FXGTi fourteen
MEDFOTtD MATL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1935.
Medford-Tribune
"EverroB to Hoatbeni Or.ana
Bead, lb. ttU Trinima"
Dallj Eicapt Saturdaj.
Publlahed by
JIEDKURD PBINTINO CO.
U-17-: N. ir St Phooa a.
ROBERT W. UHU BJItor.
Ad lndap.nd.ot N.wapapar.
Cutared Mcond-cl.aa oi.tl.r at Mad.
Jord. Oreon. under Acl of U.rcb t. ml
SUBSCRIPTION BATE!
Br Mill In dmc:
Daitr. on. !!?
Duly, ! monthn !
DHy. ono montb ..........
y Carrier. In Advanw Madford. A ah.
l.nJ. Jacaiillla, C'"''"..'
Pboanlx, TaUnt. O.ld Hill Jid 0"
D.llj. ona r.ar "!;V
Dally. li monlhe
Dally, ona month
All tartna. caan ID ad.anea.
Olrlrlal Papar of tho City of U'dford.
OlflclaJ PP of Jntkaoo Coiioiy.
MKJIHKK OV THE ASSOCIATE," PKtBS
Red. In, Full Laacd lr Berilco.
Tna Aooltd Pr.i. M axclualv.ly on-
titlad to too uit for publication of All
nW0 Oiap.icn.. sr.
wlaa cradlta.l In thla paper, and alao
the local niai pupn.u...
All Mrhta for publication of apaotal
dlspatcnaa neraio ' "
MCMHER OS1 UNITED PRESS
MEMBER Or AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
Advartl.lna Rpreeentetlee
u n unnrvnn JL COMPANY
Offlcea In Naw Vork. Chicago Detroit
San rranciaoo, iib-'
Portlaod.
MEMBER
ON
Ye Smudge Pot
I Bj Arthur I'erry.
Hallowe'en la history. A numbtr
ct Innocent pranks were perpretrated
and the guilty goblins grabbed.
T t. nniAnrwl IlnfO. alUmnUS
will call upon the metropolitan
snoru serine wno aavocawa ijuuiiu.
for 'Old Oregon teams, wno ;nM
uiH trm-TaKs in southern California
They plan to confer with him. pro
and con, upon nis pian, srra ni"
they do not find him: out to i-yncii.
--
a vufahiirtT P nirl claims she
hitch-hiked 3758 miles to greet Oln-
n-.0j.ra film niiMn. In HollVWOOd.
She would not walk that many feet
to greet ciarie uanie.
Old-fashioned Ideas about living
within your income arent very popu
lar these days, so perhaps It would
be better to say nothing about them.
(Pendleton East Oregonlan)
Wherein Journalism grows fearlessly
evasive, but nice about It.
The esteemed Bend Bulletin learn
edly dtneuasca the tendency to de
scribe college football players as "the
Klda." It la arued that a pair ot
tflckles welshing a quarter of a ton
are not ';klds." The paper further
point out: "Purlsttcaiiy a Kid is
a youthful goat." and argues if this
volution of the language continues,
In due course of time, the Old Folk
seeking the 200 per month pension
are apt to be known aa the "Towns
end Kids." In thla neck of the woods,
when a political war la climaxed
with a particularly dumb bit of fe
lonious cuasedness. it has been more
or lens of a custom to gild the crim
inality by stating "It wss boys
play." There has also been consider
able talke of late about "the boys In
the legislature getting down to busi
ness." This la also giving the male
Juveniles the worst of it. Neverthe
less, there Is aa much sense In calling
a gridiron hero a "kid" as a full
grown politician a "boy."
IflATB I,ADV SrKAKS W.
(Burnt Chimney (YY. Vn.) Clnrton)
LOftT My husband. Answers to
moat any name. I called him
everything before our Repara
tion. He Is bald -bended, short,
fat and dumb; truo American
type of the "model" huaband.
Finders Keeper. Lucy WillcoJt.
The weather continues to cauae
eHlwna to wonder where they hid
their overcoats laat aprlng. and why
they ptild no attention to the Bill
Bolger blanket aale laat August.
The C. Woods scales are still com
mitting perjury In a manner hlRhly
satisfactory to the womenfolks.
It or ton looks like the state plan
ning board should start planning
to do no more planning.
LOfl ANOELES. Oct. 30. (AP)
John Swanaon. 63, known wherever
(Told waa panned in the Northwest,
and who made a fabulous fortune
In the Klondike, died here yesterday
In poverty. (Proas Dispatch) Short
sermon on "horse and bugjrv" thrift-.
A number of Toal-Otl JohnnV
strrlnilturtAtF. with pip that they
did raise, are (tettlntt ready to kill
and devour them.
rnNm:NrY ripnt
Twelve cents altogether. Twelve
cents tax on a gallon of KsoHne for
whlh the filling station man gM
thirteen cents twenty-five cents a
gallon all told
Irate rltlrens storm the hoards and
howl when a sale tax of two or
three per cent la proposed. But here
Is a sales tax ot almost one hun
dred per cent. (Colllfrs.)
Owing to the Hflcteiu-y of the po
lice, and the rain, the HHllowe'en
devastation last nipht was the lowest
In years. The elf that have const. t
ently smeared the Bert Orr windows
With soap for yearn, failed to show
Up due to (ear of pneumonia and
the police. Many of the Older Girl
were irate and Irked, because sprites
spread parafln on their door screens.
The only way to get rid of the
parafln la to throw the screen door
away.
The strife police urge youngln'i
going o the football gvme In K
Palls, to travel ao they can see the
game there, and get back to see the
next one here. They report It Is
long way to the bottom of the can
yona. lining the mountain.
t'se Mall Tribune want ads.
The Truth About Italy
FRANK SDrOXDS h probably the best posted man- In the
United States on foreign affairs. What he writes concern
ing the European situation comes as near being "official", as
anything can be.
In the current Atlantic is an article by Simonds entitled
"Benito Africanus what the Italian adventure really means."
Those who want the truth about the situation in Europe at the
present time should read it. Interestingly written as all Simonds
articles are, it is also very enlightening. '
MUSSOLINI, in Simonds' opinion, is not an Italian. Huey
Long but a would-be Napoleon. He is neither a fakir nor
a bluff. He has deliberately engaged in a war of conquest, to
gain security for Italy on one hand, greater glory and power for
himself on the other. The Italian adventure in E'h'P'a is ex
actly similar to the Japanese in Manchuria, a militaristic and
imperialistic excursion against a weaker people,' to get more
land, more raw materials and eventually more national wealth.
England sidestepped the Japanese challenge because Bri
tain's interests in that section of the world are relatively slight
and remote. She didn't sidestep the. Italian challenge she
couldn't for it 1b a direct threat to the integrity of the British
empire, but Simonds strongly intimates she took decisive action
too late and then fell back on economic sanctions through tha
League, instead of as at Fashoda and the Golden Horn, opposing
such threats with force.
BUT the most interesting feature of the Simonds article is the
reason given for England falling back on the League instead
of taking firm and aggressive action herself. According to
Simonds, the British fleet is not strong enough to keep open
the line of communications from Gibraltar to Suez, nor could
the Sudan be defended against Italian forces in Libya and
Eritria, and finally the important British naval and military
base at Malta could not be defended against the present mobil
ized Italian air force.
THIS is astounding information, particularly to people in this
country who have assumed all along that Great Britain
could blow Italy out of tho water any time she desired, and
blockade her torts tighter than a drum, 2-4 hours after a declara
tion of war.
It is hard to believe, but still it is harder to believe that Mr.
Simonds doesn't know'what he is talking about.
A ND if this is true, then of course, recent peace talk reported
from Rome must be a lot of apple sauce, except of course
as concerns a victorious peace such as Mussolini must have, to
give Italy her place in the sun, and himself the glory and secur
ity, of a Benito Africanus at home.
In other words, as far as H Duce is concerned this war is no
shnm battle, no dramatio taur de force to divert the Italian
people from their troubles, during a brief period of domestic
crisis, but a genuine war of conquest, for the specific purpose
of creating another Roman Empire, and Mussolini is not only
ready to fight England but the world, to achieve his goal and
realize what he regards as the Italian national destiny.
Another Napoleon therefore is right! And unless a miracle
happens, another European war, as certain eventually, as the
sun rising over Roxy Anne toirforrow.
INCIDENTALLY the Simonds article again confirms the view
flint aa thai VArt Ta nntc nnctitnt1 tl,A T,nnma nf Vartrtne
- " "-"B
is powerless to prevent war, until it is ready to wage war to
enforce peace. He lists Italy, Japan and Germany, as three na
tions, acutely needing more land and more wealth, and voluntar
ily yielding to dictatorships and militarism to get them in other
words deliberately choosing war in preference to accepting
peace and the poverty and national inferiority such a choice
imposes.
Simonds, of course, is not omniscent. Like any other human,
he may be mistaken, and future events may prove him wrong.
We have no Delphian oracles in the present world confusion.
But the burden of proof certainly rests upon those who would
dispute, the views of a man of his standing, knowledge and keeu
insight into international polities, and world conditions, based
upon study and personal contacts abroad for the past twenty
five years.
For the sake of world peace we hope he is wrong; but judg
ing the future by the past, the chances arc he isn't,
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M D.
aimed letter pertaining to penonai Health nd nyciene not lo dlneaw
dugnoau or treatment will be aumered ay Ur. Brad; II a .tamped aeir-ad-
arewed envelope la encloied Letter! mould tw brie! and antten In Ink
Owing to the lane number ol letter rereited only a tew can be an.wereit
No reply can be made to queries not ainiormlng to Initrncttona. Addreaa Dr
William Brady, m El Camlno. Beverly UlUa. Cai.
A WHEAT BIX I N EVERT ITOMT!
m
Physician and nutrition authorities
of a generation ago, whoae ideas are
stlu current among the laity, aaeumed
that refined
white lour fair
ly r a p r e seated
wheat and con
stituted an ade
quits staff of
life. Only the
other day an ag
gregation of old
tlmera purport-'
lng to tell the
public what's
what and what
isn't officially
"accepted" t b I a
oad statement In
reference to the queatlon:
"White bread la . , . whole
some . . . nutritious ... Its avoid
ance for fear of any harmful con
sequences or the fear that It Is
the cause of any dlseawd condi
tion when properly need In the j
, normal diet, is entirely without
scientific foundation."
I think we doctor regard aa "scien
tific" those ideae which coincide with
our own and reject as without auch
foundation any new Ideas which we
do not get or ideas which we reluct
to acknowledge for one reason or en
other. The eldera conceived their opinions
and formulated them long before the
role of vitamins wss known. It la
true that white bread Is practically
equivalent to bread made of whole
wheat meal In calorie or fuel vahie.
In the balanced proportions of fat,
protein and carbohydrate material, In
taste (at least for many persons). As
a white bread eater I agree it Is
wholesome and nutritious. But frank
ly we must admit that It la Inferior
to whole wheat bread in nutrition.
One authority who hss definitely
proved this by teste on men under
control ft Hlndhede. No physiologist
nutrition chemist or expert In
Arrierloa can successfully controvert
his observation. Indeed, no one hero
has made any actual tests to sub
stantiate the assumption that white
bread ta as adequate as whole wheat
meal bread.
Prof. H. C. Sliennan, one of the
foremost nutrition authorities in this
country, makea this remark in bis
book "Chemistry of rood and Nutri
tion" (Macmillan. New York).
"In general it la orily when too
larire a proportion of the needed
calories are taken in the form of
artificially refined foods that
there Is danger of a deficiency of
vitamin B; but. since artificially
refined foods are so commonly
and abundantly used by people of
all countries, the vitamin B
value of a food may be of prac
tical interest, though probably
lees Important than Is the vita-
-min A, vitamin C or vitamin O
value.
' In many homes these days bread Is
the mainstay and too often It is not
properly supplemented with milk.
butter. e(?gs or cheese, as ALL physi
ologlsts and nutrition authorities
agree It must be If the needs of the
body are to be met.
Referring to Sherman's view, if
bread is the mainstay In the diet, and
white bread is used from habit, choice
or availability, then artificially refin
ed food supplies the greater propor
tion of the calories in the diet, and a
vitamin B shortage is inevitable.
In ordinary cooking, where the
water In which the vegetables, cer
ealsor fruits are cooked Is drained off
and thrown away, a considerable part
of the vitamin B in these foods la
discarded.
It Is my own belief that a large
part of the population, t respective of
economic status, suffers from a par
tial deficiency of vitamins, particu
larly B. O and A. Tills la only one
good reason why there should be a
wheat bin in every kitchen and a
suitable mill or grinder for prepar
ing meal or flour as It Is used from
day to day.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Damp.
Does sleeping In a room full of
damp clothes have any effect on
healh? (K. J. E.)
Answer The dampness la rather
beneficial to health. Most sleeping
rooms which are artificially heated
are too dry for health.
Exercise for Arches.
Can you suggest an exercise to
strengthen weak arches? I have what
our doctor calls "pronated" feet. He
saya my arches are weak, but not
flat. (MIm L. H.)
A nawer S ta nd with bare feet
touching at great toes and heels an
inch apart. Boll ankles alowly out
ward so that soles face each other,
and at same time curl toes down and
under with a vigorous pull. Then
relax, extend toes or spread and pull
them back In the opposite way with
an equally vigorous pull. Repeat
this from 10 to 50 times, night and
morning. - Walking barefoot or in
stocking feet on tip toes, always toe-,
lng In, is fine exercise for weak an
kles ("pronated feet") which la the
functional or potential stage of Hat
feet. Oenemlly the young person
with pronated feet (the ankles turn
in too much) needs general physical
up-bulldlng and usually advice or
treatment by the family physician.
(Copyright, 1935, John Tt DM Co.)
Comment
on the
Day's News
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William nrarty. M. D., 265 El
Camlno. Beverly mils. Cal.
gentle soul whom England looked up
on as America's foremost wit. And
American friends forgot.
Barney Oallant, after 15 years of
catering caper to uptown stayouts ex
ploring Oreonwlch Village, la again
salaaming patrons In the sparkling
new cafe belt, spreading from Fifth
avenue in the Fabulous 50's. Barney
expected permanently to retire when
he gave his Village auberage to hie
headwalter. but after a year of knock
ing around tho world, came back, saw
the dawning of another night club
era, and went scampering over the
horizon to greet It.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By 0.0. Mclntyre
3v
- , tlWMj
NEW YORK. Nov. 1. Thoughts
while strolling: Tht ladles do not
wear firs .he days they fairly drip
them. All the
I- current cancers,
j even Astal-e.
i could learn
something of
grace from Nick
Long. Jr. Add
cvirloea: A menu
without the word
'-al,f.ling.-' What
ha became of A
C. Blumenthal?
Nobod y can
whine up their
voice like Una
M e r k e J. Beet
non-profesnlonai dancer; Esmond
O'Brien. Frank Case's name for a
derby: A hard hat. Few establish
ment maintain the dignity of Tif
fany's. Wonder If Jed Kilev known
Ned Rllev? Two pea in pod .
Frank Craven and John Oolden.
U-ok alike: Monta Bell and Onry
Ccper Cole porter ridtn a frh
popularity. Dance-a-Jig word: Paral
lelaplpedon. Now we hare to no
through the night of Hauptmaiin'e
electrocution. Grandest name of all
football stars Ted Coy. Von know so
much what are skittle without
looking it up?
Prk avenue aartoTlal: Theodor
and hla mornln oo.it, lapel rvey and
tol iif ruled trousers. The drug store
ahere the clerks change to tuedoe
at sundown. The apartment home
where elevator operators m-ear buck
led knee breeches and th starter a
drum majors high fur hat.
ld iVilomon mincing out of the
frherry-Nerherland In h! mteion y.
And Dwigat riske ivaduig (or rasper
hour soloing. Impossible portraits:
Irene Bordonl without bangs. That
sunny knoll opposle the Plana. Tliat's
what I need. To sit on a knoll and
get sun-glinted.
I came from the Winter Oaiden a
went nteht in the depths of a dolor.
A favorite rowdy comedian was on
the bill but they hadn't done high
by him. I refer to Herb Williams.
He was shorn of his piano act. the
one where he throws out anchors,
draws glasses of beer from under
neath, looks into the distance with
hand-shadowed eyes and utters those
curdling cries. And that climax when
he whangs the keyboard with an uce
and the oat hops out and ambles
across the stage. That act should
never die.
An authoritative story of Frltzl
Scheff and her most popular song,
"kiss Me Again." As all know, the
song woe written by Victor Herbert
especially for her. Several days be
fore the premiere he played it over
and she did not care for it. A tem
peramental cyclone resulted. She
thought the range too great. He was
adamant. Oscar Hammerateln. see
ing a postponed opening, suggested
compromise. She would ilng it the
first night and if it did not click It
would be tossed out. Petulantly she
agreed. The rest is history. She sang
the song and stopped the show for 13
minutes. After many encore the
audience yelled for Herbert and. tak
ing FrltsM'a hand, he advanced to the
footlights. When quiet came, the
actress looked tip coyly at her com
poser and cooed "Kiss me ?3inl" He
did. and they were fast friends until
his passing.
(Copyripht. 1935. McNaught
Syndicate.)
By FRANK JENKINS
O rob ABLY you noted thla dis-
A patch :
"Communist Russia, foe of Fascism,
joined with France and England to
day in the economic punishment of
Fascist Italy for Its Invasion of Ethi
opia, notifying Geneva (seat of the
League of Nations) of it readiness
to Impose an embargo on export of
key products to Italy and giving Its
pledge to abide by the buy-nothing
from Italy boycott.
ITALY is governed by one kind of
dictator. Russia is governed by
another kind. These dictators, evi
dently, haven't much confidence In
each other,
HERB la an interesting fact:
Germany 1 ruled by a dictator
(Hitler). Rtissia la ruled by a dic
tator (Stalin). Italy la ruled by a
dictator (Mussolini). Turkey la ruled
by a dictator '(Kemal Pasha). Aus
tria la practically ruled by a dictator
(Prince von Stahrenburg). Among
the great powers, only the United
States, England and France maintain
a democratic form of government.
Apparently the world war. even
with our help, didn't do much to
ward making the world safe for dem
ocracy.
FARMERS of 48 states, speaking
through & national referendum
vote 366.643 to 67,511, or more than
five to one. in favor of continuation
during 1836 of the corn-hog control
program.
In Oregon, the vote was 1377 for
and 179 against.
Pretty decisive. j
A SIC yourself this question:
If requested to vote on whether
you prefer to be paid for NOT work
ing and NOT taking chances or to
work and take chances and maybe
not get paid after all, bow would you
vote? ,
Well, the farmers felt the same way
about It. Can you blame them?
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
.Not ember 1, 1EI13
The atmosphere was cleared, and
the dust laid by a light rain yesterday.
Grizzly Hiking club will hold its
first annual dance.
Hallowe'en hoodlums cuts five
clotheslines loaded with clothes on
Riverside avenue. The miscreants ore
known, Chief Hlttson saya.
Frank Ditsworth's mare. Blue, wai
found shot In the chest and dead re
cently. Thla Increases Frank's lovi
for careless hunters. (Flounce Rocs
Frills).
H. Van Hoevenbers ships a carload
of hogs to the Portland markot from
Gild Hill.
Medford high defeats Klamath FalU
20 to 13 yesterday. Most of the gami
was played in a brisk shower.
Prices Have Been
LOWERED
on our regular Fine Quality
Merchandise for SATURDAY
and MONDAY ONLY
JTIOFF ALL
TLL", HATS
$2
00
OFF on all
DRESSES over $6.95
i.fW FFonai1
I If ' COATS in stock
Scarfs $1 A Hose $1
MP II t-s S
Moving Cnmp The ERA camp at
T.flVA V t.h Wiwin trnjt Vv( n.-r mi-.rrt
today to Dead Indian Soda Springs. I
f I
Flight 'o Time
Med ford and Jackson Count
history from, the files of the
Mall Tribune 10 and 20 Years
Ago),
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
November 1, 1033
(It Was Sunday)
350 gallons of moonshine seized,
and three California bootleggers
seized.
Snow falls In Klamath county, at
Salem, and In Crater Lake National
park.
Adrlenne Steward to open new
ready-to-wear store for women tomorrow.
High school football squad starts
drill for Armistice Day game with
Ashland.
Phonograph Records
Special for C""Jf Y llSj
Dollar Days Jf
3 for $1.00
All Popular Sheet Music
. 3 for $1.00
Special Edition Sheet Music, each 10c
Palmer Music & Electric Store
MAIN AND BARTLETT
laaaarMMaaBwaaaanMHaaaa
Depositors In the Gold Rill hank,
closed a year ago. will lose only eight
cents on the dollar.
Contract let for bridge across Rogue
river at Grants Pass.
Pear shipments from the valley to
date total 1.495 cars.
On an outsklrt the other evening
a mud-splattered gypey van was pull
ing into a filling station. Lettered
In white on the side waa "Zotfd. the
Clown." In the driver's seat a droop
ing fellow, a forlorn PagUarcl. At a
window the curtains parted and there
appeared the faoe or a frowr.y frump,
red-eyed, with a clgsret hanglnn from
her lower lip. She peered leptly
out, blinked, yawned and was gone.
The very tag end of the old waon
shows, and one could not resist the
obvious murmur: "What a lite!"
IVatrloe Herford. sinter of Oliver. !a
In town after a two year eiile Ip the
country. Miss Herford and Clusie
loft us. friends from childhood, were
' a number of year ago the moat ex
! pert, mlmlca of America and Euroyie.
Perhaps atlll are. . Incidentally, the
Oliver Hertford exhibit of published
original and water colors drew a
crowd recently and a brisk sale Is
reported. But too late to ease the
lntt horasAlng houra of the shy and
Home Treatment For
Varicose, Swollen Veins
Swollen veins may become danger- j
on s;.d aften burst. Sufferer are i
advised to get a two-ounce original j
bottle of Rmemld Oil (full atrengthl I
at Jar m In Drug Store or any phar-
maoist and start to red'K the veins j
and bunches at. once wHb this bejj
lrt ol. A small bnttit will last. 1
loiv time because It t very ooncn ;
t.rsted and a little goes very long '
wav Apply nlktht and .riOtulii nh j
a soft bniAh or finger tip as directed ,
until the swelling la reduoed. Refund j
is guaranteed If not satisfied. o I
effective Is Kmerald Oil that H la I
hbrhly useful in reducing 'rouble-1
so-.ne simple swelling not du to i
tainic disrae. 1
BoBneinmnaim CM lb
SATURDAY - SUNDAY - MONDAY
WINE SPECIALS
Eagle Vineyard
. "IMPERIAL"
DRY SHERRY
WHITE PORT
Gallon 1
$1.95
! Gallon ,
$1.00
Full Quart
60c
Eagle Vineyard
Sparkling
8AUTERNE. MOSELLE
BURGUNDY, qt. St. 50
MESSENGER
DELIVERY SERVICE
10 South Fir - Phone 420
Extra Special
Zinfandel Wins
A High Grade Claret
Gallon
75c
Malaga
Gallon ....SI. 65
3 Gallon .S5
Quart 50
Dry Wine
RIESLING
(A High Quality White
Wine)
GALLON
$1.25
Fortified
Sweet Wines
EAGLE VINEYARD
Select Vintage
Port, Sherry, Angelica,
Tokay, Muscatel,
Diy Sherry
GALLON
$1.65
V, GALLON
85c
FULL QUART
50c
Dry Wines
BURGUNDY
(The Cream of Red
Wine)
GALLON
$1.10
aaaaaiaaaaaa.l ur laail la I II rr mi imaa n mi In lajaaaT
RICHES CAN BUY NO HIGHER QUALITY
THAN THIS ARISTOCRAT OF COFFEEI
When It comes to cof tee. Nob Hill is the choice
of those who can afiord the very best. Even a
dollar a pound could buy no higher qualityl
Yet, through manufacturing and distributing
economies, it is priced to fit today's food bud
gets. Nob Hill is always fresh, always ground
the moment of purchase for your own
thod of brewing. Enloy the best next
try Nob Hill Coffee!
5P
UfT"M, Hit. V 4" - Vavaft
Featured in
SAFEWAY STORES
o
I