Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 22, 1935, Page 4, Image 4

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PAGE FOUR
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, IfEDFORI). OREGON. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1935.
,Tribune
"Etmtodc la Bo nth urn Oregon
Bed tba Mall Trlbuna"
Dad)? Kieept Haturdaj.
Published by
uvnirnan DUINTlNfl CO.
tl.lf.is N. ITlr 0L Phone is,
ROBERT W. BUUU Bdi.or.
Aa ndspandenC Nawapapar.
Bntarad aa Mcoad-elaia mittr at Mad
ford. Oragon, uodar Act of llareb I, l7t.
eUBflCKIPTION BATES
Daiir. on
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Und. Jackaoo villa, Caotral Point.
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highway.
Dally, ona yaar
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Daily, ona month -
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...... .10
Official Paper th City of Medford.
Official Puper of Javkmoa County.
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Receiving run imara irs on ....
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titled to the uae for publication of all
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wlia credited in thle paper, and alao to
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All rights for publication of apectai
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HEM DEB OF UNITED PRESS
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OF CIBCULATtON
Advertising Repraaentatlvee
M. C. HOGENSKN A COMPANY
Offlcee In New York. Chicago Detroit
Bin Franclero. Loa Angalea, Beettla,
Portland.
MEMBER
in
ON
Ye Smudge Pot
I By Arthur Perry.
Montana ha earthquake., na
Oregon a special session of the legls
lature. An offer to awap, even up,
has been rejected by Montana.
Man Jongg la being revived In th.
east., and promisee to regain it.
popularity of IS year. ago. It may
dlaplace Man Brldggo.
A mad farmer called yesterday
and threatened plowing and your
corr.
Th Indiana un her. hv. formed
a very Jolly and sociable club which
thev have named "The Eat wun,
and which bears the motto, "Bit
down end got hungry." (Klamath
Palls Herald) Another trick of the
palefaces Invades the tepees of Poor
Lol
.
Expert, are warning young par
ents not to lot their pride and Joy
walk too soon, or they will have
rainbow underpinning, and not bo
able to chase them efficiently when
they grow up.
There seems to be no dearth of
politicians, who have announced
their Intention of flocking to the
forthcoming national convention 01
th. Townsend old Age Pension olubs
In Chicago. Bom. observers opine
there will be mors politicians than
Old Polks. In such sn unhsppy .vent
the Old Polks can toke-up-the-col-lectlon.
a duty heretofore generally
' devolving upon the visiting political
orator. Frequently an item shows up
In the press stating that sn aged
delegate Is hitch-hiking to the con
vention. As yet no politician has
deigned to prove hla sincerity for
the cause by . doing the same.
' .
"HUNTERS GET NINE DEER ON
WEEK-END" (Yrcka Journal Hdltne)
They may be the "panting hind,"
the poets are always talking about.
The lowly and orange colored pun
kin, with the approach of Hallowe en
Is vlelng with riotously colored au
tumn leaf, as something to clutter
up the living room. In some In
atances, th. Older Girl, have com
mitted harl-karl on the punk In, nd
Installed electric light.. On Hal
loween, the .hell of th. former
sturdy punkln, will be turned over
to Juvenile elfin, and sprites, for
use while smearing soap every place
but on their own necks. Th. festive
damage will be high RRaln thl. year.
N
Orsndpahood has been conferred
upon C. Plrhtner, causing him to
step three ways at once. Th. new
soprsno came to his boy Clyde's
house.
The Democratic party Is now, al
cording to printed Information, "mak
Intf Its bed. to lie in the 1038 cam
paign." There is also a decided opin
ion, the Democratic party Is making
Kb bunk, to lie out of In the 1930
campaign.
MOW WAI1 ABE BltF.n,
"There haa never been a Juat on.,
never an honorible one on th. pr
of th. Inntlgator of th. war.
"I can se. a million years .head,
snd this ruls will never change in
so many as half a doren instances.
"The loud little hsndful as usual
will shout for the war. The pulpit
will, warily and cautiously, object
at first; the great, big. dull bulk of
the nation will run its sleepy eyes
and try to make out why there
ahoud he a war. and will say. ear
nestly and Indignantly, 'It Is unjust
and dishonorable, and there 1. no
necessity for it.'
"Then the handful will shout
louder. A few fair men on th. other
side will argue and reason against
the war with speech snd pen, and
at first will have a hearing snd be
applauded; but it will not last long.
"Before long you will see this
rurlou. thing; the speskers stoned
from the pisiform and tree speech
strangled by hordes of furious men
who In their secret hearts are still
at one with those stoned speakers
as earlier but do not dare to say
so.
"And now' the whole nation pul
pit and all will take up th. war
ery, and shout Itself hosrse, and
mob any honest man who ventures
to open hi. mouth; and presently
such mouths will cease to open."
(Msrk Twain's Writings)
"KICKEH.MCK"
Pndernarmrnts that fit at
Lthelwyn B Hoffmann's.
Cm Mall Trlbun. want .da.
MEDFORD,
Welcome to
lygEDFORD warmly welcomes
" vention of the Parent-Teachers Association, which opens
for a four-day aesaion in the city today.
With U. 8. Senator Fred Steiwer; Dr. Frederick M. Hunter,
Chancellor of Higher Education! Dean Kate Jameson of Oregon
State college; Mrs. Sarah Orr Dunbar, and Mate Superintendent
of Education C. A. Howard on th program, the convention
promises to be one of the most interesting ever held in southern
Oregon.
In addition to many speakers
forum discussions, oft such timely subjects as public safety, pub
lic health, rural needs, home life and the uses of leisure. We
certainly envy those with the time and the opportunity, to at
tend all the four day sessions.
PARENTS and Teachers! The influence of the home, com
h!n.r1 with rviiMift education I '
As one looks out on this struggling and harrassed world,
with democratic governments overthrown by this form of dic
tatorship and that, Communism, Nazism, Fascism with war
rBfring in one continent, threatening, to overwhelm another, and
extend to a third; with unrest and discontent in our own coun
try declining, but still sufficiently active, to encourage the self-
seeking machinations of table thumping demagogues, and the
cxhorlers to False Gods; economic, political and financial.
Can one really conceive of
more USEFUL, than one devoted
young, and surrounding them
those influences which will make
arH more self-reliant citizens.
In these two directions, it
hope of this country, and for
zed world, really rests.
PICK out the major evils and delusions which now beset the
world, and seem to be leading it blindly from one major
catastrophe to another, and where in the last analysis, and where
only, must one seek, for the forces of rescue and defense?
Right here;
In the education of the individual, the ability of the indi
vidual to reason things out for
the ability not only to see things as they are but to sec through
pretense and sham, and with such enlightenment the moral
character, to sustain the obligation it imposes.
Without that, indeed the future looks black. With it, there is
not only hope, but conviction that democracy and civilization
will not only survive, but go on steadily to greater and finer
things.
So we congratulate the officers and members of the Parent
Teachers Association on the nature of their organization, its
growth, strength and increased influence, and we congratulate
thin state and the country, on having the services of such an
organization at the present critical time.
Will Rogers and Sidney Smith
A TRAGIC year for humor I A few months ago Will Rogers
orashed to his death in an airplane. On Sunday Sidney
Smith orashed to his death in a motor car.
They were two of the country's greatest humorists. What
Will Rogers said and what Andy Gump snid and did, were for
many years, subjects of general
The two men, Rogers and Smith were very different, both in
fundamental character and attainments, but in output they were
alike in this: both were as soundly American as corn on the cob.
Both, too, were kindly in their
absence of the satirical or the sophisticated in their treatment;
thoy instinctively sensed the American scene, one in words, the
other in line, day by day, amusingly depicted it.
Will Rogers left a place which
generation, perhapB, never will be.
It is interesting to note, however, that in spite of his author's
ilcath, Andy Gump and Uncle Dim, Tom Carr and Little Chester,
the Widow Zander and Mania Dc
i
TT'IIE fact they CAN go on, brings out another striking con-
trast between the two men. Will Rogers was Will Rogers,
and all there was to Will Rogers was Will. No one could ghost
for him. Ho just talked and wrote,
do either, that was the end.
Sidney Smith created the Gumps, and for many years, hand
led the strip alone, line dialogue
and Smith's fame and fortune
more of the verbal and pictorial
joyed himself as wealthy men of
In short, Sidney Smith created a new character and a new
type in American comio strips, and then more or less, let his
brain child run along on its own momentum, in charge of the
family nurse, governess and chauffeur. Ho ceased to be a de
voted parent, in the true sense of the word
T IS doubtful, therefore, if any of the millions of Gump fans,
will notice any change in this strip, as time goes on, unless rer-
haps the fact the author's death
break the magio spell.
Our prediction is there will
Irawings nor in the humor and
Rim and Min and the rest of.them might go on forever, as far
as their proper mechanical perpetuation is concerned.
It is when public favor starts to decline, that the man who
created the Gumps will be missed. Smith understood the crea
tions of his own imagination as no one else did of could. He not
only made them develop and grow, he knew instinctively when
they should change, or a new interest should be brought in.
We doubt if a ghost can he found for that quality. For it was
genius, ami genius is rare.
Grace Moore of
Opera Fame III
HOLLYWOOD. Calif,, Oct. 33 (API
Suffering from a severe cold, Orace
Mcore, the opera singer, was confined
in Cedars of Lebannon hospital to
iy.
Although 111 last night, the star
went through with a weekly radio
broad, ast, and then entered the
hospital.
the P. -T. A.
the delegate, to trie tatcori'
of note, there will be important
an organization more needed,
to the proper education of the
in their formative years, with
them better, more discerning,
seems to the present writer, he
that matter thm hope of the civil-
himself, clearly and logically,
conversation.
humor; there was Bn entire
hasn't been filled, and in this
Stress, will go on.
and when he could no longer
and plot. But as time went on,
grew, he delegated ' more and
routine to others; while he en
middle age are wont to do.
being known should somehow
be no discernible change in the
human interest, and Gump and
Roseburg Pastor's
Residence Burns
ROSKBURO, Oct. 32. (AP)
Fire j
of undetermined origin early this
morning totally destroyed the home
of Ret. A. J Starmer, South Metho
dist minister, In Miller's addition to
Roseburg. Nearly all of the furnlah-
MIR were also hnrned Thr family
was absent from home and nn estl-
mat. of um low was oBtainablfc
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M D.
signed letters pertaining to personal health .nd Hygiene not to disease
diagnosis or treatment win he answered ny Ur. Brady If a stamped self-addressed
envelope Is enclosed Letters should b. brief and written In ink
Owing ro the large number of letters received only a (ew can be answered
No reply ran be made to queue, not conforming to instructions. Address ur
William Brady, tift El Csmlno. Beverly Hills. I'al.'
IIVPERSENSlTIVF.NB
It Is well known that certain Indi
viduals are hypersensltlv. to specific
substances, such as egg white. a
heir, goose festh-
rs, strawberry,
shellfish, nuts,
and if they In
hsle or Ingest the
slightest q u a n
tlty of the spe
cific s u bstanc.
they nro likely to
suffer an attack
of hives, or asth
ma, or ecsema, or
migraine.
This peculiar
h y persensltlvlty
seems to run In
families, though the manifestations I
in me cnild may not be the some
as those in the parent's history. For
instance, the parent may hove been
subject to migraine and th child
may bo subject to eczema: nor la the
specific cause of the reaction neces
sarily the same. Only the peculiarity
or tenoency is innerlted. Doctors
have a name for It, of course. Thev
can it aiiargy. just an old medical
custom, applying an Imposing name
to anything we don't understand
clearly ourselves. Keeps patients from
asking too many embarrasstn ouea
tlons. , Ancient tradition of digni
fied silence translated Into twentieth
century bla-bla.
Well, anyway, here's another medi
cal woman stepping up front to -re
port three cases of cataract aseo-l
ated with allergy. Dr. Ruby K. Dan
iel, Fellow In Opthalmology, describes
her observation of cataracts In two
girls each 17 yenra of ago and a man
35 years of age. One of the glrla
sought treatment for extensive ec
zema and complained of poor vision.
Her mother had been subject to hay
fever, her father had been subject
to vasomotor rhinitis (otherwise
known as hyperesthetic rhinitis) and
a grandmother had been abject to
eczema. The girl had mild eczema
as a baby and at four a rather severe
dermatitis occurred when she han
dled a dyed Easter egg. this derma
titis or scut eczema affecting the
lining of her eyelids and covering of
the eyeballs. From six to 13 she
had had frequent hives. At about
the age of 16 ehe noticed dimness of
vision. Now at 17 she haa cataracts
and can Just count fingers with her
right eye and distinguish movements
of objects with her left.
Dr. Daniel chose a great date In
medical history for her birth the
year I entered tho medical profession.
And you all know I'm Just a young
chap trying to keep five or ten y?ars
ahead of the march of medicine. I
mention thl. to encourage young
women who wonder whether medicine
offers any sort of career for a girl
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
1 NEW YORK, Oct. aa. Iowa, from
either modesty or paucity, for many
years seemed to have the scantiest
supply of figures
In the world of
art and litera
ture. At the Now
York teas, one
met celeb rltles
from every state
In the union, but
aomehow seldom
any from Iowa.
From surface
indications ahout
all that Iowa
could brag about
artlatlcally was
Ruth 8 u c k o w.
with her fine tales of homely Iowa
life and that artist, whose name
escapes me, who haa made at least a
success destlme and scenes from
this same I.wa milieu.
But lately Iowa has com. to the
artistic forefront with a bang. Fore
most is th. lowan. Darryl F. Z
nuck, whose tremendous conceptions
In movies havs bestowed a aalary ot
aaso.ooo a year. Also MscKlnlay Kan
tor In the field of novel and ahort
story and poems of Civil War.
Many regard hie "The Voice ot
Bugle Ann" as the most sublime
dog story. Then there Is Kent Taylor,
whose recent prominence as a lead
lug man In tho cinema makes him
somewhat a figure in that line. In
cidentally, Indiana la usually fore
most at celebrity gstherlngs.
Monta Bell, the director,
who has
been over In London trying to see
Just what a right-handed boy could
do In a left-handed town, also turn
ing out a movie script called "War"
mastered the monocle while there.
And determined to face the hoot
by sporting It upon his return. But
coming up the bay his nerve desert
ed and he went to the rail, opened
his eye and' let It plop Into the sea.
Double t a x e a probably lost to
America the most expert of the el
nema monocllsts George Arllss. The
best reports are he will remain in
England, make one more picture por
traying the life of Samuel Pepya.
ascend to the knighthood and re
tire. He has an annuity paying $19.
000 a year.
The first monocle I ever saw was
worn by Arils, when he was tour
ing aa leading man with Mrs Fiske.
I cornered him for an interview- at
a hotel brenkfajit table In Cincuv
nati. At intervals as he talked he
removed the disss, revealing an eve
permanently stretched into a gro-
i teque owlish stare. I rather hopefl
(t woud drop into his oatmeal o
t could quote Charlie RuascIPs fa
mous line about his spectacles. Sain
Russell : "They took like the glass
In a hen-house window."
Bert on Braley recently broke his
own record by selling some verse.
for s very Ttlr price, on thetr 3fth :
trip throne. h the malls The miga- t
sine which bought them bad. in
I .w
1
tB AST) CATARACT
In the discussion of Dr. Daniel's
report. Dr. Ulysses Moore, distinguish
ed pediatrician and nutrition auth
ority of Oregon medical school, said
that he himself might soon be a can
didate for a oataract operation but
for some scratch (skin) tests made
on him by an allergic minded col
league. These testa showed h. is
sensitive to a number of foods. But
although he likes tuna fish and beef
steak, he Is sure to have conjunctiv
itis next dsy if he eats even a little
of either, and If he continue, to
eat the offending foods for three day.
he develops a new corneal ulcer. For
ten years more than 20 per cent of
his tune was lost because of undlsg-
nosed allergy Involving the eye. Many
his trouble.
QUESTION!? AND ANSWERS
What, Wheat to Eat?
Our feed store evidently caters to
many of your readers. They do not
consider a customer queer If he asks
for plain wheat. They have It, all
cleaned and In any quentlty from a
pound to a tmshel. Alao they have
cracked whole wheat If you do not
care to bother cracking It yourself.
A. M.)
Answer Thank you. I believe the
Increasing demand for plain wh
Is waking up the farmers, millers,
seed and feed store people. I have a
monograph here "Wheat to Eat," for
any reader who asks for it and In
closes 3-cent stamped envelope t-edr-
Inc his. address. It tells the food
value of plain wheat and givea tried
recipes for Its use,
on Honor Roll.
I. am 16 and a heavy cigarette
smoker, Mother thinks the habit will
shorten my life. I am 69 Inches tll
and on the honor roll in school. Whflt
should I weigh?,, Should I quit smok
ing? (B. S. W.)
Answer 140 pounds. Better have
advice of psychiatrist about your
mental condition. I agree with
mother.
Windows HvYefct.
Why do our windows sweat or steam
so that we can't see out of them.
when the furnace is going, while our
neighbor with the same kind cf fur
nace, haano such trouble? We heat
to 70 or sometimes a little mors.
(Mrs. C. I.
Answer Your walla are not well
Insulated, that Is, not enough air
apace and ventilation between outer
and Inner walls. Try heating to 67
only, and evaporating more water In
the house.
(Copyright, 1935, John P. Dllle, Co.)
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should tend letter direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. D.. 206 El
Cnmlno. Beverly Hill
Illls, C
Cal.
the course of the five years the
poems had been traveling, rejected
the same verse six times. It Is true
postage ate up about half the price,
but postage is genersl overhead In
the poet's trade, and is charged, not
to Individual manuscripts, but to
general expenses. Thomas Burke sent
a poem to London Punch now and
then for eight years. Finally It was
printed. .
One of Manhattan's notable sum
mer visitors used to bo Henry Wat
terson. the Louisville editor. He
enmo to town for his holiday when
the metropolis was hottest and
emptiest. In the cool of the evening
he would foregaher at the Lambs
with cronies and Marse Henry would
Insist upon fashioning hla own ver
sion of tho delectable and cooling
anodyne called the Julep, bringing
for the occasion choice sprigs from
his Kentucky mint bed. Wilson
Lackaye usually managed to be In
town, and when they started yarn
ing no listener went home until
dawn.
Jsmes Montgomery Flogg was the
leader in the aummer vogue of going
necktleless. But he always carried a
spare lue to the hoity-toity rule
In the splffy spires where most
m.gaslne offices are. Those without
ties were banned from elevators.
Flagg had a hook-on atrocity of .
Gay 00 vintage for auch exigencies.
For hla years and he's no Baby
LeRoy Flagg Is the most Indus
trious artist of his day. Asldo from
hi. enormous magszine output, he
is a judge at practically every beauty
contest and never mlssea a party.
His boon companions In relaxation
are Jeff Machamer and Ham Fisher.
Chaplinanla: Near the Warwick a
motorist awaiting the green light
rested his arm on the window. His
hand held a fat. freshly lit Vigar.
a num. stepped out, plucked the
cigar . and aauntered off, puffing
nonchalantly.
(Copyright, lf35. McNaught Syndl
- cate)
WASHINGTON, Oct, 33. (AP A
program of part time employment
which will provide Jobs as play
ground dlrectora, recreational lead
ers, and atudent of various public
records for P4.000 young people was
announced, today by Aubrey Wil
liams, director of the national youth
administration.
No estimate was made of the cost
of the activities, which will be fi
nanced from the $37,000,000 work
relief allotment to the youth ad
ministration. Those employed will
be between tha aeea of 16 and 34
The community development and
recreational leadership program.)
largest of the activities, will emoy
54.000 young people 'as leaders nd
istants in the establishment, or- I
gamratlon and conduct of recrea- j
ttonal community activities.'
I
would be in-
William said work
eluded in part;
pl.y.roun.is. -om-
munitv house, camps and athletic
fields.
Comment
on the
Day's News
Br FRANK JENKINS
FIFTY - TWO nations, speaking
through the general committee
of the league, aay to Mussolini:
"fltop making war and make peace,
or we'll QUIT BUYINO what you
have to sell. In addition, we'll refuse
to sell you" key products necessary
for the manufacture of war materials.
"We'll give you eleven days to make
up your mind aa to what you're go
ing to do.' -
IT IS estimated that these 63 nations
buy 70 per cent of Italy's ex
ports. It takes money to wage wars,
snd money can be obtained only by
selling whatever the nation at war
I nM j- Ml)
Unless all the materials necessary
for the manufacture of war muni
tions are possessed at home, the na
tion at war must obtain them from
abroad. Italy doesn't possess all these
materials.
So, you see, the league ultimatum
has large and sharp teeth.
TPHTS question now arises:
Why was not this ultimatum.
, whlcn apparently has teeth In It. not
delivered to Mussolini SOONER be
fore war was actually begun and
thousands of lives lost?
ANSWERS to that question can not
be given with positive assurance,
but they can be surmised. Here are
some surmises, based upon news de
velopments of the past couple of
weeks;
It has not been known where
France would finally line up with
Great Britain or with Italy. Britain
had to know what France would do
before she could put the screws, eco
nomic or otherwise, to Italy.
France, apparently, has chosen the
side of Britain. Hence the ultimatum
to Italy.
FRANCE sat on the fence as long
as possible. Mussolini, It is as
serted by responsible correspondents,
offered a formal military alliance to
France, which the French considered.
The reason they did not accept It
was FEAR OF GERMANY, and be
lief that Britain would be a more
powerful protector against the Ger
man menace than Italy would be. It
Is to be presumed that they have
exacted from Britain a promise to
come to the aid of France If Germany
strikes.
It was these negotiations back and
forth that held up the boycott ulti
matum to Italy.
(What I. here said, please remem
ber. Is bssed upon surmise and not
upon knowledge. In these matters,
those of us outside the Inner diplo
matic circles can only put two and
two together and draw dedueXons
from the result).
THE point Is this:
If the lesgtve can stop the warJ
between Italy and Ethiopia now. It
could have prevented it from begin
ning. But It couldn't act until Its
more powerful membera decided
where their own SELF INTEREST
lies.
Their obligations tinder the league
agreement meant NOTHING, as we
ssw In the esse of Manchuria. Their
own self Interest mean EVERY
THING. This writer, for on.. Is thsnkful
that th. United States Is not a mem
ber of the league.
(Continued from page One)
dff-the-record by officials Is that
such a step would accomplish noth
ing, that It Is better for an unsatis
factory status quo to continue.
It will be denied, but every In
sider there knows thts explanation
la a truthful excuse to cover a much
better, political reason. The strate
gists really felt that retraction of
recognition would be a blanket con
fession of error. The indications are
that they may continue to hold that
view until after the next election.
Before recognition, the state de
partment expected a $50,000,000 an
nual American export trade out ol
the deal. That waa the official in
side figure. All It actually got was
a promise to purchase $30 ooo.OOO.
This represents only $15,000,000 more
than export before recognition.
But what hurt worse was the mis
understanding on debts. In the rec-
osnttlon discussions. President Roose
velt promised trade credit for set
tlement of the $700,000,000 Ameri
can debt and damage claims.
This government offered to re
duce the els 1 ma to about $300 000 000
and extend $100.000 000 of credits.
ft j,, utvinoff de
HOO OOO OOO in cash and an
aioooooooo in credits.
Our diplomats considered Utvln-
off.t KttUxiar h Aonhrnlm mtainteT-
pretatlon of the president's offer. ;
f!,e hlkxm bw, th9
ssme color .
)t rKn lnrf
Th. Is'.e.u subtl. b;ln trust trial ,
balloon la supposed to be a book by
David Cushman Coyle. The new
deal connection with It la being
traced by the fact that Coyle left
th resettlement board of review
(Tugwell) only a week ago; appar
ently because his book was coming
out November 1. Previously he had
served In a brain trusting opacity
with the WPA planning board (Hop
kins) and the public works planning
board (Ickes).
Coyle advocates spending such as
no one ever heard of before. He sug
gests that $50,000,000,000 should be
disbursed by the government next
year and an equal amount for the
next few years. He wants the money
to go only for services snd not for
public works, even self-liquidating
ones. He does not want to Inflate
to get the money. He would raise
it by Income taxes.
He should be a big help to Mr.
Morgenthau, who has been wonder
ing how he can get even a aub
stanttal part of $4,000,000,000 out ol
any kind of taxes during the next
two years.
Note Mr. Coyle seems to trip hlm-
elf by disclosing that the total ns-
tlonal Income In 1033 was 46,000. -
000.000. If confiscated entirely by I
the government, It would have been
$5,000,000,000 short of Mr. Coyle'
aspirations. You may be aure that
the bigwigs of the new deal have
nothing like this In mind. Appar
ently the balloonlsh aspects of the
book are based on the expestatlons
that no one will object to Mr. Roos'
velt spending $4,000,000,000
reading Mr. Coyle.
after
It Is understood, however, thst Mr.
Coyle Is willing to put his theory
Into practice by spending all the
proceeds of the book and any other
money he may have for any ser
vices, however useless. You msy ap
ply to him.
FARfraiEF
OF
Seeking relief under the provis
ions of the Frazler-Lemke farm act.
a hearing was held today before
Conciliation Commissioner George B.
Dean, in an effort to reach an agree
ment with the creditors of Edwin
P. Hughes, Medford district farmer.
Conciliation Commissioner Dean is
acting under orders of the United
States federay district court, to whom
he will report his findings. The hear
ing Is being held In the county
court.
Commissioner Dean said that the
purpose of the hearing waa to reach
an agreement with the creditors II
possible whereby Hughes would be
able to retain possession of his farm
of 72 acres near this city.
The farm was foreclosed on a year
ago by the Federal Land Bank ot
Spokane. Wash,, chief creditor, for
$4200.03.
GEORflLLYJl
PASSES IN HILT
George Harry Mosley Holly ageo
13, and stepson of Mr. and Mrs
George R. Holly, passed away sud
denly at the family home at Hilt.
Calif.. Saturday evening from pneu
monia. He was born in Colorado. Febru
ary 22. 1922. and had lived at Hilt
for the past six months, where he
attended public school. Previous to
this he had lived In southern Ore
gon, spending about eight years at
Ashland.
He leaves to mourn his depar
ture, besides the parents, three halt
sisters. Margaret, Dorothy and Ham.
three half brothers. Raymond. Albert,
and Joseph, all of Hilt. Cal. He auo
leaves h 1 a grand -paren ts, Mr. and
Mrs. H. Mackay of Medford, Oregon.
Funeral services will be held at the
Perl Funeral Home at 3:00 o'clock.
Rev. Joseph Knotts officiating.
4
Sophie Tucker in
Organizing Role
HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Oct. 33.
(AP)-Sophie Tucker, "the last ot
redhot mamas," toured Hollywood
today looking for people over 40
years of age.
Sophie, who "admitted" she was
48. wants to form a "Life Begins at
40 Club" out here. She said she
organlfed them In New York. Cleve
land. Boston, St. Louis and Chicago.
"There's no dues. Just parties." i
she explained.
ME AM LAND
V AWU'.UUlUUIi..""
Mt7
"Wow
jfi - -
...
fpltis tax
Ladies - -
L.
nnTinni fei 1 11 BL 3 a. X 1
Flight 'o Time
Med ford and ' Jackkon Count
Mstury from rhe rile, ur the
Mall Tribune 10 and tu Year
Ago).
TEN VKARS AGO TOUAV
Oetober 2, 19?5
(It was Thursday)
J. C. Carle Is assigned as Southern
Pacific station agent here.
F, C. Dlllard Is named engineer
charge of the construction of the
new Medford water system.
Hindu occult and seer Is ordered
by the police to make himself
scarce.
I. It. (Ike) Patterson of Marlon
county announces he win be a Re
publican candtate for governor.
In a practice game against the
regulars, Robert Hammond Jr.. as
tounds Coach Calllson by making a
touchdown. Young Hammond is full
back for the scrubs.
League of Nations orders the Bal
kan war to stop. Neither Greece nor
Bulgaria accede.
Nation thrilled by reports of 'huj?e
fortunes made In Florida real es
tate. TUKS'TY VKAR XflCi TOIIW
October 22. 101.1
j Russians check German drive on
I Rlea: Allied fleet bombards Bulcarlan
j coast.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Theirolf rpturn
from a month's visit In Kansas.
Miss Helen Dahl Is hostess to the
Wednesday Auction club.
Grizzly Hiking club postpones trip
to Braden mine planned for Sunday,
on account of Vain.
Edison Mazda lamp globes Intro
duced to observe discovery of the
electric light globe.
Republican county chairman "mor
tifies the editor." by charging aha
Democratic party deceives the work
era and the tillers."
FAREWELL PARTY FOR
. I MTEOD -FAMILIES
MrLEOD, Oct. 23. CSpl.) About
7ft neighbors and friends of the
Hoag and Coburn familiea met at
Sunset on the Rogue Sunday where
they enjoyed a community dinner
in honor of these two families who
will this week be leaving the com
munity. The afternoon was lyipplly spent
in active games and visiting and
wishing the departing friends a suc
cessful future. Mr. and Mrs. Cobttm
and family expect to make their
home In Washington, where Mr.
Coburn has secured employment.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoag will make then
home at Corvallis with thrlr son,
Leo. who la a student at O. S, C.
They expect to return next summer.
HENDERSON, FOE OF WAR,
SUCCUMBS . IN LONDON
LONDON, Oct. 22. (AP) Arthur
Henderson. Implacable foe of war,
died without knowing his great '
dream of world peace had been shat
tered by the boom of guns In East
Africa.
Attaches of the West End Nursing
Home, where the president of the
world disarmament conference died
last night, disclosed today that Hen
derson whose Indefatigable crusade
for peace was Inspired by the death
bf his eldest son In the World War
had not 'seen a newspaper for six
weeks.
PLANNING
A HOME?
PHONE ONE
BIG PINES
LUMBER CO.
BALLROOM
ff USE OUiO
if COMPLETE j
SERVICE J)
WEDNESDAY
OCTOBER 23rd
' v?&:-zl ".-.II w
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