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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1935)
PAGE TWO ME MAIL TRIBUTE. MEDFORD. OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1935. MEDFORDTRIBUNE "E.aryorj. IB tfoolbcra Mragoa nil to. lull Trtbaaa" Dally EzMPt Saturday. Pubilah.d by UEDrORD piuntino co. M-1T-1I N. ril St. Pnooa 11 ROBERT W. RUHU Bailor. A.O lnd.p.otl.nl N.w.pp.r. Bot.r.d .aeond-eLM ""'" lord. Or.joo, ond.r Act ot Marca I. l" BUBBORIPTION BATE By Mll lo Ad.ancal Dally, ooa year. Dally, all month Dally, ona monlb " . .'S By Carrlar. In Ad.aoea Sl.dtord. a.n land. Jaaa.on.llla, C a n t r a I Point. Pho.nl.. Talant. O.lo BUI and on biahwars. Dally, ona yaar. Dally, ala month. Dally, ona month All urma, ca.h lo ad.nuca. Official Pnpm of lha City ol Mfdlnrd. Official rape, at MKUHKB Of THt HIM'I4 TBU PUCIHt KartfTlnt Pull l-"wd Wlrn Hlca. Tha Aaaoclatad Praia la aaclully an tltlad to tha ui. for publlcatlno of all Bm nltp.tch.. or.dll.rt to It or othar wtaa er.rtlt.d ID thla paper, and alao to tha local nawa publlih.d h.r.la. All rlfhta for publication of apaclai dllpatchaa haralo ara alao ra r.ad. MEMBER OF UNITED PR EBB MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Otf CIRC1IIATION8 Aflartlttnf R.pr..nfatl... H. 0. UOOENSE.N CCIMPANa Otflcaa In Naw fork. Chlcaio Datrolt Ban PVanelaco. boa Ana.l.a, flaattla, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot I By Arthur Perry. THOUGHT FOIt TODAY. "Ten million dead and twenty million wounded, with Hundreds or mllllone reduced to the verge of poverty, eeemed lewon enough for all time, but It waa not. The war lords were beaten, but there re mained the diplomats, and, still worse, the professional politicians. The men of words took up the work of the men who fight with swords. The orator took the place of the generals. The generals had reaohed the point of exhaustion, but there it no exhaustion for the orator whose command of the voters may be every bit as dangerous as the war lord's command of soldiers." (Prom "It Was for This.') LISTENING, Radio announcers are up to their old trlcka of Injecting what they eall "dramatic emphasis" In their accounts of football games. The ''dramatic emphasis" constats chiefly of prolonging the agony for the listener. The "dramatic emphasis" works something like this: The an nouncer receives a telegram from the scene of battle reading; "Halt- hack Jones goes six yards around right end. Stop. On 34. Stop I Instead of reading that short and Informa tive statement to the radio listeners, and waiting for another message, the announcer proceeds to get in his fine work, to-wit: All right, friends of radio land, here la another thrilling message from the gridiron classic, furnished through the courtesy of the Mad Amalgamated Prune Sellers of the Paclflo Const. This Is a football game being played this afternoon and there axe 80.000 people watching, and twice that many listening to It. The next time you see a Mad Amalgamated Prune Seller Remem ber thla broadcast. There seems to be some confusion. Its all settled. The referee asks eaoh captain If he Is ready. The referee blows his whis tle. Here'e the play. The Bobcats line upl The Wildcats go Into a huddle I They come out of a huddle t They go back Into a huddle! They come out of a huddle) The ball Is ready to be snapped) (Time out for the Wildcats, while Tackle Brown tlea his shoe string)) They go back into a huddle I Boy, U this a football garnet They come out of the huddle! The ball la ready to snap! The ball Is snapped! It goea to let me see there's a fan In the wny. Your announcer can't make out the ball toter. It's number M IT'S num ber M. GOOD OLD 68. That's Make 5'Mrtlakl! No It'a not! NO-ITS-NOTI ITS JONES1 JONES IS CARRYTNO the bull ! AND dors he go. He's headed around right end, behind lovely Interference lit The stands are cheering wildly I Jones Is awayt He make one yard! He makes two Y-A-R-D-ftl Will they ever atop this boyt He's still going! He makea three ya-RDS! I this a ball, game! Jones ducks a tarklert Qosh! Am 1 thrilled? I He rips off F-O.tJ.RII I THEY CANT STOP HIMt THEY CANT STOP HIMIII They DO STOP HIM! JONES good old Jones le stop ped sfter a colloesal run of five yards 1 The ball la on the 84 -yard line. In tha second quarter of this battle between the Bobcats and the Wild cats. Tails are being twisted Hal Hat This thrilling sccount is being brought to you by the Mad Amalgamated Prune Sellers. The next time you aee a Mad Amalgated Prune Seller, see If you can make Mm madder! For the benefit of thoc who are Just listening In, Hnirbsck Jones of the Wildcats has Just made five yards around right end! (Three minutes silence) Friends of radio land! Here Is t correction. On that last play Jones made six yards. Just as soon as we get another play, we will lose no time in getting It to you. The game la now in the middle of the second period. Well! WELL! Friends of radio-land, Here's a flash. The battle Is oven The Wildcats won. In a few min ute we will give you the score. Good -bye, Ftlrnda of Radlolandl Good -bye ( Phone 843 Well naul away youi 1 ftuarc. City Stuitaxj aerrloe. Armistice THIS is Armistice Day. a day etaside to commemorate the bravery and valor of our boyg who fought overseas, and brought peace 17 years ago, to a war stricken world. Now there is another war being waged abroad, between one of the allied powers and a small and comparatively defenseless nation in Eastern Africa the Italo-Ethiopian war. The former allies of Italy are engaged in an effort through the League of Nations, to check this war, and force Italy, the aggressor, to sue for peace. Whether or not this effort will succeed remains to be seen and whether or not this action, successful or unsuccessful, will eventually lead to another Euro pean war, also remains to be seen. The thought that occurs to us, on this Armistice Day is this: namely, that in bringing about a warless world, these ex-service men who are marching today, can be a more effective force than any other, for they more than any other class in the body politic know what modern war means. And what they say and do for peace, can not be discounted, as proceeding from any deficiency in the fighting spirit, as can the pleadings and arguments of the professional pacifists on one hand, and the impractical idealists on the other. In fact one of the strongest arguments for peace and against war, we have seen for a long time, appears in the current Colliers, and is from the pen of one of the country's foremost heroes in the world war, that daredevil flying ace, Eddie Ricken baeker. Rickenbacker got fame and glory out of the last war, but here is his Armistice Day message: Just seventeen years ago this Armistice Day, I was flying over No Man'a Land. So far as I know I waa the only American filer up that morning. As commander of the 04th Aero Pursuit Squadron I received orders on the evening of November 10th to ground all my planes. We were stationed at Rembertcourt, some 30 kilometers behind our front-line trenches. For ten weeks we had been up to our necks In legalized murder. It had become dull and humdrum. If we got any kick out of It at all It was In saving our own necks. Early on the morning of the 11th I found out what the order meant. The war was to end at eleven o'clock. The men soon learned about It, At first It didn't seem real. War had been all tha world had known for four years. Even before the United States was In It, It was all any of us thought about. It takes time for a thing like the end of a war of that alze to get Into a man's mind. Dawn that day didn't seem right. There should have been something Important about It. There should have been some thing about the sky to make everybody know that an event waa happening of such magnitude that It made everything else In the; world Insignificant. X can remember thinking thla and being vaguely disappointed about It. It waa dull and foggy and with practically no celling for a flying man. The guns were still booming at the front, but bock with us there wasn't a motor stirring. I went around checking up to be sure there- were no planes in the air. Those were orders. But aa the morning wore on I kept getting more restless. 1 had been In many sn air fight over this stretch of ground and I got the idea I should be up there watching the thing finish. I had seen plenty of the worst down there below and thla would be a chance to see a different picture. Around ten-thirty my squadron had become accustomed to the calm In camp and had started a celebration. Nothing like the celebrations that followed the Armistice but pretty good for a start. The place waa deserted. I ordered my mechanic to go and check my Spad fighting ships, and at ten-forty I warmed the motor and took off toward the lines. Visibility was very bad and I hedge-hopped along, flying blind. When the World Stood Still I headed for the Argonne. T could hear the sound of the ' big guns down below and after a while 1 sensed I waa In that stretch of hell between the trenches. After a man has coasted around up above there for a few good fights, he gets the feel of that business, night or day. I came down to about loo feet and scon found out I waa right. The guns were going full cry from both sides and I quickly ahot back up again. Armistice or no Armistice, they seemed to be taking no chances. At about five minutes to eleven, a rift opened In the clouds and I could ace the whole panorama of war below me. It waa the same scene I had been seeing for months murder on the grand scale. Guns boomed, puffs of powder flatthed out and the answera came from the other side. I kept high enough to keep out of trouble but I could see what woe going on. I looked at my wnteh. It waa one minute to eleven and hell was still going on. The seconds dragged on toward eleven and then It stopped. One second there was the same terrible roar of death the western front had known for four years; the next second there was silence. 4The roar, the noise was gone. Nobody could ever describe that silence. The world seemed to stand still. Then from the trenches broke forth a pandemonium of Joy such ns man had never heard before. I mushed down upon the scene. The men were now climbing up out of the trenches and rushing out into No Man'a Land. They were dirty and filthy and so tired most of them stumbled ax they ran. You could see them coming over the top, dropping their rifle and then running out In that space where they would have met death a few minutes before. They threw their tin hats and gna masks and shovels In the air. Suddenly, from being worn-out men. they became surprisingly agile. They pounded one another's backs. They lenped In the air and bellowed and threw out their arms In wild gestures and tried to click their heels like dancers. Encmtra by the Clock From the German trenches soldiers were coming out and starting to walk across the open space. They made motions which I could see mean cigarettes. What they wanted was a smoke. The Americans came up on the run and after a bit I could see them lighting up. They must have cried. I know X did. They were enemies by the clock. At ten fifty-nine, they were killing each other. Sixty seconds later, they were Just a lot of tired, happy men who seemed to have no enmity, no bitterness. Ihey had their arms about each other, slapping each other on the back In a weary sort of Joy because they didn't have to kill each other any more. What a happy feeling! What a ghastly, happy feeling! Then 1 started back home with a feeling in my heart that I can never forget and hope never to have again It waa over. Sanctioned murder had stopped because a few men had met and deckied that it should stop. WHY COULDNT THEY HAVE MET AND DECIDED THAT IT SHOULDNT START? I flew back to my station knowing that men had learned a lesson. But have they? (Continued From Pago One.) Ing. All senators are ft Hen expansive suites In the senate office building a block away, but only the chosen few axe permitted extra hi tic-out of fices in the eapttol building near the senate chamber. The few chosen litely Include Senntnm U Follette, lUytlen. Mack. Oorne and Jim Byrnes, which rr.sv Rive von an !na Of who's what arnuiut the nenM. There seemed to h ome personal bitterness Inside the supreme court at the Isst session, but Iv ti (ions now The Justices naturally develop per sonal antagonism during their long bouts In chamber, sttue returning from their summer vafa-ion. how ever, they have been t.MernirJriR Xrecly, frequently chatUi uetur Day outside the new building on leaving. Whether they will utilt be speaking to each other In a few mouths re mains to be seen. December 9 The supreme court hears arguments on the AAA. December 9 Mr. Roosevelt talks to the Am or lent, farm bureau federation at Chicano. presumably on the AAA. December 9 Mr. Borry'a NRA con ference begins, with President Roose velt abaeitt. You may be sure that the supreme 1 court reads the papers. Orders Come Fast For 1936 Dodges The third carload of Dodge com mercial ears received by the Pierce Allen Motor company d tiring the pant seven m-eek was unloaded a few days ago and Is now' on display, ac cording to L. C. Taylor, sales man ager Mr. Tavlnr says thev slso have a carload of Plymouth on display A carload of Dodge sutnmobilea Is due here early this week and an other shipment left the Dodge fac tory Inst Saturday. Mr. Taylor said. "Orders are going In for the new 'Beauty Winner' Dodae faster than the factory can make them." Use Mail ITlouus tout S4S. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M D. Signed letter, pertaining to perumai neaitn end Hygiene not to diaeas. dlsaninla or treatment will be aniwered Of tit Brad. If a ttantped .elf-ad-drewrd envelop, la enrliiapd Letter, ahnuld De brief and written In Ink Onlnc to the larie number ol letter, reral.ed only a fen can be an.wered So reply ran be made to querlea not cofUnrmtne to Instruction,. Address III William Brady, tei El Canllno. Beverly Mills. Cat. MODERN TREATMENT Every physician who wishes to be of the greatest service to suffering humanity should study the book of Dr. Thos. F. Mc Namara, publish ed by Medical Press, Rochester, K. Y., on "Injec tion ' Treatment of Internal Hem orrhoids." Better yet, go and get clinical Instruc tion from this master of the modern method. It haa been estimated that 70 per cent of the adult population have rectal disease at some time In their lives, and the disease la Inter nal hemorrhoids In 8S per cent of the cases. Dr. McNamara states that ninety per cent of external hemorr hoids are due to the fact that the patients first had Internal hemorr hoids, Internal hemorrhoids are painless unless they become inflamed, throm bosed (clotted) or prolapsed. There Is generally only a vogue sense of weight or fulness, the annoyance of prolapse, more or less Itching, and sometimes mental depression. Often the patient calls the discomfort "chronic lumbago." Indeed auch "chronic lumbago" has been com pletely and permanently relieved by Injecting an Internal hemorrhoid, after the patient had tried various spas, electrical gadgets, blisters and what not prescribed by various phy sicians who did not consider a rectal examination part of the routine phys ical examination of the new patient. Bleeding is the most serious effect of Internal hemorrhoids. Frequent smalt Internal bleedings may occur without the patients knowledge, and drain the strength. Anemia resulting iron, the bleeding sometimes la so severe that It has been diagnosed as "pernicious" anemia, according to an English surgeon, Arthur S. Morley, who also advocates Injection treat ment. Dr. McNamara speaks of four broth ers, all afflicted with hemorrhoids. as they thought. But one of the brothers who came for treatment. was found to have carcinoma already beyond operablllty. Two other broth ers received the Injection treatment and were relieved without any diffi culty or loss of time from work. The fourth brother, however, fearing the doctor might diagnose cancer in his cose too, consulted a surgeon.. The surgeon sent the man to a hospital and did the radical operation, the NEW YORK DAY BY DAY Ry O. O. Mclnryre NEW YORK. Nov. 11. Olary: Be times and pleasing notes from Joan Crawford and the Kansas Governor London. And & long letter from the m 1 c h 1 n g Tom Geraghty about Americana In London and bid to the news paper party for Louella parsons. So out end saw Elsie J arils wnlk Ing slowly with a oane. For no reason, break f as t e d In the big dlniu? room of the Com modore and by a moment to aee the Coblentres back from a aSouth American Junket, but they out. And the Koats Speeds not ot home either. And a policeman sold e crowd in front of the Cat ham was waiting to see Jimmy Walker, who now lives across a roof top from me. Dinner with Henry and Ann Sell and they away with some fine-feath ered friends to opera end we to walk home finding there a lobby note from Florida visitor: "Havo you a few minutes in which to dizzle a small town girl? P. S. I'm catching pneu monia. What are you dolrw?" And I waa rwther sorry I ml?sed her. Some frlftnds of the theatrical chronicler Ward Morehouse have been importuning htm for several months to register in his district. They fin ally won him over, and on a recent registration day he appeared. When questioned as to when he voted lsat upon being told he was 3fl years old and had never voted, thoy made him take the literacy tewt. H came through naturally with flying colors, having a cumber of collego degrees, and wna given an embossed certifi cate of literacy. He has had It framed handsomely and It hanjjrs conspicuou sly near his desk. Under a fierce white light! Until his murder, Arnold Rot lute in was the underworld's most mecessful ready cash man. Far more so than the later big shot, Dutch SchulU. He was able, the legend go. to ralM a hAlf million by merely making a few SAT The Economical W.-xy Bum Our Select. Heavy DRY FIR SLABS ft rut at a r I t; IrUAL tattlnf. ("leaner Cheaper PHONE 63,1 Bedford Fuel Co. OF HEMORRHOIDS old Spanish method. It was a great success but the patient spent six weeks In bed. That's where some peo ple prefer to be. No accounting for tastes. In thla highly practical technical book Dr. McNamara speaks of many cases where patients suffered from nutritional disturbances,' loss of weight, loss of strength from Inter nal hemorrhoids, even though there waa no apparent bleeding. One pat lent gained 10 pounda within three months after injection of the hem orrhoids. In many cases of anemia the patients are not aware they have hemorrhoids. In not a few cases of nervous trouble remarkably prompt disappearance of the "nervousness" has followed the healing of a fissure associated with hemorrhoid. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Histamine for Pruritus Colleague informs me that he found a hypodermic injection of half a milligram of histamine brought complete relief within 30 minutes to Intolerable Itching a patient with hives had suffered for several days without cessation. In 18 hours the Itching returned, but another Injec tion gave permanent relief. The med ical literature has recently had re ports of prolonged relief of Itching in Intractable pruritus cases by this remedy, which Is effective only when administered hypodermlcally. Mumer Is It dangerous for a person with a double heart murmur to marry and have children? (R. K.). Answer Heart murmur' Is not a condition, tt Is tha name of a sound heard over the heart. It does not necessarily signify heart disease. The person should be guided by the ad vice of his or her physician. Belly Breathing Two years ao, following suggestion In yovr column, I began practicing Belly Breathing. Under heart spec ialist's care for past 12 years. Have not seen him in past two years. Now I can climb 400 feet to our mountain cabin without getting winded. Is that due to the Belly Breathing? (H. r. a.) Answer t don't know. Certainly the B. B. helps the handicapped heart. Instructions In 'The Art of Easy Breathing" copy for ten cents coin and stamped envelope bearing your address. (Copyright 193S, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate, with Dr. Hrnrty hmi.fl tend letter direct to Dr. William nrady M D 263 El Camlnn. Beverly Hills, Cat. phone calls. When Fannie Brice was In despair over ball for her then hus band Nickey Arnatoin. Rnthsteln within o,n hour tossed $100,000 In her lap on the Midnight Frolic Roof. Yet It develops that when pistoled he had 50 in cash and debts of a million. Schultz, too was stony. Broadway! Personal nomination for the best groomed elderly lady of the day Mrs. James Roosevelt, the President's mother. Ballroom dancing Is In full flower strain. Upon the male In such dancing turns depends success of the alliance. It's his Job and a polished art it Is to exploit the grace of his partner In the swirls, pirouetting and curtssy Ing end completely muffing his own personality. In such Instances woman Is the attraction and the masculine task to accentuate and create illusion of the puff-ball llhtnow. Yet In most instances the man Is the superior dancer and get top billing. Maurice, to my notion, waa foremost In keep ing his eyes on hia partner. He woHld even st?p aside so she could t.ike the bows. He rarely took more than one And to dance with Maurice, aa rec ords show, meant fame and fortune. The time has developed a high sal aried marksman known as a trouble shoefcor. William Ott, former news paperman, la a conspicuous example of the movie field. There are a dozen more In various Industries, drawn chiefly from newspaper ranks. Often they are called contact men or by the dudlsh term of public relations coun sels. Anyway, they smooth out the rough places that often keep a bl deal hanging. And are generally close to the throne. In a turn of Chinatown, five Chi nese children sat on door-step watching the pavement flow. Freshly scrubbed, shining. I could not help but Idle at a neighboring window to glance back. After a time I sauntered on. One called; "Now that you've seen us, what do you think?" All I could do wns turn, wave and haul off and look sillier than all g"t out. (Copyright, 1939. McNaught Syndi cate) ''p Brlrom surface conditions A jr nd not be endured. J9 YSj Malt your skin clearer JfA rajrand amoothor with rheSZnoli&S fuel oil Am Kind Minimum Ratrfc Pump rrt1re 11C2 North Central iiaaaaVawSi Armistice Day By Owen H. Barn hill "What means this Armistice Day to you?" The sun shone brieht o'er Olive View. While orchards green stretched far I below. High hills behind were crowned with snow. "What means this day?" The veteran raised His shattered form and seemed amazed That I should ask. His tired eyes Looked far away, as one who tries To see once more the bygone years. Their Joys and sorrows, hopes and fears. "It means," he answered, tense and low, "The day we conquered foreign foe. For years we'd fought against great odds. Our life-blood reddening Europe sods. I saw my comrades torn with shell. My brothers racked with pains of hell; While poison-gas the world knows how Made me the wreck that lies here now. November came. The living dead Seemed doomed to sink In sea of red As millions met their cruel fate, A sacrifice to war of hate. Our hope was gone, our strength was spent. Then suddenly the air was rent With shouts of Joy no tongue can tell. For peace had come all would be well. From dark despair to hope sublime It lifted us first Armistice time. The world was saved from further strife And granted then new lease of life. Now when each year this day comes round, May we with words of prayer be j found, ' Imploring that our sense of right May save us from war's cruel blight. While wounded wait for death's re- 1 lease, i You who are young, work on for i peace." j I turned away with tear -dimmed eyes in" muftcu ub western sunset esies; Then vowed with all my strength I'd Btrlve To keep the fires of peace alive. Flight 'o Time Med ford and Jackson Count history from the riles of th Mali Trlhone 10 and 80 Yeao Alt TEN YKARS AGO TODAY November 11, 1023. (It was Wednesday) In bright sunshine, after the heavy downpaur of last night, the Armistice Day parade and exercises are held In the city. The parade was one of the largest In the history of the city. Fight started against paying ol state gas tax. Mod ford high football team over whelms Ashland 68 to 0 before ca pacity crowd. Barney Senn, local fullback, ripped the Llthlan line to shreds, and Connie Conrad kicked seven straight extra points. Rain continues to fall over the city and valley. October was a dry month with only one rainy day. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY j November 11, lt 15. (It was Thursday) The Southern Pacific today sola the 700th ticket from Medford to ' the exposition which doesn't look 1 like hard times. Movement started upstate to com bat auto license fee, and gasoline ; tax. j Medford high completes Its prac ttce for final football game of year with Ashland. Jess Gentry will play I left end, and Gene Narregan will j do the kicking for the locals. Carload of valley Boscs gross ai92ti and carload of Cornice gross $1838 ; In New York city. j French Inflict severe defeat on i Bui gars In Balkans; Serbs resist- i ance halt Austrian advance; Gcr- j mans depart from Riga sector on account of rain, and Russians claim j victory. 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