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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 20, 1936)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORDtfjtiTEIBUNE "Everyone IB 8oBther Orae-" Beads tha lull Trlbana'' Dsllf Bxcept sWtonlsr. Publlatiad by alEDfORD PMNTINO) CO. ll-lf-IS M. rir it. oS II. ROBERT W. RUHU Editor. ERNEST R. OILSTRAP. ImW As loaapsadapt Hwptpir. Catered as eeeonSHllaM "V itnanRIPTION RATE! , Mall ID Ad.DCl Daiir. fw ; ?! Dallr, els months Dally, one moDtb ".'.I" . L r Carrier, la Adveaee Madford. Ash land. Jacksonville, Central Point, Phosnlx. Tal.nl Oold BUI aad on Dillr, ona Faar a.0 Dally, all montha s.is Dally, one month i0 All tiraia cash IP advance. Official Pa oar of lha CIlF Bedford. Official rauaf of JachaoD Cotuty. efEMHER OK THE ASBOOIATBU PUUUi n . . bn,i I - CV I r Hwta. nacri.uiB - - Tha Aaaoelatad Praaa la alolualraly en MMad to tba uaa for publloatloo of all aawa dlapatchaa oredltad to It or othar arlaa eradltad lo this papar. apd alao to Ibe local oawa publlahad karalo. Ail rtfbti for publlcatloo of special dlapatchaa haralo ara alao raesrved. U3MBER OP UNITED PRESS UEUBER OP AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS AdTardafnt Rapraaanlatlvaa la. C. elOOBNSEN COIIPAMt Offlcaa lo Naw Fork. Chicago Dalrolt Sap Franolaeo, Lot Anfalas, Seattle, Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. initiative bllla. filed by student of Institutions of higher learning, to overrule by a vow of the people, the rulings of campus authorities, and. It will be proper to rater to them a Institutions of higher leering. a a Justice and the Jackpot were knocked out of a slot-machine with a blunt Instrument one night last week, the police report A representative of the Texss Cen tennial Exposition was scheduled last week to catch the governor and put a cowboy hat on him. O. Wig Ashpole and Vern Brophy. stockmen, report that a cowboy hat never looks Its best unless the wesrer Is bow legged. In corroboration of this theory they point f P"1" dent, and at Jerry Jerome. a a a The Oregon State Speech assocle tton met at Eugene over the week end, and made some. a a a "Anyone found near my chicken bouse at night will be found there next morning." (Notice reported n the Merrill (Ore.) Record) Plain enough. THF RKAlclil.PRlTH. (Time Magaxlne) "Poets, song writers and dreamers for the past ten years have given their genius to the automobile, the movies, the radio and the airplane. They have not been singing of the home and that Is one reason why there are still sbout 13.000,000 unemployed In America." a a a The aecretery of state has denied tha request of Sam Brown of Oer. yels. candidate for the V. 8. senst. to run the picture of his "Same old Ford" In the Voters Pamphlet. It la contrary to the statutes, and would not be constitutional, even If It was a new Ford. a a a It Is now alleged Portland poli ticians ara attending Townsend club rallies, and (of all things!) turning them Into "a political rally." No candidate would attend a Townsend meeting with the remotest Idea of making a speech. It would be Just like going to a Orange picnic, with both hands bandaged. a a a TRIORS or TRADE. (alem Ktatesman) "Some merchants reallre this, so they do not park In front of their own stores, but In front of the places of business of other people, which Is not very sweet competition." a a After todsy, Robert Sherwood la eld enough to look wise, and vote the wrong way. Bondage (Ben Hur Mmpmaii In tha Oold Hill Ness, SO Venra Ago.) "O, It you be my msster," the young cried the young man, tnso lant lithe In his stride "O, If you be my master, come wrestle with mel" The wind Is In the msple. the bird Is In the tree: the foam la on the clear cup. Youth la In Its. pride mad Youth, glad Youth, be you satisfied I "O. If you be my master," the young man spake the young men. xhuberant. bold eyes swage "O. If you be my master, as loose tongues say al, put It to the lest, till the w i. The wind la In the maple, the bare boughs shake light Touth, bright Youth, rc your own sake I "O. If I am your master, will you follow on young man. Insolent, where the bunch have goner O. If X be your master, as old tongues dsck, will you take the road with me that turns not back?" The birds within the maple lies one now drawn dread Yuuth, dead Youth old In the dawnl 4 Frank McHugh ot Hollywood be lltUea superstitious friends. But he .'aye In bed every time Friday falls on the thirteenth. Tha number 4 farms In the United mates on January 1, 1935. was 6.812. 80. sn Increase of 8 3 per oent over April 1, 1930, according to the cen sus bureau. RKraheth Russell, photographers' model, refused nine film testa before ton successful on. Louis McHenry Howe I OWS MeHENRT HOWE, who died Saturday, after a long, lingering; illnees, upset the tradition that "no man can be a hero to his valet." For quarter of a century, he was not only political, but a spirituat valet for Franklin D. Roosevelt. Politically he was the president's alter ego. As constant attendant and valiant aide he saw him through two critical illnesses, typhoid fever and infantile paralysis. His association with the Roosevelt family was so close that he was practically speaking adopted as a mem ber of the family. The Roosevelt children called him "Louie", and during his last illness, the Rooseveltg did everything for him in the way of constant solicitude and oving care, that a family would do for their very own. But with Louis McHenry Howe, familiarity never bred con tempt. Nor did it bring disillusion. To the last Franklin D. Roosevelt was Howe's "white knight," his inspiration and his hero. A sour, cynical, rather embittered gnome of a man as far as the world was concerned, when the Roosevelts or the Pooseevlt issue came into the picture, he was all sweetness and light, the inhibitions and suppressions of a life time vanished, he became radiant, vital, keen, interested in only one thing, what would be best for the man and the family, to whose future and fortunes he was so passionately devoted. We have always felt the retirement of Secretary Howe from all active service over a year ago, was a great loss to President Roosevelt politically. Shrewd, realistic, with an uncanny sense of what the rank and file of this country might be thinking and doing, his daily advice and counsel, during the recent parlous times, would have been invaluable. He would have supplied caution, restraint, the balance wheel, which a man of the president's sanguine and impulsive nature often needs. What has been true for the year past will be even more true in the future, with the presidential campaign soon in full swing. But that was not to be. Strong in mind and will, the fates provided Louis McHenry Howe, with a physical equipment, that was woefully inadequate to withstand the strains and stresses that his aggressive combative spirit placed upon it. The wonder is not that he died before he reached three score and ten, but that he ever lived within five years of it. It is scarcely an exaggeration to say, that for the last several years, the dim flame of life within him was only kept alive by his indominable spirit and the one great passion of his soul to be at the side of his "hero" in his time of need, and see him through to another victory I To Much of a Bad Thing WE sometimes wonder if President Roosevelt's critics aren't overdoing the thing a bit. We read a number of maga zines and newspapers, in our regular line of work, and confess we are getting a trifle FED-UP by the constant stream of fault finding and abuse that a majority of them are passing out to their readers. After all no president of this country, regardless of his shortcomings could be quite so COMPLETELY "no good" as most of Franklin Roosevelt' 's more prominent critics maintain. Day after day, not a word of commendation much less praise just iteration and reiteration, Issue after issue, he is all wrong here, he is all wrong there, he Is all wrong all the time I yiTAT the president has made mistakes, that there are flaws in his New Deal, no fair minded person will deny. But that he is as bad, or HALF as bad, as the anti-Roosevelt press tries to make out, just can't be true, and outside of the radical, fire eating partisans, we don't believe any of the people believe it is true. ltORE than that. There is no doubt in our mind that this sort of thing is defeating its own purpose. Instead of increasing opposition to the president it is arousing sympathy for him. It also tends to weaken the foroe of the entire anti Roosevelt propaganda just as all gross exaggeration and palp able excesses do. After a while when it becomes so apparent that all that is said CAN'T be true, the natural disposition is to conclude that nothing that is said IS true. That this wholesale and indiscriminating lambasting of the president is doing more to help than injure his political chances, is suggested in a new note of sympathy that has slipped into the columns of some of the more fair-minded political com mentators. Take Raymond Clapper, for example. He has been far from a Roosevelt protagonist during the past few months, but in his article released today we note he devotes all his space, to de fense of the president's repent, address and derision for the efforts of the anti-F. D. R. claquers to pulverize it with ridicule and throw it in the ash can. The following extract will show what we mean : From ths hostlls newspaper comment upon President Rooee volt's Baltimore speech. It appears there Is something deplorable In the spectacle of ths president of the United States giving voice to the high Ideals of social Justice which he thinks should , guide the policies ci this country. His address, frankly an Inspirational appeal to youth. Is re ceived with much ths aame cynical sneering reaction that burled the Idealism of Wood row Wilson under a deluge of post wax disillusionment snd ushered In Its Pandora's box, loaded with the Ohio gang. All we need to do, It la said. Is to stop this nighty experi mentation and get bark to 1919. All right, get bark to I9M, arid what do you havet It the Brookings Institution testify. Ta-enty-one per cent, ot our families living on leas than $1000 a year. per ient. living below eiSOO and 11 per cant, below $3SO0. which la regarded as the deadline below whloh a family cannot live decently, And In addition a headache Just around the corner. That la tha promised land to which ths practical opponents of Roosevelt would lead us. No. th "practical men" who torm the backbone of the Roosevelt opposition, and who set the pitch for most of tha press comment, have no patience with auoh visionary trash and fine phrases as were found In the Baltimore speech. Why waste time on Ideals? They must get direct to the point. And how do they get to the point? it Just happens that disclosures of the Blsck senate committee In the last few days have shown how tha moat vocal of the anti-Roosevelt forces get to the point. Tha point Is to beat Roosevelt by any means thst turn urj even ths lowest. Dig out those facts and you will find that John J. Raakob and Pierre S. du Pont put up $10,000 bela-een them to finance the recent southern graasroota convention of "Jeffeieonlan Democrats" for the purpose of building up the demagogue Tal mad re aa an opponent to Roosevelt, The money was solicited by one of the men who distributed through the south posters showing Mrs Roosevelt photographed with nfarroee. The oreanlnttlon which promoted the back-firing TalmaJe meeting collected manna Ojm a long list of business aieru tlves. utility officials, men like Alfred P. Sloan. Lammont du Pont and Ogden Mills, snd others on the American Liberty League s white list, rhe sickening posters about Mrs, Roosevelt were distributed at the Talmadre convention and widely written about. Bui the Heavy Sugar Raridlf :'' pi t v,i the money haven't olssvowed this affair, although they naturally are dis appointed Uitt Talmadts fanned out an4 sad to be benched. MEDFORD MAIL secretary to Pregident Roosevelt, TRIBUTE. alEDFOKD, Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertslnlng to persons! heslth snd h.iglens not to dtsesse diagnosis or treatment will ba answered by Dr. Brsdy If a stamped self-sd-dreeeed envelope Is enclosed, utters should be brief snd written In Ink. Owing to tha large number of letters received only a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Ur. Wllllem Brsdy, 265 El Caralno, Beverly Hills, Cal. THE MANAOEM Ths removal of non-cancerous moles and warts from tha face calls for tha finest skill of ths surgeon. Individuals of limited Intelli gence may be willing to sub mit to ths mlr aola vorkera of R?V'' IT the market place. uio oaroera. beauty "doctora" and self - com mended p 1 a stlc s u r g s r y Insti tutes, but those who value their personal appear ance, comfort and safety Invariably select a physi cian or surgeon of repute to treat any such blemish. To me, a wart on my own akin would be mildly Interesting, but a wart on the skin of a potential pa tient has always been irritating. I'd better explain this, ao you won t be puzcled about It. It is simply that I never learned the proper manage ment of warts. Nine times out of ten my advice. If sought at all, was curbstoned out of me. Caught be tween my office and my buggy by the casual passerby It was extra ordinary how many of them Just happened to be strolling by and confronted with a trifling wart, what could I dof Mutter about the dan ger of cancer, blood-poisoning, lock jaw? The blighter would recoil In righteous horror and start a whlaper Ing questioning my mental state or hinting that I was hitting the dope. A medlcsl practitioner has only to brush the fur of such a est the wrong way to fan Into flame the ever smouldering suspicion that he uses dope. I learned, too late, the key to the wart problem. I offer it here to young doctors who. I suppose, are still more or less subject to the curb stone evil, tho such customers are In danger of being picked up aa pan handlers in these days of fast cruis ing. This Is the secret: Ko suoh thing as a wart. The lesion is always verruca. "My doar man. take my ad vice and have that verrucca, removed Immediately. Come to the office to morrow." There you have him. He cant grumble. You've really gone out or vour way to do him a favor, giving him a kindly warning against trifling with ft potentially dangerous leslcn. There's a fair chance he may decide to see It thru, even If it costs him fee. Whereas, under tlie old cus tom, who ever heard of a doctor de manding a fee for Just telling a per son what to put onto a wart? That's why warts Irritate me so. They're like weak ankles In that re spect. Took me many years to learn that weak ankles are in ract pronaiea feet. Physicians who have enjoyed suc- NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, April ao. Diary: Out In as sunny a glare aa I ever beheld outside Bsn Diego. And nesr Scrib- ners a constsDie gave me a dust ing off for Jay walking. Then sat with Ewing Oalloway In plummy palaver over two-year-old Kentucky hams, grits, turnip greens snd pot llkker. Home and wrotas a long letter to Irvln Cobb, the naw motion Dlc- Iiim afar mrA nactrlnv aitnffranhed books to freight to Ohio. And came a picture ."rem Dean Cornwall witn an lna,llh1 tantlmant that tOUClied me mightily. Then to Margaret rem- berton'a tea to the London star, Clllda Varesl. ninMt vith mv lsdv at Pans Mo netae talking a moment to Marshall Nellsn. who has become an autnora Mnt any amhllna throtieh China town past Irving Berlin's old stand and back to my lodgings wnere Floyd Olbbons snd Desn Ackerman of Columbia had called. Bo reading "Tom Sawyer" for the steenth time. Manhattan's most satonlshlngly lacquered newspaperman, topping even the allk stockinged fabulist. Richard Harding Dsvls and ever epruca George Buchsnsn Fife, was Algernon St. John Brencn. who out bonned the bon-ton in the Rennold Wolf days on the Morning Tele graph. They still recsll the time Pierre Lotl arrived In America snd sent for the press. There was no Interpreter and Lotl In the fantasy of hla fabulous fstlgue profeaaed to apeak only French and thst In faint whisper. Brenon arrived late like a muslcat comedy prince In afternoon togs, high hat, boutonniere and all. He tok entire charge and in French ss voluble aa his English soot ques tion after question. As the scribes trooped out, David Wallace heard toll make sarcastic remarks In per fect Fngllsh shout ths proceedings. And M. Lotl, rouged cheeka. stained nails snd all got a msenlflcent kid ding In the papera next day. George Ada la In the last lap of his "Looking Back from 70" srtlclee which msnv believe will attain sn autobiographical altitude In Ameri can lettera. Ads was the first col umnist snd the only one I know to become a millionaire and landed gentleman although his fortune cam principally from play royalties. An other autoblographv which rvkea publishers evpectsnt Is thst of Fd Howe, of Ksnsss. He h onlv sllatht 'vision cow, but wsnts lo go on with fm OREGON. MONDAY. APRIL 20. 1936. Brady, M.D. EST OT VERRUCA eess In dealing with eu.-ta cosmetic blemishes ss moles snd vsrts report the most satisfactory reult.a from the use of trichloracetic acid (a caustic far too dangerous for the layman to trifle with) followed after a minute or two by electro-desiccation (dia thermy) the esoharotlc action of the trichloracetic acid having a suf ficient anesthetic effect to make the whole treatment tolerable without any other local anesthetic. For removing a wart along the edge of the eyelid, where the esoharo tlc would be unsafe, the favored method is to Inject under ths skin of the Ud a two per oent. butyn so lution, snd then desiccation with tfte endothermy or diathermy. Not only moles and warts, but other small lesions are successfully treated with these methods, notably smsll "corns", scars, vascular nevl or "birthmarks", flbromaa snd horny nodules. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Contact Lenses My sxperlsnce with ground lenses (made In Germany) was not happy. My eyea are extremely bad. . Since childhood I could not distinguish the lerge letter on a chart even with pre scribed glssses. I was fitted with blown lenses (made In New York). 1 have worn these for eight months snd hsve normsl eyesight. They are a boon In swimming, and a great protection against dust. In fact they are almost as perfect for protection ss for vision. They are completely invisible (not so the ground contact lenses) and I have to remove mine if I want to convince people I have them on . . . (R. B.) Answer Thank you. This will an swer the questions of many readers. Eyelashes Friend suggested use of oxide of mercury as a stimulant to growth of eyelashes. Slie used It for granulat ed eyelids ss s child and It seemed fn make her lashes grow longer . . . (R. R.) Answer If one per cent, ointment of yellow oxide of mercury has sny such effect. It should be used only under medical supervision. It Is sometimes prescribed for chronic in ikmmitiM nt the evellds. gently smesred over the edges of the closed lids. Evils of Physics In your booklet "The Constipation Habit" you say physics taken habitu ally cause functional disturbances of the pelvlo reproductive organs In men and women. Please explain the na ture of these disturbances . . . (Mrs. J. U. P.) Answer Chronic congestion, irlt ablllty, weakness. Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr, IVIIIIsm Brady. M. D, 88S El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Calif. his memoirs. His problem Is to learn to dictate. That must come hard In the SO's. Personal nomination ' for a most exciting Impersonation smong the mimics Norma Terris' of Helen Hayes as Queen Victoria. One of the few public events where 1. P. Morgan moves about without body guards and with no Tear of usual brash overtures towsrd celeb rity Is at the annual flower ahow at Grand Central Palace. He Is a de voted horticulturist and not only attends each day's sessions but al ways wins several prizes. He Is especially adept growing Iris, violets. smsryllls and frceslaa. Every morn ing and evening at his Olen Cove estate he strolls for 19 minutes smong his posies. There are contem plation Interludes, snd set-rents hsve learned must under no circumstance be interrupted. George White's fisticuffs with Rudy Vallee back stage recently proved sgaln the doughty producer Is the scrappiest ot hla guild. A bantsm with sharp throw-back to the rough and tumbling days when he was known slong Broadway aa "Swlfty. the mes-rnger boyl" There was that memorable premiere of his revue seversl years ago. when as the lobby thronged with fashlonsb'.es, White snd lw Brown stood toe to toe In one of the most reckless slug festr. ever seen outside Madison Squsr Gsrden. Bsgstelles: H. T. Webster, when trsvellng registers from Tomshawk. Wis. . . . AI Jolson Is reputed to hsve slmost his entire fortune In safety vault caah . . . Ernest Hem mlngway la a pte-for-breakfast eater . . . Arthur Hopkins was onoe police reporter In Cleveland . . . Robert Ripley is ths richest Ameri csn cartoonist, being In the million aire division . . . Rebecca West'a next novel la to deal with the self conscious literary set in New York and will be more fun. "How." wlrea a fond father from Portlsnd. Oregon, "can my son be come a columnist without going to spy expense?" Give him 100 yarde of words snd let him go mad I (Copyright. 1930. McNsught Syndicate) Join ETHKLWYK B. HOFFMANNS Hosiery Club. Every 13th pair free. "Seventeen." A perfume for spring with a light, spicy fragrance. 39c dram. Young a Drug Co. Y'.ltln cards were Introdu-red In this country by French royalists mho settled on eUpelo Island to escape the French revolution. Herbert Marshall of the films Is familiarly known ss ''Bart." His mid die name Is Brotih, his mother's trs'don ns.ne. V'.'l. ncsr FI P.so, Tevas. c'.slma lie oldaat pie.-e of cultivated land in the United Ststea, Comment the on Day s News By FRANK JENKINS. WITHOUT opposition, ths bouse of representstlves passes a blU authorizing a 440.000,000 national highway program for the years 1938 and 1939. The bill now goes to the senate. What the senate will do with it remains to be seen, but neither the house nor the sensts has been turn ing down msny bills involving the spending of government money. ABOUT ths most fruitless enter prise anyone can engage In Is crying over milk that has already been spilled, but It is hard to refrain from shedding a few hot tears over the billions of government money that have been frittered away In useless "projects" Instead of being invested In highway development. The excuse for these "projects" has been that they provided employ ment, and In a way that Is true slthough the smployment provided by lsrgs numbers of them has been "made" work; that Is, work done solely for the purpose of giving some body a Job. Highway construction on a vast scale would have provided an equal amount of employment, and In re turn for the money spent (which must ultimately be repaid out of taxes) we would hsve been getting something thst was worth what it coat. FROM the Carqulnez bridge to the Oakland ferry la a magnificent highway three lanes wide all the way and four lanes psrt of the way. From downtown San Francisco to San Jose, on the other side of the bay, Is a similar highway, two of them, as a matter. of fact, for a considerable psrt of the distance. These highways, with their three and four traffic lanes, are an abid ing Joy to ALL who travel them. They n wide and roomy, carrying an sn-.krJng traffic with astonishing ease. The billions of government money that have been frittered away In plaything projects would have criss crossed the United States with high, ways like these, and at the same time would have provided honest, self-respecting employment for mil lions of people. Their benefits would have been PERMANENT. t THIS writer, who in many ways Is old-fsshloned, doesn't believe In government spending that Is Im mensely and staggeringly beyond government Income, resulting In piling up a debt whose interest bur den alone is stupendous; not to mention the burden of repayment. But U the polltlcisns whom we elect to run our government for us Insist upon spending vastly more than the government takes In. they might st least try to get s dollar's worth of penhsnent benefit In re turn for each dollar they spend. Building highways, which serve sll the people and whose construction Is a legitimate enterprise of govern ment, Is sbout ss good a wsy to do thst as can be found. , I Communications The Consumers Will Pay. To the Editor: I have been much Interested In the Townsend plan, which would pension all American citizens over 60 yesrs of age. who could qualify. not to exceed $300 per month. One thing about the plan that ap pears most importsnt and the leset discussed Is the accumulating ia xifflclent funds to pay the smount of money the Townsendltes are de manding. A psrt of the revised McQroarty bill states thst the money received from the transaction tax after ihls bill goes Into effect shall be deposit, ed by the secretsry of the tresaury In this U. S. citizens retirement en nulty fund snd shsll be disbursed only for the peyment of ths sums expressly authorized by this act to be paid therefrom and for no other purpose. Taking ths figures which hs-e been used most, there would be sp proxlmstely 7 600.000 persons who could quailfy for a pension snd if each one received $300 per month which the Townsendltes are demand ing I but which the revised McOro srty bill does not promise) there trould he collected from the people of the United Btetes In transaction taxes $1,900,000,000 per month, and referring to paragraph "F" this amount would be collected each month for four months and at the beginning of the fifth month the sum collected on the first month or frsotton thereof shall be paid, after the expense of administration has been psld, pro rata to qualified an nuttants. This would mean that In four months M P00.eoo.00t will ave hn collected before any money woud be paid out and each month after, the same amount would be collected that was paid out ac. thst there would be c-nttnuslly git.noo ooooon Mng Idle In the treasury of the United States that could not be used for any other purpose whatsoever. The federal treasury report of money In circulation for December, tpt.a. was $.saa.7io19 or $4S II per CJrliV ao If the M.-Groarty transsc. 1 tton tat aent into effect It w.-u!d 'alihdtaw all ths money in clrcula- tlon. and ettll not have ,O00,0O0,- 000. Eatlmatlng 190.000,000 .population it would be a per capita tax of ale per day, S1J.50 per month and MO for four months. In order to ac cumulate ss.ooo.ooo.ooo in four months (130 days) It would with draw g50.000.000 'per dsy( Including s..tivi rmm circulation, ao ln- stesd of putting money in circula tion It wouw nave ina OKI' feet. a MH ahtt rate of tax the consumer would have to pay whether It might be 10 per cent or 18 per cent added to their cost of living but remember, the consumer win pay as they always do. To those of the Townsend fol inM,r. artirt am sincere and believe what has been toll them. I ask them to study the revised McOrosrty bill. then take a pencil ana pii " i nut tnr themselves and see If they do not conclude that It Is not a recovery bill and Is not pos- .,1,1. . .n.rt in mlt In forOB SUCh an extreme law that would add. an other tax In addition to w h.i-H.n tha, nenola are now under and will be for yesrs to come. (Name on file) Medford April 30. Mourns Death of Howe. To the Editor: in th community moum the passing of Colonel Louis Mc Henry Howe which slthough not un- navarthAlaaS. Came SS S blow to his many friends In Jackson county, whom he naa oeen -elated with as friend and counsellor. hi. ,niMta nr honorarv member of the Good Government Congress, Incorporated. n.irlnrr Colonel Howe's Illness the past year he continued to keep in touch with Mrs. nenneiia a. i president of the Good Government Congress. Incorporated. His last let ter received a short time aRo' ex pressed optimism that he would soon v. ni t.alt un more active duties at the side of his be.oved Mend, Franklin D. Roosevelt, presi dent of the United States. Tha rwMt rtovrnment Congress. Incorporated. Joins with president and Mrs. Roosevcu, wno arc nm" hnnnrarw members, in mourning the passing of a beloved friend. HENRIETTA . Moulin. President. Good Government Con gres. Inc. Medford, April 20. (Continued from Page One ) Record (without reading) April 9 by the senate Democratic floor leader. Mr. Logan's appeal "to reason Is almost entirely the facs that the New Deal dropped $337,000,000 of federal donations Into Kentucky. He gives names and amounts of each Item in millions, Including AAA 130.000.000. CCC S.23.O&O.00O, direct re lief $36,000,000. CWA $9,000,000. PWA $30,000,000, etc., etc. The New Dealers have tired of the Van Nuys bill proposing heavy penal ties for business men who influence the vote of their employes. It is being quietly strangled In the house Judic iary committee because It Is a little too raw. What made them realize It was a counter proposal to prevent federal officials from doing the same thing. The long look you may have noticed on Senator Wheeler's face is due to the fact that he could not get any thing but an upper tier seat for the opening game, and, when seated, he saw through a spy glass that his sec retary was sitting In a front box near the president. The old Japanese scare Is being used regulsrly by ths Filipinos in their current campaign to repeal eco nomic barriers here. Despite the aus picious start of the new Philippine commonwealth and praise of the U. S. for treeing the Islands, the possibility of strslned relstlons n.Jvween Wash ington and Manila is 0'-,te strong. The veterans' lobby, .'lushed by vic tory in bonus legislation, has Just about given up hope for the universal draft (passed by the senate, now In the house). A recent canvass of the legislative situation convinced an American Legion committee that It would not get through this session. You will see plenty of Mr. Roose velt's face In the news reels from now on. Eight sepsrste presidential ap- It's Appreciated EFFICIENT and distinctive; funeral service in appreciated by every family during a period of gorrow . . . That i why OUR ervice Is so satisfactory ... all details so difficult to discuss at a tune like that are handled with sympathy and understand ing and with minimum trouble to the family. CONGER FUNERAL PARLOR WEST MAIN AT NEWTOWN Solicited for Membership in Order of Ooiden Rule and Declined pesrsncas were photographed by reel era between April a and 18. A lot of rich Democrats are already being "mentioned" backstage aa spec ial ambassador to the coronation of Edward VIII in May. 1937. Apparently it is hoped that sll will help their chances by making substsntisl con tributions to Postmaster General Far ley's campslgn fund. Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of ths Mall Tribune 10 and 20 yesrs ago. April 30, 1D28 (It Was Tuesday) A dozen speeders fined $30 In Jus tice court for Sunday outbursts. Oak Grove to build 3 -room school annex. Tribe of pigmies discovered In Af frlca, able to outrun a deer. Senate votes Italy war debt relief. Seeley Hall placed in charge of local airport. Tourist fined $35 for fishing without license. "Hamilton street Is ordered opened by city council. President Coolldee urges "economy In private and public affairs." April 20. 1!)1 (It Was Thursday) French repulse German attacks upon Verdun. Attorney Gus Newbury moves his offices to the third floor of the M. F. Ic H. building. Three rises in price of stationery attributed to world war. John W. Pernoll brought out a new Oakland car from Grants Pass lsst week. (Applpgate notes.) City council to act on Blue Ledge railroad bonds issue tonight. Judge W. E. Crews la elected presi dent of the Woodrow Wilson club. Coast counties co-operating for nrpded railroad. ' 315 Office Now Located 26 So. Fir TRANSFER i& STORAGE CO. ;.joaarctsirssj BmatauiauBai tsaasstaTOrs?ryfPa for Quick W$tl ls'atV ''A ScrT"' hW aljNt H PH0NE FPIan to stay awhile when you visit the NEV Exposition... There's much to see in San Diego RATES 2to350-o "a 6 ' T'S&V l cortEt shop I JfpfvS