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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1936)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFOKD, OREGON. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 25. 1936. TEvjaws la SsvUMra Oreae ataade the UaU TriH" Dally Baeept aWrdj. Publish ad br MKDfORD PaJNTIMO CO. ll-H-lt N. rir It. Fhoee ft. ROBERT W. RUHU Editor. SRNE8T R. OILaTRAF. Manager. Aa Indapandeot Newspaper. Bntaraa aa aacoad-fllaaa mattar at Mad tor A, OraaoB, under Aot of March I. lilt. SUBSCRIPTION RATEI a 1111 In IdruMi DaJIf. OD MU- t!lj. all month I.Tft Dally, on month B Carrlar. 1b Jfc$-t Madferd. Ab land. JaekvoQTtll. Otntrtl Point. rhMBts. TaJant Oold Hill u oa hi ah vara. Cally, on rear .91.0 Da Mr. six month.,... 1.1 ball?, on mooth AH tarma, uib lo tTUM, Official Paper of the CMr of MM ford. Official Pap of Jackaoe Count. MKMBEB OfbTHB AMOCIATKIi fatf-thf. BoctlTlBi nil Loaned wire Hertlce. Tha Aaaoclated Prau la aielualvalr 0' UlUd to tb bm for publication of all w aiipaicii oraauaa lo it or atner wi crtditad lo this pa par, and alio to in i oca J oawa puoninao nertin. Alt rights for publication of areola! flapatchaa harela aro alao raaarrad. I1EI1BBR Or UNITED PRESS af RUBER OP AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Adrarfltlnff Raproaontatlrt M. C. MOO EN SEN A COMPANf Offteaa tn Saw Terh. Chicago Datrolt SB rranelaeo. uoa Angajaa, vastus, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur tmf. Dr. Alexl. Carral. Nob.1 prlae wln mi, claim "Mankind 1. breailiif. dawn." ThU abould b Interesting, If not cheering new. Millions who v "brok." are not, but rapidly ft ting that way. . Th. Jilting by th. na board ot th. Townaend forca of Ongon of a horde of aeli-aUrtlnf political op portunists. Is a matter of deep re jolclnt among voter, past 31 and not yet 90. A number of candidate., who failed of .ndorMirwnt, w.r. I.It apchle by th. rebuke, whloh, un happily, Is Juat a temporary, not a ptrman.nt, condition. Th. un quenchable gall duplexed In th. first place will .nabl. tbtrn to carry on In th. prwant crisis and, In th. futur. as In th. past, b. av.r for themaelYee and with th. aid. they thin has th. most votes. On. of th. discarded lot hss announced his Intentions of continuing th. battl. with "40 and Ford." In th. light of what haa happened, he may add a frying pan to hla campaign- equip ment. Th. We of a party strayed down town late laat night wearing a lampshade. H. was a big success, and th. owiter of th. lampshade tried to act Ilk. she was not msd. "BORAH PRBPARBi fOR AN- OTHKR HI.OW'" (Hdllne Red Blurt News) Crude but accurate descrip tion of a epeech. . farmers aald one-fourth of the Teiaa county wheat crop had blown away, leaving but 36 per cent of the crop. (Press Dlapstch.) Higher mathematics down on the farm. . . Oratorical construction of a rail road to the coast has been resumed, and will continue as long as the lead pencils hold out. ... It Is to be hoped the proposed WPA history of Jackson county does not fall to record two classical hap penlnga. They are worthy of men tion. One was th. tlm. an Apple gat, hunter ahlnned up a sapling to escape being shot for a deer, and waa knocked from hla perch for a bear, and suffering from a shoulder wound. Th. other historic occa sion occurred when hysterics ruled, and th. Truth wsa embattled. A eltlren, advised that blatant dema gouge. were lying to him, from every atump and platform, replied with blistering logic: "Sure, I know they're lying, but I'm tired of believing the truth, and want to hear no more of Itl" Roth were masterpiece of their kind and should be preserved for th. futur.. ON A FHOSTY MORN (anon to Re) I Com. si) you amudrere and 111 sing to you A story shout the Bear Creek smudg. Ing crew. On a troly night wtlb a torch In Tour harut Tou've got to go some to b. a I smudging man. The thermometer henga on an old pear tree, wrerythlng aafe while at thirty. three. Rut when It drone down Just two degree, lower Tou'U hear lowry call at the bunk hou. door: . . "Com. on. boys, you've got to hurry. Come on. dots, w. cannot wait. Com. on boys, you've got to hurry, Th. thermometer la now at Si." n Turn on your light with an awful groan. Toy can tell there's something do ing, by Lowry'a tone. Put en cIMVa that you cannot soil. 'Cause you've got to get ready for to bum that oil. "look at your thermometer as you go. Light every other pot In every other row. And when you're made the circuit riouhl. bark to No. 4. And If It's still freerlng, light up soma more." "Come on, boys you'll hare to hurry. Come on, bovs. lose no time. Com. on. boys, you'll hsve to hurry. The thermemeter'n now at 2.' Sucslimhstn a tea cresm. Ctndy A fa14 09uaia. Tn Cieet, Ug ft. gm Editorial Correspondence SAN DIEGO, Calif., March 23. After regular exercise at Soboba, we didn't relish the idea of spending five hours on a bug with no outdoor activity. But while the outdoors waa lack ing there waa plenty of activity. In fact that Hemet bus run ning to Riverside waa better muscular exercise than the late President Coolidge'a electric horse. How that old rattle-trap flew over that winding narrow road up hill and down dale, with the five or six passengers rattling around within like so many dice in a box. The driver had all the advantage for he sat on a front seat and had the wheel to hang onto. We forgave him however when he informed us as we approached Riverside that he had to speed up a bit to catch the San Diego bus having been delayed ten minutes at Oilman Springs. As it was we missed the connection at the Riverside station but flagged the outgoing S. D. bus just after entering the outskirts of the city. . . . e When we first sighted the San Diego bus we thought war had been declared. It was a small low-slung conveyance and racked full of marinea in their white caps and blue uniforms striped with red. In fact as the see nn inch of space within.. modating also. He pulled out a and hung it somehow between ye editor perched for four solid there was a great deal of hot that voyage. However we will say this for the detachment on that particular trip. They drank a great deal of beer, and jabbered pretty continuously, but there was no rough stuff in word or action, nothing said or done that could have offended the most borrow one of their favorite terms they were a "swell" bunch of kids, and a credit to the service in every way. Perhaps they had been slightly chastened by defeat, and night and day motor trip from Denver, Colorado. For we ouicklv learned they were the from the Marine base in San th national tournament at Denver in the second round. Not surprised thev were beaten for squad, the huskiest bunch of whereas basketball these days Thanka to them we had a close-up of the air base at March Field, and also the marine base here in San Diego where they debouched. The two were rather similar. Most attractive buildings, clean, well cared for, attractive, fine grounds with well kept lawns and gardens, Sam doesn't take good care of We had finite a talk with one team, with a delicious sense of accent. We kept thinking how of Owen Wisters "Virginian." "fine", plenty to do, good training and they treated you well. He was making a special study of rsdio and television on the side and hoped to get transferred to some special research department later on. The date of our arrival here following morning we had the Pt. Loma and aee the fleet come out on aome aort of aecret maneuver, joining the other part of the squadron from San Pedro, and as thirty or thirty-five of them, battleships, cruisersj torpedo boats and one airplane carrier came swinging in to the harbor it waa to a confirmed landlubber at least a most thrilling and impressive sight! And here we might as well aging one. Instead of gamng majesty and might steaming into self confidence, and thinking what a waste of money and men all of this for war and destruction and death when if we were just sane, universal peace would reign ye editor found himself with difficulty restraining an overpowering impulse to take off his hat to cheer! Of course that surprising experience with the marinea the night before may have had something to do with it. We don't know. t - But we do know this: that impulse, represents an elemental biological something, in the human race, which has existed pretty close to 300,000 years, and which we fear does represent the greatest single obstacle to securing a permanent and work able plan for world peace. In plain English that something is this: man is instinctively a fighting animal, Irish or not Irish he LIKF.S to fight. And if for some reason or other he can't fight, then he likes to watch a fight. That, instinct is stronger in some than in others, stronger in youth thau any time there after, but no matter how civili.ed we THINK we have become, it exists, to a greater or less extent in all till death. Of course as long as we have hit on this subject w might as well finish it the answer to that is to secure what the late Henry James termed a moral substitute for war. That is in stead of fighting our fellow men with guns and gas, divert the combative instinct against such universal enemies as disease, fires, floods and the like. But would Ye Kditor or any charter member of the bald headed club standing on Pt. I.oma or anywhere else, feel his pulses throb, something suddenly quicken within him, if he should sight just an imposing array of maritime tonnage aa we saw this morning going out to sea to fight well say the fungus bungiis infesting the nearbv lobster beds! Perhaps so. But we DOl'MT itl ' R. W, R. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW TORK. March 36. The two gentlemen who express New York's most, pronounced ubiquttousneae are Jul Olaemer and Tippy Orey. In- almost any part of the world the South Be, Sing apore er the Arctic Circle one ta almost certain to see one or the other, niaeneer la su per salesmen for a Jewelry house. An wit of the bsndhox fellow of metlculmie ahlne. A throm-er .of maenttlcteni partlea who ttp'toea about shushing noisy guenta A flret ntghter and almost invsrlablv the first person to greet an arrlvirtf blgglty from Hollywood or Ku rope. Rxample of his omnipresence: I know a gentleman who will swear he aw Olaenner at the same moment In two different trains pulling out ft Albuquerque In opposite direo Uona. Tippy Ore xuitUt eaallj be bu waaixAakM door swung open we couldn t Rut the new driver was accom leather camp chair arrangement the two front seats, upon which hours not so solid either for air and bottled beer, mixed in the U. S. Marines or at least delicate sensibilities. In fact to members of the basketball sound Diego who had been put out of they looked more like a football six - footers one would care to see, takes finesse and speed. certainly no one can say Uncle the men in the army and navy. of the marines, a guard on the humor and a charming southern perfectly he would fit the role -Ho said he liked the service was rather fortunate for the opportunity to take a run to in. The ships had been ordered make a confossion and a dam at that array of power and port with such precision and termed man -about-tha -globe. He bob up In the most unexpected place. A fellow of varied talent. Orey hax written several musical revue for the Foil Bergere in Pstls. He is an outstanding bob aledder at Sera nee and haa won trophies for skiing at St. Merita. The last time t saw him h waa moseying out of a neigh borhood movie In the deep Bronx. Oeorgt White continue to display hte almost childish tvet for selling seat in th box office at his own show. He has been doing It for years and what was once thought a pub licity dido la now another of tb theater traditions. He rarely misses the evening or matinee rush. It s hla way of relaxing. Where a others play bridge or golf, he fir his custo mers the O. O. I've often thought the country Jakiest of the small town names was the one in Indiana once known as T 11 holt. James Whltccmb Riley tm morUllred it. He had an early sweet, heart living there, whom he used to visit. One of his poem carried the line: "The little town of Tallholt wa good enough for me." After thl waa published the 12 outraged cltlrens petitioned Washington for a change of name. This was done and. as I recall, is now Hamilton Station. In cidentally, Tallholt la in the adjoin ing county from Bennett's Cmlng. where Richard Bennett, the ator, and father of the famous Bennett girls. as horn. Tom Oeraghtv's Mtle stop In Indiana la railed RusiX Personal Health Service By William Brady, M D. Signed letters pertaining to personal Health and Dyglene not to disease dlsgnusls or treatment will be answered by Ur. Brady If a stamped self-ad-dressed envelop. It enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr William Brady, ZSS El Camlno. Beverly Hills, CsL INHUMANTY IN Til A press dispatch racentljr described an atrocity perpetrated upon stiikih; relief workers by "county officers." Fifty strikers were encamped In the o o u n t y court house. A 17 -year old girl among them was dlscor. ered to hare diphtheria." s o "fumigation had been ordered" and while deputy sheriffs stood gusrd with tear guns to prevent removal of the fumigation can dies the strikers whv refused to leave the building (about one-third of the number) coughed end choked In the acrid fumes, their heads bound with damp cloths and the men. wom en and children flattened on the floor. Cries of the children were audible to the ring of officers and spectators outside. Must have been as amusing to the spectators as s lynching or s train wreck or other casualty where th alert and eager Yankee myatander has a chance to see torture Inflicted. The newspaper story does not say who ordered the fumigation. Presum ably the local health authorities, If so, It would be poetic Justice to treat those health authorities to a good done of their own medicine. I'd like to touch off a candle or two for them to cough and choke on. Just as an object lesson for the public. There Is no Justification for such fumigation of a room or building wherein a case of diphtheria or any other contagious or infectious disease hss been found. Only where the health authorities are Ignorant, super stitious or crooked Is the rite of fum igation of premises after contagious or Infectious disease still practiced. As a sanitary or public health meas ure fumigation haa been proved use less and abandoned by sll competent health authorities. It Is now employ ed only 'for the destruction, of rats and other vermin. A bootlicking little county vintage politician who manages to get ap pointed health officer, likes the sense of Importance It gives him to go j around snd raise horrendous stinks ! on the premises after Illnesses which still frighten the peasants. People who have advanced beyond the third Brrnde at school ought to be Bert Williams, I am told, employed a seasonal color tone gradation with his supply of hats. In the spring he would appear with a pearl gray. In mid-summer a milk white, Indian summer a light tan, autumn a brown leaf effect and for deep win ter a chocolate brown. The hat waa his favorite wearing apparel and his only extravagance. He had them especially made In Philadelphia of the finest material procurable. The reason: He always had to wear a throw away cap sporting a flour ad. when a boy. Then there Is Bob Hague, the Standard Oil tanker tycoon who did so much to temper winds to the shorn Lambs during the depression. When a one-gallused boy, his com blned hopes centered on owning a sfm winding, silver case watch. Time after time by heroic saving he seemM on the verge of proud owner ship. But something always hap pened. He was In hla early 20 's be fore he finally made the grade. Re sult: Today he probably has. outside the Morgan collection, the finest as sortment of watches from all over the world Individually owned. A small fortune has gone Into his hobby. Dexter Fellowea contends that youthful frustration harvests the older crop of circus fane. He, over a period of years, discovers that ktds who had to allp under the tent or tote water to the elephant are the dyed-ln-the-wool patrons. I lean to this theory. I could, as a boy, always go to the circus. Today I care little for It. H. T. Webster and Clare Br t kits had constant disappointments. Both became enthusiasts, even to traveling with Rlngllngs a few weeks each year. And sctlng as clowns. Nimble, the Boston pooch, ta In the dog house today in the Holly wood manner, fnnce he got his talk ing to he hss been crawling belly wtse toward me In utter dejection, yowling low and plaintively. But I bestow the stern look that cringe editors and publishers. He may win me over twice T felt myself slip ping but he's going to team that dragging the southwest section of a pair of speckled hot aiggedy pajamas Into the hall and Into the elevator flllM with strange ladle la not cricket. No, sir, it not playing the game. (Copyright. 1P3. MVNaught Syndicate) Rent a Bicycle 41m Bros. iS North Fir. Gceighound provides the ideal way to travel to Example ot LOW FARES and Cfwt. .an rran. Iran in. In. nrelei 11(0 11 11 Klam. rail. I " Rmeburf 5.2. IMrll.ini) S.S0 4.M DEF0T Central E NAME OP AMERICA able to comprehend the simple facts. first, that disease germs do not sur vive many minutes In the air or light and must be quickly transferred from person to person In one way or an other In order to produce the disease In the second person. No amount of sterilizing or disinfecting of the walls. floors or furniture or articles In the sickroom or the house where a person has been 111 of Infectious disease enn prevent spread of the disease. Of course no antiseptic, disinfectant or germicide which Is not dangerously poisonous or fatal to human beings will destroy disease germs in the body of a 'living person. Therefore, the crime of these "officers" Is a revolt ing one and If there Is still a sense of decency In that corner of the country the Nazis Involved In It will be punished for their offense. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Healthful Beverage. Please state which Is the most healthful beverage, pure orange Juice, pure tomato Juice or pure milk . . (O. A- J.) Answer In particular circum stances one might be more essential than the others. They are all health ful, wholesome. lad Pol Mining. My sons have a lead solder molding act which they use a great deal. Is there any danger of lead poisoning from the fumes of the melting lead? . . , (Mrs. B. V.) Answer Yes. Better give them In stead a plastic or clay molding out fit and some Instruction by a good kindergarten teacher. This will both amuse and develop artistic talent. Parents of pre -school children would do well to visit kindergartens In pro gressive schools and get Ideas on en tertainment and education ox int children between two and six years of age- Come Hack. A few months ago you had several extremely Interesting articles on phy siological rejuvenescence. I waa so busy at the time . . . (Mrs. M. G.) Answer Send ten 'cents coin and stamped envelope bearing your cor rect address, for booklet "The Regen erative Regimen." (Copyright, 1936, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communlcoate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr William Brady. M. D.. 365 El Com I no. Beverly Hills. Calif. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. THE Brick Store, a stated In Uiee chronicles yesterday, waa mer chant, banker, broker and business adviser for the whole great Klamatn country. It edged Into the banking business In the simplest manner Imaginable. It customer sold their crops or their cattle or their sheep or their products of whatever kind and brought the money to the Brick Store for safo keeping. Then, when occasion arose to pay out money, they scribbled on any scrap of paper that came handy an order on the Brick Store and signed It. and this scrap of paper passed s a check and waa psld when pre sented. IN the papers found the other day In tearing down the old atruc ture appeara a typical "check" of thl sort. It reads: (as) Klamath Falls, July 8, 1804. The Brick Store, ( Gents: Please pay Mr. five (fl) dollars for me and much oblige. O. O. APPLKQATS. This pioneer forerunner of a bank check wa written on the back of an envelope addressed to Captain Apple gate. It did the work a well a a fancy printed check would have done. 1M those days, among stockmen and farmers generally, sale were apt to be made In the fall and purchase In the spring. When a stockman started out to buy a doren head of cattle, or s hundred, or a thousand (whatever his requirements hsppened to be) he dldnt first, as must now be done, come In and arrange a credit at the bank and sign e note. He Just started out and bought hst he SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES all points tnroutt wteiM .nd ffeqwent Grrrbroee, te all CtH. remit rMle. ma connettioo. to tnt point Am.,, titr-rxlitif puM.. dt.rwht.ed Itltt. he.1 Htl.tft Ml tb. p?td. r.rf..'.i tttnJ, (pt erpecoi). toatraieiK, ,.4 An. t.rtic.. i.Mvt Mr.nroRn tvtii.Y Northbound I (i a m. V) a m. i:S0 pm. 11:10 p m. oulhootinn1 13 OA a m. 5:10 am a M) am. e 45 p m. and 8th Phone 309 wanted where b found It and wrote a check. When th check came in, It ws paid out of hla balance, If he had one, and If hla balance waa exhausted It ws paid anyway and charged up against him as an over draft. These overdraft were paid and the account adjusted whenever sales were made and money came In. The Brick Store KNEW ITS CUSTOMERS. (Thl custom, It Is perhaps well to explain here, waa common at . that tlm Is livestock communities, even where more formal bank ex isted. Stockmen and farmers seldom though of arranging a loan before hand and signing a note. They Just wrote checks and later settled for the overdraft. It waa only with the advent of tighter banking laws and less permanent populations that the custom died out.) IN this connection, W. A. (Bill) Deizell some year ago told this writer an amusing story. Shortly after the adoption of Ore gon' first state banking law, a spruce young exemlner appeared at the Brick Store to go over It bank ing business. After a half day spent on the books, he showed up before the owners practically foaming at the mouth. "Do you know the fix you're in?" he demanded. "You've got a long line of loans out, and the only assets I can find are a big list of overdrafts! If you don't get out and get these overdraft converted Into bankable notes, you're a good aa looking into the penitentiary doors right now!" "The funny part of It,' Bill added with a chuckle, "waa that every one of those overdrafts waa as good as gold." . Again, you see, the Brick Store knew Its customers. f 4 ONE more talc, related the other day to this writer: "One of the Brick Store's big ac count (a man known over the whole east of the mountains coun try) ran on for several years, and, finally waa figured 'up for settle-1 ment. The owners looked over the figure and one of them shook his hesd. 'I don't think that's correct,' he said. 'We owe him money instead of him owing us.' So they figured It again, over and over, and It finally turned out that they DID owe him money $10,000, woieh was promptly paid, to the great surprise of the customer. who hadn't kept track of it him self, and was astonished, to learn that he had o much coming." THEY were shrewd, capable business men. those proprietors of the old Brick Store, and they were out to make money for themselves. But they were HONEST. 4 Meteorological Report March 25. 1936 Forecasts Medford and vicinity: Unsettled tonight and Thursday with freezing temperature. Temperature a year ago today: Highest, 08; lowest, 39. Total monthly precipitation, .06 of an Ich; deficiency for the month. 1.29 Inches. Total precipitation since Sep tember l, 1P35. 76.40 Inches. Relative humidity at A p. m. yes terday, 70 per cent; 6 a. m. today, 78 per cent. Sunrise tomorrow, 6:04 a. m. Sunset tomorrow, 6:29 p. m. Observations Taken at 8 A. M., 120th Meridian Time WU i r s Boise , 43 38 .08 Clear Boston 46 38 .40 Rain Chicago w. 62 36 T. Clear Denver 43 32 .... Cloudy Eureka - 44 40 .13 Clear Helena - 84 14 T. Clear Los Angeles 04 43 .38 Clear MEDFORD 44 S3 T. Cloudy New York 08 48 .01 Clear Omaha 48 26 Clear Phoenix 68 46 .14 Cloudy Portland 48 84 .... P.Cdy. Reno 40 36 .03 P.Cdy. Rose burg w 46 32 13 Clear Salt Lake City .... 96 28 T. Cloudy San Francisco 82 44 14 Clear Seattle 48 38 T. Cloudy Spokane 44 34 p. Cdy. Walla Walla 48 34 T. P.Cdy. Washington. D.C. 66 48 T. Cloudy Mldffet Psotos l So. PT.AALEYB GREEN SLAB W Big DOUBLE LOAD For Direct Mill Deliveries First come, first served! Phone 7 Now TIMBER PRODUCTS CO. END OF NORTH CENTRAL AVENUE Flight 'o Time Med ford and Jackson County history from the flies of the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years ago- TEN YEARS AGO TODAY .March 2 1926 (It was Thursday) Republicans to hold convention In Nat. March 30. Smudging record for valley set, with nine straight nights of firing, and another frost predicted for tonight. Smudge oil supply running low. and special shipment Is sought from the south. Trio of locsl youths nabbed as bootleggers. Rogue River Civic club plans a pie social for end of week. Coach Prink Calltson of high school says: "Al Melvln Is the most promis ing basketball player In state high school circles." Melvln was a substi tute the past season. Resolution mailed to fish commis sion by sportsmen demands "adjudi cation of Rogue river conditions for the betterment of mankind and fish ing." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY March 2A. 1P16 (It was Saturday) Prosecutor B. B. Kelly addressea the "Political Science" club at the public library. Mrs. R. F. Antle entertains the Wednesday Bridge club. . H. W. Bingham gave a luncheon at the Country club Sunday In honor of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Clark. Mrs. Bert Thierolf and Mrs. How ard Hill entertained at the Thierolf home Wednesday afternoon for Mrs, R. P. Caufleld. nee Ruth Merrick, who left Thursday for her home at Oregon Ctty. City police declare war on reckless Jitney drivers. (Continued from Page One.) mind was that a good neighbor at tends to his own business, rather than the business of the neighborhood. At least, this la the firmly established Intention of all hla foreign adviser here. There was one period of 48 hours recently when the British really got. excited about war prospects. This wai when Lloyds declined to Insure against war at any price. Today they will give 10 to 1 against war within six months. The Inside on Lloyd's temporary timidity Is that the youthful British foreign minister, Anthony Eden, be came unduly alarmed for that period of time. When he returned from his Paris trip about that time, he Is sup posed to have passed word down the line that war was so near he could "almost hear the guna rumble." What frightened hlra was the In formation be received from French officials In Paris. They told him they were going to drive the Oermans out of the Rhine. The French wanted to know whether Britain would help. Despite his personal alarm, Eden handled the situation very well. He got the French to agree to a confer ence later In London, thus affording them time to cool off. The vague suggestions for a peace, disarms ment, and economic conference have fallen Into cold water here. Not a single official of the state department would willingly become a member of the American delegation to such a conference. The naval conference In London was an International headache. The world economic conference earlier was a bigger headache. Both prob lems thrown together with pease would Just about cause the greatest of all International headaches. Furthermore, the Idea of having such a conference In May Is very, very bad. After May comes Novem ber. No new International Ideas will get very far here until after the elec tion. It will be dented officially, but th JT)rSkin Itchy ? " -flD-ont scratch! Apply this VVsoothinq ointment freely and) A-TV 1ulcl relief-as I do! 4 Resinol 1 PINE state department had a little private understanding with Paraguay before recognition waa granted. At least It had an understanding with Colonel Franco, the military revolutionist with a fascist complex who Is now the government of Paraguay. Col. Franco waa the only Latin American government holding out sgslnst the Roosevelt pan-American peace conference. He said: No recognition, no Para guay, no peace conference. He got his recognition by promising to ac cept the peace conference Invitation, but he had to make his promise first. The state department took no chances. FASTER service. PORTLAND Yi hrs. , SEATTLE 2 hrs. SAN FRANCISCO 2'4 hrs. LOS ANGELES A . . ,. 4Hhrs. y New faster morning snd evening planes to California; also to Portland, Tacoma, Seattle. Now you csn leave t 3:12 p. m., and arrive in Portland before dinner. Or eavc after lunch and be in Southern California in early evening! Twin-engined planes. Heated cabins. Stewardesses. Tickets: Municipal Airport Tel. 241 Hotels; Travel Bureaus; Telegraph Offices UNITED AIR LINES 3 Power! Traction! Economy! ... a combination that gets work done quickly, with leas effort and with more left as profit when th Job is done. Oregon farmers' have learned to depend upon "Caterpillar" tractors because they do every Job on the farm ... in any soil ... at any season. Better Investigate! Maybe the sure gripping tracks of a "Caterpillar will earn more for you. HUBBARD WRAY CO. 29 N. Riverside. Phone 202 3 BEGINS TOMORROW THURSDAY March 26th The story of Iris Lanning and the detour she took to happiness via New York. An absorbing ro mance. IN THE MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE Golden lk I Mfk CTWddtmei Z 2