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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1935)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKL), OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1935. MEDFORD$$TRIBUNE "KrrytiDP ID Himtblrtl OrKip KmiIi th Mali ."rlbuw" intt sc-pt riMturdnr. MUUKURD PBINTINO CO. tt-H-i N Kir m. hot RuUBKT W. BUHL, Blttor. Ao Indapanrtent Nawapapar. Cntereri as W!od1-cIm a' Cord. Oreiou. unrter ci 01 ire eWBSCRLP'ilON RATES Br Mall-ln Advance: Dally. one - - rsii i. mnnlhl Dally. one month Br Carrier, id Advance Madford. An land. Jacksonville, Central Point, Phoer.1. TateoL OeU HM highwaya. Dally, one rw Dally, an moot lit. ... Dally, ont month All tarma, caah Id advance. orrirlal I'Hptr of I ha City ot Mrdtord Offlrlal Faiwr ot Jarkanp CoupIJ- MU31..KH Of TUB AHtHKIIA TWJ PHKfcH Kecrtvlos run iaro yl Tht Aaauoiitad Prttt it iciuttvaly en titled to the uat lor publloatloo of all i BAiitkii a it ttr other wlsa credited to this paper, md alao to tha looai nawa puDiin.i All right for publication JJf epeelai dltpatohaa haralo art alao reeervert. U EM BLR OF UNITED HHEB8 UBMBBR OK AUDIT BIIRBAD OK CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representatives M. 0. HOCIKNHBN COM PAN J Offices tn Naw Vork. Chicago Detroit San Frenclsro. l.os Angeles. Sesttie. Portland. Ye Smudge Pol i By Arthur I'errj. ......., nnrf nariii bombed Ethio pian town., in th. path of th. Ital ian advance, and Chinese province, ruthlessly seized by Japanese force., are approximately In th. .am. boat a. sprlnndeld, Ore., threatened With two recall election for th. Do It! t,l eradication ot flv. city offlclaU. The Springfield Imbroglio 1. th. firm doubl.-chlnned politic, to maHe I" appearance In the .tat. The Canada trade treaty i caua lng all .treet-corner quarterback, to plead for high protective tariff, when not calling .IgnaU, or resting between halves. . ..... rt.ifttn" are operat ing upstate, Their methed 1. to Pa tent a 20 bill In payment for . amall purchase. While the merchant la trying to remomber when he aaw one last,, the .hennanlgan 1. con- ummated. i . E Brown, listless, waa west ot the railroad MafXa yesterday, to get the mall and pneumonia. Walter Baer, ex-convlct alien, whose dcportBtlon preturbed metro po'ltan nnd Willamette valley poli ticians no end Is now on his way. to Cierinany. In 'the final court room scene, under stress of parting, his wife scratched, kicked and struck with a purse a federal Immigration officer. Boor, from ths sidelines, voiced profane encouragement, and staged an effort to enter the melee also. Upon arrival overseas, tha de portee, who Is asserted to have en gineered a couple ot relief station mutinies, should control himself, as the Nazi government crushes 1-man revolutions and unofficial martyrs speedily. His Inte should b an ot ject losson to other foreign-bom agi tator, too busy denouncing America to return to their own native heath.. Several mora cftlzens have made their debuts In new auto.. The new vehicles are able to do everything but lick their weight In locomotives at a crossing. - "Book Week" Impends. It there is a week not otherwise engaged, right after Christmas, It should be used M Greater Endurance week. at A numbor of Old Oregon Brads are acting like they would ha', a Im portant business In Seattle, Wash.. ' next Saturday. They don't like to make such a long journey, only to find the man they wnnt to see has gone to the footbail game. ... An expert fixed your corr's type writer the first of the week. Signs of mslpracti.ee are Just beginning to show up. One ot the Older Girls reports her hat looks worse on straight, than It .he didn't care. . Scar MUs Chatfleld: I am the third wife of a man who la a good provider but a mighty poor excuse In every other way. (Chlco (Calif.) Enterprise) A rose amid the brickbats. s A hardy miner, who has been In a hole In the side of an Applegate mountain for five fishing seasons, reports he Is now out of the main one. ... HVrOCRtM' IN DIXIE. (Portland Telejram) Folk.. I think I found my answer last Ssturdsy at the North Carolina-Duke game In Durham. The county In North Carolina In which Durham Is located 1. leR.lly bone-dry, but let me tell you that not since) the repeal of the amendment have I seen such two-fisted, stomped - down, aiming - to. get-get-drunk drinking. t There Is no public Interest In the proposal for a "one-house legisla ture." the press report.. Th. public fesrs the Idea will bounce the wrong way. and give them three houses. ... The first fog of the season ar rived this morning. It Is too early to predict what It Is doing to the p':tr blossoms next spring, ... The Justin (Up-to-School) Smltn boy completes his first year of Lite, th New Desl. and mussing up by H Flewher. the demon baker Sat He Is s sturdy lad. snd needs to be. Pol H-e 'n.t iVesi on? Nol.tir . M Jim i EUielwvrj B. Uollmaoa Right, the First Time TPHERE has been much weeping anil wailing over the depor- tation of one Walter Baer, Uermdn ex-convict, from this country to his native land. In the case of Baer such action, under the law, is mandatory. The government MUST deport aliens who have been convicted of two or more felonies involving moral turpitude. Baer was convicted of burglary, and forgery, and in all served thrfe prison terms. Following his final release in 1924 he married a Portland girl, became the father of three children, and since that time, has, as far as the records show, been a law abiding citizen. When he surrendered to the immigration authorities in Port land on Tuesday, however, Baer egged his wife on to attack Roy Korene, district immigration director the lady using 1ier purse as a weapon, reinforced by a finger nail barrage and several well planted kicks in the general direction of the un offending official 's soiar plexus. Cried hubby as the battle raged s "Give It to him honeyt Olve him hell. The dirty rati The blankety blankety blank I He's the boss of the home wrecking crew. Go get him"! Thus spurred on Mrs. Baer delivered an unusually vicious drop kick, missed her mark and fell to the floor, whereupon friend husband started in with a little rough and tumble Marquis of Queensbcmy on lii.s own account. . A LL of which indicates that in spite of all. the sob stories about forgiveness of sins and breaking up of happy homes, the federal authorities were right in the first place. Mr, and Mrs. Wajlor Uner have shown themselves to be the sort this country can very well do without. Has America Chosen? SOMKONE asks u to explain the Canadian Reciprocity treaty, in its relati&n to the AAA. The Canadian treaty, it is claimed, lets down the bars to an influx of farm products into INCREASES the saleable supply AAA on the other hand, decrease his production REDUCE the saleable supply, so profitable prices may be obtained, via the old law of supply and demand. In other words, AAA does ONE thing, and tho new Canadian treaty UNDOES it, which in doesn't make sense. Wo agree, it doesn't UNI7ESS, Well, Paul Mallon in his article today perhaps throws a little liht on the subject. Mallon claims Secretary Wallace on November 1-ith spoke on "matters of the gravest national importance." Among other things tho secretary of agriculture declared in effwet, the AAA was only established as a temporary emergency measure to give the farmer tho samo protection and benefits, the manufacturer has enjoyed from a high protective tariff. In the long run, Mr. Wallace believes this policy is wrong for the farmer, wrong for industry and wrong for the country. Therefore he favors, lowering the tariff wall on one hand, doing away with the AAA on tha other, and eventually attaining a free'f lowing system of trade all around, nationally and inter nationally. : , IF this view is correct then tho new treaty with Canada may be tho first step in this direction from the standpoint of inter national trade. Abandonment of the AAA with its processing tax, or a radical modification of both, it is presumed will follow. This may not sound very convincing, particularly in view of tho fact that President Roosevelt recently stated the AAA would be made permanent, but it does at. least make sense. And it also is entirely in harmony with the book written by Mr. Wallace a year or so ago entitled "America must choose." At that time tho Secretary of Agriculture maintained Amer ica must choose between economic self sufficiency and isolation building a Chinese wall around this country figuratively speaking, and Tearing down all walls, and engaging in free and unlimited trade with the rest of tho world. The signing of the Canadian treaty nuiy mean, that in the opinion of tho present administration, "America has chosen" to do tho latter. nrninin nn LIXUIKIO L1C CAST BY STARS PASADENA, Cat. (UP) Aitrono mera hnva revealed plana for nn elec tric My" art powerful It will l?ht CAiidle'a ft time thouM.da ot mile way, to be an auxiliary to the world' Jar geat teleacope. The "eye" la an extraordinarily dell cat photo-electric cell, for um In measuring the amount of light Riven off by atari million of mlKvi out of light of the luimnn eye. It mill be iaed In conjunction with the giant 300lnoh teleacope. rated t a power sufficient to ihow up ky acrapera on the moon and aoon to be constructed on a Southern California mountalntop. Dr. Oeorge Kllcry Hale, veteran astronomer and dlrcctor-emetltua ot Mt. Wllion Olwervatory. outlined plana for the new tclervope and Ita auxiliaries In the Atro-phyntcnl Journal, The "eye" coiWms of a tarsrt of a aenaitlve metal Itwide the cell. Light raya traveling perhaps 3& or 50 mil lion miles from distant stara are gathered in by the maaitve round re flector of the teleacope and focuwed on the cell. ralnt though the Ught rays are, they excite electrons In the iwnMtlve metal. In turn generating electrical currents, very feeble but stilt meas urable, nv measuring the strength of the electrical current a distant seU up, the astronomer will be able this country, which in effect on this side of the line. . orders the American farmer to the opinion of our inquirer just to compute the star's relative bright ness. Such electric "eyea" now In use with present world's largest 100-lnch telescope at Mt, Wilson are powerful enough to spot a candle 3000 miles distant with the aid of the telescope, or seven miles distant without such amplification. With the new telescope, twice as big and four times as powerful, tor which a 10-foot pyrex reflector la now cooling at a Corning, N. Y glasj works, greater distances are expected. Construction details of the tele scope are now being worked out by seientista. The tremendous barrel will require a mount comparable to that of a big gun. When installed, probably atop Mount Palomar near San Diego, it Is expected to have a possible amplifica tion power that would bring the moon to within an apparent distance of 35 miles of the earth. More KtiRlWh Companies. LONDON (UP) The number ol new companlea registered In Eng land and Scotland during 19:,4 was higher than for many years past 1.1.066 compared with ll OJfl during the preceding 13 months. Th num ber of companies on the registers at the end of 19M waa MVfl40. .tustmllN tines "Movie Matt" MKLROURNK. Australia (UP Australia. In proportion to Its popu lation, has more cinemas than any other country. There are 1386 tor 6.630,000 prople, or one for S287 per sona. The United Statra ha one for every 10.400. and the United King dom one for every 333. BOSTON (UP Pumpkins r$ growing In Charlestown'a business district. They are ripening on the -ines in a flower pot. Where the seecs came from U a mystery. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M D. Signed letter pertaining to personal Health and nygtene nut to disease dlugfmsl. or treatment will he answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped ielf-.d-dressed envelope Is enclosed Letter, should be Uriel and written tn ink Uwlng to the large numhei ot letter, received only a ten can br answered Nu repl) run he made to queries nut conforming to Instructions Address Ur William HrBOv. iVA Kl Camlno. Beverly Hills, t sl. AMBIXATORY TBEATME The reason why varicose ulcer does not heal as readily as an ordinary wound la the reason why the ulcer happens In the first place, name ly; poor nutrition of the tissues of the leg. The stag nation of blood In the enlarged or dilated vein retards nourish ment of the cell and tissues through the cir culation. Every doctor encounters cases of varicose ulcer of long aiandlng, the patient complaining that It has re mained unhealed for many years not withstanding all the remedies "tried" from time to time, and yet, tf the patient can be persuaded to stay In bed for a week, perhaps with the leg elevated part of the time, the ulcec heaU with astonishing celerity. Pro vided, of course, there is no "proud flesh,-" that Is, exuberant granulation tissue, in the ulcer; or If there is, It Is asceptlcally trimmed down to skin level. Sometimes, though, it is a great hardship for a bread winner to remain 1 In bed a week. Well, there, is a good : alternative treatment available for the varicose ulcer sufferer who can't lay up for treatment. I hope It will not annoy the old guard If I call this ambulatory , treatment. Something about that word ambulatory seems Vj arouse animosity among the old timers reckon It means x thorn more patients going to better doc tors, say for treatment of hemorrhoids or hernia. The ambulatory treatment of vari cose ulcer is ns follows: First gently bathe tho ulcerated area with plain soayy water agreeably worm. Rinse away the soap with tepid and then cool water containing a heaping tfcb'.espoonful of salt In the gallon. Gently dry the raw place snd surrounding skin with clean freshly Ircncd soft cloth. Then cover tho ulcer with a pad of a ozen or mor layers of fine cheesecloth fresh ly iioned, or surgical gauze from ft sterile package. Over this apply a mbber sponge about Inch thick nnd an Inch larger In diameter than the ulcer. Keep the sponge in place by an clastic bandage applied from the toes to the knee. That's all. Now you must walk about every day, to get the gentle massage effect which helps the circulation. Or if it Is against your political principles to NEW YORK DAY BY DAY Ry O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Nov. 21, The auto graph hounds have broken loose again. And an even larger pack in in full crv. So wi much so that at auspicious movie and stage open ings a special re serve of police, Including a squad of mounted, are necessary to keep n path open from curb to en trance. For a tinio me nuisance seemed to be abating. But something prob ably the recent arrival of Joan Craw ford and Franchot Tone supplied fresh tantivy. At rtteh premieres as "Jubilee" and "Dend End" clothes of Innocents were actually torn in the rush to sign celebrities. Tho numerical magnitude of the menace It borders on real danger grew from 6 In the evening to cur tain time In a massed block of push ing, shoving hoodlums. Cars were unable to get within half a block of the marquee and the highly lacquered had to run a gauntlet. Such polished tmportants as Ina Claire, Helen Hayes and Florence Walton, among many others, reached the lobby In varying stages of dlsf hevelment. Afterwards. In the same riotous fashion, limousines were un able to reach the doors and the same pandemonium reigned. The bachelor apartment house has almost passed from the architectural scene. The wealthy bachelor now prefers a pent-house, a modern hotel apartment or quarters at a club. In Its day the best known bachelor shrine was The Alpine, on the present site of the Hotel McAlpin. Among famous guests were Marshall P. Wil der, Charles Dana Gibson and Hy Miiyer. John W. Kollsr. first to xise the pseudonym "Cholly Knlckerbock er," was also a tenant. Mary Garden Is carrying on bravely In a concert tour to rebuild the world that crashed about her with the mar ket collapse. She was an Insull cred itor to the nine of M0.000 and there was also a million she entrusted to others which evaporated almost over nlht, But her head Is still high. Those wno know say that not once has she ever whimpered. Not even to her closest friend. Mme. Francis Alda. And she Is sinking with thrill ing abandon, The since seems no longer to have a place for those sweeping and volup tuous types oiu-e hrglamourlug every mus ten I comedy. Such as the stau esque Kitty Gordon, with her ala baster dtsptav of back revealed In shockingly V'd gowns. Also the breath-taking Valeska Suratt. sheath ed In riotous velvets with long trains. And Grace La Him with her enor mously brimmed hats and be jeweled gadgets. Incidentally, t passed Mtw Gordon on a street yesterday, still commamlimc looking and quite beau tiful. No st(u;e eftmi In the memorv of the i'rcM'nt crop ot 1la;.fc-ts yrotd NT OF VARICOSE I'LCER walk, with gasoline so cheap and everything, then you must do some regular exercise every day and one of the best Is lying on your bvrk and Juggling a barrel, real or Imaginary, with your feet. Remove the dressing, wash ulcer as before, and reapply, every two doys. It Is useless to apply this treatment or any other if there Is proud flesh In the ulcer. That must be removed first, and only the doctor can safely do this. It Is unwise to attempt to "burn" it out with caustic. Q L'ESTIONS AND A N S WKB 8 What Grade Milk? Is grade ' A milk as beneficial to health as grade A irradiated milk? We cannot afford to buy certified milk. (I. N. C.) Answer Irradiated milk ts any milk that lias been exposed to ultra, violet light, usually from a carbon arc light, for a few. seconda. This Imparts to the milk the vitamin D influence required to prevent rickets in infants. Grade A millc which Is approved by your family phyalcian or your local health officer 1 pure and wholesome. Grade A raw milk, from tuberculin tested herd. Is second only to certified milk. In my opinion. Grade A pasteurized milk is always safe. If ?ou are not certain about the purity of the milk, better scald It the.c is, bring It to a boll for one minute, then let It cool. This will kill any harmful germs there may be in the milk. Grade B milk Is fit for food only when It has been thoroughly cooked. Come Buck, Old Timer. With extraordinary benefits . . , I have been taking your lodln ration. Why take it in cycles rather than regularly ... I am 58, 63 Inches tall and weigh 16i5, which Is about six pounds less than I weighed a year ago . . (C. H. H.) Answer No particular reason If you prefer to take It the year around rather than for a month in each of the four seasons, it Is all right. But you are far overweight for your height. Why not come all the way back while you arc at it? Send ten cents coin and 3 -ccnt-c tamped envelope bearing your address, for booklot "The Regen eration Regimen." which outlines the iodin ration, corrective . protective diet, vitamin requirements and every thing you need to rejuvenate. (Copyright, 1935, John P. Dille Co.) Bd. Note: Persons wishing to com m u n Ira t e with Dr. Bra tf y should send letter direct to Dr. Wllllnm Urady. M. (., -J 05 61 Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cat. such a show Btopper as the Norman Bel Geddes single scene In "Dead End." It stirred first nighters to ar resting bravos. The' vista shows the pier of a slum street Jutting to the water. Glistening bodies squirm up the dock posts from their swim and all the figures in the cluck and sag of river edge squalor toughs who slug rats, harried mothers of hood lums, wharf bums and blowzy Mag dalens of the Jumping off places are vividly etched. A scene that swept a play to a hit. On a Bryant park corner an orator was tub-thumping about "the rights of the people." His audience, chiefly a few messenger boys, probably with, as Georgo Ade used to say, death mes sages marked "Rush," and a group of giggling girls. "Not a tender emo tion la left in the human heart," he moaned. "Capitalism has squeezed them out." Somehow a group of pigeon feeders nearby seemed mild re futation. Thingumabobs: Manuel Quezon, Phllllplne president, has a phobia fear of common colds . . . Faith Bald win has a house boat named "The Dog House" ... Ed Sullivan reports the bar at Reuben's old Madison ave nue stand employs 60 bartenders In three shifts . . . Which Is the town's biggest crew . . . Sydney Horler, Eng land's ace mystery writer, plots the finale of his novels first . . . Louelta Parsons averaged three teas a day in her honor on her recent New York visit. Interstate Coyote: "Mclntyre can write circles around the boys who strain so absurdly to heckly him. The trouble is he's never anti anything." Is that so? I've been anti-parsley' on plate dinners since I don't know when. (Copyright, 1035. McNaught SjTidlcate) Young "G-Mnn" Runs Amuck. TOLEDO (UP) Bangt Crash! "I'm a Junior G-man after my old man," shouted an eight-year-old as he shot out the windows in the rear of an old interurban station here. His hands clutched an sir rifle. Police confiscated the "gun" snd sent the G-man home. Horse Scornful of Auto. NEBRASKA CITY. Neb. (UP) Old Dobbin was ruled at fault when Roy Lundy's horse-drawn cart crash ed Into Miss Thelma Diller's motor car. Miss Dlller was unable to get her car out of a rut, and the horse refuse:; to yield an Inch. Iron Fnrge Vrd 100 Year. WALNUT GROVE. Iowa (UP) An Iron forge used in the days when stage coaches rumbled east and west across Iowa Is being used in the shop of Alfred Ehlers, who Inherited his father's blacksmith business. The shop Is believed to te at least 100 years old. . Town Farm Romance Title. -HAMPTON BEACH, N. H (UP1 Hampton Peach has earned the title "Land of Romance. During the past summer no less than 30 aeoret mar rinses have been re.orded by IVwn Clerk William Brown. HhMers ihun Hmanioti Job. MOSCOW. Idaho -(Ur-. Only cfcr bidder sought the job of painting the city water tower. Five prospective bidders considered the w.irk too har ardouv The v.ink w i;i be sprayed from a W-fo.t acaJIold. Comment on the Day's News v By FRANK JENKINS Q RESIDENT ROOSEVELT and bis t secretary of state, Mr. Hull, have thrown the agricultural American West to the sharks in order to save the industrial East. That Is about the only Interpreta tion a Westerner can put upon the Canadian-American ' trade treaty, made public on Monday, THE general effect of the treaty, without going Into confusing de tail, Is to lower the tariff wall be tween the United States and Canada. That, in practice, will work out this way : The American East, whose manu facturing industry Is more Efficient and vastly bigger than its Canadian competitor, will be enabled by low ered tariffs to find new markets in Canada for its products. The Cana dian West, with Its newer, cheaper lands and Its generally lower produc tion costs, will be enabled to find new markets In the United States for Its products. PUTTING It more plainly, the American East, which Is doml nantly industrial, will sell more man ufactured goods to Canada, while the Canadian West, which Is dominantly agricultural, will sell more farm pro ducts and lumber to the United States. Canada won't suffer greatly from the Increased Invasion of its markets by American manufactured goods, for Canada's manufacturing Industry Isn't large and is heavily owned al ready by American interests. The sufferers will be Western FARMERS AND LUMBERMEN. HERE Is the curious part of It: This cutting of the throat of Western agriculture is accomplished by the same administration that Is responsible for AAA. (Agricultural Adjustment Administration.) AAA, whose purpose Is to raise prices of American' farm products above the world price level, can be made to work only by building around the United States tariff walls so high that competing farm pro ducts from abroad can not get over them. HERE is what has happened: By killing the pigs, plowing un der the cotton and hiring our farmers not to grow wheat and corn, we have succeeded in raising the price of American farm products above the world level. That situation can be MAINTAINED only by raising tariff walls so high that foreign farm pro ducts will be kept out. Yet here we see the same adminls-. tratlon that is responsible for AAA, with its plg-kllllng and Its hiring of farmers NOT to produce, TEARING DOWN the tariff walls between the United States and Canada so that Canadian farmers may come into the United States and sell to us the pigs and the wheat and the other farm products that our farmers are hired NOT TO PRODUCE. MAKE sense of it if you can. This writer CAN'T, It sounds utterly ridiculous. (Continued From Page One.) Obviously It would require com plete reorganization of Industry. The Germans could send in their steel for trl-borough bridges; the steel companies would have to make roll ing pins or lace ruffles. Also It mlgh require government supervision be yond that generally discussed here tofore. It would certainly necessitate strong policing by someone. Further more, It Is hardly probable that a good start could be made toward such a goal on a nationalistic basis, without world co-operation. The only hint Mr. Wallace gave about starting this ideal world was the suggestion that a council on general welfare be created. He would Clever Mrs. Pierce SHE LOST 50 POUNDS OF FAT Feel full of pep and posses. the i a'.ersder form you crave. You can't i if you listen to gosslpers Mrs Pierce ; has a mind of her own. j To take off excess fat po light on i fattv meat, butter. cre.m md s unary ' sweets -eat more fruit And ve;etbies. ; Take a half teaspoon fill of K.usrhen ; Salt in a glass of hot water every , mo.-niryi taste fine wt'h Juice of half a lemon added! Kruschen is as; low as 40c. j Mrs W. L. Pierce of Tiffin, Ohio.! writes: "I've Lrvken off 50 lbs. with Kruschen In 6 months. I was 239 ; and intend to continue till I'm 1M."' No more e.ithnrtl. s no more l.ia- ' the, ami no eonlip.itlon when o'i take mti little il.it 1 tlie f Krtii hen. : -l.irrnin Pnigs and drufji! oen - a here. have this council conduct referenda on economic issues and ateer the economic course of national adminis trations, no matter which political party happened to be in control ol the presidency. (Note Mr. Wallace would retain the Democratic system; also a constitution.) Only one conclusion in nil this eroplng theory can be fully guaran teed. It Is that Prof. Tugwell Is only the aileron on the left 'wing now. Mr. Wallace is the strut and fabric. It would seem to be safe, how ever, to advise Industrialists that they need not hold their breath until Mr. Wallace's plan is worked out. ' There may conceivably be a new deal move to take the monopoly words right out of Senator Borah's mouth. Also.' the Canadian treaty Indicated that some progress Is being made toward tariff reduction. But the alacrity displayed at the Whtus House in moving to prevent a repeti tion of the German steel Incident waa hardly in line with the Wallace theory. Also. Commerce Secretary Roper is still making "breathing spell" speeches. No one at the White House broke down and bawled when Father Cough! In broke with the adminis tration the other Sunday. Official comment was not offered, but there was some private comment indicat ing a light-hearted attitude. One caustic associate of the president suggested that the famous radio star might have been fishing for a pat on the back. The basic fact seems to be that Washington ' authorities do not re gard Father Coughlin with as much terror as at this time last year. There arc reports on the Inside that his mail can now be carried in a wheelbarrow instead of the fleet ot trucks formerly required. There seems to have been an in ner misunderstanding about Mayor La Guardla's speech at the confer ence of mayors. Ho has used his stock phrase, "semi-colon lawyers of the new dealers," in every speech since the memory of New York newsmen runneth not to the con trary. But the boys here had not heard It before, played 1 it up. They did not reallee that, in the next paragraph, Mr. La Guardla always praises Messrs. Hopkins, Ickes and all the names he can remember here. The .answer to Mr, La Guardla's relationship with the new deal ap parently is that he sat on the allot ment beard and got all that was coming for New York city. Note Mr. La Guardla virtually ad mitted In his speech that he has no hopes or intentions of re-election. Prized Signatures In Museum. JUNEAU, Alaska- (UP) On the register of the Alaska Territorial Museum, page 445, dated August 8, are scrawled three names, which make the ' page a prized document In territorial history. The signatures are: Will Rogers, Wiley Post and Joe Crosson. PENDLETON, Ore., Nov. 21. (AP) August J. Strange, president of the Mount Emily Lumber company, said he feared the lowering of tariffs on Canadian lumber "will bring about easily and quickly the ruination of Oregon's greatest industry." Use Mail Tribune want ads. fx . ; i CU'B SPICIAl aW sk tVM m tartut Emnwi ft CoM?r.!( STRAIGHT RY6 AND tAjii.liiwiauip MUi Xu isi.ilalail laflil. Flight 'o Time Alediurd and Jai-knun Ciniiitj history from the Nle ul the Mall Tribune til and 20 Venn sen) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY November 21, 1923 (It Was Friday) New sawmill at Gold Hill starts. ' Enrollment at the Talent high school doubles over last year. r.ciid bond itvy election in Sams Valley overwhelmingly defeated. Red Grange, famed football star, to be greeted by crowd of 80.000 -in the final game of his college career to morrow. Marriages decrease, divorces increase in Oregon last year, federal statistics show. Still and mash seized in raid In Sams Valley district. Salesman with II headlights on his auto, is ordered to remove all but the legal number. Traffic officers report, "when he was all 'lit' up, the average motorist thought Copco was headed his way." TWENTY YEARS AGO TOP AY November 21, 1915 Miss Hazel Brown entertained ft number of her friends from Medford Friday evening with a dancing party at Eagle Point. The following were present: Misses Katherine Swem, Laura Gates, Babe Cochran, Maria Gates, Margaret Soutter. Gladys Wil son. Gladys Peart, and Alison O'Brien; Messrs. Francis Bennett, James Vance, William Mitchell, John Moffat, We Icy Judy, William Beverldge, Eugene Narregan, Carl Tengwald, Holland Hubbard and Bob Strang. The Colony club met at the Hotel Medford the pstst week to sew for the Red Cross. Mr. and Mrs, John C. Mann return from a trip to the San Francisco fair. Miss Mollie Brltt has returned from a two weeks visit with friends in Oak land, Calif. (Jacksonville Items.) FAT GIRLS GET THE GO BY-SLIM GIRLS WW MEN Lou Fat The Eur Wy-Without Stimtion Dirt, or Btck-Brcakini, Bendini and Robing Excrciiu. There'a a reason why so many people find dieting slow and often times futile in re ducing1. The reason, doctors say, Is often be cause a little gland is not working right. All the blood in your body goes through this tiny gland sixteen times every day. If it doesn't pour into the blood stream about one and one-half drops of vita) fluid every 24 hours, many people take on ugly fat. This fluid helps Nature to "burn up" excess food and fatty tissue in much the same way as a good "draft" acta in a furnace. Now, physicians combat this condition by feeding this gland the substance It lacks and millions of pounds of excess fat has been wiped out this way. Marmolft Prescription Tabtets are based on the same scientific method used by doc tors. 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