MIFORT) MAIL TRIBUNE, fEDFORD, OREGON. TTTESDXY. SEPTFfBER 8, 1933
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(Continued from Pags Oiw.)
the winter Olympics early this year
In Oirmlsch-Partenklrchen. doing to
Switzerland with queen Wllhelmina
recently, Juliana saw the Oerman
nobleman again.
Prince Bernhard la well known In
Berlin and Parts society. He fin
ished school at the University of
Berlin last year and became affiliated
with the dye trust, serving In Paris
as a sort of apprentice, without sal
ary. Netherlands Surprised
- The Netherlands public, which has
heard the name of Its only royal
princess linked speculatively with
other of Europe's numerous cllglbles.
In addition to Edward, was surprised
by the announcement, -
Tall, round-faced and plump. Jul
iana Is extremely popular everywhere
In Holland, and particularly In the
young court set,
She entered the University of Ley
.den when she was 16 Incognito,
trested much Ilka any other pupil
She emerged a thoroughly modern
young woman.
When a little girl, she was fond of
Ice skating, Later she took up ten
nis, the first of the House of Orange
to try the game.
In 1030 she won the'degree of doc
tor of philosophy and literature Ho
norls Catisa.
But' despite her arduous studies,
she participated whole-hoartedly tu
the activities of a club for women,
students, wrote a prise poem and
produced her own play, "Bluebeard. '
Bernhard's full nsme Is Bernhard
Leopold Prederlk Eberhard Curt
Charlea Godfrey Peter. The prin
cess Is Jullsna Louise Emms Marie
Wllhelmina.
The prince, It la believed, will as
sume the title of Prince of The Neth
erlands after he la wed.
Today's communique cams on the
heels of reports which,' however, were
officially denied, that, Queen Wll
helmina wae planning to abdicate
sfter her dsughter married.
Secretary To Wed
Mill Helen Hartley, secretary to
Mra. Herbert Hoover, will marry
Charlea Bolton White, Palo Alto
architect, at Stanford memorial
church Sept. 4. (Associated Press
Photo)
Commercial fox ranches In Alaak
contain about 36,000 animals.
Shanghai and Nanking, Chins
boast hupe stadiums aratlr.g 70.000
Many were turne-i awsy trom the
Chinese Olympto tryouta.
It costs about a, .too to kep a race
:.orse for a year.
nh Inea tone brooches promise to ri
val clips for popularity this autumn
4
The fosail of a prehistoric camel
haa Leon found In Oklahoma.
4
Closing time for Too Late to Has
slfy Ada is 1 :30 p. m.
AUTO LOANS AND REHoAMIftu
W. Z Thomas, 40 8. Central.
PRINCESS JULIANA
OF NETHERLANDS
'WILL IKED GERMAN
Press-Button Museums
Impress Dean Allen On
Tour Through Germany
Liberal Education in Hygiene Provided by
Working Models of Body in Dresden;
Munich Also Has Giant Exhibit
(Editor' Note: This Is one of several articlea written for this news
paper by Eric W. Allen, dean of the University of Oregon school of Jour
nalism who Is now traveling In Europe on a fellowship granted by the
Oberlander Trust of the Karl Schurz memorial foundation).
By ERIC W. ALLEN
Dean of the University of Oregon
School of Journalism
MUNICH. A kind of educational
institution much resorted to In Ger
many, but which the writer has never
seen or heard of elsewhere and he
haa been around quite a bit, at that
la what might be called (in an Ir
reverent mood) a press-the -button
museum. But do not let the (Up
pant nam deceive the reader he
must think of a great building larger
and more expensive than the new
capltol now probably beginning (It Is
to be hoped) to go up at Balem.
We saw our first at. Dresden. It
was a great white building In a park
almost as large as Ooverndr Martin's
"Candelarla Heights." Prom end to
end. from top to bottom, It was de
voted to the single subject of hy
giene. When one gets through jt,
one probably knows almost as much
about how the human body works as
does Dean Dlllehunt. .
Ilun By Spectators
In these museums the signs do
not say "hands off," or "don't touch";
Instead they read "press button
here," or 'turn lever slowly to right.-'
or "put on a clean mouthpiece and
blow in the tube." Then when one
presses or twists or blows things be
gin to happen. Here the artificial
heart begins to pump blood through
Its four ventricles and the lungs ana
capillaries, ah In the right order.
There you can adjust the right levers
and watch (and hoar) the vocal or
gana pronounce the different ,vowels
and consonants.- Here one can meas
ure his own adaptability for with
standing fatigue, or test the strength
of his grip or the capacity of his
lungs. There he can see how the
liver or the kidneys work. The final
exhibit la the famous transparent
man (semi-opaque) within whom
one organ after another glows with
electric light while at the same mo
menti the name of the organ appears
on the pedestal.
But the real honcyboy of theso
museums we did not see until we
got to Munich. The reader will think
I am lying, but hero goes; The
Deutsche Muwum was begun in 1003
and took 26 yeara to build and equip.
The exhibit department has a floor
space of nine aces. It has 60,000
exhibits. To walk through the rooms
carried one 15 kilometers, or nine
and one-tenth miles. It has 341 ex
hibit rooms and some of them are
very large, conalnlng auch object aa
airplanes, locomotives, full -si re tunnel-boring
apparatus in a full-sized
tunnel, or a complete submarine
sawed open so that every part can
be studied. It contains three piano
tarluma. one showing the universe as
the Ptolomalo astronomers understood
it, one aa Copernicus understood It,
while the third la the original of
which Chicago and New York plane
tarlumm are coplea. It coats one
mark to enter the museum once, or
two marka to go In aa often as one
desires, The library (shelves for 1.
000,000 volumes), the lecture halls
(largest aeata 3000), the administra
tion, and the largo storage and res
taurant departments are all In addi
tion to the above figures.
fchviirms With People
Today waa Sunday and the nine
acres were swarming with people of
all ages. Small boya (tough on ma
chinery In any country) were Jerk
ing on levers to send witter throng!,
turbines, swinging electric fans or.
their pivots to see how half a dozen
kinds of ancient and modern wind
mills worked, sending railroad trains
through tunnels, snapping on Roent
gen raya. X-raye, alpha rays, neon
tights in half a dozen different col
ors, and learning the lawa of per
spective, reflection, triple expansion
engines, Diesel engines, volcanoes
earthquakes, household Illumination,
artesian wells, weather predicting, city
planning, navigation, interviewing
each other by television and having
a grand time with what is probably
the moat expensive and educational
toy In the world.
But even the wisest scientist would
find much to learn In this museum.
And the historian would get a con
ception of hlatory far less silly than
tho account of how various generals
happened to win battles. Almost
every one of the Innumerable de
partmenta goes bark to how the
thing waa handled In prehistoric
times among the lake dwellers, the
Toilers, the primitive Egypt inns, or
the Neanderthal men. (Neanderthal
Is not far from here). For Instance
In chemistry, there were rooina show
ing in- a splendid and striking wny
how the old alchemist worked trying
to make gold out of baser metals.
then coming down step by step to
modern times. It was a shock to inn
old grad to see a typical collegt
laboratory such aa he worked In when
he was young exhibited along with
the alchemist's cU as something out
of date and done for of historic in
trrest only.
-Many Mummiiu
The modern chemistry rooms are
devoted to questions of how the atom
looked from inside, how the more
complicated molecul. are made up.
what happens under various ray bom
bardments and simple little thing
like that. Then a aeries of gorgeous
rooms allowing in a truly wonderful
way what modern chemistry can ac
compluh in practice.
Counting picture galleries as mu
seums there are 29 museum In Mu
nich about the same as Vienna!
Of these. I imagine the Dcutche.--muwum
appeals about least to the
feminine soul the ladles I saw tlier
looked rather nonplused and Itvt
my own tmenuciit .uf ih-
about tWO miles a talr rnmiM t.m
pl&-but the men and boya eat it
up. The 16-jear-old boy In our
party la hopeful of going through
from room 1 to 341, without ' skip
ping anything. It will be some time
before he gets to exhibit number
64,909.
GETS ADVANCE SIGHT
Members of the staff of C, D. Bean,
Inc., gathered at the Hotel Jackson
Monday night to witness a preview
of the widely heralded Maytag "Model
18" washer recently announced by
the company. The dinner and ad
vance showing of the new Maytag
model wilt precede a sweeping wash
ing machine promotional campaign
by thla company, according to C. D.
Bean.
"The eyea have it," said Mr. Bean.
"Whan science told ua that we re
ceived the great majority of our Im
pressions through, our eyes,, manu
facturers took this leaf from the
scientist's note book and spent much
time and thought and money In
making their products aa attractive
to the eye as possible.
"Few product have escaped. Rail
road trains, motor cars, furniture,
oil-burners, washing machines and
hundreds of other products have un
dergone a beautifying process and
emerged bright and shining.
"Chromium, nickel, aluminum, and
porcelain enamel all wink at us from
every angle. The housewife's eyes re
spond to the appeal of this well-
dressed merchandise and her money
goes to the manufacturer and the
dealer whose products suit her eye
and do tho work the best and the
Malnat.
"Washing machines are among the
products which have gone through
till face-lifting process. It was a big
itep from the broad-beamed wood
tub of other daya with the rattling
rack-bar across the top to tho silent,
gleaming, efficient washday servants
of 1036. The change has been grad
ual but constant, and one Improve
ment has followed In the wake of
another.
"Only recently, the Maytag corn
puny has announced Its now model
18 washer typifying the new trend
and establishing a new high In per
formance. "The new Maytag Is finished In a
distinctive shade of green and trim
med with gleaming chromium. From
the top of Its efficient wringer down
to Its spring-mounted rubber casters,
model IB is a washer that will make
any housewife's washday easier."
SALES SET IRK
NEW YORK. Sept. 8. (AP) Salfa
of General Motors cars to consumers
and dealers of the United States for
the eight months ended August 31.
set all-time records, the company an
nounced today.
Domestic, anlea to consumers for
the eight months totaled 1.361.714
cftra agalst 884.863 In the like 1035
period and the previous record of 1,
168.710 In the first eight months of
1938.
Domestic sales to dealers for the
eight months totsled 1.33M83 cars
against 953.343 a year ago and the
former record of 1.333.846 for the
first eight months of 1939.
In August tho company sold to
domestic, consumers 133.804 cars, a
record for the montah since the 1930
peak of 151.733 units and compared
with 137.346 In the Ilko month laat
year. August sales to dealers In the
United States totaled 99.775 against
103.098 In August laat year.
There are more ?ood wire-haired fox
terriers on the streets of Berlin thsn
almost any other :lty. They outnum
ber the dachshui.:a 5 to 1.
Conscience Hurts
Mter twenty years, Jesse Greer,
'Mher of six children, confessed to
ouisvllle, Ky., police that he had
0?d checks of $2,000 In his na
town of Hernando, Miss. He
..ill to returned to face eharati
I LAitoclated Press Photo
. rj-2..;-
GENERAL MOTORS
m
w LI
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease,
diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped, self-addressed
envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In tnk.
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, 26S El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif.
NO WONDER THEY
T. W. Skinflint (I'm not sure
about the Initials, but let ua call
him that) says a friend of his re
cently had an op
eration for pros
tatic obstruction.
Tho operation re
quired about an
hour. After the
operation the pa
tient waa confin
ed to hospital
for two weeks,
with a drainage
tube inserted In
the bladder and
a special attend
ant to tako care
of him. There
waa nothing gentle in the expenses,
says Tight Wad. The patient paid
tho surgeon 360 slmoleons, and that
wasn't all. Tho hospital demanded
an additional (160. It must have
been Just terrible. Think of It a
man paying out 1500 In hard cash
Just to gain ten or twenty more
yeara of comfort and ten more years
of life.
Mr. T. W. Skinflint declares that'
it la no wonder some men wait too
long before having an operation when
fees are so high. Why. some men
are unable to pay such exorbitant
bills.
Well. Skinflint, wherever you are
and whatever your real surname is.
be of good cheer. Thla Is a free
country, and nobody compels you
to have any truck with surgeons or
physicians If you feel they are rob
bers.
No wonder some men wait too
long and become nuisances to them
selves and to their families, when
they cherish such childish, peevish
notions of the value of comfort and
life and self-respect.
Few men under 60 really need re
moval of any part of the prostate
gland. One urologist, reporting his
experience, in 600 prostatectomies by
the older method (perineal or supra
public operation) and In 600 trana-
urethal prostatic resections, all of the
latter being cases In which formerly
ho would have done the perineal or
suprapubic operation, Bays he be
lieves the transurethal resection la
possible in any caao in which the In
strument , (called resectoscope) can
bo Introduced Into the bladder. Of
course, the patient Is under anesthe
sia. While I havo no patience with such
cantankerous complaints aa this of
T. W. Skinflint's, I have seen enough
of the wretched results of prostatic
obstruction In men past 60 to sym
pathize with any victim of this trou
ble. And I have seen enough of the
misery that comes to men who pro
crnstlnate too long, to exhaust my
patience. Most men at 60 or older
are rather poor surgical rlska any-
J way; they become steadily poorer
risks If they suffer prostatic ob
struction and put off the only ef
aO.MclnTvrF
NEW YORK, boot. B. Jo.any Par
rar la a refutation of the old saw:
"You cannot mako a business man
out of a poet.'' Only a few ?ears ago
he was strum
ming his lyre, a
delicate y. pale
blue-eyed dream
er who had come
down fiom the
green hills of
Vermont to the
bl? city
Todav as one
of tho heads of a
publishing house,
he Is a rrddy and
robust figure In
one of the moat
competitive fields of mercSsndlslng.
If he turns out n sonnet these days
It Is solely for hW own amusement.
His time Is spent at a desk mr round
ed by secretaries Nnd push buttons.
His partner la Stanley Rlnehart.
son of the authoress Mar? Roberta
Rlnesart. The story goes hat the
capitalist. Mc&smore K-nclall. a bibli
ophile on the side, backed the young
men In their quixotic adventuring
The old timers tn the business looked
upon It as a costly whim.
From the Jump of the iun the
succeeded. But the big splash was
when they decided to publish the pon
deroua "Anthony Adverse" which had
been knocking around with no takers
for some time. It proved the book
sensation of the decade ana made
fortune.
She la a hobbling old ladv with Jet
bonnet and fichu, who often steps
out of a plushy cocktail bar near the
Waldorf Just as I go astroll with the
dog. We bow as the outgrow.h of such
frequent contacts. Tins evening she
stooped, tapped my arm royly and
said: "You know what? I feel like
i'm going to whoop 1"
Much of the successful exploitation
of the Zifgfrld film was due to Ber
nard (obel. who literally followed the
showman beyond the grave with his
ballyhoo. Sobel was a former pro
lessor of English at Purdue and Is
t likely ihe most erudite of tl.e public
relations grenadiers Zlegfeld engag
ed him for a prrsa agent drrlng the
xiceess'ul years for the Pltles and
other productions. City editors say
he turns In the nut precise English
of all the P. A s.
There are uua'ly dlsputra as to
the origin of ZlrgtVld's celebrated tag
line tthl?h rrd "OlorlMna the
1 Ameruan Girl." It was ,!vdttea to
many, including 'he producer him
self. As a matter of fact. 2'enfeld
told me that Walter Ktnfiy. when
h press asnt for vauilvvtlle succf-M
td th lui" inr a micr el'ric Wen
I on Broadway (or The Fol'tte- (t was
used tamafter in all Zieg'tld't pro
Brady, M.D.
WAIT TOO LONO
fective treatment for many months.
X-ray treatment haa been used to
a considerable extent for' enlarged
prostata and with considerable suc
cess. A competent proctologist makes
this observation: "Every once in a
while some patient past middle age.
under treatment for some rectal
trouble, remarked how much better
his prostatic trouble waa in fact,
where he used to get up many times
at night, now he slept tho night
through." This prompted him to try
out diathermy to the prostate
through the rectal speculum, and
such treatment brought prolonged
relief to many sufferers from pros
tatic obstruction.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Multiple Sclerosis
Please repeat the diet you men
tioned as beneficial for persons with
multiple sclerosis. , , . (R. J. J.)
Answer. Mellanby tells about It In
his book on Nutrition and Disease
(Oliver and Boyd, London). Particu
lars In booklet "Chronic Nervous Im
position," copy of whloh sets you
back 10 cents and stamped envelope
bearing your address. High vitamin
A diet: 1 to 2 pints milk dally, 2
eggs, liver, green vegetables, carrots,
2 toaspoonfula cod liver oil -twice a
day. Lists of foods richest in, vita
mins A, B, etc., in booklet "Building
Vitality," available on same terms.
Can't repeat things hero casually
haven't space.
Canned Food
Is It necessary to cook commercial
ly canned vegetables 15 minutes
when the can Is opened, In order to
destroy any harmful bacteria that
might be in them, such as botulism
germ? . . . (Mra. 8. W. F.)
Ans. It la more Important to give
home canned food such additional
cooking on opening the can. No,
commercial canned vegetables are ster
ile and require no further cooking,
unless you prefer the food warmed
or cooked over. Boiling destroys bo
tulinus toxin or poison If any pres
ent but would not certainly kill the
spores of the bacilli. If canned food
looks, tastes or smells at all "queer"
on opening the can, It should be dis
carded, for safety.
Polishing Glass
My work lh cleaning class for mir
rors. I use red rougo powder mixed
with water and ammonia, and polish
the glass after this dries. I breathe
more or leas of the dust all day. , . .
(W. R. H.)
Ans. Red rouge la Iron oxide
Harmless. If you have no bronchial,
lung or throat trouble to begin with,
such work Is not harmful to health.
(Copyright, 1930, John F. Dillo Co.)
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Biady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady, M. D. 26S El
Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif.
ductions a simple, obvlout declara
tion, yet advertising men y one of
the most compelling ever hatched.
New York hotels have almost lifted
the ban on cooking in rooms. Until
a few yeara ago, it waa done surrep
titiously with eviction often a pen
alty. The old Waldorf had a special
sniffer to roam the corridors. But
the boom time de luxe hotels in
stalled kltchenottoj and refrigerators
In even small suits ana single corns.
And the side street hotels tould not
compete with the roomlm? houses
permitting cooking. Anywny. most
hotels realize their dining rooms are
passe. They Just open as , gesture.
Those who do not rook in r:oms pat
ronize the cluster of cafeterias nich
ed in all big Inns The Ansonla X
believe waa the first big hotel to
Install kitchenettes.
And the hotel detective or house
dick la now confined to the first floor
to watch for lobby sharpers, sneak
thlevea and "we boya." Their of
iiclousness In key hoi- snooping In
the past Involved hotels ttt. demage
suits. CeaMir Rltz rightly conaucted
his hotels on the assumption every
one who signed the register waa re
spectable. If they proved otherwise,
he got rid of thtm by hiking the
tariff. As a result he rarely had a
suit or scandal.
The moat generously squired lady
in current scene la the darVly exotic
and now matured Libby Holman.
When she visit the night .lube she
is often accompanied by from a half
dozen to a dozen male escorts. No
other ladles, as a rule. It la all
somewhat a musical comdy vene.
Mlsa Holman, incidentally, 'ook over
the Billy Leeds oxpanslve estate In
the knobby Oyster Bay section this
summer and her week-enu parties
notched high in the gaiety pools.
I waa recalling oM Undo Oabe
Walsh the hostler at McCormack's
livery stable. He tf,ways ate hi des
sert first at dinner. He explained
If there waa anything left on his
plate he would rnther It oultf be
cabbage and corn pone.
(Copyright. 1P36. McNajght
Syndicate )
Gum drops and salt tablet help
steel mill workers keep cool and avoid
heat exhaustion during the summer
months. The salt tablets which arc
about the aire of an aptrtn, are taken
three or four times a day.
A temperature of 93 degrees below
rtro has been recorded in Mt. McKin
ley National park, Alaska,
Kyanite. used in manufacture of
fire brick, having high heat resist
ance. Is mined In northeast Georgia.
Basking shark of the North Atlan
tic attain a length of over 30 ft
and are killed for oil.
Bnskra are unknown in the Hawllan
i!nd!.
Gold mining on a commercial acale
is sprain going forward in North Caro
lina In several section.
Comment
of the
Day s News
By FRANK JENKINS '
YOU probably read this headline
or one like It: "Politics Shunned
by Candidates In Iowa Conference."
, The candidates referred to are
President Roosevelt and Governor
Landon, and the Iowa conference 1
tho conference of governors called
recently by the president to con
sider the drought situation.
If you are familiar with the" ways
of politics, you doubtless snickered
when you read the headline.
THE president's drought trip and
his conference of governors (IN
CLUDIN'O Governor Landon, his op
ponent In this campaign) are based
primarily and almost exclusively
upon political consideration.
In the humble Judgment of this
writer, both tho trip and the con
ference are GOOD polities from the
standpoint of President Roosevelt.
The trip creates the Impression that
the president Is deeply and. humanly
Interested (aa he doubtless Is) In
the drought problem and wants to
do something about It, Tho drought
states havo a LOT of votes, so this
Impression will be valuable.
Including Governor Landon, the
Republican nominee, In the confer
ence of drought governors creates an
appearance of complete sincerity and
broad fairness, both of which appeal
strongly to the average American
voter.
MUCH more Important than either
of these considerations Is the
fact that the trip and tho confer
ence give President Roosevelt the op
portunity to meet people face to face
and so display to them his really
genial and charming personality.
If President Roosevelt were as
sound In his economic views aa he Is
charming personally, and if he sur
rendered himself' with men of sound
Judgment and practical experience
instead of radical and more or less
hare-brained experimenters, such aa
Tugwell and his type, ho would be
one of tho truly great presidents of
our history.
He has ALL tho qualities of lead
ership EXCEPT ability to lead peo
ple In the right direction.
TO ALL who know anything about
tho running of political cam
paigns, the carefully reiterated state
ment that there la no politics in
the presidents drought trip la about
as funny as anything can be.
Long before the trip was started,
It was discussed pro and con by the
higher command'" of the new deal
campaign. All of Its political possi
bilities, both favorable and unfav
orable, were gone over minutely and
balanced off against each other. The
conference of governors waa worked
out and decided upon, and If you
went over the country with a fine-
tooth comb you couldn't find a pol
itician ANYWHERE who doesn't
know that the governora conference
was decided upon as a device to put
Landon on the spot.
In campaign years. EVERYTHING a
president does is done for political
reasons. This drought trip Is no ex
ceptton to the rule.
yHIS governors conference, with its
A opportunity to. bring Landon m
as a second fiddler in President
Roosevelt's orchestra, waa a smart
Idea, but It would have been more
impressive if Roosevelt himself had
not refused, quite curtly, President
Hoover's Invitation to a somewhat
similar conference back in the be
glnnlnc of 1933, after Roosevelt had
been elected but before he had been
Inaugurated.
DALLES WILL HAVE
THK DALLES. Ore.. Sept. 8. -(AP)
Construction of gssoline storage
tanks with a capacity of 1.000.000 1
gallons will be started here tn the '
immediate future by the Inland Nav- I
igatton company. I
Announcement of the project wa
made by Jack L. Hyneman and N. K. j
Dent, officials of the company, on a
visit to The Dalles. The company j
will uw The Dalles as a distribution
point for the Inland Empire.
More than 30,000 pounds of steel j
for tho tanks will arrive here In the ;
next few weeks, the officials said. !
FLUSH OUT
15 MILES OF
KIDNEY TUBES
Medical authorities agree that your kld
rtryi contain IS Miles of tiny tubes ot
filter which help to purify the blood and
keep you healthy. Kidneys should empty S
pints a W and so get rid of mors than I
Pounds of waste.
If you hav tronhle with too Tranent
bladder paMirts with scanty amount eu9
intt hunting and discomfort. th It Miles
3( kidney tubes may need ftujhin out. Thit
dancer signal may h the beginning of nt
fing back ache, leg pains, K of peP and
enerpy. netting up niffht. Swelling, rufflneM
unIer the eye, headaches and dmines.
Pcn't wait. Ak your drutrxt fur
TVm Died tuccefu!ly by mil
lion for over 4 year. They gift happy
relief and will help to flutb out the It
aUlat ct kiiaej tubta. 04 0a' FUfc
Also Involved in the project are moor
age facilities for boata and barges
from which gasoline will be discharg
ed; pipe lines, pumping equipment,
power connections, loading racks,
trackage and road construction.
Bnd
(Continued trom rage One.)
one aubject at a time and a greater
ability to lay the subject aside when
he la through with it. In this way,
his mind haa become a very orderly
filing cabinet.
Furthermore, train riding end trav
eling Co not tire him ba much as the
averagi person. The mot'o of the
White House correspondents has been
Join the Roosevelt entourage and
see the world," but none of the news
men la able to stand the trip as well
as he does.
More than the mere saving of old
ships was Involved in that decision
by Great Britain, the United States
and Japan on destroyers snd sub
marines. It wo& really the first tech
nical step toward accelerated naval
building, all around, if Indeed It does
not signal the start of a direct race,
Old ships are not much good for
combat purposes. Offhand, It may
seem to be rather foolish to keep
them in service, and to man them.
None of the governments involved
chose to explain why it Is not. but
all the admirals know.
For one thing, if you are planning
to have more and mare ships in a
year or two, you must have an en
larged trained personnel to man
them. Old ships are second best to
new ones for that purpose.
Another good reason is that these
ships can be used for political trad
ing purposes. The admirals can
vventunlly trade them in to congress
for modern replacements, or they
could be used as excellent bartering
material If there ever Is another naval
disarmament conference.
Foresight- does not, hovever. ex
plain the peculiar advantige which
Japan took from the old ship deal.
What happened was this:
The London naval treaty gave the
U. S. and Britain 160,000 tons of de
stroyers and Japan 105.000, as of De
cember 31, 1036. It gave all three
powers equal tonnage In submarines
(82,700) as of the same date. All
tonnage beyond those figures was to
be scrapped.
However. Britain did not want to
scrap her old destroyers and Invoked
the escalator clause of the treaty.
She wanted to keep 40.000 tons of
over-age destroyers, and she so an
nounced. The United State answer
ed she would do likewise.
But Japan elected to hold on to
her old subs as well as her destroy
ers, keeping 16,000 tona of over-age
and 11,000 of old destroyers. The
effect waa to give her superiority In
submarines, in othor wotda, she
changed tho treaty ratio.
What all this complicated dlplo
matlc maneuverlnp merely means Is
that no one Is going to an rap any
thing he has any use for.
No one believes frny'.hlng will come
of Russia's latest scrap warning to
Japan regarding border lncdents on
the Manchukuo frontier. It waa
merely a bookkeeping notice to keep
the record straight.- as far as Russo-
Japanese relations are concerned.
The Inside fact is the Red? are not
ready for trouble. With Hitler an
noylng them at the front '.oor, they
are In no position to do anything
about the back, unless perc.iance Mr.
Hitler some time soon finds his hands
filled with his problems .n western
Europe, In which case Moscow might
try to bear down on Toklo.
This Is the 'key to the Russo-Japanese
situation.
FOR PERSONAL LOANS OP ALL
KINDS. W. B. Thomas, 46 8. Central
Gun Repairs. Expert gunsmiths
8lms Bros.. 33 N. Fir.
4
Closing time for Too Late to as
sl(y Ada Is 1:30 p. m.
Use Mall Tribune want ads.
DON'T WAIT FOR
ANOTHER RAINY DAY
Now is the best time to protect your home
against the weather by reshingling your
roof with long lasting
RED CEDAR SHINGLES
Inspect our complete stock and ask
for quotations.
BIG PINES LUMBER COMPANY
6th & Fir Sts.
Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
history from the files of the
Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years
ago.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
September 8, 1026.
(It was Wednesday)
Vivn rum violators, caught In, M
hours by special prohibition enforce
ment officers.
Rrh.v.1 ftf cltr onen. with laiwej
s.frslAn HOKHltA fact ITianV PUPill
are atill working in the orchards an4
packing plants.
Hunters flock to hills for opening
of deer season Prlday.
nr fir menaces Hanlev haystack
between this city and Jacksonville,
The third story addition to th
Masonic building on Main street neari
completion.
R. O. Fowler, county agent,
his car "tagged" for double parking.
'The double parkers are not as bad
as the triple parkers," the chief of
police states.
TWENTY YEARS AGO WUl
September 8, 1918
Col. George P. Mlms la nomlnatd
for postmaster of Medford. after a
long contest among local Democrat
for the post.
Unitarians seize Dobrlc but lose.
Orsova; fighting resumed on tu
Somme by Allies.
Grizzly club will climb Mr. Baldy
next Sunday, and hold their second
annual meeting. Notice of the event
warns: "If you want an onlce, com
and plead your cause, and If you W)ll
not accept an office, come and pro
tect yourself." The article further
states, "Cole Holmes Is a ringleader
of the organization."
Delroy Getchell among Medford
residents urging the establishment of,
a farm loan bank In the northwest.
fc
Bain predicted for next week-
county fair week.
ON REFEREE FOR GO
PORTLAND, Ore.. Sept. 8. (AP)
A long conference between principal
In tomorrow night's mat match,
billed as a world titular affair, re
sulted tn the selection of Dick
Rutherford as third man In the ring.
Rutherford, former Oregon State
grid coach.was approved by Sandor
Szabo, Hungarian aspirant to the
heavyweight wrestling championship,
and Tooth Mont, manager for Dave
Levin, Brooklyn claimant to the cur
rent title.
Verne Harrington, Portland ref
eree, was rendered Ineligible by Lev
in's Insistence that an out-of-town
man be obtained. Rutherford Is chief
referee for the California boxing com
mission.
Mrs. Coolidge Home i
Mrs. Calvin Coolldge, widow of th
late president, Is shown on arrival
In New York after her first trip
abroad. She posed In the "foreign
hat" she Is wearing only after
protest. (Associated Press Photos
Phone 1
9
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