washington 570 1 lb. Prince Albert and Velvet 73o Squibbs Chocolate Vitavose 13c S H A OOO 1D Discount on Kodak Work. Ladies' Rest Room fjjfc DRUG STORE Phone S84 Medford Bldg. From my apartment window I of ten see against the skyline a man waving a pole In attitude of conjur ation but amid a flock of pigeons. They fly away, displeased, then re turn usually with new recruits In their ranks. That way he augments his flock. He started off quite mod estly three years ago with Just one pair. He may be an appassionado for pigeon pie. Or Just a lonely Metro politan bird lover I (Copyright, 1935. McNaught Syndi cate) 4 Use Mail Tribune want ads. TEN YEARS AGO T06.Y September 13. 1125. (It was Sunday.) County fair to open Tuesday, and all stores of city will close at noon, so tbe clerks can attend the hcrse-racing. and ability, not their aocial stand ing. " Claude Savior, the barber, nr.d family, have returned from Pennsl- vanla where they have been residing the past two years. According to the latest figures, the county fair went 1300 In the hole this year. H.' Chandler Flgan. Medford, leads field in golf tournament at Del Monte, Cal. Medford named as one of the air mail stations on the Pacific Coast. Pear shipment to date total 1158 cars. United States senator from Oregon arrested at Baker for being Intoxi cated, -and claims he is the "victim of a conspiracy.' First heavy rain in several weeks falls over the city and valley. Driz zles continue today. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY September 13. IMS. (It was Monday.) Lord Kitchener, British secretary of war, claims "Huns have shot their bolt." Three millions enlist in Brit ish forces: Russians start counter attack at Vllna. and greatest retreat ;n history seems halted. Heat wave closes public schools l; east. According to Deputy Stock Inspec tor Wig Ashpole. there are 3000 tot hogs In valley, with a price of 5 to 5l,3 cents per pound. Most of the growers are holding back for better prices. Under the direction of Coach Otto Klum. the high school football team turned out for practice last evening. The coach announce "tn? nlavers will be picked according to their size James Owens of Wellea ran into town this morning. He is prosper ous farmer. Father and 4 Sons Doctor. ESSEX, Mo. IUP There are flv doctors in the Brandon family. Dr. J. M. Brandon, 90, and his four eons. The father he practiced medicine in Stoddard county for 65 years. Superior, Wis., has 29 miles waterfront on Lake Superior. Distilled from genuins sloe berrie, and properly aged, LYONS Sloe Gin has the truo Sloe berry flavor. l.35 a Fifth 533 - THE E. O. LYONS A RAAS CO. Naw York Son Frofieiieo lo Anol m FLY siKM liLls4 FALL HOUSECLEAMiNG PI Kill 'em all kill 'em quick. Kill insects the easy wayl What's a lady to do with annoying, huzzy, frowzy flies? What to do about stinging mosquitoes. pesky ants, gnats, clothes-destroying moths? Kill 'em at one stroke kill 'em quick with Stand ard Oil Fly Spray! 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